Tag Archives: Campus

Terrified Michigan State students barricaded and hid as police searched for a gunman who killed three on campus – The Associated Press – en Español

  1. Terrified Michigan State students barricaded and hid as police searched for a gunman who killed three on campus The Associated Press – en Español
  2. The Michigan State University killer was previously charged with a felony but was still able to buy guns CNN
  3. Michigan State University gunman had felony weapon charge dropped in 2019 Fox News
  4. Michigan shooting | An Indian student in the US writes: Universities don’t prepare you for the reality that you could be shot The Indian Express
  5. Editorial: The MSU Shooting Hits Home, Because it is Home 9&10 News

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Northwestern Mutual to leave Franklin campus, thousands of jobs to relocate downtown Milwaukee – TMJ4 News

  1. Northwestern Mutual to leave Franklin campus, thousands of jobs to relocate downtown Milwaukee TMJ4 News
  2. Northwestern Mutual downtown Milwaukee campus | FOX6 News Milwaukee FOX6 News Milwaukee
  3. Northwestern Mutual plans $500 million upgrade to its HQ, will bring 2,000 Franklin employees downtown BizTimes Milwaukee
  4. Northwestern Mutual invests $500 million in downtown Milwaukee campus Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  5. Northwestern Mutual to move 2,000 jobs from Franklin to downtown – Milwaukee Business Journal The Business Journals
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Northwestern Mutual invests $500 million in downtown Milwaukee campus – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

  1. Northwestern Mutual invests $500 million in downtown Milwaukee campus Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  2. Northwestern Mutual Franklin to Milwaukee downtown move, $500M investment | FOX6 News Milwaukee FOX6 News Milwaukee
  3. Northwestern Mutual’s office project will have a big impact on downtown Milwaukee. These numbers show the scope Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  4. Northwestern Mutual joins growing list of companies moving operations from suburbs to downtown Milwaukee TMJ4 News
  5. Northwestern Mutual to invest $500M in Milwaukee downtown WISN 12 News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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TikTok Banned From University of Texas Campus – Rolling Stone

“You are no longer able to access TikTok on any device if you are connected to the university via its wired or WIFI networks.”

So reads a notice that appears on the devices of students at the University of Texas at Austin after the school announced it would be blocking the use of the social media app on university WiFi and servers. The decision was prompted by an order from Governor Greg Abbott banning the use of the app on state-owned devices on grounds of security concerns. Students can still, however, carry a gun on campus. 

“As outlined in the governor’s directive, TikTok harvests vast amounts of data from its users’ devices — including when, where and how they conduct internet activity “and offers this trove of potentially sensitive information to the Chinese government,” UT-Austin Technology Adviser Jeff Neyland wrote in the email to The Texas Tribune. 

The statement was a virtual word-for-word reiteration of Abbott’s December ban on the installment and use of the app on government-issued devices. 

The app, which is owned by the Chinese company Bytedance, has attempted to assuage cybersecurity concerns raised by lawmakers. In June 2022, the app announced it would be migrating American user data to Oracle servers stored in the United States. But the efforts to reassure legislators have been largely unsuccessful, multiple states have issued governor device bans similar to Abbott’s, and a nationwide ban on the app has been proposed by lawmakers in Congress.

Other universities, including Auburn University, Boise State University, the University of Oklahoma, and the University System of Georgia, have also implemented bans similar to UT-Austin’s.

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While students and faculty, under the guise of their own and the university’s safety, will no longer be allowed to access TikTok via university WiFi, under Abbott’s governance they can still carry a firearm on campus. Texas’ “campus carry” laws permit students to carry concealed handguns on campus, including in classrooms. 

Texas has seen some of the nation’s most brutal mass shootings in recent history, including the 2022 massacre of 19 children and two teachers in Uvalde, Texas, and the 2019 killing of 23 people in an El Paso Walmart. UT-Austin experienced its own mass shooting in 1966, when a gunman shot and killed 15 people and injured 31 others from the observation deck of the university’s iconic Main Building Tower. While digital security is of course an issue of concern, the discrepancy in the government of Texas’ priorities for student and public safety are striking.



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Princeton student found dead on campus died by suicide: Officials

A Princeton University student who was found dead on the New Jersey campus this fall died by suicide, the prosecutor’s office said Wednesday.

The body of 20-year-old Misrach Ewunetie was found near university tennis courts on Oct. 20, nearly one week after she went missing.

A man walks on campus at Princeton University, Feb. 4, 2020 in Princeton, New Jersey.

William Thomas Cain/Getty Images, FILE

An autopsy by the Middlesex Regional Medical Examiner’s Office has determined she died from “bupropion, escitalopram and hydroxyzine toxicity” and her death has been ruled a suicide, the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office said. Bupropion and escitalopram are antidepressants. Hydroxyzine is an antihistamine.

“Misrach’s death is an unthinkable tragedy,” the university said in a statement in October. “Our hearts go out to her family, her friends and the many others who knew and loved her.”

If you are struggling with thoughts of suicide or worried about a friend or loved one, help is available. Call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 [TALK] for free, confidential emotional support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

ABC News’ Nicole Mclean contributed to this report.

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Idaho stabbings rock campus a decade after deadly romance between professor and student

MOSCOW, Idaho – The brutal slayings of four University of Idaho students early on a November Saturday marked the first homicides in Moscow in years, according to authorities, but while such crimes are rare, details about the few can be shocking.

Sunday marks four weeks since the slayings of Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Madison Mogen, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Ethan Chapin, 20, in a rental house across the street from the university’s Greek Row. The three women lived there, and Chapin, who lived in a frat house 200 yards away, was visiting his girlfriend, Kernodle. Police have not publicly named a suspect or any persons of interest.

While the city’s last murders came in 2015, in August 2011, a university professor turned a gun on a graduate student with whom he’d been romantically involved, then killed himself in a murder-suicide, school workers told Fox News Digital Friday.

Katy Benoit, a 22-year-old musician and psychology student from Boise, was gunned down in her off-campus apartment months after her romantic relationship with University of Idaho professor Ernesto Bustamante ended.

IDAHO MURDERS: POLICE URGE PUBLIC TO ‘STAY VIGILANT’ AS FAMILIES GATHER FOR FALL GRADUATION

A University of Idaho memorial for Katy Benoit, a former graduate student who was shot and killed by a professor in 2011. Inset: Katy Benoit.
(University of Idaho/Facebook, Moscow Police Department)

The Associated Press reported in 2011 that the police affidavit contained a statement from Bustamante’s friend, Rowdy Hope, who alleged “that Bustamante had multiple handguns and multiple personality disorders…[including] one Bustamante calls a ‘psychopathic killer’ and another Bustamante calls ‘the beast.'”

Police reportedly found Bustamante in a hotel room the day after Benoit’s slaying, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

IDAHO MURDERS: SLAIN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ NEIGHBOR SAYS FRONT DOOR LEFT WIDE OPEN AFTER ATTACKS

“We are shocked and saddened by the death of Kathryn ‘Katy’ Benoit, who was killed outside of her off-campus residence in Moscow last night,” the university wrote on Facebook on Aug. 23, 2011. “There is no way to express how devastating the loss of any life can be, but especially someone so young with such potential.”

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO MURDERS TIMELINE: WHAT WE KNOW

“Her last weeks as a physical being on Earth were filled with excitement and anticipation for her new role as a Teacher’s Assistant, where she would be teaching undergraduate classes in Social Psychology and Developmental Psychology,” her family wrote in an online obituary. “Katy was a recipient of the Bronze, Silver and, just this past year, Gold Congressional Awards, which are given by Congress to outstanding young Americans with high achievement in volunteer public service, physical fitness and personal development.”

A University of Idaho memorial for Katy Benoit, a former graduate student who was shot and killed by a professor in 2011.
(University of Idaho/Facebook)

Benoit’s death prompted the school to begin an annual event called the Campus Safety Week and Katy Benoit Safety Forum. The university also installed a memorial in her honor on campus.

“The Katy Benoit Safety Month is still held annually and includes a safety forum, a ‘lighting audit’ for students, trainings and other events,” Jodi Walker, the school’s executive director of communications, told Fox News Digital Saturday.

Moscow is generally regarded as a safe community, where there have been few slayings over the years.

Ethan Chapin, 20, Xana Kernodle, 20, Madison Mogen, 21, and Kaylee Goncalves, 21, along with the women’s two other roommates in Kaylee Goncalves’ final Instagram post, shared the day before the slayings.
(@kayleegoncalves/Instagram)

Court records show the 2015 homicides involved a local man named John Lee, also known as Kane Grzebielski, who later pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder and another count of aggravated battery.

Lee fatally shot his adoptive mother, his landlord and a local restaurateur, the Associated Press reported at the time, and he injured another man who survived. 

Lee is currently serving a life sentence for the crimes at the Idaho State Correctional Institution.

IDAHO MURDERS: CONVICTED KILLER ARRESTED A MILE FROM UNIVERSITY STABBINGS

In 2007, another man, James Leonard, shot and killed Tyler Lee in a driveway in Genesee. He initially claimed self-defense but pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was later freed – only to be arrested last week in Moscow on domestic violence charges just over a mile from the off-campus house where someone killed four students in the early hours of Nov. 13.

Police said his arrest had no connection to the murder investigation.

Moscow, Idaho detectives are interested in speaking with the occupant(s) of a white 2011-2013 Hyundai Elantra, with an unknown license plate in relation to the investigation of a quadruple homicide on November 13, 2022. This image is not the car in question, it is just for reference. 
(Moscow PD)

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Anyone with information is asked to call the tip line at 208-883-7180 or to email tipline@ci.moscow.id.us.

Police are also looking to speak with the occupant or occupants of a 2011 to 2013 white Hyundai Elantra that was near the crime scene around the time of the slayings.



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Idaho State Police adds patrols to university campus as school holds vigil for 4 students killed in unsolved stabbings



CNN
 — 

Idaho State Police has added four campus patrols and 14 patrols for the general community as the University of Idaho hosted a vigil Wednesday night for the four students fatally stabbed earlier this month.

Several hundred people attended the vigil on the campus of 9,300 students to commemorate the victims: Ethan Chapin, 20; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Madison Mogen, 21.

Several family members spoke about their loved ones.

“We lost four beautiful souls,” said Goncalves’ father, Steve. Later, he told those watching to find someone they love and tell them. “The only cure to pain is love,” he said.

Chapin’s mother, Stacy Chapin, talked about how their family was very close. They shared meals when they could, they played games together and loved spending days on the boat listening to country music, Ethan’s “most favorite thing in the whole world.”

“We are eternally grateful that we spent so much time with him,” she said, and then, as her voice cracked, she implored the audience to do the same with their families. “Because time is precious and it’s something you can’t get back.”

The parents – including Mogen’s father, who spoke lovingly about his “great kid” who was “just nice to everybody” – also thanked law enforcement and university officials for their work since the November 13 slayings.

Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find the murder weapon, but a spokesperson for the Idaho State Police said they have begun to receive forensic testing results, Fox News reported.

“I do know that each type of testing… some take longer than others. And I also do know that there have been results that have been returned and those go directly to the investigators, so that way they can help, again, paint that picture as we keep talking about,” spokesperson Aaron Snell said, while declining to say who the DNA belonged to.

CNN has reached out to Snell for comment.

State police are assisting police in Moscow, a city of about 26,000 people, with the investigation. The uncertainty and lack of information around the unsolved killings has left the campus emptier than usual after Thanksgiving break.

While there is no official number on how many students returned, Provost and Executive Vice President Torrey Lawrence told CNN professors are reporting that about two-thirds to three-quarters of students are attending in-person.

“This is a heavy situation, and we are moving forward by trying to be supportive of all of our people, our faculty, our staff, our students, and trying to address their needs,” Lawrence said.

One student told CNN that, with a killer not identified, people are “sketched out.”

“It definitely feels a little bit different,” said student Hayden Rich. “It seems kind of a sad setting. It is kind of quiet.”

Snell told CNN on Tuesday they’ve seen an uptick in 911 calls while the cases remain unsolved. Most of those calls are concerning “suspicious person” activity, or “welfare check.”

“We are recognizing that there is heightened fear in the community and so the officers are going to those calls and they’re handling them as they come up,” Snell said.

University of Idahos President Scott Green acknowledged last week that some students did not want to return until a suspect is in custody.

“As such, faculty have been asked to prepare in-person teaching and remote learning options so that each student can choose their method of engagement for the final two weeks of the semester,” he wrote in a statement.

Dozens of local, state and federal investigators are still working to determine who carried out the brutal attack. Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find a weapon – believed to be a fixed-blade knife – and have sifted through more than 1,000 tips and conducted at least 150 interviews.

The four students were found stabbed to death in an off-campus home in Moscow. The killings have unsettled the campus community and the town, which had not seen a murder since 2015.

Police said they believe the killings were “targeted” and “isolated” but have not released evidence to back up that analysis. They also initially said there was no threat to the public – but later backtracked on that assurance.

“We cannot say there’s no threat to the community,” Police Chief James Fry said days after the killings.

Authorities said they have not ruled out the possibility that more than one person may be involved in the stabbings.

So far, using the evidence collected at the scene and the trove of tips and interviews, investigators have been able to piece together a rough timeline and a map of the group’s final hours.

On the night of the killings, Goncalves and Mogen were at a sports bar, and Chapin and Kernodle were seen at a fraternity party.

Investigators believe all four victims had returned to the home by 2 a.m. the night of the stabbings. Two surviving roommates had also gone out in Moscow that night, police said, and returned to the house by 1 a.m.

Police earlier said Goncalves and Mogen returned to the home by 1:45 a.m., but they updated the timeline Friday, saying digital evidence showed the pair returned at 1:56 a.m. after visiting a food truck and being driven home by a “private party.”

The next morning, two surviving roommates “summoned friends to the residence because they believed one of the second-floor victims had passed out and was not waking up,” police said in a release. Somebody called 911 from the house at 11:58 a.m. using one of the surviving roommates’ phones.

When police arrived, they found two victims on the second floor and two victims on the third floor. There was no sign of forced entry or damage, police said.

Investigators do not believe the two surviving roommates were involved in the deaths.

A coroner determined the four victims were each stabbed multiple times and were likely asleep when the attacks began. Some of the students had defensive wounds, according to the Latah County coroner.

Student Ava Forsyth said her roommate is staying home because she does not feel safe. Forsyth said she feels “moderately” safe, but “not so much” at night, when she takes advantage of a free campus walking security service.

Rich, the student who said people are “sketched out,” said he decided to come back for the many tests he has this week. Student Lexi Way told CNN that she feels safe with upped campus security and “tends to learn better in class.”

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Foxconn protests: iPhone factory offers to pay its workers to quit and leave Zhengzhou campus


Hong Kong
CNN Business
 — 

Foxconn has offered to pay newly recruited workers 10,000 yuan ($1,400) to quit and leave the world’s largest iPhone assembly factory, in an attempt to quell protests that saw hundreds clash with security forces at the compound in central China.

The Apple supplier made the offer Wednesday following dramatic scenes of violent protests on its campus in Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan province, in a text message sent from its human resources department to workers.

In the message, seen by CNN, the company urged workers to “please return to your dormitories” on the campus. It also promised to pay them 8.000 yuan if they agreed to quit Foxconn, and another 2,000 yuan after they board buses to leave the sprawling site altogether.

The protest erupted on Tuesday night over the terms of the new hires’ payment packages and Covid-related concerns about their living conditions. Scenes turned increasingly violent on Wednesday as workers clashed with a large number of security forces, including SWAT team officers.

Videos circulating on social media showed groups of law enforcement officers clad in hazmat suits kicking and hitting protesters with batons and metal rods. Some workers were seen tearing down fences, throwing bottles and barriers at officers and smashing and overturning police vehicles.

The protest largely tailed off around 10 p.m. on Wednesday as workers returned to their dormitories, having received Foxconn’s payment offer and fearing a harsher crackdown by authorities, a witness told CNN.

The Zhengzhou plant was hit by a Covid outbreak in October, which forced it to lock down and led to a mass exodus of workers fleeing the outbreak. Foxconn later launched a massive recruitment drive, in which more than 100,000 people signed up to fill the advertised positions, Chinese state media reported.

According to a document setting out the salary package of new hires seen by CNN, the workers were promised a 3,000 yuan bonus after 30 days on the job, with another 3,000 yuan to be paid after a total of 60 days.

However, according to a worker, after arriving at the plant, the new recruits were told by Foxconn that they would only receive the first bonus on March 15, and the second installment in May – meaning they must work through the Lunar New Year holiday, which starts in January 2023, to get the first of the bonus payments.

“The new recruits had to work more days to get the bonus they were promised, so they felt cheated,” the worker told CNN.

In a statement Thursday, Foxconn said it fully understood the new recruits’ concerns about “possible changes in the subsidy policy,” which it blamed on “a technical error (that) occurred during the onboarding process.”

“We apologize for an input error in the computer system and guarantee that the actual pay is the same as agreed,” it said.

Foxconn was communicating with employees and assuring them that salaries and bonuses would be paid “in accordance with company policies,” it said.

Apple, for which Foxconn manufactures a range of products, told CNN Business that its employees were on the ground at the Zhengzhou facility.

“We are reviewing the situation and working closely with Foxconn to ensure their employees’ concerns are addressed,” it said in a statement.

On Thursday morning, some workers who had agreed to leave had received the first part of the payment, a worker said in a livestream, which showed workers lining up outdoors to take Covid tests while they waited for departing buses. Later in the day, livestreams showed long lines of workers boarding buses.

But for some, the trouble is far from over. After being driven to the Zhengzhou train station, many couldn’t get a ticket home, another worker said in a livestream on Thursday afternoon. Like him, thousands of workers were stuck at the station, he said, as he turned his camera to show the large crowds.

Zhengzhou is set to impose a five-day lockdown in its urban districts, which include the train station, starting from midnight Friday, authorities had announced earlier.

The protest started outside the workers’ dormitories on the sprawling Foxconn campus on Tuesday night, with hundreds marching and chanting slogans including “Down with Foxconn,” according to social media videos and a witness account. Videos showed workers clashing with security guards and fighting back tear gas fired by police.

The stand-off lasted into Wednesday morning. The situation quickly escalated when a large number of security forces, most covered in white hazmat suits and some holding shields and batons, were deployed to the scene. Videos showed columns of police vehicles, some marked with “SWAT,” arriving on the campus, normally home to some 200,000 workers.

More workers joined the protest after seeing livestreams on video platforms Kuaishou and Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, the worker told CNN. Many livestreams were cut or censored. Online searches for “Foxconn” in Chinese have been restricted.

Some protesters marched to the main gate of the production facility compound, which is located in a separate area from the workers’ dorms, in an attempt to block assembly work, the worker said.

Other protesters took the further step of breaking into the production compound. They smashed Covid testing booths, glass doors and advertising boards at restaurants in the production area, according to the worker.

Having worked at the Zhengzhou plant for six years, he said he was now deeply disappointed by Foxconn and planned to quit. With a baseline monthly salary of 2,300 yuan, he has been earning between 4,000 yuan to 5,000 yuan per month, including overtime pay, working 10 hours a day and seven days a week during the pandemic.

“Foxconn is a Taiwanese company,” he said. “Not only did it not spread Taiwan’s values of democracy and freedom to the mainland, it was assimilated by the Chinese Communist Party and became so cruel and inhumane. I feel very sad about it.”

Although he was not one of the new recruits, he protested with them in support, adding: “If today I remain silent about the suffering of others, who will speak out for me tomorrow?”

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New Mexico State player ‘lured’ to campus ahead of fatal shooting

A New Mexico State men’s basketball player shot early Saturday was “lured” to the University of New Mexico campus by four New Mexico students before an altercation ensued wherein he shot and killed one of the students, according to a Sunday release from the New Mexico State police.

In the predawn shooting that led to the postponement of Saturday’s New Mexico State-New Mexico rivalry game in Albuquerque, Mike Peake, a junior forward, was shot by Brandon Travis, a 19-year-old New Mexico student, a source told ESPN, confirming multiple reports. Peake then used a gun he possessed to shoot Travis, according to police.

Travis was pronounced dead on the scene.

New Mexico State police officials said Peake’s condition is unknown; however, a statement by the University of New Mexico that was sent to students said he was in “stable” condition.

The three other assailants, a 17-year-old female and two of Travis’ friends, all fled after the shooting, which unfolded at a New Mexico residence hall.

“Through investigation, agents later learned that Travis had conspired with a 17-year-old female and two of Travis’s male friends, all UNM students, to lure the 21-year-old victim to UNM campus and assault him,” the New Mexico State police statement said.

The 17-year-old female has been apprehended and charged with aggravated battery and conspiracy.

Peake, who is averaging 9.0 PPG through two games, was transported to a local hospital.

The release by New Mexico State police calls Peake a “victim” in the shooting.

A statement by New Mexico State called the incident “heartbreaking” and said men’s basketball staffers had stayed in Albuquerque as the program continues to work through the tragic incident that involved one of its players. A statement by the University of New Mexico said counseling services will be available to all students.

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New Mexico State’s Mike Peake ‘lured’ to campus ahead of fatal shooting

New Mexico State men’s basketball player Mike Peake was shot early Saturday after he was “lured” to the University of New Mexico campus by four New Mexico students before an altercation ensued wherein Peake shot and killed one of the students, according to a Sunday release from the New Mexico State police.

In the predawn shooting that led to the postponement of Saturday’s New Mexico State-New Mexico rivalry game in Albuquerque, Peake, a junior forward, was shot by Brandon Travis, a 19-year-old New Mexico student. Peake then used a gun he possessed to shoot Travis, according to police.

Travis was pronounced dead on the scene.

New Mexico State police officials said Peake’s condition is unknown; however, a statement by the University of New Mexico that was sent to students said he was in “stable” condition.

The three other assailants, a 17-year-old female and two of Travis’ friends, all fled after the shooting, which unfolded at a New Mexico residence hall.

“Through investigation, agents later learned that Travis had conspired with a 17-year-old female and two of Travis’s male friends, all UNM students, to lure the 21-year-old victim to UNM campus and assault him,” the New Mexico State police statement said.

The 17-year-old female has been apprehended and charged with aggravated battery and conspiracy.

Peake, who is averaging 9.0 PPG through two games, was transported to a local hospital.

The release by New Mexico State police calls Peake a “victim” in the shooting.

A statement by New Mexico State called the incident “heartbreaking” and said men’s basketball staffers had stayed in Albuquerque as the program continues to work through the tragic incident that involved one of its players. A statement by the University of New Mexico said counseling services will be available to all students.

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