In a recent State of the University speech, Chancellor James
Moeser described private funds as the fuel that propels a university to
greatness.
With the close of the Carolina First
Campaign, which raised a record $2.38 billion over the past eight years, the
University has
surpassed expectations in that quest.
For the past five years, University researchers
have examined how living in smaller cities,
towns and rural areas influences the
development of young children.
Now, with a $12.8 million grant from the National Institutes
of Health, researchers at the FPG Child Development Institute and the School of
Education will look at how well these children make the transition to school.
The master plan for Carolina North, along with a concept
plan for an Innovation
Center that would serve as its gateway
project, shared center stage at the Chapel Hill Town Council meeting on Jan.
23.
Jack Evans, executive director of Carolina North, said the
twin presentations of the master plan and a concept plan for the Innovation
Center were important steps for the town’s approval. Both marked a culmination
of months of planning on a host of fronts.
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation of New York will support a
collaborative effort on civil rights between the University and UNC Press.
The three-year, $937,000 grant will support “
Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement,”
a project that, through print and digital
publications, will underscore one of Carolina’s longstanding academic
priorities: interdisciplinary civil rights scholarship.
Fred Eshelman may not have intended to
propel the Carolina First Campaign into the history books, but his $9 million
pledge to the School of Pharmacy did just that. The University
now has completed the fifth-largest campaign in higher education and the
largest at a southern university.