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"A New Order of Things provides many lessons on change and innovation adoption, lessons told through the stories of the core innovators who took the nurse practitioner idea from a clinic experiment to a university program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and extended that to two additional educational programs across the state of North Carolina, and to a partnership with community leaders developing rural clinics dotting its rural state"--
Nurse practitioners --- Training of --- History. --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- North Carolina.
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Boasting six national championships and scores of Hall of Fame coaches and players, Carolina Basketball has come a long way from the first season--when the campus newspaper published a notice asking an unknown culprit to return the team's basketball. These pages are packed with little-known stories from the program's earliest days and new insights into its best-loved moments. All the greats are here, from Jack Cobb and the ""Blind Bomber"" George Glamack to Lennie Rosenbluth, Phil Ford, James Worthy, Michael Jordan, Antawn Jamison, and Tyler Hansbrough. Lucas reveals the meaning of the ""Carol
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One Fantastic Ride is a behind-the-scenes portrait of the unforgettable journey to the University of North Carolina's 2009 basketball national championship, the program's fifth NCAA Tournament title. Adam Lucas, Steve Kirschner, and Matt Bowers were with the Tar Heels every step of the way, interviewing coaches, players, and staff. As the 2008-09 season opened, national pundits widely considered the Tar Heels the hands-down favorite to win the title. But injuries to key players, surprising midseason losses, and formidable ACC competition made the ride bumpier than expected.
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In January 1957, a group of physicists from several countries met at the University of North Carolina to discuss the role of gravitation in physics. The program was divided into two broad sections: unquantized and quantized general relativity. The first section included a review of classical relativity, its experimental tests, the initial value problem, gravitational radiation, equations of motion, and unified field theory. The second section included a discussion of the motivation for quantization, the problem of measurement, and the actual techniques for quantization. In both sections the relationship of general relativity to fundamental particles was discussed. In addition there was a session devoted to cosmological questions. A large part of the discussions is reproduced in the present report in an abridged form, followed by a conference summary statement by P. G. Bergmann. The Chapel Hill conference also marked the establishment of the Institute of Field Physics, directed by Bryce and Cécile DeWitt. The conference was the inaugural conference of this institute.
Physical sciences. --- Mathematics. --- Nuclear physics. --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- gravitation --- theory of relativty --- physics --- quantum theory --- MPRL --- Edition Open Access --- history of science
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In January 1957, a group of physicists from several countries met at the University of North Carolina to discuss the role of gravitation in physics. The program was divided into two broad sections: unquantized and quantized general relativity. The first section included a review of classical relativity, its experimental tests, the initial value problem, gravitational radiation, equations of motion, and unified field theory. The second section included a discussion of the motivation for quantization, the problem of measurement, and the actual techniques for quantization. In both sections the relationship of general relativity to fundamental particles was discussed. In addition there was a session devoted to cosmological questions. A large part of the discussions is reproduced in the present report in an abridged form, followed by a conference summary statement by P. G. Bergmann. The Chapel Hill conference also marked the establishment of the Institute of Field Physics, directed by Bryce and Cécile DeWitt. The conference was the inaugural conference of this institute.
Physical sciences. --- Mathematics. --- Nuclear physics. --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- gravitation --- theory of relativty --- physics --- quantum theory --- MPRL --- Edition Open Access --- history of science
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"Hobson, a passionate follower of North Carolina basketball who once played briefly for the Tar Heels, tells the story of an eternal childhood relived each season. More than a basketball memoir, his account also depicts a seldom-viewed South through glimpses of a boyhood in the Carolina hills"--Provided by publisher.
Hobson, Fred C., --- North Carolina Tar Heels (Basketball team) --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- Tar Heels (Basketball team) --- Basketball. --- Yadkin County (N. C.) --- Hobson, Fred Colby, --- Yadkin County (N.C.) --- Yadkin Co., N.C.
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Book Imprints --- Book Imprints --- Catalogs, Library --- Rare Books --- Early printed books --- Printing --- Imprimerie --- catalogs. --- catalogs. --- catalogs. --- History. --- Histoire --- Estienne family. --- Estienne family. --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. --- Catalogs. --- Paris (France) --- Geneva (Switzerland) --- Paris (France) --- Imprints --- Catalogs. --- Imprints --- Catalogs. --- Imprimés --- Catalogues
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