Kannapolis juiced about research
KANNAPOLIS, Sept. 13 - Rising slowly from his seat, David Murdock, 81, stepped to the microphone and gazed out at the immense crowd.
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KANNAPOLIS, Sept. 13 - Rising slowly from his seat, David Murdock, 81, stepped to the microphone and gazed out at the immense crowd.
Sept. 30 - Almost 25 years after serving as a clerk to then-Associate Justice William Rehnquist, John Roberts was sworn in Thursday to replace his former mentor as chief justice of the United States.
Almost 25 years after serving as a clerk to then-Associate Justice William Rehnquist, John Roberts was sworn in Thursday to take the place of his former mentor as chief justice of the United States.
A meeting to be held this Friday could be the first step toward dramatic changes in tuition policy for the UNC-system Board of Governors.
Officials at UNC-Chapel Hill have begun discussions of a possible change in the way student grade point averages are calculated.
RALEIGH
In spite of repeated refusals to answer any questions that might eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court, Judge John Roberts was pressed Wednesday on a multitude of high-profile controversies still raging in courts across the country.
KANNAPOLIS - Rising slowly from his seat, David Murdock, 81, stepped to the microphone and gazed out at the immense crowd.
A changing of the guard took place in the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Friday.
After months of grueling debate and controversy, the N.C. General Assembly finalized the state budget two weeks ago, a month and a half after its original deadline of June 30.
Close, but no cigar.
UNC-Chapel Hill and N.C. State University are no longer the only state universities that could gain tuition autonomy.
A face familiar to the UNC system might have been added to its list of presidential candidates.
With the deadline for the current continuing budget resolution quickly approaching, legislators in the N.C. General Assembly are scrambling to create a final budget or a new resolution by July 20.
Against the best efforts of many in the N.C. General Assembly, executions likely will continue in North Carolina.
Since the revelation of the conference committees last week, members have been meeting non-stop in an effort to finalize the state’s 2005-06 budget.
The University’s plans to close Horace Williams Airport have hit some turbulence within the N.C. General Assembly.
The stage is set in Raleigh for what could become a very long summer.
As UNC-Chapel Hill and N.C. State University continue to grow in size and ability, many legislators are looking to further increase the power of each institution.
The offer for nonresidents to gain in-state tuition status, once secure in the pages of the Senate budget, now has found itself amid scrutiny.