News Archive
On the final Wednesday of the spring semester's Food Truck Series by University Culinary Services, four vendors will assemble on Risman Plaza from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. on May 1.
The School of Peace and Conflict Studies originated at ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ as a response to May 4. Today it’s central in ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½â€™s global presence. We travel to Rwanda, where ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ convened a global peace education conference and, through the Kigali Summer Institute, immerses students in peace-building centered on reconciliation, in a place that experienced the unimaginable 1994 genocide.
Listen to episode two of May 4: Legacy, which continues with the story of ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ fraternity brothers drive to the nation’s capital in the hours after the shootings and make their way to an Oval Office meeting with President Richard Nixon. We also move into the 21st century with Associate Dean and retired Lt. Col. Mo McFarland on the May 4 legacy.
Martin Phan, 23, a nursing major in ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½â€™s College of Nursing, is one of a growing number of Vietnamese citizens who have chosen to attend ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½.
Fashion photographer Pauline St. Denis has experiences, skills and advice to share about her storied professional career. Luckily for the students in ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½â€™s School of Fashion, St. Denis made time to talk and work directly with students as part of this year’s Annual Fashion Week.
ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ celebrated Earth Month with an exceptionally full schedule of events, not the least of which were the activities on campus surrounding the total solar eclipse!
The annual Spring Plant Sale at the Herrick Conservatory offers a chance for Flashes to add more green into their gardens and homes. Students help grow the plants and paint rain barrels. The event helps raise funds for several biology-focused student organizations.
What’s past is prologue. Let the history of May 4, 1970, be heard this week.
In her first year as the director of the May 4 Visitor Center, Alison Caplan has enjoyed uniquely wonderful and "magical" experiences in how ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½'s history creates connections and inspiration.
The extensive detail that goes into efficiently maintaining a modern campus may surprise you. And, when you learn how the planning experts at ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ handle this important task, you will be equally impressed.
The famed British designer nicknamed "the Princess of Punk," Dame Zandra Rhodes, will be inducted into the ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ School of Fashion Hall of Fame on April 27.
In 1941, a writing exercise for high school journalists visiting ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ was centered around a fictional kidnapping of the university's first president, John E. McGilvrey. In a pre-internet version of a "home page takeover," the stories ran on the front page of the ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½r - without including information revealing that they were not real!
ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ took a moment to honor the faculty, staff and students whose accomplishments help to lift the university to higher heights.
A sea of silk and satin, leather and lace floated down the runway as ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½â€™s Annual Fashion Show debuted to an enthusiastic crowd filling the Kent Student Center Ballroom Thursday night.
This Flash Friday we want to introduce you to Eduardo Miranda Strobel, an international student from Curitiba, Brazil, getting the full ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ experience.
Cleveland-born celebrity chef Kenny Gilbert is preparing some of his signature classic dishes for students at Eastway Center.
The idea was simple: Physically connect people with the locations of the May 4, 1970, ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½ shootings so they might better connect with each other.
Senior entrepreneurship major Meg Gidley has loved softball since she was three years old. It was in her blood. Then, injuries sidelined her playing career. So she started a coaching business.
Birds flew overhead, black squirrels darted around and a cool, calm breeze swept across Risman Plaza on April 22 as dozens of organizations assembled their tables for Earth Fest, an interactive Earth Day event.
Students from ÇàÄêɬµ¼º½'s School of Fashion were able to showcase their designs digitally, by clothing avatar models, for a runway show on floor-to-ceiling, wraparound screens at the DI Hub's Blank Lab.