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Jokes from a popular social media account will soon appear offline, on T-shirts created by a local clothing company.

The Twitter account UNC Problems offers a satirical take on the daily events of Carolina students. Since its creation, the UNC Problems Twitter account has gained nearly 4,000 followers.

Now, the account’s 10 most popular tweets will appear on T-shirts. UNC Problems will collaborate with Thrill City, a clothing company that UNC students Ryan Cocca and Sunny Huang. Their T-shirts highlight UNC fads like Kendall Marshall’s “kbutter” nickname and the popular Chapel Hill nickname “Chapel Thrill.”

Current followers are excited about the shirt.

UNC Problems continues to earn retweets for its funny UNC related tweets that students are clearly reacting to. Recent tweets on the account address popular campus topics like the Pit preacher and a shout-out to pokey sticks, a late-night campus snack:

A tweet about how great it is to be a Tar Heel earned 17 retweets:

UNC Problems continues to reach out to its followers for their input on the upcoming T-shirts.

Other popular UNC twitter accounts include UNC Paparazzi and UNC betch. Even the UNC squirrels have a Twitter account.

How to get involved

Follow UNC Problems to stay updated about the release of the UNC Problems T-shirt. Email your UNC problems to uncproblems@gmail.com.

Kbutter and Thrill City T-shirts are available for purchase online.

The UNC Clef Hangers will present a spring concert April 21 at 8:00 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The concert will serve as a farewell to the Clef Hangers’ senior-class members, as the performance will be the last of the school year.

The Clefs are Carolina’s oldest a cappella group, formed in 1977 by UNC student Barry Saunders and originally called the Morrison Dorm Singers. The Clef Hangers adopted their current name in 1978 in addition to their signature vests and bow ties. Since then, the Clefs have had the opportunity to take their talents around the world, performing in Spain, France, Scotland, Jamaica, Greece and Italy. Over the years, the Clefs have released 16 professionally produced studio albums.

The Clef Hangers are, in many ways, similar to a fraternity. Many of the close-knit members live in a house together, and the group often travels abroad over spring break for international performances.

Senior soloist Cole Hammack says that he will really miss being a Clef after he graduates. “My favorite part of being a Clef is the brotherhood of the group,” he said in a recent phone interview. “You’re with these guys all the time and singing is a very vulnerable thing to do, so you grow close to people you otherwise would have never known very quickly.”

The Clef Hangers cover popular songs, adapting them to a cappella versions entirely their own. This year’s repertoire has included popular Coldplay songs “Yellow” and “Paradise,” a cover of the Old Crow Medicine Show song “Wagon Wheel,” a rap cover of the David Guetta and Nicki Minaj song “Where Them Girls At,” and the always classic “Carolina In My Mind” by James Taylor, among others. Watch the Clefs sing “Wagon Wheel” here.

The Clef’s albums are available for purchase online. You can also like them on Facebook or follow them on Twitter. Their recent tweets are about the upcoming spring concert:

Tickets for the 2012 spring concert are available through the Memorial Hall box office.

Roice Fulton, North Carolina Governor's School Foundation vice president

Roice Fulton, North Carolina Governor's School Foundation vice president, hangs a poster promoting fundraising at the final convocation of Governor's School West in Winston-Salem, N.C., on June 23, 2011. reesenews/file photo

The future of the North Carolina Governor’s School has been in question since 2010 when the General Assembly of North Carolina voted to reduce funding for 2010 and 2011 and eliminate funding for 2012.

But after a six-month fundraising campaign led by alumni raised more than $675,000, the program will remain open for summer 2012.

Governor’s School alumni remained positive throughout devastating cuts in hopes of somehow keeping the program alive for 2012.

“Alumni and other people across the state have realized Governor’s School is important and has changed their lives and changed the lives around them,” said Chris Hendel, student body president of the 2010 Governor’s School.

Mackenzie Brown, freshman at UNC and 2010 Governor’s School student, said Governor’s School changed her life.

“If the state were to take away funding for the program, they would be making one of the worst decisions yet,” she said. “Everyone deserves to have the opportunity to experience what I experienced, and cost should not be a factor.”

The General Assembly has funded the Governor’s School program since its founding in 1963, allowing students to attend for free. A $500 dollar tuition was imposed in 2010 to ensure that Governor’s School would continue throughout the summers of 2010 and 2011.

Governor’s School is a unique six-week summer program that brings four hundred students from different backgrounds together to learn and develop. Many alums of Governor’s School express a passion for the program and a general positive outlook of their experience. Driven by their desire to keep the program alive for future students, alumni from across the state have not hesitated in banding together in support of raising funds sufficient to open both campuses for summer 2012.

Chris Hendel has led the UNC Governor’s School initiative with the help of Tom Bodo in order to rally alumni of the program at UNC and to raise as much funding as possible for summer 2012.

“It was very frustrating to know that something I enjoyed so much was being taken away,” Hendel said. “So I kind of got in touch with the Governor’s school foundation and tried to be a part of making Governor’s School live on.”

Last year’s efforts have paid off, according to a recent press release by the North Carolina Governor’s School Foundation. The press release dated Feb. 3 confirmed that after a six-month fundraising campaign and support from thousands of alumni and dozens of state-wide organizations, the Governor’s School had raised more than $675,000. That ensures that both the Salem college and Meredith college campuses will be open for a summer 2012 Governor’s School program.

“As for what we have accomplished since June and July, it has been something we never expected–being where we are now and we have achieved opening both campuses,” said Roice Fulton, vice president of the foundation. “It is almost surreal to look back at how much work went into it. I can’t believe we did all of that.”

Six months and $700,000 dollars later, Fulton said that both campuses will be open for a summer session in 2012 for five or six weeks, “I certainly hope for a six-week program,” he said. “We don’t want any student to miss out on the full experience.”

Fulton said charging tuition prevents some students from attending.

“Some have said they will not even apply this year because of the tuition of $500,” he said.

The foundation announced that more than $39,000 in scholarship funding would ensure that the tuition would not pose a barrier to entry for low-income students. The foundation hopes these scholarships will help offset the 2012 tuition costs for qualified applicants.

Although supporters of the Governor’s School rejoice in their success and the security of the summer 2012 program, future funding is still in question. Hendel acknowledged that the next step is to ensure that the state funds the program.

“We had one shot to prove to the state that this program is important and should be funded, and if it doesn’t happen it will be very difficult to maintain fundraising in the years to come,” he said.

Fulton said that private funding is not a sustainable path for the future. “Sponsors have said ‘We are only going to do this once,’ and now it is up to us to convince the state that this is a treasure to the state.”

Of the 1,700 past recipients of the prestigious Morehead-Cain Scholarship, 430 have attended Governor’s School. Anthony Dent, a senior Morehead-Cain Scholar who also attended Governor’s School, expressed his strong support for using private funds to keep Governor’s School alive.

“Governor’s School was a fun six-week program that allowed me to work on my fluency in French and offered lively debates on all manner of topics,” he said in an email message. “Many of the friends and acquaintances I made later matriculated with me into UNC.”

Fulton remains positive hoping the foundation’s great efforts will pay off in the end. “Hopefully, maybe not next year but some time soon, we will get our funding back.”

Described by The New York Times as “the most accomplished pianist of the new generation,” Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes returns to UNC’s Memorial Hall Friday Feb. 17 at 8:00 p.m.

Leif Ove Andsnes is the recipient of four Gramophone Awards and seven Grammy nominations. He returns to Memorial Hall following his 2009 performance of Pictures Reframed, created in collaboration with South African artist Robin Rhode.

Tickets for the show are on limited availability. Student tickets are $10. Tickets open to the public range from $69 to $29. Buy your tickets at Carolina Performing Arts.

Listen to Leif Ove Andsnes play ‘Grieg’ in the WGBH studio

Don’t know much about classical music?

A pre-performance “Classical Conversations” at 7 p.m. in Gerrard Hall can give you some context to Leif Ove Andsnes’s music. Join Chancellor Emeritus Dr. James Moeser for a free conversation featuring the works of Chopin, Debussy, Bartók and Haydn. Dr. Moeser will introduce you to the meaning behind many of these iconic works by the masters of classical music.

UNC Chancellor Holden Thorp has not yet made a decision on gender-neutral housing, the Daily Tar Heel reported on Tuesday.

If Thorp approves sophomore Kevin Claybren’s proposal for gender-neutral housing in select UNC residence halls, students of the opposite sex will be allowed to live together as roommates starting in the fall 2012 semester. Kelsey Rupp of the Carolina Review, UNC’s conservative journal, reported on the debate surrounding the issue in November, stating that:

“The motivation behind the gender-neutral movement must be recognized as desiring to make taboo the assertion that men and women are fundamentally different, as well as denying the fact that anything can be gained by recognizing differences between the sexes.”

Rupp makes an argument in support of the proposal as a reporter for UNC’s conservative journal, and while a good deal of individuals still oppose such measures by the University. Rupp did not respond to an email requesting comment.

The issue can be seen from two perspectives: one being that college students are mature, capable, and autonomous enough that they should be able to choose what gender their roommate is. On the other side, gender differences should continue to be recognized and honored.

Ultimately, approval or disapproval should be based on each individual’s own opinions and personal beliefs concerning their own comfort with the idea. The line which Thorp is hovering behind is a blurry one with several implications, both positive and negative, for the future direction of the University concerning gender issues. Whether or not he chooses to cross this line will be known in the next few days.

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer Center Director Terri Phoenix did not respond to a phone call requesting a comment.

The North Carolina Geological Survey estimated there is about 40 years worth of natural gas supply trapped less than a mile below Lee, Moore, Chatham, Durham and Wake counties.

But the process to remove natural gas from shale rock using water, sand and a cocktail of chemicals, called “fracking,” is illegal in North Carolina — for now.

On Tuesday, January 31 at 5 p.m. The UNC Institute for the Environment with host the lecture To Frac or Not to Frac: Risks & Rewards of Natural Gas Production From Shale featuring Larry Murdock of Clemson University’s Department of Environmental Engineering & Earth Sciences.

The lecture is free and open to the public and will be held in the Tate Turner Kuralt Auditorium.

The lecture comes in anticipation of a March report by state officials on whether the North Carolina lands are to be drilled into to extract natural gas reserves.

To read more about the complex process of “fracking” follow these links:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sq0LFhw-klM[/youtube]

Whether you’re a UNC student faced with a boring weekend of work in Davis or a Chapel Hill resident expecting a low key weekend around Franklin street, there are many events approaching that are sure to liven up the next three days of your life. Chapel Hill has never ceased to impress me with its vivid culture, variety of people and constant activities of all kinds, and what better way to discover these aspects of Tar heel town for yourself than to venture out this weekend and check out these great events.

If you have a sweet tooth and like to win prizes, I would suggest checking out Franklin Street’s newest froyo addition Sweet Frog for the grand opening celebration which continues through Saturday. Sweet Frog is delicious, a fresh alternative to your average Ben & Jerry’s and YoPo, and prizes will be given away every hour from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.

Another option is the Chocolate Door party on Saturday to celebrate the Chocolate Door’s three year anniversary. There will be free cupcakes, a raffle and a discount bowl offering up to a 50 percent discount. This is a great place to grab your Valentine a gift. If you want to beat the rush, pre-order.

Families should be sure not to miss a chance to explore the night sky this winter on Saturday at the Morehead Planetarium. The program is based on the same theme as Starry Nights, and it is designed for children ages 7-12 and families. Cost is $20 per family, or if you are a Morehead member, $15 per family and $2 per additional family member after the first four. Make sure to register.

End your weekend with relaxation on Sunday and attend the free meditation class at the Franklin Street Yoga Center at 12 p.m. The Kosala Center in Carrboro is sending a meditation teacher to help you learn to engage in guided meditation which can reduce stress, tension and distraction. The Sunday class will be the first of a series of four, followed by a question session. No experience is necessary.

After you’ve rid yourself of stress and distractions in meditation, check out the Bridal Showcase at the Carolina Inn. The showcase will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. and will include cake sampling, sample bouquets, music and beautiful wedding gowns from top designers and the most experienced wedding vendors of the area.

Sunday night, the Heels play the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets at 6 p.m. in the Dean Dome. Grab tickets if you can, or tune into ESPN to support the Carolina basketball team. After Thursday’s victory over N.C. State, the boys should be fired up and ready to pull out another exciting win.

For even more events, check out Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership.

Zalmay Khalilzad

Zalmay Khalilzad

Former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and former ambassador to Afghanistan and Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad will speak at Kenan-Flagler Business School’s 2012 Weatherspoon lecture. The lecture will take place Monday, Jan. 30, at 5:30 p.m. in Koury Auditorium, the business school’s main lecture hall.

Khalilzad, born in Afghanistan, gained American citizenship in 1984 and became involved in political administration shortly after. It’s likely that Khalilzad will provide an interesting perspective concerning American relations with Afghanistan and Iraq, specifically concerning the war on Iraq. He served in the government under the administrations of Reagan, Clinton, and Bush.

The Kenan-Flagler Weatherspoon lecture is a unique, annual event which serves to shed light on current global issues that relate to business leadership and management. The lecture has been delivered by visiting scholars and leaders from fields ranging from government and politics to education. In 2011, author David Brooks delivered the lecture, leaving attendees with a new perspective on how to succeed and human nature. [youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4cb1t-M5Xs[/youtube]

There is no admission fee to attend the lecture, but registration is required. Parking is available in the Business School Deck.

“The Shallows” by Nicholas Carr,  a finalist for the 2011 Pulitzer Price for nonfiction, will be the incoming Class of 2013′s summer reading, the Carolina Summer Reading Program  announced on Friday.

In 2008 Carr wrote an article for The Atlantic  about what the Internet is doing to our brains.  Carr made the world stop and think about the impact the Internet has had on our generation when he posed the question,  “Is Google making us stupid?”.

The article gained public attention, and Carr began to research the topic more fully and explore the cultural and intellectual consequences of the Internet. The book was a finalist for the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction.

The Summer Reading Program’s committee of nine students, faculty and staff chose this book because of its relevance to this generation’s connection with new media. Professor Kevin Stewart, chair of the committee, said, “The book causes the reader to think critically about how and why technology, particularly the Internet, has shaped our lives and the way the we think.”

Incoming students who will enroll in the fall are encouraged to read “The Shallows” and participate in group discussions on the first week of class.

Listen to NPR’s review and excerpt of “The Shallows”  here.

Buy the book at UNC Bullshead Book store here.

Buy the book on Amazon here.

Campus Style is a regular Reese News feature that profiles fashionable students on campus. Have a suggestion for someone we should photograph? Email newsroom@reesenews.org or leave a comment below.

Tim Dement, a junior from Asheville, and his girlfriend Emily Tinsley, a junior from Summerfield, met with me at their favorite spots on campus one beautiful fall afternoon. Tim is a comparative literature major and Emily is an English major. These two are often seen on campus together with a book in hand.

Tim:

What are your favorite places to shop?

I don’t have a go-to place. I shop anywhere there are sales.

Who/what are your style inspirations?

Luke Wander.

What was/is your favorite article of clothing?

The hoodie I wore for four years.

What most excites you about this semester?

I am excited to travel north and spend time with extended family (Emily gets to go with him this year).

What is the one activity you would be willing to ruin these clothes for?

An impromptu slip and slide in the front yard.

What do you want to be when you grow up?

Be in a career that uses creativity.

What are five things you cannot live without?

(This is Emily’s list of five things Tim cannot live without)

The Legend of Zelda, shoes with holes, Pokemon trading cards, sleep and ice cream.

If someone sees you on campus but doesn’t know your name, you would like to be referred to as the boy who ___________________ .

you shouldn’t talk to.

Emily:

What are your favorite places to shop?

Anthropologie and Goodwill.

Who/what are your style inspirations?

The 1950s.

What was/is your favorite article of clothing?

A pair of transformer brown leather boots from Aldo. They’re well-loved and have lots of holes in them now.

What most excites you about this semester?

Going to Sevilla to study abroad – next semester!

What is the one activity you would be willing to ruin these clothes for?

A mud fight in thick, red clay.

What do you want to be when you grow up?

A physicians assistant and a mom (Tim thinks this is awkward).

What are five things you cannot live without?

(This is Tim’s list of five things Emily cannot live without)

A Steinbeck book, scuba gear, Eunice (her 1999 Honda Accord), old lady clothes and sleep.

If someone sees you on campus but doesn’t know your name, you would like to be referred to as the girl who ___________________ .

has a boyfriend you should totally talk to!