Arts & Lifestyle Of Interest ... Governor clears NCSA change On Aug. 8, Gov. Mike Easlcy signed into law the bill that changes " North Carolina School of the Arts" to "The University of North Carolina School of the Arts. The name change was sent to ^tjie governor for his signature in July, after it won approval by the N.C. General Assembly. On July 9, the bill (Senate Bill 2015) passed in the House by the overwhelming mar gin of 115 to 1. The bill had already passed unani mously in the Senate, on June 24. "litis is a great and historic moment for our School," said North Carolina School of the Arts Chancellor John Mauceri, who recently celebrated his second anniversary at the School. "While the School's leadership had unanimously supported (and indeed, suggested) the name, the U is the tip of the iceberg. The University of North Carolina School of the Arts is the first state-supported, residential school of its kind in the nation. Established as the North Carolina School of the Arts by the N.C. General Assembly in 1963, UNCSA opened in Winston-Salem ("The City of the Arts") in 1965 and became part of the University of North Carolina system in 1972. "It is emblematic, in every sense, of a larger and, for us, deeply important shift in the attitude