Foundation
Eclipsing $4.25 Billion
The Campaign for Carolina meets a milestone goal one year early and continues with renewed focus on scholarships and school and unit priorities.
A World of Possibility and Promise
The Roy and Mary Alice Smith Fellowship Endowed Fund through The Graduate School will support future generations of students pursuing a graduate degree in chemistry.
UNC-Chapel Hill Receives Second Grant From the Kern Family Foundation to Assess Entrepreneurial Engineering Collaboration
Thanks to a new $631,000 grant from the Kern Family Foundation, a new assessment project will be led by Viji Sathy, associate dean for evaluation and assessment in undergraduate education
Honoring Gwendolyn Harrison Smith
The first African American woman to enroll at UNC-Chapel Hill is being honored with a named scholarship fund, thanks to a $100,000 gift from Grubb Properties.
New Gift Marks the Importance of Support For Clinical Psychology Graduate Students
As the No. 2 ranked clinical psychology graduate program, UNC’s department of psychology and neuroscience has a long history of faculty fostering strong working relationships with students.
Roberts-Watson Family Support New Environmental Scholars Program
The newly formed department of earth, marine and environmental sciences received a vote of confidence from College alumni Jennifer Watson Roberts ’82 and Manley Roberts ’80, who have created the
A Blessed Life: Cliff Huang and His Journey From Taiwan to UNC
In a story seemingly made-for-TV, Cliff Huang, Ph.D. ’68, weaves a tale that is truly rags to (academic) riches. It’s a story that led him to recently make a $1.5
Carolina Blue Honors Fellowship to Reach More Students
The Carolina Blue Honors Fellowship has been expanded to reach more UNC students with additional funding from Ricky May. This will build on the Carolina Blue Fellowship’s momentum pre-COVID-19 and
New Clinical Outreach Program Will Treat Traumatic Brain Injury in Veterans
A $12.5 million gift from the Avalon Network will establish the THRIVE Program in the College of Arts and Sciences’ Matthew Gfeller Center.
Analyzing Ancient Animal Remains
Associate professor Benjamin Arbuckle and graduate student Christine Mikeska are examining remains of animal teeth excavated from two Bronze Age cities — Hattusa and Tell Bderi — to explore fundamental