Articles by Colin Donohue
Page 124 of 210
School of Communications Faculty Meeting Sept. 3
August 30, 2010
iMedia Ice Cream Social Sept. 2
August 30, 2010
iMedia Ice Cream Social Sept. 2
August 30, 2010
Message from Rick Willis, 2010-2011 NCOGC president
August 27, 2010
I am excited about the next two years. Leading the North Carolina Open Government Coalition will be a rewarding challenge for me and, I hope, the people of our state. I have several goals for my tenure I wanted to share in my first column.
North Carolina Open Government Coalition welcomes 3 new board members
August 26, 2010
The North Carolina Open Government Coalition will welcome three new board members to its ranks this fall who have backgrounds in media organizations and public office. They will work with the coalition to advance the mission of promoting openness and transparency in local government.
FreshTV interest meeting Sept. 5
August 25, 2010
School of Communications welcomes 7 new faculty
August 25, 2010
Seven new faculty members with strong professional and educational backgrounds joined the ranks of teacher-scholars in the School of Communications in Fall 2010.
School of Communications Plays Prominent Role at National Conference
August 24, 2010
Eleven faculty members and a 2010 graduate of the School of Communications participated in the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) national conference in Denver from Aug. 3-7.
News and Observer: N.C. ethics reform law signed, opening state workers’ records
August 23, 2010
From the Raleigh News and Observer (8/3/10): With two suspensions for inappropriate contact with a student, Jessica Wishnask quietly left the New Hanover school district two years ago to go work for another. She did not have to disclose her misconduct, and her prior employer did not report the suspensions.
Asheville Citizen-Times: Report may force state to close SBI crime lab
August 23, 2010
From the Asheville Citizen-Times (8/22/10): A report revealing State Bureau of Investigation agents overstated blood evidence in dozens of cases could force North Carolina to close its crime lab and change the agency's secretive policies, defense attorneys and a former prosecutor said.