‘People don’t want to see us, but they want us out here’
By Henry Chan | February 22, 2017‘People don’t want to see us, but they want us out here’ It was two days before Thanksgiving and by 7 p.m., campus was deserted.
‘People don’t want to see us, but they want us out here’ It was two days before Thanksgiving and by 7 p.m., campus was deserted.
The North Carolina Comicon was held this past weekend at the Durham Convention Center. Now in its seventh year, the event had become so large that it took over adjacent buildings and blocked downtown traffic.
RALEIGH—The air of anticipation turned into one of giddy celebration soon after news broke that North Carolina belonged to the Republican Party.
RALEIGH—In a last ditch effort to charm voters of North Carolina, a crucial battleground state, Republican nominee Donald Trump campaigned in Raleigh for an energetic crowd.
Riley Mangan works at the Human Vaccine Institute on mother-to-child transmissions of HIV. Modestly dressed in a plain sweater and jeans, he speaks with a smart earnestness; the phrase “boyish charm” was invented for guys like him.
Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton campaigned in Raleigh with the Mothers of the Movement Sunday to reinforce her core policy messages and encourage early voting.
A federal district court recently dismissed a lawsuit challenging Senate Bill 2, a North Carolina law that allows magistrates to refuse to marry same-sex couples based on religious objections.
“Have you ever heard of the paper bag test?” That is the way Steven Cozart begins his interviews for “Pass/Fail”, a series of illustrations that was awarded the 2016 Dorothea Lange-Paul Taylor Prize by the Center for Documentary Studies.
In their latest play “The Undertaking,” The Civilians, a New York-based theater company, is here to remind you that you are all going to die. Written and directed by Steve Cosson, “The Undertaking” has a simple premise: Steve (Dan Domingues) is an interviewer, and he spends an evening with his friend Lydia (Irene Lucio) discussing interviews he did concerning death.
New research shows that oxytocin, commonly known as the “love hormone” due to association with social behaviors, may also boost spirituality.