PlayMakers presents regional premiere of ‘Hold These Truths’
PlayMakers Repertory Company will present the regional premiere of “Hold These Truths,” written by Jeanne Sakata, April 23-27.
PlayMakers Repertory Company will present the regional premiere of “Hold These Truths,” written by Jeanne Sakata, April 23-27.
More than 140 Carolina undergraduate students will present their work at the 15th annual Celebration of Undergraduate Research on Monday.
Historian Malinda Maynor Lowery is a part of the team that produces ‘A Chef’s Life,’ an award-winning PBS show based on a farm-to-fork restaurant, Chef and the Farmer, in Kinston, N.C.
When Los Angeles-based music industry entrepreneur Ken Weiss first moved to Chapel Hill in 2007, he had no idea he’d be co-teaching the University’s first course in artistic entrepreneurship just three years later.
New research from North Carolina State University and UNC-Chapel Hill reveals that energy is transferred more efficiently inside of complex, three-dimensional organic solar cells when the donor molecules align face-on, rather than edge-on, relative to the acceptor. This finding may aid in the design and manufacture of more efficient and economically viable organic solar cell …
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Patricia Parker, an Associate Professor of Communication Studies and Director of Faculty Diversity Initiatives in the College of Arts and Sciences, has won a 2014 University Diversity Award.
Years before Charles Kuralt did it, Carolina had a champion of the common people who understood the value of taking his show on the road.
Matthew James Leming of New Orleans, La., a junior at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has been awarded a 2014 Goldwater Scholarship. UNC junior Samuel Jackson Resnick of Gainesville, Fla., received an honorable mention.
The French translation of UNC historian William Ferris’ book, Give My Poor Heart Ease: Voices of the Mississippi Blues, has won a prestigious prize from Académie Charles Cros in the world music book category.
Women who start new businesses with men have limited opportunities to move into leadership roles, according to sociologists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; and when they co-found a business with their husbands, they have even fewer chances to be in charge.