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Adverse: !TEST! !TEST! 2025-04-08 08:50:20

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The Well

News for the Carolina community

  • A library catelog with a seed package in it.

    Learning by growing

    A new seed library in Kenan Science Library's makerspace has everything Tar Heels need to explore gardening or botany.

  • Graphic with a headshot of Ingrid Camacho and line drawings of hands at a computer work station on a beige background.

    She led the ITS Service Desk through the pandemic

    Ingrid Camacho worked in ITS for two decades, retiring Feb. 28. When COVID-19 forced many of Carolina’s employees to work remotely, she met the challenge with innovative solutions.

  • People hold photos of women at Carolina.

    Women’s History Month 2022

    More than half of the Tar Heels enrolled at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill today are women, but that hasn't always been the case. Take a closer look at how women’s history progressed at UNC-Chapel Hill.

  • Sartaj Jhooty by Wilson Library.

    #GDTBATH: Sartaj Jhooty

    Sartaj Jhooty spent last semester studying at the University of Granada as part of the Carolina Global Launch program, which enables first-year students to spend their fall semester abroad before joining the Carolina community on campus the following spring semester.

  • Students crossing a crosswalk on South Road as a police officer directs traffic.

    Keeping pedestrians safe

    Carolina and Chapel Hill are working together to prevent vehicle crashes that harm pedestrians.

  • Two people working in a lab.

    Universal hope for hemophilia

    Current hemophilia treatments have limitations for a significant number of patients. That’s why Carolina-connected startup GeneVentiv Therapeutics is developing the first universal, single-dose gene therapy for all types of hemophilia, including the toughest cases.

  • Linda Rhodes

    Carolina People: Linda Rhodes

    A Tar Heel through and through, she helps with fundraising for the School of Social Work.

  • A blue-footed booby poses on a rock.

    Galápagos: A gateway for global research

    For more than 10 years, the UNC Center for Galápagos Studies has been a hub of collaborative research activity spanning many disciplines, with the potential to impact the globe. Diego Riveros-Iregui and Amanda Thompson, the center’s new interim co-directors, strive to use their own experiences from the islands to expand its reach and grow its reputation as a world-renowned research institution.