A Sense
of Place
The Review regularly explores Carolina’s sense of place. This story is
part of an ongoing walk around
the campus that includes “Pillars
of Wisdom,” about Carolina’s
columns, from September/
October 2008; “Worn Pages,
Tough Spine,” about Wilson
Library, from January/February
2009; “In the Grove,” about
campus trees, from July/August
2009; “The Beloved
Unknown,” about the Old
Chapel Hill Cemetery, in
May/June 2010; “Body of
Work,” about public art, from
September/October 2010; and
“If These Stones Could Talk,”
about UNC’s rock walls, from
July/August 2011.
Exhibit Open
To the Public
No, you don’t have to be a Carolina Inn guest. Inn Manager
Jack Schmidt says, “The inn
is open to the general public,
and we invite students, alumni,
residents of Chapel Hill and
anyone else that is interested to
visit the exhibits in all areas of
the building.”
ONLINE: Watch a WUNC-TV
feature on the inn’s photographic
display that includes an interview
with Ken Zogry ’97 (MA, ’08 PhD)
at
alumni.unc.edu/go/innpictures.
PHOTOS BY DAN SEARS ’ 74
The bar, in the inn’s
original lobby, is
now a gallery of 87
Daily Tar Heel
editorial cartoons spanning decades.
Clockwise from
upper left: The burn-ing issue of comic
strips in the paper,
1996; George H. W.
Bush and the
Persian Gulf, 1991;
and Charlie Justice’s
choo-choo chasing
the devil back to
Dook, 1946.