More than 100 people gathered on the UNC Pembroke campus on March 28 to witness the unveiling and rededication of the newly restored Hamilton McMillan statue.
The Southeast Indian Studies Conference proved to be a valuable forum for discussion of the culture, history, and contemporary issues of Native Americans in the southeast.
“When I saw that UNC Chapel Hill and Duke were hosting the first annual North Carolina Latin American Studies conference,” says Spanish professor Diana Lee, “it made sense to organize a panel with [History professor Chris Woolley and Political Science professor Melissa Buice] because our research
Julie Kane, former Louisiana poet laureate, spoke to a poetry writing class during a recent visit to campus. Dr. Kane also gave a public reading from her work in the Thomas Assembly Room of the Museum of the Southeast American Indian.
More than 400 seventh and eighth graders from John Griffin Middle School in Fayetteville, Magnolia and Prospect schools in Robeson County visited The University of North Carolina at Pembroke for the 3rd annual Pi Day.
The Biology Department's chapter of TriBeta is now accepting applications. TriBeta (or Beta Beta Beta) is a National Honor Society for students of the biological sciences, with numerous chapters across the nation.
PEMBROKE, NC – Thanks to a partnership of the Pembroke Magazine, the College of Arts & Sciences, and the Mary Livermore Library’s Friends of the Library, this Thursday at 5 p.m., poet, editor, professor emeritus, and former poet laureate of Louisiana Julie Kane will read from he