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Tales from the Tours It’s spring at Northwestern, and that means it’s high season for campus tours — more than 42,000 people visited campus in all of 2010. We asked a few of Northwestern’s walking ...
Twitter: @karapeeler Related Stories: — Tour guides work virtually, pushing boundaries for admissions — Northwestern’s acceptance rate falls to 6.8 percent, lowest in University history ...
Northwestern University to get visit from federal antisemitism task force The task force was created following Donald Trump’s executive order on “Additional Measures to Combat Anti-Semitism ...
Learning about the sustainable features of Northwestern’s Evanston campus just got easier with the launch of a comprehensive online Sustainability Map. The map recently went live on the University’s ...
On August 15, the American Institute of Architects Chicago (AIA Chicago) brought together more than 30 architects and construction professionals to tour Ryan Center for Musical Arts and the Kellogg ...
Home Events Additional Campus Spaces Additional Campus Space Requests Space reservations in Norris, the Black House, Gender & Sexuality Resource Center, Multicultural Center and Religious & Spiritual ...
A group of 14 students and faculty participated in a Social Justice Tour of Northwestern’s campus Thursday, exploring the untold histories of the University and delving into NU’s activist past.
In past years, the prospective undergraduate tour route only covered the southern part of campus, while the northern side was shown from a spot outside Norris University Center, 1999 Campus Drive.
Joshua Perry, Reporter February 12, 2021 Since the pandemic rendered their work remote, Northwestern’s tour guides have been slowly adapting their work of introducing campus to prospective students.
Walking along the Northwestern lakefront, it’s hard to imagine anything other than students and University buildings coloring the backdrop. But centuries ago, the Three Fires Confederacy ...
Northwestern University President Henry Bienen, left, and Princess Diana visit a sculpture garden on the Evanston campus on June 4, 1996.