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(11/01/13 3:20am)
Thousands of people came out to Franklin Street to celebrate Halloween on Thursday night. The most popular costumes included Mario and Luigi, Waldo, and Minions from Despicable Me, among others. Seniors Hilarie Halsch and Emily Hinshaw dressed as salt and pepper shakers. This year was Halsch's first on Franklin Street for Halloween.
(11/01/13 3:20am)
Several students collaborated to build a replica of the P2P Express, "driving" down Franklin Street and making horn noises at the crowd.
(11/01/13 3:09am)
From left to right, Roli Tyagi, Nikita Patel, Shivani Dave, and Aisha Venugopai, seniors, dressed as undead zombie Disney princesses for their time on Franklin Street on Halloween.
(11/01/13 3:09am)
Thousands of people came out to Franklin Street to celebrate Halloween on Thursday night. The most popular costumes included Mario and Luigi, Waldo, and Minions from Despicable Me, among others.
(11/01/13 3:09am)
Thousands of people came out to Franklin Street to celebrate Halloween on Thursday night. The most popular costumes included Mario and Luigi, Waldo, and Minions from Despicable Me, among others. Allyn Sharp, left, and Jed Robb dressed as characters from Game of Thrones.
(11/01/13 3:09am)
Ibrahim Zafar, senior biomedical engineering major at NC State, and Sara Shariff. UNC senior political science major, dressed as an army helicopter pilot and copilot for Halloween.
(10/31/13 2:45am)
Marshall Richardson, left, and Tallis Donnelly prepare fake guts for Thursday's haunted house. It is a fundraiser to benefit Internationalist Books and the Weaver Community Housing Association. "Those two groups, I just couldn't imagine a Chapel Hill without them," says Ichabod Yo, an organizer of the haunted house.
(10/24/13 2:55am)
Jay Reeves owner and manager of Vinyl Perk, which opened October 18h, makes coffee through a process called pouring over. "This way of making coffee has been around for about 60 years and uses no machines. Making coffee this way takes away the bitterness and you can really taste the coffee bean when drinking it."
(10/23/13 12:26am)
Sid Kieth, owner of Surplus Sid's in Carrboro, returned to Carrboro 26 years ago after graduating from UNC in the mid 1970s. A former history and political science major, Kieth says, "I took a cue from Napoleon - I crowned myself king of Carrboro."
(10/15/13 11:19pm)
John Parker, a senior at UNC, had his world flip upside down the weekend of October 7, 2013, when he earned the position of principal trumpet in the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra. Parker beat nearly 100 other musicians who were invited to audition for the position, which he will take after this semester. Parker has played trumpet since he was 10, saying, "It's fun picking up the horn every day and experiencing something different."
(09/30/13 3:54am)
Jeanne Fischer, UNC voice teacher, sings during Sunday's Mayn Goldener Brunem: An Afternoon of Yiddish Art Song in Hill Hall. Deborah Hollis accompanies her on the piano, and Brent Wissick plays the cello in a few of the entrancing pieces during the performance.
(09/24/13 12:18am)
Josh Sanders, owner of Pita Pit on Franklin Street, is coming up on one year of ownership of the restaurant. This month marks its tenth year on Franklin Street. Enthusiastic about his restaurant, his customers, and his involvement with the community, Sanders says, "I always thought of the food business as more of a people business anyway." Many of his customers are long-time regulars whose names and orders he remembers.
(Zach Hunter, on left, spring 2012 graduate from UNC, still lives in CH)