Retired ND American Studies professor dies
Retired Notre Dame American Studies professor Elizabeth Christman died Thursday. She was 96.
Retired Notre Dame American Studies professor Elizabeth Christman died Thursday. She was 96.
As a way to make the technological network more efficient, the Information Technology department at Saint Mary's College has recently adopted a new program.
In a campus-wide effort to provide food options for the less fortunate, the Saint Mary's College's Office for Civic and Social Engagement (OCSE) will be collecting boxed and canned food for a local project called Neighbors in Need this month.
Student government recently released "Head Above Water," a CD containing original music by Notre Dame students whose profits will benefit for the Global Water Initiative,
The Campus Life Council met with Bill Kirk, associate vice president for Residence Life, Monday to comment on possible revisions of the du Lac student handbook, emphasizing in particular the progression of disciplinary sanctions and the University's policies for alcohol consumption on campus.
In an effort to encourage discussion of ethical matters among students and faculty, the Mendoza College of Business launched its 13th annual Ethics Week Monday, focusing this year on the issue of abortion.
The Edith Stein Project, sponsored by the Identity Project of Notre Dame, will return to campus for a fifth year, initiating an honest discussion on human identity and relationships.
As a way to celebrate Valentine's Day, Saint Mary's athletes came together to throw a party for the children of Memorial Hospital's Oncology and Hematology Departments Sunday.
On any given weekend, a cab driver will experience at least one student bolting from the cab without paying, president of Blue Ribbon Taxi Kerry Clear said.
From charity concerts to AcoustiCafe to this year's B1 Block Party, senior Pat McKillen is a regular on the Notre Dame music scene. His constant presence on the performance circuit has earned him a sizable student fan base and performance opportunities outside the University.
Fundraising and advocacy are two immediate term relief efforts in the aftermath of the Jan. 12 earthquake in Haiti. Rebuilding the country's institutions like the medical care system is one long-term effort the University is now undertaking, Brennan Bollman, a Notre Dame graduate and the 2009 valedictorian, said.
The third annual Notre Dame Diversity Conference examined current hot topics in business ranging from the gender gap to Latino markets Friday and Saturday at the Mendoza College of Business.
In a campus-wide effort to provide food options for the less fortunate, the Saint Mary's College's Office for Civic and Social Engagement (OCSE) will be collecting boxed and canned food for a local project called Neighbors in Need this month.
Notre Dame alumni Kaylea Hoelscher and Todd Woodward will return to campus on Feb. 8 top share their experiences in the advertising profession at an event hosted by the Marketing Club.
Who They Are Junior Eras Noel lives in Siegfried Hall and is majoring in Mechanical Engineering and Industrial Design. Noel's vice presidential candidate, Julian Corona, is a junior Electrical and Mechanical Engineering major. He lives in St. Edwards Hall. In Their Words: Top Priority: A series called "Perspectives," where a professor will lead a discussion with students in his area of expertise about a topic of the week, or topic of the month. "We'll talk about gay marriage, abortion, the death penalty," Noel said. "It helps us to grow as a student community and as individuals."
Music professor Nancy Menk and members of the Saint Mary's Women's Choir will join other choirs in a performance at Carnegie Hall in New York City on Valentine's Day. The concert is entitled "Love, Lust and Light" and will begin at 2 p.m. in the Isaac Stern Auditorium.
Who They Are Presidential candidate Soler, a sophomore from Farley Hall, is an accounting major and vice presidential candidate Bell is a sophomore business major from Knott Hall. Soler is currently sophomore class president and Bell serves on Student Senate. In Their Words Top Priority: Soler and Bell plan on creating a rental program for textbooks in the Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore.
Student government is prioritizing seven initiatives for the rest of the year, student body president Grant Schmidt told the Student Affairs Committee of the Board of Trustees at a meeting Thursday.
The thermometer read 32 degrees, but yesterday 180 Siegfried Hall men braced the freezing South Bend weather in shorts, T-shirts and sandals to raise money for the South Bend Center for the Homeless.
Scholars across disciplines will come together tonight and tomorrow in a colloquium hosted by the School of Architecture entitled "Learning from Rome: The Influence of the Eternal City on Art, Architecture and the Humanities" in order to question the merits of studying in and about the Italian capital.