CAMPUS MAP of UNC-CHAPEL HILL E Office & K University Dist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

CAMPUS MAP of UNC-CHAPEL HILL E Office & K University Dist CAMPUS MAP of UNC-CHAPEL HILL E Office & K University Dist. Court Business PIC Office END H FRANKLIN ST. 134 1/2 East Hill Franklin St. Commercial Battle Building Vance UNIVERSITY SQUARE President's Residence Pettigrew Porthole Sundial T. Graham Memorial Hickerson . S Spencer Ackland House N L IA Hill Annex PA B E R HOOPER LN. PA L M RK Morehead T Alderman Hanes Art Planetarium T LU AT Center E O B Hill E C Brooks Hall Granville R UNC Press T n Towers a S Evergreen n e FRATERNITY CT. Arboretum H West House K G Person Alumni I E L SENLAC RD. Howell McIver A E R C Smith A L P Abernethy Old Well I Swain N New East New West M Davie U L Old East Old Old West Old A CAMERON AVE. CAMERON AVE. Gerrard Playmakers BOUNDARY ST. South Theater Carr Peabody Hall Manly Memorial Aycock Graham Grimes YMCA Phillips Annex Phillips Bynum Carolina Inn Caldwell Cogeneration Steele Facility Forest Phillips U Theatre Hamilton Stacy n Hanes Saunders A d 210 Pittsboro St. Lewis Everett d e m rg is ra s d Sitterson io u Ruffin Manning Mangum n a Carroll s te Water Tower C O Gardner Murphey U N Nash T Co R Joyner Tennis Y bb Whitehead Courts C L Miller Davis Library Lenoir U Venable B Navy Dey ROTC Bingham R Green- law McCAULEY ST McCAULEY ST D Alexander Center for Dramatic Art Morehead Labs House F. P. Graham C Wilson Under- Student Union on Library graduate nor Kenan Labs Library Paul Green Daniels Theatre Student G Stores GIM Wilson S r O State Employees' e U n T Winston Credit Union r H u lt R T a T D - r Coker u S te K a d A T r I Student Rec. CE ST a Bell Tower VAN e B Center T B M S itchell U O L M R O O C S B rg OUT S e H H RD T b T Fetzer Gym T n S I U Fordham TA P ree O D Woollen Carmichael -G S G n M IU ym Auditorium C vra E M l a a N r D ra rin D u u cG r I M s g C R ld t m in o A g n ie lth L F a tra e D In lic H R R Rosenau b UNIVERSITY D u Kessing Pool P Kna C Grand pp Berryhill a stand rm kill edicine Cas h s ic Mc er Baity Labs lt e M h cc Institute of Govt. a c a So r e n ry B e ente H ie a r BELL TOWER l C c r in enter S ib k L B h C u o PARKING LOT Kenan Football llit u Fetzer F s C ck t - B ield u h cNider ille Kenan ra M ild in r g Be oor T Dental Stadium lk Trac Science k Ind D R T B UNC Hospitals a tr. T W u y e E B Dentistry rne lo Student ra om Athletic a G u H r S ev. C g n a tt D u D e e tu I to r ck a e - s M lth rs ergency d e O u le M e R R h w A e n k h T c c BO io N T EmEntrance d t B a . e S N rrs Entrance S T I Main Kenan tta T c Law H I N o h Field e P G n . ouse n W TO W H a 1 M D in V 0 a R g 5 r ry s S la J U cu B o E le gy u n o lo ild e lle Navy Field M Parker Bio in s n George Watts Hill g Alumni Center Lineberger Taylor Building Biolo R S gical D cience N Re s T C .C s. Ctr. RAMSHEAD S linical Henry E C . ancer PARKING LOT Stadium W C tr. N.C.Sciences Neuro- Hospital Carpentry Shop Avery irs k EPA ffa c Med. A e A D lth g a in e rk H a M D M A P S R S IR R I O A K N F C F E F E C A hiller A D G r Bldg. R H G Boshamer D te M T Security L IN . 2 I n A O Services Intramural Baseball K R e R E R N Field Stadium D H Morrison C A Housing P re ett . a Support nn e ldg C B B y Grounds r Bldgs. C to d e Water Tower la Victory Village M u Daycare b Chase m A ACC Express IR aus M C Manning e J hringh B d ACKSON Sub- Craige Parking Deck E Station Chiller Bldg. Odum Village Student Family Housing BE RNARD STREE DR T raig D C E AR V HIBB I R D S E L W O B B R Hinton A James N CommunityService S O Business N S School T Parking Deck RD Y FO RE PU C O Ke nan Ce Tennis M T nter Courts A N N I N G D R McColl Building BO Dean E. Smith W Center L ES DR NC 54 Koury BY PA Natatorium SS W EST Chiller Building M A SON N FA RM RD The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ily ycockedicine Fam 0 100 500 1000 A M SCALE IN FEET US 15- 501 & NC 54 BY P © UNC-Chapel Hill Design Services (919) 962-7123 ASS N.C. Bot.
Recommended publications
  • 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]
  • Explore Orange County, NC
    Explore Orange County, NC Towns of Chapel Hill, Carrboro and Hillsborough Weekly Calendar of Events April 29 – May 5, 2019 An annotated list of interesting events happening in Orange County over the next week, prepared by Chapel Hill/Orange County Visitors Bureau. MONDAY Apr 29 SENSE OF PLACE TOURS 2 PM UNC Visitors Center / 250 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill (919) 962-1630 The UNC Visitors Center offers Sense of Place tours at 2pm Monday through Friday, and 11am Tuesday through Thursday. Registration is required prior to tours. Tours are not held during holidays or campus closures. *Guests are advised that tours may be cancelled due to severe weather or high temperatures. Questions? Please call at (919) 962-1630. www.unc.edu/visitors/explore-carolina/ TUESDAY Apr 30 UNC BASEBALL 6 PM Boshamer Stadium / 235 Ridge Road Chapel Hill (919) 962-2296 Admission: $5-$7 UNC vs. Liberty University www.goheels.com/ UNC SOFTBALL 7 PM Anderson Softball Stadium / 912 Raleigh Road UNC Chapel Hill (919) 962-2296 UNC vs. NCCU www.goheels.com/ WEDNESDAY May 1 ZARA: A ONE PERSON SHOW 7 PM TO 8:15 PM Chapel Hill Public Library / 100 Library Dr. Chapel Hill (919) 968-2777 Zara: A One Person Show, Andrew Aghapour, a graduate of UNC's Religious Studies dept with a creative background in comedy, improv, and storytelling has developed a one person show called Zara that he will be performing at a series of events in Chapel Hill this spring. A variety of fun, engaging events from either local or visiting professionals. Meeting Room B.
    [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]
  • External Relations Committee
    EXTERNAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE January 29, 2020, 3:40PM Chancellor’s Ballroom West, Carolina Inn OPEN SESSION FOR INFORMATION ONLY (No formal action is requested at this time) 1. Communications Update Joel Curran, Vice Chancellor for Communications 2. Public Affairs Update Clayton Somers, Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs & Secretary of the University Amy Auth, Director of State Affairs Kelly Dockham, Director of Federal Affairs *Some of the business to be conducted is authorized by the N.C. Open Meetings Law to be conducted in closed session. COMMITTEE MEMBERS R. Gene Davis, Jr., Chair David L. Boliek, Jr., Vice Chair Richard Y. Stevens, ex-officio Teresa Artis Neal Kelly Matthews Hopkins Ashton B. Martin Ralph W. Meekins, Sr. Allie Ray McCullen John P. Preyer Administrative Liaisons: Joel Curran, Vice Chancellor for Communications Clayton Somers, Vice Chancellor for Public Affairs & Secretary of the University #GDTBATH Jan. 30, 2020 It’s a Great Day To Be a Tar Heel #GDTBATH goals • Spotlight our students and build community • Introduce future Tar Heels to current Tar Heels • Show alumni glimpses of current student life Emma DeMartino Thoai Vu Sakari Singleton Jeromy Rech Social media Zach Nodden Federal Affairs Update UNC Board of Trustees External Relations Committee Kelly Dockham, Director of Federal Affairs Wednesday, January 29, 2020 THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL OFFICE OF FEDERAL AFFAIRS FY20 Appropriations Update • Late December, Congress passed two Fiscal Year 2020 (FY20) appropriations bills. • On December 20, 2019, President Trump signed both bills into law. • Government funded through end of FY20 – September 30, 2020. • FY20 funding provides increases to many critical funding sources for UNC-Chapel Hill.
    [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]
  • 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
    [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]
  • 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 .............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Orange County NC Visitor Industry Facility Phase 1 Analysis 2017 03 23
    This image cannot currently be displayed. DRAFT COPY Typical Important Site Factors For Discussion Purposes Only 1. Ability to leverage existing facility investment / infrastructure 2. Requirements / preferences of private partner (if applicable) 3. Size, cost and ownership complexity of site Oriented - 4. Proximity to quality full-service hotel inventory 5. Proximity to restaurants, retail, nightlife, entertainment 6. Pedestrian-friendly walking environment 7. Parking availability 8. Ingress / egress 9. Site visibility 10. Synergy with other public sector development initiatives / master plans 11. Compatibility with surroundings 12. Other considerations 98 Feasibility Study of Potential New Visitor Facility Development in Orange County, North Carolina FACILITY OPPORTUNITIES This image cannot currently be displayed. DRAFT COPY Local Market Conditions For Discussion Purposes Only Primary Orange County Hotels Map # of Key Hotel Rooms 1 Carolina Inn 185 2 Rizzo Center 183 3 Courtyard by Marriott 169 4 Sheraton Chapel Hill Hotel 168 Oriented - 5 Chapel Hill University Inn 132 6 Aloft Chapel Hill 130 7 Quality Inn Chapel Hill 119 8 Residence Inn by Marriott 108 9 Siena Hotel 79 10 Franklin Hotel 67 13 12 11 Hampton Inn & Suites 142 12 Holiday Inn Express 83 13 Microtel Inn & Suites 74 Total Hotel Rooms in Orange County = 1,639 8 7 4 9 5 10 6 11 1 2 3 16 Feasibility Study of Potential New Visitor Facility Development in Orange County, North Carolina LOCAL MARKET CONDITIONS Source: Chapel Hill/Orange County Visitor’s Bureau This image cannot currently be displayed. DRAFT COPY Local Market Conditions For Discussion Purposes Only Key Orange County Destination Amenities Map Key 1 Downtown Chapel Hill 2 Friday Conference Center 3 Rizzo Center Oriented - 4 Sheraton Chapel Hill 5 UNC Campus 6 Rainbow Soccer Complex 7 Soccer.com Center 7 4 3 6 2 1 5 19 Feasibility Study of Potential New Visitor Facility Development in Orange County, North Carolina LOCAL MARKET CONDITIONS This image cannot currently be displayed.
    [Show full text]
  • Making a Difference Across the Nation
    Non-profi t THE MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL SCHOOL OF LAW Organization CAROLINA LAW U.S. Postage Van Hecke-Wettach Hall PAID PERMIT # 177 160 Ridge Road, CB # 3380 Chapel Hill, N.C. Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3380 www.law.unc.edu CAROLINA LAW twitter.com/unc_law Alumni, update your contact info at www.law.unc.edu/alumni. ON Save the JUNE 20 Alumni Reception at the dates! N.C. State Bar Meeting, Wilmington MAY 15 THE Alumni Night at the AUGUST 20 Durham Bulls Game New Student Orientation Alumni Community JUNE 13 Welcome Event, Alumni Luncheon at Chapel Hill NCADA Annual Meeting, Hilton Head, S.C. SEPTEMBER 5 MAP Alumni Association Golf JUNE 17 Classic, Chapel Hill Alumni Breakfast at making a difference NCAJ Annual Meeting, SEPTEMBER 6 Wilmington Bluegrass and BBQ, Chapel Hill across the nation founded in 1845 PAGE 18 VOLUME 38, ISSUE ONE SPRING-SUMMER 2014 UNC Law Alumni Association Board of Directors DEAN’S MESSAGE Executive Officers Craig T. Lynch ’86, president Leslie C. Packer ’86, vice president Dear Friends: Walter D. Fisher ‘86, second vice president Last fall, Carolina Law highlighted students, faculty and alumni John Charles Boger ’74, secretary-treasurer who are making daily contributions to communities and Harriett J. Smalls ’99, Law Foundation chair individuals all across North Carolina. By helping a nonprofit Marion A. Cowell Jr. ’64, past campaign chair hunger relief corporation navigate its growth, assisting a commu- nity to create an economic development plan, and lobbying the John S. Willardson ’72, past president (2008-09) General Assembly to preserve the Governor’s School program for Norma R.
    [Show full text]