The agenda for this month’s Faculty Council meeting did not list either DePaul’s budget gap or the Strategic Resource Allocation Committee (SRAC). Still, the topic dominated a portion of the May 3 meeting, as Provost Salma Ghanem hosted a back-and-forth discussion with those in attendance. Many questions and concerns from faculty in attendance centered on.
April is usually marked by the mundane ritual of contract renewal for term faculty at DePaul. This year, the situation is much more complex. On Monday April 10, students gathered on the corner of Sheffield Ave. and Belden Ave. near the Msgr. John Egan statue with the inscription reading: “What are you doing for.
DePaul Faculty Council held its elections for the 2022-2023 academic year at last Wednesday’s meeting. The positions voted on were president, vice president, secretary, three at-large members of Faculty Council Executive Committee (FCEC) and a newly created position of communication officer. Professor Sonia Soltero, faculty council president, Quinetta Shelby, vice president and associate professor, and.
‘The Color of Law’ Author Richard Rothstein to Speak at DePaul University
March 3, 2019
Richard Rothstein’s book “The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How our Government Segregated America.” (Book cover courtesy of JRB Communications, LLC)
Housing policy expert on campus Thursday, October 4
CHICAGO (ENEWSPF) September 24, 2018
Government policy at the local, state and federal levels has played and continues to play a critical role in the segregation that’s seen in major cities across the U.S., argues author Richard Rothstein in his 2017 book “The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How our Government Segregated America.” The housing policy expert will speak October 4 at DePaul University on governmental roles in creating and enforcing racially discriminatory housing and lending policies and the legacies of such policies today.
Watch Kenya Navy s Helicopter Training in Indian Ocean
Kenya Navy officers participate in a training in Nyali
Twitter
As Kenya s defence system continues to grow stronger, the training of its recruits also grows more intense.
A video shared by
NTV on Tuesday, May 25, showed the grueling training session Kenya Navy officers undergo before being sent behind enemy lines.
In the clip, the police chopper is seen airlifting a number of trainees and hovering around the ocean. Through the backdoor, the trainees are seen jumping legs-first into the ocean.
The training, which was aimed at Combat Water Survival, was carried out at the Nyali public beach.