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Juan Alamo standing at the Old Well on UNC-Chapel Hill's campus holding a percussion instrument

Where words fail music speaks

For most of his life, Juan Álamo has used music to connect to and communicate with others. As a skilled marimba player, he uses his talent and passion to teach the next generation of musicians to do the same.


A postcard with the text "Postcards from the Pandemic" on it and the Arts Everywhere logo in the corner

Staff postcard project to memorialize pandemic

“I Was Here: Postcards from the Pandemic” lets employees process the past two years through artistic expression, culminating in an exhibit on Arts Everywhere Day April 8.


A class sitting in a room with masks on and collaborating with laptops

Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl Team heads to national competition

Carolina’s Intercollegiate Ethics Bowl Team will be facing off against 35 other schools for a national title this weekend. It is the team’s first time advancing to the national championship in over five years.


A picture of the group standing in front of the South Building on UNC-Chapel Hill campus

Building a rich intellectual community

For almost 40 years, the Carolina Postdoctoral Program for Faculty Diversity has been preparing scholars from different backgrounds for faculty careers and the tenure process.


Headshot of Marcia Chatelain

Black history viewed through fast-food lens

Marcia Chatelain, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America,” makes eye-opening connections during the 2022 African American History Month Lecture.


A photo of Angel Hsu presenting

Combining science and policy: Angel Hsu’s journey into climate conservation

Assistant professor of public policy and a faculty member in the environment, ecology and energy program, Angel Hsu is also founder and director of the Data-Driven EnviroLab, an interdisciplinary research group.


A stock image of animated figures standing on words reading out different pronouns

Authors use they/them pronouns less frequently

A Carolina study shows that in digital publications, authors underuse “they” compared with he and she in similar contexts.


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