In 1949, when the state closed the centers, the Charlotte Center was taken over by the city school district and became Charlotte College, a two-year institution. Funded first by student tuition payments, then by local property taxes, it became state-supported in 1958 upon joining the newly formed North Carolina community college system. In 1961 it moved to its present campus ten miles northeast of downtown Charlotte, and in 1963 became a four-year college. It adopted its current name July 1, 1965, upon becoming part of the Consolidated University of North Carolina, since 1972 called the University of North Carolina System.
As of 2003 UNCC has an enrollment of 19,000 students (15,400 undergraduate and 3,600 graduate). It offers over eighty-two undergraduate, fifty-seven master's, and ten doctoral programs.
For athletics purposes, the school prefers to be called Charlotte. The school, a member of the NCAA's Division I (with no football program), is currently a member of Conference USA, but will leave for the Atlantic Ten Conference in 2005. Charlotte's team nickname is 49ers.
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