Student Events

AAUP Fall Forum: Meet the New ISU Faculty Ombuds

In spring 2019 the Faculty Senate and Office of the Provost established a Faculty Ombuds Office - the purpose of which is to offer confidential and impartial counsel to faculty members at ISU who face professional challenges. Dr. Carrie Ball (Professor – Department of Applied Clinical and Educational Sciences) was selected as the first Faculty Ombuds at ISU. AAUP ~ ISU Chapter is pleased to host her in a forum where she will explain the principles of Ombuds-ship and her plans for further developing this important new agency on campus.

“The Drowning Girls”

“The Drowning Girls” — a ghost story about three young women murdered by the same man — opens Indiana State University’s fall theater season. In the early years of the 20th century, the three were considered — and consider themselves — to be of little account until they are lured into marriage by their murderer making them, as one of the trios says, “a useful member of society.” Grim and unsettlingly funny, “The Drowning Girls” recalls an era when women were dependent on men for everything, from money to their very existence in society.

"The Drowning Girls"

“The Drowning Girls” — a ghost story about three young women murdered by the same man — opens Indiana State University’s fall theater season. In the early years of the 20th century, the three were considered — and consider themselves — to be of little account until they are lured into marriage by their murderer making them, as one of the trios says, “a useful member of society.” Grim and unsettlingly funny, “The Drowning Girls” recalls an era when women were dependent on men for everything, from money to their very existence in society.

“The Drowning Girls”

“The Drowning Girls” — a ghost story about three young women murdered by the same man — opens Indiana State University’s fall theater season. In the early years of the 20th century, the three were considered — and consider themselves — to be of little account until they are lured into marriage by their murderer making them, as one of the trios says, “a useful member of society.” Grim and unsettlingly funny, “The Drowning Girls” recalls an era when women were dependent on men for everything, from money to their very existence in society.

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