UNC offers students a vast array of art
From Franklin Street to South Road, UNC’s campus is crawling with art.
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From Franklin Street to South Road, UNC’s campus is crawling with art.
A flashing television screen commanded its viewers to “BUY BEER.”
A different sort of magic is coming to Kenan Theatre.
Live from Chapel Hill, it’s the CUAB Comedy Festival.
Cosmos Lyles thinks he has solved two big problems.
Carl McIntyre didn’t let a stroke stop his acting career.
Yuriko Doi became a master, a mountain priest and a mosquito in the Center for Dramatic Art Monday morning.
Due to a reporting error, a previous version of this story stated the incorrect lineup for the Big Star Third Concert. An tribute ensemble band will be performing. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
Howard Lee leads a double life.
Marc Bamuthi Joseph stood in Gerrard Hall on Wednesday afternoon with his collaborators — a documentarian and a visual artist and urban planner.
Raised rental fees and incomplete facilities have not deterred campus groups from taking advantage of the recently renovated Historic Playmakers Theatre.
This story appeared as part of the 2010 Year In Review issue. The Daily Tar Heel resumes publication Jan. 10.
Broadway is coming to UNC.
Visitors faced a wall of tragic statistics about human rights violations at the FedEx Global Education Center on Saturday morning.
Halloween is over.
Amy Burtaine’s acting career blossomed in a circus.
Walls adorned with splattered paint, graffiti and cartoonish figures greet art lovers as they enter the Artery, a student-run art gallery in Chapel Hill.
With a strum and a pick, Southern culture spilled off the porch and out into the lawn Thursday night.
Joshua Brown and James Kuo tried their best to enter the storied UNC a cappella community, but there just wasn’t room.
Michael Brown has painted sea turtles, musical youth and a parade of recognizable University characters.