Committee selected to choose new dean of SPEA
There is an opening within IU’s faculty, and the process to fill it has begun.
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There is an opening within IU’s faculty, and the process to fill it has begun.
When IU President Herman B Wells tasked Leo Dowling with expanding the University’s foreign reach in 1943, there were only 29 international students.
An IU School of Public Health program received the American Society of Safety Professionals Outstanding Student Section of the Year Award, according to a press release.
The Media School has received the largest gift in its history for the foundation of an independent investigative journalism center, according to an IU press release.
It seems around every corner, there is the red fencing and heavy machinery marking a construction project in the works. Here's a roundup of construction projects happening or scheduled to start on campus.
The Bloomington Faculty Council had its first meeting for the 2018-2019 academic year Tuesday to discuss student outreach, vote on proposed amendments and examine the trends of students graduating with credits from other institutions.
Parents and prospective students mill around the new admissions office at Ernie Pyle Hall. Tour guides huddle to review their new talking points and route for the campus tour. It’s student tour guide Nicole Hill’s first tour since the start of the new semester.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos will publish new policies for handling sexual misconduct on college campuses, according to an Aug. 29 New York Time article. Since the rules are not published yet, it is unclear what the effects would be for IU.
Robert Ferrell, a former IU professor and leading historian on American diplomacy, died at 97 at a nursing home in Chelsea, Michigan, earlier this month.
In May, School of Public and Environmental Affairs dean John D. Graham thought he would continue deanship for two or three more years. Graham's plan quickly changed when he received news of the birth of his second granddaughter, Isabella.
In the sea of people marching down Third Street, one woman’s sign stood out. A plastic pink lei was wrapped around the wooden stick that held it.
Following social media posts critical of IU's sexual assault policies, as well as posts stating the University violated Title IX while investigating her case, an IU student will no longer work as an RA next school year and has also organized a march and rally to take place during Welcome Week to bring attention to sexual assault on campus.
The IU-Purdue partnership in Fort Wayne, Indiana, has officially changed after long-discussed plans to split Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne into different universities took effect July 1. While both universities will share the same buildings and remain on the original campus, they are now separate entities.
An update containing Ellie Johnson's response to this article is included below.
IU alumni elected Donna Spears to the IU Board of Trustees. After votes were counted Saturday, Spears received 4,151 votes out of a total of 13,710 and defeated her opponents, including incumbent Phil Eskew, who finished second.
UPDATE:
The majority of IU students may have gone home over the summer, but the IU Board of Trustees continued to make decisions and grind away at its regular meeting June 15 at IU-Northwest in Gary, Indiana.
IU alumnus Lemuel Watson is returning to the University as the dean of the School of Education.
Monday marked the opening for IU's Mexico Gateway Office in Mexico City. The Mexico office is the fourth of its kind around the world, and joins other IU international offices in New Delhi, Beijing and Berlin.
Summer in Bloomington means fewer students, a generally quieter campus and numerous construction projects. The Indiana Daily Student spoke with IU Capital Planning and Facilities’ Jim Stewart to learn about what’s happening on campus and what changes students can expect to see when they return in the fall.