Lloyd Kramer, the history professor who directs UNC’s humanities program, was honored in January with the GAA’s Faculty Service Award. read more
Ali Farahnakian ’90 has debuted his People’s Improv Theater — otherwise known as the PIT — in Chapel Hill. Farahnakian, a former Saturday Night Live performer who has two PIT locations in New York, opened the third in the building… read more
She waited almost half her life for the chance to change the lives of others. Now, each day, Chesca Colloredo-Mansfeld ’87 picks up where her mother’s example left off. read more
Who will take up the enormous challenges of the delicate laboratory of Galápagos? Carolina got an exclusive admission, and now it must show that it is the fittest. read more
The law school’s Center for Civil Rights found value in teaching litigation by going after governments on behalf of people who lacked legal clout. The UNC System Board of Governors had a problem with that. read more
John Fichthorn ’95 and Burke Koonce III ’92 are looking to bring sports fans’ sensibility to the world of business. read more
Stephanie Griest has immersed herself episodically in the lives of people living on our southern and northern borders. It’s produced the newest of her three books, “All the Agents and Saints: Dispatches from the U.S. Borderlands.” read more
Jodi Magness and about 40 researchers and students returned last summer from a seventh season of archeological excavation inside a synagogue at Huqoq, an ancient Jewish village in Israel’s Lower Galilee. read more
The Carolina Edge, a signature initiative of the just-launched Campaign for Carolina, addresses access and affordability to higher education – two essential characteristics of our university. read more
Will the longtime showplace for indie films be sold or closed? Bruce Stone, who previously also owned the Varsity Theater in downtown Chapel Hill, opened the Chelsea Theater in 1990 in the Timberlyne shopping center. The Chelsea became the… read more