October Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

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. The Daily Tar Heel coverage See supplement. 4 The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Office of the Student Body President Box 47, Carolina Union Chapel Hill, NC 27599-5210 (919) 962-5201/(fax) 962-4723 Fellow Tar Heels, The first six months in office have proven to be an exciting challenge for the officers of the Executive Branch. Immediately following our inauguration on April 5, we assembled a team of intelligent and proactive students who entered our cabinet with varying levels of experience in Student Government. These students were drawn from a wide variety of backgrounds and have been a part of virtually every aspect of student life at UNC-Chapel Hill. After assembling our team and filling our first round of appointments to external committees on campus, we parted ways for the summer. Officers, committee chairs, and executive assistants were able to take part in summer enrichment opportunities ranging from work with the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland to internships in Washington, D.C. with Senator Ted Kennedy’s office. This disbursement early on led to a need to re-energize and re-focus upon everyone’s return in late August. With the Student Body President and Vice-President remaining in Chapel Hill throughout the summer, much planning and preparation took place during this time period in order to ensure a swift start following our cabinet’s reunion. At the release of this report, we are effectively reporting on a little over a month’s work as a full team. Recognizing this constraint, it is clear to anyone paying attention that the strides that have been made to date reflect the hard work and determination of a committed group that comprises the Executive Branch of Student Government. We look forward to the continued growth and further development of our team as we continue our service to this great university. Thank you for taking the time to review our accomplishments thus far and stay tuned as the excitement continues to build throughout the second half of our term. Seth Dearmin Adrian Johnston Daneen Furr Student Body President Vice President Treasurer Neepa Mehta Mark Laabs Erika Barrera Secretary Chief of Staff Senior Advisor 5 REPORT OF THE STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT SETH DEARMIN A New Student Government The single, most important goal of this year’s Student Government is to create a more accessible and friendly governing body. By inviting more inclusion in Student Government, the student body will experience a more transparent Executive Branch and one that is able to provide a greater impact over the next six months. The President is continuing to focus resources in this direction and he is learning and developing more effective ways to reach students all the while. In order to meet such an end, Dearmin has sought student feedback, worked to include all students interested in an Executive Branch committee, and experienced record numbers of applications for the cabinet chair, committee member, and external appointment positions. The overall interest in Student Government is perhaps most clear when viewed in context of the over 200 students who attended the interest session in early September and the constant flow of students that are signing up for committees and eagerly seeking to help develop the platform projects. Student Organization Relations With the assistance of the Student Body President’s Executive Assistants, Committee Chairs, and fellow Officers, Student Government has worked to reach student organizations by attending their meetings and contacting their leadership. More effectively, Student Government has worked to invite members and leaders of other student organizations to be a part of the government. This effort has taken place in an attempt to re-focus Student Government as an umbrella organization that can provide resources for each of the over 600 student organizations on campus. The presence of student leaders from some of the most well known organizations like Dance Marathon and BSM speaks to this end. One of Student Government’s greatest contributions to student organizations, Mambo, is being introduced as a new online web and calendar technology. Reference the ‘Report of the Chief of Staff’ and the ‘Technology and Web Services’ portions of this report to learn more. Transparency with Student Body More effective communication has proven to be a struggle for student organizations across the board; this has been the same case for Student Government. In realizing there is no single full-proof method for reaching the entire student body, Dearmin has worked to expand the methods of communication. The use of the Student Government website and the integration of the new Mambo technology have shown to be effective methods for promoting Dearmin’s calendar of events. Columns in The Daily Tar 6 Heel and Chapel Hill News and Observer, letters to the editor, office hours in the Pit every Wednesday at 1:00 p.m., forums on issues such as tuition, informational emails, and the Student Body President Radio Show have all shown various levels of success. In addition, Dearmin has worked to post materials, including documents from the Tuition Advisory Task Force and Chancellor’s Committee on Student Fees, on the website in order to allow students access to the same information he uses in making his decisions. Dearmin is currently in the process of developing a monthly newsletter that will be distributed to the student body in order to keep them up to date on happenings within Student Government. In addition to his office hours, Dearmin has developed a bi-monthly ‘Outdoor Office Hours’ that will float between Rams Head and the Quad. These events are meant to be fun and to disseminate information to students. Tuition Advisory Task Force The greatest responsibility and expectation of any Student Body President is to focus his time and energy toward the tuition process. Efforts relating to tuition began in late Spring 2005 as lobbying efforts commenced surrounding the budget cut the University was facing. See the ‘Report of the Student Body Vice President’ for more details. After working with the Provost to set up this year’s Tuition Advisory Task Force, a series of meetings were undertaken in order to provide background information surrounding tuition as it relates to Chapel Hill. Documents were distributed to the committee outlining the unversity’s overall funding picture, a history of tuition increases, priorities and needs, and a plethora of studies, philosophies, and comparisons with our peer institutions. The Advisory Task Force focused much of its time on graduate student issues, working to better understand the state of graduate students on campus. Information for graduate students was scarce in comparison to that centered on undergraduates. After the Task Force fleshed out questions and concerns, it focused on the needs of our campus. The Task Force determined there is a serious need to increase funding for Teaching Assistant stipends as well as faculty salaries. In transitioning to looking at numbers for a potential increase, the Task Force entertained a great deal of discussion around the idea of tuition predictability. Please reference the ‘Report of the Student Body Vice President’ for more detail on efforts surrounding this core principle. The Tuition Advisory Task Force Report, to be released in early November, will outline the workings and recommendations of this committee in much fuller detail. Senate Bill 98: Orange County Super Precinct Senate Bill 98, a pilot initiative allowing residents of Chapel Hill and Carrboro to vote outside of their assigned precinct on Election Day, consumed much of the Administration’s summer workload. Adrian Johnston and Seth Dearmin made numerous trips to the state capitol and worked with Senator Ellie Kinnaird and Representatives Verla Insko and Joe Hackney in order to see this bill through to fruition. After Senate Bill 98 is implemented, students and residents of Chapel Hill and Carrboro will be afforded the opportunity of voting on campus on Election Day- as opposed to traveling off-campus as the current system mandates.
Recommended publications
  • First Generation Tar Heels Feel Isolated
    FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2020 127 YEARS OF SERVING UNC STUDENTS AND THE UNIVERSITY VOLUME 128, ISSUE 36 UNC revises spring calendar Chancellor By Maddie Ellis Classes will end on May 5, with The new calendar does not include a wellness days are intended as full Guskiewicz University Desk Editor exams between May 7 and May 14. Spring Break to limit travel and the breaks from the semester. Registration for the spring semester potential spread of COVID-19. This decision comes after students UNC’s spring semester will will now open on Nov. 30, but the Instead, the spring calendar will have petitioned for various breaks have a delayed start on Jan. 19, deadline to register has not been set. include five built-in “wellness days.” throughout the semester, and one talks spring Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz The original spring calendar set the These days will be incorporated into was ultimately granted for Friday. and Provost Bob Blouin said in a last of day of class for April 23, with the spring calendar as either individual campus wide email Thursday. exams between April 26 and May 4. days off or in “combined clusters.” The [email protected] planning By Maddie Ellis University Desk Editor Just a few First generation Tar Heels feel isolated hours before UNC announced its revised spring semester schedule, University desk Editor Maddie Ellis talked with Chancellor Kevin Kevin Guskiewicz Guskiewicz, who will be installed as UNC’s 12th chancellor on Sunday. Guskiewicz discussed the spring planning process, semester breaks and what decisions still have to be made. This interview has been edited for content and clarity.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • Too Late for Change in the Decision Ross Said Student Input $ and a Vote in $ Needed to Come Earlier in Friday’S Tuition $ Increase Decision
    Serving UNC students and the University community since 1893 Volume 119, Issue 144 dailytarheel.com Thursday, February 2, 2012 Too LaTe for change in the decision Ross said student input $ and a vote in $ needed to come earlier in Friday’s tuition $ increase decision. $$ the tuition process. But Ross said TUITION students have had By Jessica Seaman an opportunity to Staff Writer provide their insight on tuition. “There will be some people on Student protesters, who have both sides that aren’t happy,” Ross opposed tuition increases since said. October, will likely have little He encouraged students to par- influence when the UNC-system ticipate in the tuition discussion Board of Governors votes on by communicating at the campus tuition proposals on Feb. 10. level and by sending emails to At a meeting Wednesday night, members of the board. students pushed UNC-system “I don’t know if it will have a President Thomas Ross for more difference if they vote,” he said. representation at board meetings, “But the board is trying hard to so they can be more active in the make sure students have a voice.” tuition debate. He said students also have a But Ross said it would be diffi- representative on the board to cult to know if students will influ- whom they can relay their con- ence the board’s decision when cerns. they vote in eight days. Atul Bhula, the president Wednesday’s meeting was orga- of the Association of Student nized after student groups emailed Governments, is the sole non-vot- Ross asking to work with him on ing student member of the board.
    [Show full text]
  • Freshmen Take on Green Tech Lessons from a Little Birdie
    This Weekend FRIDAY Inside 30% Chance of Rain 98/67 New Orange County SATURDAY 20% Chance of Rain airport under 90/70 SUNDAY consideration 20% Chance of Rain 92/70 Page 3 carrborocitizen.com JULY 10, 2008 u CARRBORO’S COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER u OV luME II NO. XvII FREE District reinstates some axed CHS advanced courses by Susan Dickson The school district allocates However, school officials have Pedersen said not all AP and Staff Writer teachers to schools based on en- now decided to offer several of the honors courses are offered at Cha- rollment, and because Carrboro courses that had higher enroll- pel Hill and East Chapel Hill high Several weeks after school offi- High School has fewer students ment, including AP chemistry, AP schools either. cials announced that about a dozen than the other high schools it has biology and AP Latin, according “It happens at other high schools,” advanced placement and honors fewer teachers as well. Few stu- to Superintendent Neil Pedersen. he said. However: “It’s a little bit more courses would not be offered at Car- dents signed up for certain AP and Pedersen said officials are also challenging at a smaller school.” rboro High School next year, Chapel honors courses at Carrboro High, considering offering several other School officials told students Hill-Carrboro City Schools officials so school officials decided not to courses, including AP French. they could take the courses at one of say they will make changes to offer offer them. “I really do think that the addi- the district’s other two high schools, several of those courses.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • WXYC Brings You Gems from the Treasure of UNC's Southern
    IN/AUDIBLE LETTER FROM THE EDITOR a publication of N/AUDIBLE is the irregular newsletter of WXYC – your favorite Chapel Hill radio WXYC 89.3 FM station that broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week out of the Student Union on the UNC campus. The last time this publication came out in 2002, WXYC was CB 5210 Carolina Union Icelebrating its 25th year of existence as the student-run radio station at the University of Chapel Hill, NC 27599 North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This year we celebrate another big event – our tenth anni- USA versary as the first radio station in the world to simulcast our signal over the Internet. As we celebrate this exciting event and reflect on the ingenuity of a few gifted people who took (919) 962-7768 local radio to the next level and beyond Chapel Hill, we can wonder request line: (919) 962-8989 if the future of radio is no longer in the stereo of our living rooms but on the World Wide Web. http://www.wxyc.org As always, new technology brings change that is both exciting [email protected] and scary. Local radio stations and the dedicated DJs and staffs who operate them are an integral part of vibrant local music communities, like the one we are lucky to have here in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Staff NICOLE BOGAS area. With the proliferation of music services like XM satellite radio Editor-in-Chief and Live-365 Internet radio servers, it sometimes seems like the future EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Nicole Bogas of local radio is doomed.
    [Show full text]
  • UNC Alumni Association
    University, which should be committed to historical truth and opposed to modern-day white supremacy. Fourteen of the amici are UNC Black Pioneers, an association of black students who had the courage to break the color barrier at UNC-Chapel Hill between 1952 and 1972. These amici are listed below in alphabetical order, with their UNC class year in parentheses, followed by brief biographical information. Karl Adkins (B.A. 1968) is a retired judge. After receiving his law degree at the University of Michigan, he practiced law in Charlotte with Julius Chambers, and then served as Superior Court Judge in Mecklenburg County, and Chair of the North Carolina Board of Law Examiners. Kelly Alexander, Jr. (B.A. 1970, M.P.A. 1973) is a funeral director in Charlotte and a member of the North Carolina House of Representatives. Sondra Davis Burford (B.A. 1969), a retired general accountant, lives in Sanford. Philip L. Clay (B.A. 1968), is a professor of housing policy and city planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He received a Ph.D. in City Planning from MIT in 1975 and served as MIT’s Chancellor from 2001 to 2011. James E. Cofield, Jr. (B.S. 1967) is a retired real estate developer, now living in Duck. He received an M.B.A. from Stanford in 1970. He was president of New England’s leading mortgage firm and is a former president of the Massachusetts Mortgage Bankers Association, a former first vice president and member of the Executive Committee of the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce, and a former chairman of the Audit Committee of WGBH Educational Foundation.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • 50 Reasons to Love OC Ad News of OC 07.2014 Hires.Pdf 1 7/21/14 2:56 PM
    50 Reasons to Love OC ad_News of OC_07.2014_hires.pdf 1 7/21/14 2:56 PM The League of American Bicyclists 32. name both Carrboro and REASONS Chapel Hill as Bicycle Friendly Communities. Designated bike trails lead 32 from town to country, TO LOVE countywide. ORANGE 33. Carrboro’s 300 E. Main for boutique shops, COUNTY restaurants, and lodging. 34. Carrboro’s Weaver Street Market is the NORTH largest community-owned co-op grocery store in the Southeast, oering local, CAROLINA organic, natural, and humanely raised foods. 35. Carr Mill Mall was rehabilitated under THERE’S SO MUCH TO DO IN THE the Tax Reform Act of 1976. Much of the original architecture remains in its CHAPEL HILL/ORANGE COUNTY AREA. restaurants and upscale boutique shops. WHERE WILL YOU START? 36. Open Eye Café, a coee shop aectionately known as “Carrboro’s living room” serving beans from Colombia, Amazing restaurants, 1 15. If you’re hungry, visit Sutton’s Drug 1 . like Crook’s Corner, Store on Franklin Street—a living museum in Nicaragua, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Honduras, Lantern, Panciuto, Acme, all the best ways. If your photo makes it on Guatemala, and Peru. Mama Dips, Crossroads the wall, your life’s work is done. Chapel Hill, Il Palio & more. The ArtsCenter 37 16. Come, be inspired, and learn through 37 . in Carrboro 2. For Lexington and play at Kidzu Children’s Museum. oers classes in visual, Eastern-style barbecue, literary and performing there’s Allen and Sons, 17. West Franklin arts, music concerts, Hillsborough BBQ Company, Street’s Festifall features theater productions, Pantana Bob’s Restaurant and Bar, and visual and performing children's programs, The Pig.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Tar Heel Football Game Notes
    2020 TAR HEEL FOOTBALL GAME NOTES THIS WEEK’S MATCHUP GAME FOUR NORTH CAROLINA NO. 5/6 NORTH CAROLINA TAR HEELS (3-0, 3-0 ACC) VS. Record: 3-0 (3-0) Conference: ACC FLORIDA STATE SEMINOLES (1-3, 0-3 ACC) Head Coach: Mack Brown (Florida State ‘74) Twitt er: @CoachMackBrown Brown’s Overall Record: 254-128-1, 32nd year DOAK S. CAMPBELL STADIUM (79,560) • TALLAHASSEE, FLA. Brown’s Record at UNC: 79-52-1, 12th year SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2020 • 7:30 P.M. ET (ABC) FLORIDA STATE Record: 1-3 (0-3) Series vs. FSU: FSU leads 15-3-1 Conference: ACC Head Coach: Mike Norvell (Central Arkansas, '05 '07) Series Streak: NC won two straight Overall Record: 39-18, fi ft h year Last Meeti ng: 2016 (W, 37-35 at FSU) Record at FSU: 1-3, fi rst year Last UNC Win: 2016 (W, 37-35) BROADCAST INFORMATION Kickoff : 7:30 p.m. ET GAME INFO TAR HEELS AND SEMINOLES CAROLINA IN THE POLLS ABC: Sean McDonough, play-by-play; Todd • Carolina and Florida State meet for the 20th occa- • Carolina is ranked No. 5 in the Associated Press Blackledge, analyst; Todd McShay, fi eld analyst; sion on the football fi eld this Saturday for a prime- poll this week. It's the highest ranking for the pro- Molly McGrath, sideline ti me 7:30 p.m. kickoff on ABC. gram since November 1997. The Tar Heels sit at No. Tar Heel Sports Network: Jones Angell, play-by-play; • Saturday marks the third successive meeti ng be- 6 in the Amway Coaches Poll.
    [Show full text]
  • The Magazine for TV and FM Dxers
    VHF-UHF DIGEST The Official Publication of the Worldwide TV-FM DX Association OCTOBER 2009 The Magazine for TV and FM DXers Courtesy of Fred Vobbe Convention 2009 is History Convention 2010 Returns to Rochester NY August 27, 28 and 29 Visit Us At www.wtfda.org THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION Serving the UHF-VHF Enthusiast THE VHF-UHF DIGEST IS THE OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WORLDWIDE TV-FM DX ASSOCIATION DEDICATED TO THE OBSERVATION AND STUDY OF THE PROPAGATION OF LONG DISTANCE TELEVISION AND FM BROADCASTING SIGNALS AT VHF AND UHF. WTFDA IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF DIRECTORS: DOUG SMITH, GREG CONIGLIO, BRUCE HALL, KEITH McGINNIS AND MIKE BUGAJ. Editor and publisher: Mike Bugaj Treasurer: Keith McGinnis wtfda.org Webmaster: Tim McVey wtfda.info Site Administrator: Chris Cervantez Editorial Staff: Jeff Kruszka, Keith McGinnis, Fred Nordquist, Nick Langan, Doug Smith, Peter Baskind, Bill Hale and John Zondlo, Our website: www.wtfda.org; Our forums: www.wtfda.info OCTOBER 2009 _______________________________________________________________________________________ CONTENTS Page Two 2 Mailbox 3 Finally! For those of you online with an email TV News…Doug Smith 5 address, we now offer a quick, convenient and FM News…Bill Hale 15 secure way to join or renew your membership Photo News…Jeff Kruszka 27 in the WTFDA from our page at: Eastern TV DX…Nick Langan 29 http://www.wtfda.org/join.html Western TV DX…Nick Langan 31 You can now renew either paper VUD 6 Meters…Peter Baskind 35 membership or your online eVUD membership To Count or Not to Count? 38 at one convenient stop.
    [Show full text]