Trustees hear revised academic plan
After 18 months of planning, writing and revision, the University’s new academic plan is preparing to enter the final stage of its life — its implementation.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
82 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After 18 months of planning, writing and revision, the University’s new academic plan is preparing to enter the final stage of its life — its implementation.
Student Body President Hogan Medlin didn’t have much time to present the findings of his Arts Innovation Steering Committee to the members of the Board of Trustees’ university affairs committee Wednesday afternoon.
Although UNC won a free concert with hip-hop legend Snoop Dogg, facility use guidelines prohibiting commercial events may force the concert off-campus, organizers said.
As the University’s Ackland Art Museum begins construction on its new gift shop, it fills a storefront that has been empty at one of the busiest intersections in Chapel Hill for more than seven years.
After eliminating its executive director and youth performing arts conservatory director positions last Friday, Carrboro’s ArtsCenter is trying to change the way it operates, sources said.
With a student arts fund in the works and a drive for an “artistic audit” of campus spaces, the arts innovation steering committee is working toward concrete results.
As of 6 p.m. Tuesday night, only one ticket was available for tonight’s concert in Memorial Hall, featuring hip-hop artist Big Boi.
A recently released survey of Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools stakeholders suggested the system’s new leader needs to be capable of making difficult decisions.
A meeting meant to draw feedback on a draft of the University’s new academic plan from undergraduate student leaders evolved into a more nuanced discussion on academic culture and policy Thursday evening.
_Due to a reporting error, this story incorrectly stated the degree Val Tenyotkin received from UNC in 2009. He received his doctorate. This article has been updated to reflect these changes. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error. _
This story appeared as part of the 2010 Year In Review issue. The Daily Tar Heel resumes publication Jan. 10.
The Arts Innovation Steering Committee is still looking for its focus.
The University’s academic options in the next 10 years could include a fast-track bachelor’s to master’s degree program, guaranteed enrollment in first-year seminars and an expanded honors program — but the details are still largely on the drawing board.
Lit by swirling spotlights and a colorful array of lasers, a crowd of nearly 4,500 students packed into Carmichael Arena for Friday’s Homecoming concert, which concert organizers say was sold out.
In ten years, if a UNC student majoring in business is able to capitalize on University resources to sculpt, paint, sing or dance, Hogan Medlin’s vision for the campus will be complete.
Sometimes, the beauty is the bookends.
As the University prepares to release the first public draft of its new academic plan, steering committee members say they are concerned about the image the plan will project to the people of North Carolina.
More than 2,000 tickets were sold Thursday when sales opened for the Homecoming concert, in a sharp contrast to last year’s sparsely attended show.
It’s a good thing that the communication studies department knows how to tell a story.
There’s a reason why a Pyrex dish isn’t on display in the Ackland Art Museum right now.