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South Graham St.
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South Graham St.
Recycling bins on Franklin St.
Chill Bubble Tea, Penang and Crepes Veronique are among the recently closed businesses on Franklin Street. There has been a high rate of turnover on Franklin, which sees the most revenue during the school year.
Once Upon a Time, sculpted by Betty Branch and commissioned by Roanoke City Library Foundation, outside the Chapel Hill Public Library.
Champion Tree
The Ackland Art Museum was founded through the bequest of William Hayes Ackland. Mr. Ackland died in 1940, he originally left his bequest to Duke University. Duke's trustees refused the bequest and so it was given to UNC, which Ackland had also considered before he died.
Brittany Greene, a senior Business Administration major, leads an icebreaker with a group of students. Greene is the treasurer of Carolina First, an organization that welcomes first generation college students at UNC. The executive board expected about 100 students to show up to the program.
Austin Cooper spent four weeks of his summer in London completing a research project on the city's club music since 2000. Cooper, a Comparitive Literature major, received a research grant through UNC and with the help of a Faculty Advisor. Cooper has a music blog at austinrcooper.wordpress.com. did most of his work digitally with iTunes and blogs from Cary
Ray Lafrenaye is in charge of all off-campus clinics, while Mel Hurston (not pictured) deals with on-campus patient services. In order to house more patients, UNC hospitals are expanding to some off-campus locations.
After Varsity Theatre's viewing of Big Fish, Daniel Wallace, the author of the novel, answers questions from the audience. Wallace, who is a UNC professor, said that main character Edward Bloom was loosely based off his father, who is "funny, charming and larger than life." On the right is Bill Ferris, the Q&A moderator.
Bryan Routh stands in front of a new robot in the Genetic Medical Building. The robot takes candidate drugs and puts them in assay plates and helps store drugs and calculate more accurate data.
David Kirkpatrick, bestselling author of "The Facebook Effect," gives his lecture on "Ten Lessons From Facebook" as a part of the Roy H. Park Distinguished Lecture Series. Kirkpatrick discussed how Facebook has come to be one of the most powerful and influential companies in the world. With over 750 million active users, Kirkpatrick said, Facebook can be used to unite people and spread information in ways never before possible. The slide in this picture is of a 2008 revolution in Bogota, Columbia that began as a Facebook event. The event was created on a whim by a Colombian man who was frustrated with the government; one month later, thousands of people gathered to protest.
Patti Thorp looks over some items from the auction with assistant director of development Shane Hudson. Thorp is this year's chair of the auction.
Rye Barcott, a UNC alumni, lectured in the FedEx Global Center to celebrate the tenth anniversary of Carolina for Kibera, the organization he co-founded, and the release of his book, It Happened On the Way to War. In his book, Barcott describes his experiences while working in Kibera, the largest slum in East Africa. While he was there, Barcott said, he learned that "talent is universal, but opportunity is not."