90.7 Charlotte 93.7 Southern Pines Before you head out leaf-peeping this fall, check in weekly to see what colors our experts are seeing at 22 of our favorite mountain spots. McColl built this building when he was CEO, and he will tell you so. [24], McColl is member of Augusta National Golf Club. [18], McColl has served on the board of directors of Sykes Enterprises Inc.,[23] Canal Industries; Atrium Health, formerly Carolinas HealthCare System; Charlotte Center City Partners; Charlotte Latin School from 1977–1982, Cousins Properties, Inc.; Faison Associates; Foundation for the Carolinas; General Parts, Inc.; NuTech Solutions Inc.; Harris Teeter; and Sonoco Products Company. “I visited more damn congressmen and senators than you can shake a stick at,” McColl says. Hugh MacColl (before April 1885 spelled as Hugh McColl; 1831–1909) was a Scottish mathematician, logician and novelist. McColl wrote to Clinton recommending a pardon for Hendrick and subsequently announced on December 7, 2000, Bank of America Foundation would donate $500,000 to the Clinton Foundation. “What would be the damn point?” he says.
John McKee Spratt Jr. (born November 1, 1942) is an American politician who was the U.S. Representative for South Carolina's 5th congressional district from 1983 to 2011. And we are running a trillion-dollar deficit. The December 1999 issue of the magazine Nordic Journal of Philosophical Logic published the proceedings of a 1998 conference devoted to MacColl's work. Born in South Carolina, McColl served as an officer in the Marine Corps from 1957 to 1959 and then joined a small Charlotte bank. He doodles. Statements like that — and there are many — manage to be both cocky and charming, in a Dizzy Dean “It ain’t braggin’ if you can back it up” sort of way.
House (1892-1987) and House Library, Edward Vernon Howell (1872-1931) and Howell Hall, William J. Hubbard and the William J. Hubbard Grounds Facility, Barbara Rosser Hyde (1961- ) and J. R. Hyde, III (1942- ) and Hyde Hall, Blyden (1910-2000) and Roberta Jackson (1920-1999) and Jackson Hall, Hinton James (1776-1847) and Hinton James Residence Hall, Mary Ellen Jones (1922–1996) and the Mary Ellen Jones Building, James Yadkin Joyner (1862-1954) and Joyner Residence Hall, William Rand Kenan, Jr. (1872-1965) and the Kenan Center, William Rand Kenan, Jr. (1872-1965) and Kenan Laboratories, Mary Lily Kenan Flagler Bingham (1867-1917) and Kenan Residence Hall, William Rand Kenan, Jr. (1872-1965) and Kenan Stadium, Oliver Owen Kessing (1890-1963) and Kessing Pool, Joseph Palmer Knapp (1864-1951) and John Lassiter Sanders (1927- ) and the Knapp-Sanders Building, Maurice J. Koury (1929- ) and Koury Residence Hall and Koury Natatorium, William Lenoir (1751-1839) and Lenoir Hall, Richard Henry Lewis (1850-1926) and Lewis Residence Hall, The Lineberger Family and the Lineberger Cancer Research Center; J. Harold Lineberger (seated center) and Joseph Lineberger (seated right), R. Charles Loudermilk (1927- ) and Loudermilk Hall, James Lee Love (1860-1954), Julia James Spencer Love (1859-1920) and James A. Hutchins, Jr., (1917-2002) and Love House and Hutchins Forum, Norman (1911-2003) and Mary McCaskill and the McCaskill Soccer Center, Samuel Eusebius McCorkle (1746-1811) and McCorkle Place, Edward G. McGavran (1902-1972) and Bernard George Greenberg (1919-1985) and McGavran-Greenberg Hall, Charles Duncan McIver (1860-1906) and McIver Residence Hall, James K. (1918-1999) and Sarah McLean (d.2001) and McLean Hall, William de Berniere MacNider (1881-1951) and MacNider Hall, Willie Person Mangum (1792-1861), Adolphus Williamson Mangum (1834-1890), Willie Person Mangum, Jr. (1827-1881), and Mangum Residence Hall, Charles Manly (1795-1871), and Matthias Manly and Manly Residence Hall, William Miller (1784-1825) and Miller Hall, Elisha P. Mitchell (1793-1857) and Mitchell Hall, John Motley Morehead III(1870-1965) and the Morehead Chemistry Lab, John Motley Morehead III (1870-1965) and Morehead Planetarium, John Motley Morehead III (1870-1965) and Rufus Lenoir Patterson II (1872-1943) and Morehead-Patterson Bell Tower, Cameron Morrison (1869-1953) and Morrison Residence Hall, Archibald De Bow Murphey (1777-1832) and Murphey Hall, Royce W. Murray (1937- ) and Murray Place, Howard W. Odum (1884-1954) and Odum Village, Francis Owen and the Francis Owen Blood Research Laboratory, John J. Parker (1885-1958) and Parker Residence Hall, George Peabody (1795-1869) and Peabody Hall, Thomas Person (1733-1800) and Person Hall, Brigadier General James Johnston Pettigrew (1828-1863) and Pettigrew Hall, James Phillips (1792-1867), Charles Phillips (1822-1889), and William Battle Phillips (1857-1918) and Phillips Hall, Paul J. Rizzo (1928- ) and the Rizzo Conference Center, Milton J. Rosenau (1869-1946) and Rosenau Hall, Thomas Ruffin (1787-1870) and Ruffin Residence Hall, William L. Saunders (1835-1891) and Carolina Hall, Cecil George Sheps (1913-2004) and Sheps Building, Joseph Carlyle Sitterson (1911-1995) and Sitterson Hall, Dean E. Smith (1931- ) and the Dean Smith Center, Edward C. Smith, Sr. (d. 2007) And Smith Field House, Mary Ann Smith (d. 1891) and Smith Building, Cornelia Phillips Spencer (1826-1908) and Spencer Hall, Marvin Hendrix Stacy (1877-1919) and Stacy Residence Hall, Walter Leak Steele (1823-1891) and Steele Building, Sonja Haynes Stone (1938-1991) and the Stone Center for Black History and Culture, David Lowry Swain (1801-1868) and Swain Hall, Emanuel Tarrson (1914-1999) and Tarrson Hall, Jack Tate (1917- ), John Turner (1922- ), And Charles Kuralt (1934-1997) and the Tate-Turner-Kuralt Building, Isaac Montrose Taylor (1921-1996) and Taylor Hall, James A. Taylor (1918-1989) And Taylor Student Health Services Building, Claude Edward Teague (1888-1970) and Teague Residence Hall, Simon F. Terrell (1924-2005) and the Terrell Building, Doc J. Thurston (1908-1993) and Hargrove Bowles, Jr. (1919-1986) and the Thurston-Bowles Building, Gary R. Tomkins (1955-2004) and the Gary R. Tomkins Chilled Water Operations Center, H. Roland Totten ( 1892-1974) and Addie Williams Totten (d.1974) and the Totten Center, Maurice Taylor Van Hecke (1892-1963) And Robert H. Wettach (1892-1964) and the Van Hecke-Wettach Hall, Zebulon B. Vance (1830-1894) and Vance Hall, Richard Henry Whitehead (1865-1916) and Whitehead Hall, Ernie Williamson (1922-2002) and Williamson Athletic Center, Henry Van Peters Wilson (1863-1939) and Wilson Hall, Louis Round Wilson (1876-1979) and the Louis Round Wilson Library, George Tayloe Winston (1852-1932) and Winston Residence Hall, Charles Thomas Woollen (1878-1938) and Woollen Gymnasium.
[6], McColl was elected student council president at Bennettsville High School, and class president in his senior year (1953).