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2001 North Carolina Women's Soccer • Page 78
History tistry, medicine, pharmacy and law. Five health schools -- Students Carolina was the nation’s first state university to open its which, with UNC Hospitals, comprise one of the nation’s Recent freshman classes at Carolina have set new standards doors and the only public university to award degrees in the most complete academic medical centers -- are integrated of excellence as measured by the rigorous coursework stu- 18th century. with liberal arts, basic sciences and high-tech academic dents have taken, as well as their grades and SAT scores. Authorized by the N.C. Constitution in 1776, the universi- programs. The incoming freshmen of 2001 are continuing that trend. ty was chartered by the N.C. General Assembly Dec. 11, In fall 2000, Carolina enrolled 24,872 students from all 100 Besides setting a new record for high school preparation, 1789, the same year George Washington first was inaugu- North Carolina counties, the other 49 states and nearly 100 the newest class will become the very best group of first- rated as president. other countries. Eighty-two percent of Carolina’s 15,608 year students Carolina has ever admitted. The cornerstone was laid for Old East, the nation’s first undergraduates were from North Carolina. Sixty-three per- state university building, Oct. 12, 1793. Hinton James, the cent of Carolina’s students were undergraduates, 28 percent UNC students have a long tradition of outstanding achieve- first student, arrived from Wilmington, N.C., Feb. 12, 1795. ment. Thirty-five have been awarded the Rhodes Location Scholarship since it was created in 1902, including the first The 729-acre central campus includes the two oldest state U.S. -
Mccorkle PLACE
CHAPTER EIGHT: McCORKLE PLACE McCorkle Place is said to be the most densely memorialized piece of real estate in North Carolina.501 On the University’s symbolic front lawn, there are almost a dozen monuments and memorials fundamental to the University’s lore and traditions, but only two monuments within the space have determined the role of McCorkle Place as a space for racial justice movements.502 The Unsung Founders Memorial and the University’s Confederate Monument were erected on the oldest quad of the campus almost a century apart for dramatically different memorial purposes. The former honors the enslaved and freed Black persons who “helped build” the University, while the latter commemorated, until its toppling in August 2018, “the sons of the University who entered the war of 1861-65.”503 Separated by only a few dozen yards, the physical distinctions between the two monuments were, before the Confederate Monument was toppled, quite striking. The Unsung 501 Johnathan Michels, “Who Gets to be Remembered In Chapel Hill?,” Scalawag Magazine, 8 October 2016, <https://www.scalawagmagazine.org/2016/10/whats-in-a-name/>. 502 Timothy J. McMillan, “Remembering Forgetting: A Monument to Erasure at the University of North Carolina,” in Silence, Screen and Spectacle: Rethinking Social Memory in the Age of Information, ed. Lindsay A. Freeman, Benjamin Nienass, and Rachel Daniell, 137-162, (Berghahn Book: New York, New York, 2004): 139-142; Other memorials and sites of memory within McCorkle Place include the Old Well, the Davie Poplar, Old East, the Caldwell Monument, a Memorial to Founding Trustees, and the Speaker Ban Monument. -
Recommendation for the Disposition and Preservation of the Confederate Monument
Recommendation for the Disposition and Preservation of the Confederate Monument A Four-Part Plan presented by UNC-Chapel Hill to the UNC Board of Governors Appendices TABLE OF CONTENTS A-1: Executive Summary of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Public Safety Panel Report. ..................... 3 A-2: Summary of Safety and Security Considerations ......... 6 B: Letter from the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources ................................... 10 C: Campus Map ................................................................. 11 D: Legal Considerations ..................................................... 12 E: Requested Cost Estimates .............................................15 F: Work of the Chancellor’s Task Force on UNC Chapel Hill History ...........................................28 G-1: Site Evaluation ........................................................... 31 G-2: Summary of Possible Sites for Disposition of Confederate Monument ......................... 38 H: Summary of Community and Public Input ..................... 52 Appendix A-1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL PUBLIC SAFETY PANEL REPORT This is an executive summary of the Report of a five-person expert Panel (the “Panel”) convened by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (“UNC-CH”) to assess the security and public safety issues associated with the “Silent Sam” civil war monument (the “Monument”). This Panel consisted of five security professionals led by Chris Swecker, Attorney at Law and former FBI Assistant Director. Other members include Jane Perlov, who has served as NYPD Chief of Detectives, Queens, Secretary of Public Safety, Commonwealth of Mass. and Chief of Police in Raleigh N.C.; Louis Quijas, former FBI Assistant Director and Chief of Police, High Point, N.C.; Johnny Jennings, Deputy Chief of Police, Charlotte Mecklenburg Police Department (CMPD); and Edward Reeder, Major General US Army Special Forces Command (Ret.) and CEO of Five Star Global Security. -
The University of North Carolina GENERAL ADMINISTRATION POST OFFICE BOX 2688, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2688
The University of North Carolina GENERAL ADMINISTRATION POST OFFICE BOX 2688, CHAPEL HILL, NC 27515-2688 ROBERT O. NELSON, Vice President for Finance Telephone: (919) 962-4598 • Fax: (919) 962-0008 • E-mail: [email protected] Appalachian State November 26, 2007 University East Carolina Members of the Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations University Senator Marc Basnight, Co-Chair Elizabeth City President Pro Tempore State University Representative Joe Hackney, Co-Chair Fayetteville State Speaker of the House of Representatives University North Carolina Fiscal Research Division Agricultural and Lynn Muchmore, Director Technical State Richard Bostic University Jim Klingler North Carolina Central University Subject: Allocations for Repairs and Renovations North Carolina School of In the 2007 Session (S.L. 2007-323), the General Assembly appropriated $145,000,000 the Arts for the Statewide Reserve for Repairs and Renovations Account, allocated 46% (or North Carolina $66,700,000) of this Reserve to the Board of Governors of The University of North State University Carolina and directed that the subsequent allocations by the Board of Governors be at Raleigh reviewed by the Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations and the University of Fiscal Research Division of the Legislative Services Office. The purpose of this report is North Carolina at Asheville to facilitate that review. University of At its August 15, 2007 meeting, the Board of Governors allocated its funding in North Carolina at Chapel Hill -
UNC Parking Zone Map UNC Transportation & Parking
UNC Parking Zone Map UNC Transportation & Parking Q R S T U V W X Y Z A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P 26 **UNC LEASES SPACE CAROLINA . ROAD IN THESE BUILDINGS 21 21 MT HOMESTEAD NORTH LAND MGMT. PINEY OPERATIONS CTR. VD. (NC OFFICE HORACE WILLIAMS AIRPORT VD., HILL , JR. BL “RR” 41 1 1 Resident 41 CommuterRR Lot R12 UNC VD AND CHAPEL (XEROX) TE 40 MLK BL A PRINTING RIVE EXTENSION MLK BL ESTES D SERVICES TIN LUTHER KING TERST PLANT N O I AHEC T EHS HOMESTEAD ROAD MAR HANGER VD. 86) O I-40 STORAGE T R11 TH (SEE OTHER MAPS) 22 22 O 720, 725, & 730 MLK, JR. BL R1 T PHYSICAL NOR NORTH STREET ENVRNMEN HL .3 MILES TO TH. & SAFETY ESTES DRIVE 42 COMMUTER LOT T. 42 ER NC86 ELECTRICAL DISTRICENTBUTION OPERATIONS SURPLUS WA REHOUSE N1 ST GENERAL OREROOM 2 23 23 2 R1 CHAPEL HILL ES MLK JR. BOULE NORTH R1 ARKING ARD ILITI R1 / R2OVERFLOW ZONEP V VICES C R A F SHOPS GY SE EY 43 RN 43 ENERBUILDING CONSTRUCTION PRITCHARD STREET R1 NC 86 CHURCH STREET . HO , JR. BOULE ES F R1 / V STREET SER L BUILDING VICE ARD A ST ATIO GI EET N TR AIRPOR R2 S T DRIVE IN LUTHER KING BRANCH T L MAR HIL TH WEST ROSEMARY STREET EAST ROSEMARY STREET L R ACILITIES DRIVE F A NO 24 STUDRT 24 TH COLUMBI IO CHAPE R ADMINIST OFF R NO BUILDINGICE ATIVE R10 1700 N9 MLK 208 WEST 3 N10 FRANKLIN ST. -
North Carolina's Federalists in an Evolving Public
NORTH CAROLINA’S FEDERALISTS IN AN EVOLVING PUBLIC SPHERE, 1790-1810 Scott King-Owen A Thesis Submitted to the University of North Carolina at Wilmington in Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History University of North Carolina at Wilmington 2006 Approved by Advisory Committee _______Dr. Chris Fonvielle_______ _________Dr. Paul Townend__________ __________Dr. Alan Watson________ Chair Accepted by ______________________________ Dean, Graduate School TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT.......................................................................................................................iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ................................................................................................. iv DEDICATION.................................................................................................................... v LIST OF TABLES............................................................................................................. vi LIST OF FIGURES .......................................................................................................... vii INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 1 CHAPTER 1 – NORTH CAROLINA AND ITS FEDERALIST LEADERSHIP........... 16 CHAPTER 2 – PRESS AND PUBLIC IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY................. 44 CHAPTER 3 – WILLIAM BOYLAN, FEDERALIST PARTISAN ............................... 68 CHAPTER 4 – THE WAR OF THE EDITORS ............................................................. -
October Report
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF STUDENT GOVERNMENT DEARMIN ADMINISTRATION OCTOBER REPORT Prepared by the Office of the Student Body President Tuesday, October 25, 2005 Campus Box 5210, Box 47, Carolina Student Union Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599 This publication was paid for, at least in part, by Student Activity Fees THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF STUDENT GOVERNMENT DEARMIN ADMINISTRATION OCTOBER 2005 REPORT Prepared by the Office of the Student Body President Tuesday, October 25, 2005 Campus Box 5210, Box 47, Carolina Student Union Chapel Hill, N.C. 27599 This publication was paid for, at least in part, by Student Activity Fees 2 TABLE OF C ONTENTS I. Reports from the Executive Officers Student Body President Seth Dearmin 6 Student Body Vice President Adrian Johnston 10 Student Body Treasurer Daneen Furr 17 Student Body Secretary Neepa Mehta 20 Chief of Staff Mark Laabs 23 Senior Advisor Erika Barrera 26 Graduate Professional Student Federation President Mike Brady 27 II. Reports of the Executive and Special Assistants to the… Student Body President 30 Student Body Vice President 35 Student Body Treasurer 37 Student Body Secretary 38 Chief of Staff 39 III. Reports from Executive Committees Academic Affairs 43 Arts Advocacy 50 Communications and Publicity 53 Environmental Affairs 54 Greek Affairs 57 Health Services 58 Minority Affairs 60 Public Service and Advocacy 62 Student Advocacy 64 Student Life 66 Technology and Web Services 68 Town Relations 70 University Services 71 Women’s Affairs 72 3 IV. Appendices Appendix A: Directory of the Executive Branch 74 Appendix B: Press Releases 78 Appendix C: Events and Activities 82 Appendix D: Letters and Speeches 88 Appendix E: Student Advisory Committee to the Chancellor 105 Appendix F: Legislative Advocacy 112 Appendix G: Tuition 116 Appendix H: Student Fees 125 Appendix I: Platform of the Dearmin Administration 131 V. -
Chapel Hill Historic District Andion HISTORIC
See OR1750.pdf Chapel Hill Boundary Increase and Additional Documentation (2015) for updated and complete inventory for this 1971 district. Form 10·300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STATE: (July 1969) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE North Carolina COUNTY: NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Orange INVENTORY - NOMINATION FORM FOR NPS USE ONLY ENTRY NUMBER I DATE (Type all entries - complete applicable sections) I NAME ·... · 1.1. .· ( ..i .... ...· i·············.·r .. .. ·... ·· .. ·.·.········· COMMON: ···········.········.···<······· Chapel Hill Historic District ANDion HISTORIC: [2. ~OCAT)ON .•.·,. .·· ·'·<······<··· )(.············ .. .< •. , .• \</·•< ·>> / ·'·······.. ·.··.····•··•••··.· >.· . STREET AND NUMBER: see continuation sheet for 2. CITY OR TOWN: Chanel Hill I Fourth Con<'ressional District the Hon. Nir.k flalifi;,n;, ds) STATE CODE 'COUNTY: CODE . North carolina 37 I m: /~;· CLI\SSIFICATI(lN ·•· i' / \/ . ······················)l;t.·.\+•.•.·.···:•.c:.:c.••...•..•.•.....•....•. ·.. ·.................. ·~<.···· .... ·... ·...•. CATEGORY ACCESSIBLE OWNERSHIP . STATUS (Chock One) TO THE PUBLIC z [ljJ District 0 auilding 0 Public Public Acquisition: (]) Occupied Yes: 0 Restricted 0 Site 0 Structure 0 Private 0 In Process 0 Unoccupied !XI • Unrestricted 0 Object rn Both 0 Being Considered 0 Proservotion work !XI No In progress !XI PRESENT USE (CI1eck One or lt1orc liS Appropriate) 0 Agricultural 0 Govornmenl IX! Pork 0 Tronsporlolion 0 Comments KJ Commercial 0 Industrial IX) Private Residence 0 Other (Specify) Kl Educotionol 0 Military IX) R.:digious Enterlolnmenl Museum Scientific Vl 0 0 llll Z· fA> OWNER OFl'RQPER'r{ < OWNER'S N/•ME: V• z -< 0 >-j > ------- <+ -< w STREET AND NUMaER: p" '' w· 0 Vl Cl TY OR TOWN: STATE: I CODE ~ 0 I 1-' lA? LOCAtiON of;l.;'t;o'i•:((fEscRJf'TibN •..... < 1-'·p COURTHOUSE,·-·--·· REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC: ~ n 0 Orange County Courthouse 0 c >-j z STREET AND NUMBER: . -
General Assembly of North Carolina Session 2007
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2007 SESSION LAW 2008-204 SENATE BILL 1925 AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE THE CONSTRUCTION AND THE FINANCING, WITHOUT APPROPRIATIONS FROM THE GENERAL FUND, OF CERTAIN CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PROJECTS OF THE CONSTITUENT INSTITUTIONS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA; TO REVISE UNIVERSITY GENERAL OBLIGATION INDEBTEDNESS; TO ALLOW THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA TO CREATE AN AIRPORT AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL OR THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA HEALTH CARE SYSTEM; TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE EDUCATION ASSISTANCE AUTHORITY TO SET THE INTEREST RATE FOR THREE SCHOLARSHIP LOAN PROGRAMS AT A RATE NOT TO EXCEED TEN PERCENT PER ANNUM; AND TO MODIFY THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE NORTH CAROLINA FEDERAL TAX REFORM ALLOCATION COMMITTEE. The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts: PART I. SELF-LIQUIDATING PROJECTS SECTION 1.1. The purpose of this act is: (i) to authorize the construction by certain constituent institutions of The University of North Carolina of the capital improvements projects listed in the act for the respective institutions, and (ii) to authorize the financing of these projects with funds available to the institutions from gifts, grants, receipts, liquidating indebtedness, Medicare reimbursements for education costs, or other funds, or any combination of these funds, but not including funds received for tuition or appropriated from the General Fund of the State. SECTION 1.2. The capital improvements projects, and their respective costs, authorized -
General Assembly of North Carolina Session 2007
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2007 SESSION LAW 2008-204 SENATE BILL 1925 AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE THE CONSTRUCTION AND THE FINANCING, WITHOUT APPROPRIATIONS FROM THE GENERAL FUND, OF CERTAIN CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PROJECTS OF THE CONSTITUENT INSTITUTIONS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA; TO REVISE UNIVERSITY GENERAL OBLIGATION INDEBTEDNESS; TO ALLOW THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA TO CREATE AN AIRPORT AUTHORITY TO SUPPORT THE MISSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL OR THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA HEALTH CARE SYSTEM; TO AUTHORIZE THE STATE EDUCATION ASSISTANCE AUTHORITY TO SET THE INTEREST RATE FOR THREE SCHOLARSHIP LOAN PROGRAMS AT A RATE NOT TO EXCEED TEN PERCENT PER ANNUM; AND TO MODIFY THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE NORTH CAROLINA FEDERAL TAX REFORM ALLOCATION COMMITTEE. The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts: PART I. SELF-LIQUIDATING PROJECTS SECTION 1.1. The purpose of this act is: (i) to authorize the construction by certain constituent institutions of The University of North Carolina of the capital improvements projects listed in the act for the respective institutions, and (ii) to authorize the financing of these projects with funds available to the institutions from gifts, grants, receipts, liquidating indebtedness, Medicare reimbursements for education costs, or other funds, or any combination of these funds, but not including funds received for tuition or appropriated from the General Fund of the State. SECTION 1.2. The capital improvements projects, and their respective costs, authorized -
8 the Challenge of Memorializing Slavery in North Carolina the Unsung Founders Memorial and the North Carolina Freedom Monument Project Renée Ater
8 The Challenge of Memorializing Slavery in North Carolina The Unsung Founders Memorial and the North Carolina Freedom Monument Project Renée Ater Commemoration of the Atlantic slave trade, slavery, and subsequent eman- cipation of African Americans has presented a formidable challenge for artists working in three-dimensional form in the United States. Nineteenth- century sculptors such as John Quincy Adams Ward, Edmonia Lewis, and Thomas Ball wrestled with the questions of how best to memorialize slav- ery and freedom, and how to depict the black body in bronze and mar- ble.1 In the early twentieth century, amateur art historian Freeman Henry Morris Murray, in his volume, Emancipation and The Freed in American Sculpture (1916), recognized that the location of sculpture in civic and pub- lic spaces spoke to communities about who they were and how they remem- bered the past. He wrote: The fact is, nearly all sculptural groups and a considerable number of individual statues, are based on some purpose beyond mere portrai- ture or illustration. Moreover, these commemorative and “speaking” groups generally stand in the open, at the intersections of the highways and in the most conspicuous places. We cannot be too concerned as to what they say or suggest, or what they leave unsaid.2 Murray succinctly articulated the problem and politics of representation, meaning, and remembrance of the slave past in public space. He was con- cerned, foremost, with how sculpture shaped the public’s understanding of slavery and of African Americans in the post-Civil War era. Murray feared that citizens and local governments would use monuments dedicated to the Civil War to erase slavery from public memory, and that they would only cel- ebrate the white heroes and common soldiers of this seismic event. -
GENERAL ASSEMBLY of NORTH CAROLINA Session 2007 Legislative Fiscal Note
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA Session 2007 Legislative Fiscal Note REVISED BILL NUMBER: Senate Bill 1925 (Third Edition) SHORT TITLE: UNC Nonapp. Cap. Projects/Airport Authority. SPONSOR(S): Senator Kerr FISCAL IMPACT Yes (x) No ( ) No Estimate Available ( ) FY 2008-09 FY 2009-10 FY 2010-11 FY 2011-12 FY 2012-13 REVENUES EXPENDITURES $3,845,893 $3,907,438 $3,968,983 $4,030,537 $4,092,072 POSITIONS (cumulative): 15.9 15.9 49.3 49.3 49.3 PRINCIPAL DEPARTMENT(S) & PROGRAM(S) AFFECTED: The University of North Carolina EFFECTIVE DATE: When law becomes effective. BILL SUMMARY: Part I: Self-Liquidating Projects: Section 1.1: Authorizes the construction or acquisition of the following capital improvement projects by certain constituent institutions of The University of North Carolina and authorizes their financing with funds available to the institutions from gifts, grants, receipts, self-liquidating indebtedness, or other funds or a combination of these funds, but not including funds received for tuition or appropriated from the General Fund. Section 1.2: New Projects Appalachian State University Kidd Brewer Stadium Improvements $8,300,000 East Carolina University Athletic Facilities Expansion and Improvements $30,000,000 Senate Bill 1925 (Third Edition) 1 Dining Facilities Improvements $9,700,000 Residence Halls Improvements and Expansion $28,500,000 Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium Improvements $24,000,000 North Carolina Central University Student Facilities Improvements $11,500,00 North Carolina State University Student Health Center Expansion