Dinner With Faculty All dinners begin at 6:30 p.m. and include three courses plus coffee and tea. Location: The Carolina Club, George Watts Hill Alumni Center Cost: $40, $25 for GAA members | Attend all four dinners: $140; $80 for GAA members
Due to the limited space available for our Dinners with Faculty, we request that you contact Ann-Louise Aguiar '76 by telephone at (919) 962-3574 to register. New this semester, our Dinner with Faculty programs offer the opportunity for no more than 11 participants to enjoy free-ranging discussions with prominent and popular UNC faculty while dining at The Carolina Club. Rather than a lecture, you have the chance to engage the faculty on a more intimate level and ask those questions you've been eager to pose. This is the one opportunity where discussing religion and politics at the dinner table is perfectly acceptable. Wednesday, September 9 or Thursday, September 24 Bart Ehrman James A. Gray Distinguished Professor, Department of Religious Studies Ehrman has won several teaching and achievement awards and is the author or editor of more than 20 books. He is often featured by national media - from "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart to NPR's "Fresh Air." Two of his books have been on "The New York Times" Best Seller List, "The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why" and "Jesus Interrupted."
Wednesday, October 14 Lloyd Kramer Dean Smith Distinguished Term Professor and chair, Department of History Kramer has won two awards for distinguished undergraduate teaching and is a favorite speaker to the lifelong learning community on European thought and culture in the 19th and 20th centuries. He has lived at various times in France, both for research purposes and as director of UNC's study abroad program in Montpellier.
Wednesday, November 11 Ferrel Guillory Lecturer and director, Program on Public Life, School of Journalism and Mass Communication Guillory founded the Program on Public Life in 1997 to build bridges between the academic resources at UNC and the governmental, journalism and civic leaders of North Carolina and the South. He is a frequent media commentator on N.C. politics.
Thursday, December 10 Marcie Cohen Ferris Assistant professor, Department of American Studies and Carolina Center for Jewish Studies Cohen Ferris, a winner of the Tanner Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Education, is the author of "Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South," which was nominated for the 2006 James Beard Foundation Award. She is the past president of the Southern Foodways Alliance.
For more information, to be added to our mailing list or to register by phone, contact Ann-Louise Aguiar '76 at (919) 962-3574 or ccll@unc.edu. |