As part of a policy, certain RSOs planning events that are challenging in scope must undergo additional steps for approval.
Tiantian Zhang, Chicago Maroon
Articles
Major RSO events face more scrutiny
Steep divide at polls between grad schools
While graduate student turnout was critical in the latest SG election, certain divisions hardly voted at all.
In back of Hutch, a nightly game of kings
Every night chess players stage an informal gathering in the Reynolds Club. Here’s why.
Expert on Middle East discusses aftermath of Arab Spring
Modern Arab Studies professor talks about the lingering and potential future effects of Arab Spring on Palestine.
Van Jones talks tyranny and justice
Environmentalist was joined by slam poet at I-House discussion.
Home and abroad, profs ‘nudge’ policy
University professors continue to advance the use of behavioral economics in the field of public policy.
Kalven report examined, questioned at open forum
Faculty and an administrator examined the role of the Kalven report in shaping University policies at an open forum hosted by SG on Wednesday evening.
Booth students claim international prize in marketing contest
Booth students won $75,000 for their plan to market pantyhose.
Teacher sues Board of Ed over suspension
A Murray Language Academy teacher is suing the Chicago BOE for suspending him after his use of a racial slur in class.
At community kitchen, a troubled past boils away
Lamont Herron found an outlet for his passion when poverty and crime were all around him.
Snowed in? Snow problem
A sociology graduate student is one of the developers of a web app that will help Chicagoans navigate snow embanked streets.
Latina women speak out on murder, misogyny
The Office of Multicultural Student Affairs hosted its Symposium on Women’s Rights in Latin America last week.
Reinke brings grave inspiration to FSC
Steve Reinke gave me a delirious and peculiar, yet engaging experience, which, in some ways, led to some self-realization.
Jersey Shore Conference: Snooki’s brush with Marxism
A Marxist analysis was in play at one of the conference’s talks, where a joint panel of students from the U of C and the University of Western Ontario offered a backdoor look at labor relations on set and the show’s topsy-turvey balance of labor-power.
ACLU president talks civil rights at I-House
American citizens risk making themselves targets of discrimination if they fail to confront tough questions about the erosion of their civil rights, the president of the ACLU said Tuesday at International House.
