Two petition gatherers at the University of Louisville want to repurpose space for an archives for U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell and his wife, Department of Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, for a student lounge or LGBTQ community space.
Read the articleWake Forest University students and faculty were upset when a comment on a social media post said the phrase “build a wall,” a reference to President Trump’s border wall pledge.
Read the articleThe marketing campaign for the University of Wyoming was a resounding financial success, contrary to the complaints of some professors who said the phrase, “The World Needs More Cowboys,” was sexist.
Read the articleA University of Nebraska professor has been charged with vandalism of Republican lawmaker’s campaign sign and another Republican’s office.
Read the articleGeorge Washington University students barred men from participating in a debate competition in the name of inclusivity and gender equality.
Read the articleArizona State University students and faculty were upset when flyers with the face of a pro-life and pro-Trump student appeared on its campus, which they felt were targeting students.
Read the articleNotre Dame University decided to cover its murals, which display the colonization of the Americas by Christopher Columbus, after student activists criticized the murals for its depiction of colonization of Native American lands.
Read the articleTwo visiting professors at Scripps College praised Venezuela’s despotic and socialist leader, Nicolas Maduro.
Read the articleThe University of Oregon’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Day celebration invoked “environmental justice” as an important civil rights cause for today’s activists.
Read the articleGeorgetown University is looking to ban guns on its campus.
Read the articleSeveral University of Wisconsin student groups organized an “emergency rally” to call on the Trump administration to abolish the United States of America’s national borders, in addition to other concerns.
Read the articleAt George Washington University, Jemele Hill, the former ESPN reporter whose career at the network came to an abrupt end when she called President Trump a “white supremacist,” injected herself into a current controversy.
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