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  • Professor Kenworthey Bilz

    Are law enforcement agencies abusing civil asset forfeiture?

    The controversial practice of civil asset forfeiture gets a well-deserved bad rap, says U. of I. law professor and criminal law expert Kenworthey Bilz.

  • Illinois chemistry professor Scott E. Denmark, left, with former graduate student Timothy Cheng. Denmark was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Illinois chemist elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences

    Scott E. Denmark, a professor of chemistry at the University of Illinois, has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

  • Student in history and political science awarded Truman Scholarship

    Thomas Dowling, a junior at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a Chicago native, was selected from a nationwide pool of nominees as one of 62 Truman Scholars.

  • Award-winning author Powell to present in Sesquicentennial Reading Series

    Patricia Hruby Powell, an award-winning young-adult author and Illinois alumna, will provide the third reading and discussion for the Illini Union Bookstore reading series marking the University of Illinois’ 150th year.

     

  • Sun setting behind miscanthus grass.

    Deaths

    Jules Rodger DeHaven Sr. ... Becky Frances Duffield ... Harriet McKean Fields ... Frederick Clyde Ford ... Iva Fern Galyath ... Anna-Irmgard Haken ... Thomas George Kovacs ... James Robert “Bob” Lodge ... Lyle Curtis “Papaw” Smith ... Stuart F. Yoos Jr. 

  • Professor Eboni Zamani-Gallaher

    How might President Trump’s proposed education budget affect college access?

    The proposed federal budget would continue to shift college access, affordability further beyond the reach of low-income, working-class students, says Professor Eboni Zamani-Gallaher

  • Art of Science 7.0: Images show the beauty of research

    Artistically enhanced research images from the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology will be shown at the Art of Science 7.0 exhibit.

  • Media Advisory: Public forums to provide Urbana campus master plan design updates

    The Urbana campus will host two sessions April 11-12 to brief the campus community and the general public on the design update of the campus master plan.

  • Illinois State Geological Survey senior geochemist Samuel Panno is one of seven academic professionals honored with CAPE awards this year.

    Seven academic professionals honored with CAPE awards

    Seven academic professionals were honored with 2017 Chancellor's Academic Professional Excellence awards at a reception April 6. Now in its 29th year, the program honors the accomplishments and contributions of academic professionals, who provide critical support for administration, research laboratories and educational programs, and offer important outreach programs throughout the state.

  • Panel to discuss ‘The War on Facts’

    Disinformation, “alternative facts” and the Trump administration’s battle with the mainstream media all will be topics in a panel discussion, “The War on Facts: Costs and Casualties,” April 13 at the University of Illinois.

     

     

  • Is Obamacare worth fixing?

    Tom O'Rourke, a professor emeritus of community health at Illinois, has spent much of his professional career examining the nation's health care system. He spoke with News Bureau Life Sciences Editor Diana Yates about the prospects for Obamacare.

  • Performance artist Autumn Knight dances in front of a crowd

    Performances by artist Autumn Knight scheduled for April

    Performance artist Autumn Knight will be on campus this month for two performances.

    Krannert Art Museum is hosting the first solo museum presentation – “Autumn Knight: In Rehearsal” – by Knight this semester. Knight incorporates elements of theater, dance, psychology and religious studies into her work, which examines with perceptions of race, gender and authority.

     

  • Professor Erik S. McDuffie’s future book examines the importance of the Midwest in shaping the history of the 20th century black world, in part by looking at global manufacturing centers such as Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit and their role in the growth of the largest black protest movement in world history.

    Illinois professor awarded ACLS fellowship

    University of Illinois professor Erik S. McDuffie is the recipient of a 2017 fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.

  • Princeton professor of religion and African American Studies Eddie Glaude to give Thulin Lecture in Religion

    Eddie Glaude, a professor of religion and African American Studies of Princeton University, will speak about W.E.B. Du Bois’ views on religion in the annual Marjorie Hall Thulin Lecture in Religion at the University of Illinois.

  • Krannert Art Museum to showcase art and design work by MFA students

    Graduate students in the School of Art and Design at the University of Illinois will present their work at the Master of Fine Arts Exhibition at Krannert Art Museum.

  • Media Advisory: Home page yields to 150-year-old humor

    The home page for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will turn the calendar back to 1867 on Saturday, with an April Fools' twist.

     

  • Final Petals & Paintings fundraiser this spring

    Krannert Art Museum will host its 25th – and final – Petals & Paintings fundraiser this spring, featuring floral designs created by two dozen florists and inspired by works of art on display at the museum.

  • The sun sets behind miscanthus at a farm on campus.

    Deaths

    Catherine “Katie” Ruth (Hedrick) Dorsey ... William C. Widenor

  • The five-day “Ebertfest” will open April 19 at the Virginia Theatre movie palace in downtown Champaign. Tickets for individual films go on sale April 1.

    ‘Being There,’ ‘Pleasantville’ and Cole Porter biopic among final slate for ‘Ebertfest’

    The last films have been added and the schedule is out for this year’s Roger Ebert’s Film Festival, coming April 19-23 to downtown Champaign.

     

     

  • Photo of the Business Instructional Facility on the Urbana campus of the University of Illinois.

    Online master’s degree in accountancy coming to U. of I.’s College of Business

    The new iMSA degree will be for working professionals who want access to quality education from a top-three accounting program with unmatched ties to the accounting field, as well as students new to the accounting profession, said W. Brooke Elliott, the EY Distinguished Professor in Accounting at Illinois.

  • Professor Richard L. Kaplan

    With the demise of the Obamacare repeal-and-replace bill, what’s next for health care?

    With the demise of the American Health Care Act all but rendering health care reform a moribund issue, tax reform likely will present its own challenges for President Trump and Congress, says Professor Richard L. Kaplan.

  • The sun sets behind miscanthus at a farm on campus.

    Deaths

    Louis Vincent DiBello ... Paul Stanley Hursey ... Jane Knop ... Eugene (Gene) Andrew Schum

     

     

  • Oasis Design Project

    University of Illinois students designed a seating area inspired by zen gardens for a major art and design show in Chicago last fall.

  • The movie poster for “Hair.”

    ‘Hair’ coming to ‘Ebertfest,’ along with additional films and guests

    The 1979 musical film “Hair” has been added to the schedule for this year’s “Ebertfest,” along with four additional films and directors, actors and other guests who will accompany them.

     

  • U. of I. animal sciences students spent nine weeks studying wildlife in Botswana's Okavango Delta and Chobe Enclave Region.

    Okavango Odyssey: Study abroad students study wildlife in Botswana

    It was 6 a.m. and the campers were quietly preparing for the day. Suddenly, a voice called out from the camp manager’s tent.

    “Girls? We’re going to have to wait. I can see a lion from my window.”

  • Birthday cake with the numbers 150

    Celebrating our sesquicentennial

    Milestones and relevant connections to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's 150th anniversary. 

  • Professor Laura Payne gave her communication in recreation, sport and tourism class a unique assignment: Perform a random act of kindness and post about it on social media using the hashtag #RAKLexiTurner, an online campaign in memoriam of an Illinois teen killed by a train. Payne, left, is shown with one of her students, Meghan Hannigan, who used the assignment to remind recruits to her sorority to be cautious around railways.

    Good Deeds, Safety Reminders

    Recreation, sport and tourism class creates public service messages about railway safety

  • Illinois computer science students Quinlin Chen and Mark Craft created a plug-in for the Chrome browser that verifies news articles and flags fake news – and they did it in only 36 hours, as part of a hackathon event.

    Ferreting out fake news

    Illinois computer science students Mark Craft and Qinglin Chen created an extension for the Chrome web browser to verify articles and pictures posted to Facebook. Even more impressive? They did it in less than 36 hours, as part of a student hackathon event hosted by Princeton University in November 2016.

     

  • Photo of U. of I. computer science lecturer Anna Yershova and a student peering through a virtual reality headset.

    Virtual Reality Project

    Have you ever been on the field at Memorial Stadium, standing next to the cheerleaders as they lead an “I-L-L” call-and-response during a football game? Or have you been onstage at Foellinger Great Hall at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts while world-class musicians play?

    With the help of a new interdisciplinary project from students in advertising and computer science, those and a few other quintessential Illinois experiences are just a mouse click – and a pair of virtual reality goggles – away.

  • Students in a “Reacting to the Past” course, each in the role of a historical figure, replay a scenario from a century ago in New York City.

    History Games

    Students learn about the past by replaying it, in a different kind of history class.

  • Students in U.S. Congress class, each in the role of a House member, debate a bill during a floor session.

    Act of Congress

    Students play the role of U.S. House members for a semester and gain insights on process, politics and power.

  • Historians take to their soapbox for books that changed the world

    Ten U. of I. history professors, staff and students will each make their case for a book that changed everything at the “History Soapbox” on March 30.

     

  • Doctoral student Sophia Balakian

    What does refugee vetting look like on the ground?

    A doctoral student found that the vetting process for refugees seeking U.S. admission was long and intense.

  • Altgeld Tower closed for repairs, carillon on autopilot

    With the closing of Altgeld Tower for repairs, the iconic carillon will be limited to machine-controlled announcements of quarter-hour intervals.

  • Actress Isabelle Huppert and television producer Norman Lear.

    Oscar nominee Isabelle Huppert and TV legend Norman Lear coming to ‘Ebertfest’

    Oscar nominee Isabelle Huppert and TV legend Norman Lear are coming to this year’s “Ebertfest,” along with two films, the first announced in this year’s lineup.

     

  • Filters showing a color change (pink) when they are working and yellow when they  are spent

    NASA awards $750,000 contract to startup for ‘smart’ color-changing air filters for space suits

    Serionix, a startup based on a technology created at the U. of I. and incubated at the EnterpriseWorks accelerator at Illinois, received a $750,000 contract from NASA to fund continued development of filters to remove toxic gases from next-generation spacesuit life-support systems. The same technology is on its way into consumer products expected to launch within the year. 

     

  • Illinois Distinguished Lecture Series in Operations Research announces speaker

    Edward H. Kaplan, the William N. and Marie A. Beach Professor of Operations Research, Public Health and Engineering at Yale University’s School of Management, will present “Adventures in Policy Modeling!” from 4 to 5 p.m. Wednesday, April 12, in the National Center for Supercomputing Applications auditorium at 1205 W. Clark St., Urbana. A reception will follow in the NCSA atrium.

     

  • The sun sets behind miscanthus at a farm on campus.

    Deaths

    Vivian Gladis Reid ... Thomas Dale “Tim” Roberts ... Russell E. Winterbottom

  • College of Engineering professors honored

    Princess U II Imoukhuede, a professor of bioengineering, is the recipient of a National Science Foundation CAREER award for her proposal “qBio+cBio=sBio; Identifying the role of cross-family signaling in angiogenesis.”
    more

  • America’s own interests, as well as international pressures, may dictate fewer changes in U.S. commitments overseas than President Trump has suggested, says U. of I. political scientist Stephen Chaudoin.

    How far can 'America First' go?

    America’s own interests, as well as international pressures, may dictate fewer changes in U.S. commitments overseas than President Trump has suggested, says U. of I. political scientist Stephen Chaudoin.

  • Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities announces fellowships

    The Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities at the U. of I. awarded its annual faculty and graduate student fellowships for the 2017-18 academic year to seven faculty members and seven graduate students. IPRH also announced its inaugural class of New Horizons summer research fellows for 2017. The program supports faculty summer research and pays for an undergraduate research assistant to support the project.

     

  • The sun sets behind miscanthus at a farm on campus.

    Deaths

    Larry Dornhoff ... Willie T. Summerville

  • Labor experts will present the second of Illini Union Bookstore’s Sesquicentennial Reading Series

     The Illini Union Bookstore at Illinois announces the second installment of its Sesquicentennial Reading Series on Tuesday, March 14 at 4:30 p.m. in the Authors Corner on the second floor of the bookstore, located at 809 S. Wright St., Champaign.

     

  • Students encouraged to enter the Sesquicentennial Design Competition

    The department of landscape architecture at Illinois announces the Sesquicentennial Design Competition, an initiative for students.

     

  • Illini Emergency Medical Services honored

    Illini Emergency Medical Services recently won three competitive awards: Striving for Excellence in Campus EMS, Collegiate EMS Video of the Year and Collegiate EMS Advisor of the Year.  The awards were presented at the 24th annual National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation conference in Baltimore in late February. IEMS is one of 246 campus-based emergency medical services organizations in North America, and one of 100 that attended the conference. 

  • Child Development Laboratory accepting applications for 2017-18

    The Child Development Laboratory, 1105 W. Nevada and 1005 W. Nevada, Urbana, is accepting applications for the 2017-18 school year. Full-day child care programs for children ages 6 weeks to 4 years are in session Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on a year-round basis. 

  • The European Center at the U. of I. is holding its 15th annual EU Day.

    EU ambassador to speak March 15 at the U. of I.

    The European Union ambassador to the U.S. is speaking March 15 at the University of Illinois, part of EU Day 2017.

  • The sun sets behind miscanthus at a farm on campus.

    Deaths

    Frances “Francie” Bridges ... Richard Charles Meyer ... John Thomas Pfeffer ... John Thompson

  • Professor Sheldon Jacobson

    Can data analytics help you fill out a March Madness bracket?

    Fill in your March Madness bracket from the center out, says bracketologist Sheldon H. Jacobson.

  • Media Advisory: Video released beckoning Obama to May 13 commencement

    A video featuring students asking former President Barack Obama to speak at the May 13 commencement ceremony was released today.