Students, administrators discuss campus cultural climate
Minority students on campus want change.
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Minority students on campus want change.
Yellow hard hats, neon safety vests and tinted safety glasses are among the apparel being modeled by officers of the IU Police Department, dental hygiene students, groundskeepers and more in an unlikely fashion-based social media campaign.
Colin Goddard, gun violence prevention advocate, shared his story of recovery and advocacy after being shot four times in the April 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, noting that background checks on gun sales and gun violence are not mutually exclusive..
From the hipsters to the partiers, every residence hall on campus has its reputation.
Living in Teter Residence Center her freshman year, Michelle Gentz would overhear people down the hall making plans for the weekend. She would hear them coming back at 3 a.m. after having a great time out of the dorm.
From IDS reports
Using diagrams of hand-drawn mazes and wired circuit boards, Nancy Folbre related the interaction of societal factors such as race, gender and identity in various neoclassical and Marxist theories, challenging the status quo of academic thought on societal influences in power structures.
For nine and a half minutes, Colin Goddard and his classmates hid under desks during their morning French class at Virginia Tech.
It all begins with an email, Tim Goth of IU’s Public Safety and Institutional Assurance said.
To help ensure safety among all IU students, University administrators and students discussed the cultural differences of international and domestic students.
We should pay greater attention to the stereotypes — both positive and negative — attached to students who identify as Asian-American and Pacific Islander that currently exist in higher education, Dina Okamoto, an associate professor in IU’s department of sociology, told a room of nearly 50 IU faculty, staff and graduate students.
As IU Police Department officer Kyle Moulden began his night patrol around 11:30 p.m., young men and women in groups trudged up and down the cold, wet campus sidewalks in costume.
With Halloween weekend approaching, the IU Student Association said it wants to set the record straight.
It’s 8 a.m. Thursday. Students living in Read Center slowly scatter to their respective classes while appearing overwhelmed and tired.
Dressed in masks, wigs and robes, guides led a different kind of campus tour Wednesday evening.
Food and water. Batteries and charging cables. Toilet paper and hygiene products.
With a priest and multiple veterans to his left, Michael Bedwell handcuffed himself to the black iron fence encircling the White House.
Following the recent mass shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon, earlier this month, IU Emergency Management and Continuity is placing an emphasis on three words: run, hide and fight.
Immigration reform is as simple as making a choice between love and hate, Ai-jen Poo told students, faculty and staff Friday afternoon in the Indiana Memorial Union’s Whittenberger Auditorium.
The future of energy capture is changing, according to the research presented by Kappe Professor of Environmental Engineering Bruce Logan, who spoke Thursday afternoon.