Mystery Museum
Carol Belk Theatre 300 Theatre Lane, Asheville, NC, United StatesFree Family-Friendly Halloween event with classic ghosts & monsters inspired by Scooby-Doo! UNCA Carol Belk Theatre.
Free Family-Friendly Halloween event with classic ghosts & monsters inspired by Scooby-Doo! UNCA Carol Belk Theatre.
Explore UNC Asheville at Open House! Tour campus, meet students and faculty, and learn about academics, admissions, and life at North Carolina’s public liberal arts university.
Free Family-Friendly Halloween event with classic ghosts & monsters inspired by Scooby-Doo! UNCA Carol Belk Theatre.
Free Family-Friendly Halloween event with classic ghosts & monsters inspired by Scooby-Doo! UNCA Carol Belk Theatre.
Join us for a night of laughter and silliness as TheatreUNCA's comedy improv troupe, led by Marlene Thompson, entertains you with a series of short-form and long-form improv games informed by audience suggestions.
Join us for a night of laughter and silliness as TheatreUNCA's comedy improv troupe, led by Marlene Thompson, entertains you with a series of short-form and long-form improv games informed by audience suggestions.
Are you struggling to get your team to consistently take ownership, hit goals, and follow through? It all comes down to one critical factor: accountability. And as a leader or […]
UNC Asheville hosts High School Media Day on Oct. 23, 2025, for WNC newspaper and yearbook students to learn from media experts through hands-on workshops led by professionals and faculty.
Diverse ways of thinking can drive extraordinary innovation. In this special lecture, Keivan Stassun, Ph.D., Founding Director of the Frist Center for Autism and Innovation at Vanderbilt University’s School of Engineering, explores how embracing neurodiversity—recognizing and valuing neurological differences such as autism—can accelerate scientific discovery.
“Southern Indigenous Waters” is the first event in the “Rising Waters: Writing Place and Environment” Thomas Howerton lecture series, a series that puts humanities scholars in conversation with natural sciences scholars about issues affecting us all. On October 30, 2025, Duke hydrologist Ryan Emanuel and East Carolina University literary scholar Kirstin Squint will discuss the centrality of place and water for southern Indigenous people.