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  • Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    As this issue of Postmarks reaches your home, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign we are moving into the final months of the academic year.

  • Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    By the time you are reading this issue of Postmarks, we’ll be moving into the final months of our academic year. It’s hard to believe that another academic year is coming to a close so quickly. And just as those of us on campus find ourselves in a whirlwind of exams, final projects and preparation for graduation, many of you are considering whether Illinois is the right choice for your child next year. 

  • Interim Chancellor Barbara J. Wilson

    Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    As you get this issue of Postmarks in the mail, we’re moving into the final couple of months of our academic year here at Illinois.

  • Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    By the time this fall issue of Postmarks is in your hands, we’ll be well into the fall semester at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Nearly 7,000 freshmen and more than 1,300 new transfer students joined the Illinois family in August, setting new records for academic achievement. Together with our returning students, they represent every state in the nation and nearly half the nations in the world. The campus is once again full of the energy, excitement and anticipation of what this year will bring us all.

  • Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    As you read this issue of Postmarks, we will be near the mid-point of the fall semester. Whether this is your first semester with a son or daughter at Illinois or it is a year of return for your child, we are proud to count them among our students.

  • Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    By the time this issue of Postmarks is in your hands, we'll be well into the fall semester at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

  • Interim Chancellor Barbara J. Wilson

    Dear Parents: Letter from the Chancellor

    By the time you read this issue of Postmarks, we’ll be nearing the middle of the fall semester here at Illinois.

  • Dear Parents

    Dear Parents

  • Dear Parents

    Much to my delight, in my first few months as chancellor I have discovered two common threads at this great university: Learning never rests and helping others is a way of life.

  • Dear Parents

    There are outstanding universities in every state where a student can get an education. We want to ensure that at Illinois, students don’t just get an education – they have experiences that really prepare them for the challenges they’ll have when they leave this campus. 

  • Dear Parents

    On Oct.1 during Homecoming I assumed my new responsibilities as vice president of the University of Illinois and as chancellor of the Urbana campus. I want to share with you how excited and humbled I am to have the privilege to lead one of the greatest modern research universities in the world. 

  • Crime alerts to include follow-up notices on arrests

    When there’s a serious crime within the campus district, the U. of I. police department sends an email to inform the campus community of the situation. Public Safety officials are planning to use the system to share good news as well.

  • Cricket Club of Illinois welcomes anyone intersted in the sport, which dates to 16th-century England.

    Cricketers maintain their wicket ways

    On Quad Day, more than 600 registered student organizations set up displays in hopes of attracting new members. Junior Utkarsh Yadav didn’t need to browse. He knew exactly which RSO he wanted to join.

  • Coursera student Kunwar Apoorva Singh is surrounded by tribal children he taught in rural Maharashtra, a state in western India, as part of an outreach campaign supported by the NGO Don Bosco.

    Coursera shares U. of I. courses far beyond campus

    As Illinois students took their seats last fall in lecture halls across campus, half a world and several time zones away in New Delhi, Kunwar Apoorva Singh booted up his computer and logged into the Illinois portion of Coursera, the consortium of more than 80 global universities offering free online courses to anyone in the world with access to the Internet.

  • Camp attendees expanded their cultural knowledge at the Education building.

    Chinese for a New Generation

    Chinese culture and language camp promotes international outlook

  • Busey-Evans dining hall cook Willie Green, left, and Housing Division administrators serve new students.

    Cheers! Giant smoothie breaks record at Convocation

    Dining Services cooked up some excitement at the annual New Student Convocation and the Guinness Book of World Records certified their efforts. The world’ largest smoothie – a 330-gallon pink delight – was created from 960 pounds of yogurt, 600 pounds of strawberries and 105 gallons of pineapple juice.

  • Austin Teitsma, a sophomore from Glen Ellyn, Ill., plays with a Garden Hills Elementary School student during a Hometown Heroes visit.

    CHAMPS/Life Skills program supports student-athletes

    The athlete shines on the playing field or the court, in the gym or the pool. That’s the part of “student-athlete” that most UI fans know about. The student part happens out of the limelight, but the record shows student-athletes succeeding there as well.

  • Birthday cake with the numbers 150

    Celebrating our sesquicentennial

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

  • Yanchen Shi (left), a senior in bioengineering from Dunlap, Illinois, gets his resume reviewed at The Career Center by Rameez Siddiqui, a student paraprofessional there.

    Career prep starts early: Even freshmen, whether certain or searching, have things they can do

    The Career Center at the U. of I. is in a handy spot, across the street from the Alma Mater sculpture on the edge of Campustown.

  • Illinois Camp Kesem has been making magic for families coping with cancer since 2007. Camp Kesem is a weeklong, overnight summer camp organized by student volunteers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

    Camp Kesem acts as an escape for children whose parents have cancer

    The little girl chatted excitedly to her dad. As the two waited in the check-in line, she began to list all of the things she loved about camp: the special guest, the other kids, the counselors. She was the typical girl excited to attend summer camp, with one marked difference: two weeks earlier her mom passed away from cancer.

  • Campers in the robotics camp test small electric cars that they built and programmed. The cars are optically guided, so they are programmed to follow the black lines of tape.

    A summer of fun and GAMES

    The weeklong camp is geared toward high school students with interests in science and engineering. GAMES includes seven camps, each focusing on a particular engineering discipline: aerospace engineering, bioengineering, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, environmental engineering, materials science and robotics.

  • Chemistry professor Catherine Murphy, seated at the microscope, explains the work of her research team to Peggy Flavin, an environmental design student.

    Art Meets Science

    Murphy Lab Participant/Observer Program creates interdisciplinary learning environment

  • Working with the theme "In My World I See " students reveal their inner landscapes using string painting, a technique in which the artist dips a piece of string 10 to 12 inches long in India ink then presses, drags or swirls the string across the paper. Color is then added using pastels, crayons or watercolors.

    Art for the sake of self-discovery

    Journeys that foster self-discovery are not always easy or pleasant – but can be empowering and liberating, says Elka Kazmierczak, a slender woman with short gray hair and sparkling brown eyes. She seems to vibrate with energy and purpose. At the first meeting of the semester for the Illini Art Therapy Association, Kazmierczak invites participants to take such a journey with her.

  • The work of undergraduate animators, from left, Pakpoom Buabthong, Annie Lin and Benjamin Blalock brings development education to people around the world on their cellphones.

    Animators help fight disease, preserve crops, feed the world

    A farmer in Burkina Faso learns how to safely store his crops. An entrepreneur in India learns how to truck her harvested grain to market. Thanks to student animators at the U. of I., these people and countless others around the world can also see and hear about the symptoms, transmission and treatment of tuberculosis, or how and when to wash their hands to avoid disease.

  • Tara Zumwalt (left) and Eve Zumwalts family has been attending Illinois for more than 140 years.

    A Family Affair

    Celebrating five generations of Illinois students

  • Advertising is Us

    Student group leads in membership, awards and enthusiasm

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • Administrative Posts

    Administrative Posts

  • 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.

  • Actif

    Startup develops wearable systems for road safety

  • A Community of Peers

    Resources await at the Center for Wounded Veterans in Higher Education

  • Muhammed Fazeel, a senior from Chicago majoring in integrative biology, created a compay called Tabule with the help of the Academy of Entrepreneurial Leadership.

    Academy helps students get down to business

    A generation ago, all an entrepreneur needed was an idea and a garage. Now, entrepreneurs need little more than an Internet connection – and, for UI students, the help of a unit on campus that can guide them as they turn their ideas into full-fledged businesses.

  • 2016 Campuswide Commencement

    Exercises set for May 14