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Reese Felts' $3.5M gift

Students in the UNC School of Journalism and Mass Communication have released the first in-depth multimedia project on the Web examining the impact of man on the Galápagos Islands.

Since Charles Darwin’s writings 200 years ago, the people of Galápagos - both residents and tourists - have fundamentally changed the natural habitat of the formerly pristine archipelago. The school’s Living Galápagos multimedia documentary documents some of these changes.

A group of 21 journalism students, four professional journalists and one faculty member traveled to the islands for a month to explore the impact of humans on the unique ecosystem. The journalists witnessed conservation, natural beauty and a welcoming culture but also saw a host of environmental and cultural issues that leave the Galápagos Islands at a tipping point.

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Wade Hargrove honored
Broadcast and cable industries work with J-school to honor attorney with an annual media law colloquium at UNC.

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Major news, research project
A $3.5 million gift from the estate of alumnus Reese Felts will fund an experimental student news project and audience research initiative.

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J-school centennial
UNC's School of Journalism and Mass Communication is making news and shaping the future in a new century of journalism education.

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