As more elite college players left school early, college basketball became younger and less experienced overall, and — perhaps predictably — more freshmen athletes made high-level impacts.
Fred Chappell, former North Carolina Poet Laureate and longtime professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. died on January 4 at age 87. To celebrate his contributions, I have revised a column I wrote in 2009 about his book of short stories, “Ancestors and Others: New and Selected Stories.”
In this video, Carl Nordgren makes the case that Creative Populism offers us the Most Logical and Rational and Optimistic Story about our Future of Unknowable Unknowns.
I listened to Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” on a CD that my wife burned for me years before we were married, right when we had first started dating. It’s a sad song, but one that still fills me with a certain set of emotions.
Whether you love Taylor Swift, hate Taylor Swift, love the NFL or hate the NFL, the following facts still apply, whether you or Dungy or anyone else likes them. Real-world facts and hard evidence tend to be very stubborn that way.
The show this past week kicked off a series of tips and exercises for growing your creatively entrepreneurial capacities. I started us off with the 30 Day CAP and my strong recommendation that you give it a try.
Jill McCorkle takes ordinary people, puts them in common situations, and makes extraordinary stories. She has done it again in her latest collection of short stories, “Old Crimes and Other Stories.”
I drink coffee every day, but I cannot detect traces of milk chocolate, walnut, or toasted marshmallow in the brew. I am a student, however, of the subtle notes and flavors of Art Chansky’s voice.
Ingram, who was a McDonald’s All-American in high school and helped Team USA to the FIBA U-19 World Cup gold medal in 2021, recently joined Chapelboro.com columnist David Glenn for a lengthy, 1-on-1 interview.
As neuroscientists say, ‘what fires together wires together’ — and when you regularly, steadily, call on your brain to master a new musical instrument or new language or new dance style or new athletic move, your brain slowly but surely becomes the version of itself that serves you best.