Following the protest of the appointment of Chancellor Glenn Boyce during a press conference on Friday at The Inn at Ole Miss, students and faculty are looking to the future for next
Students, faculty and alumni took part in protests across campus on Friday in response to the Institution of Higher Learning’s selection of Glenn Boyce as the University of Mississippi’s new chancellor. Friday
The progressive student organization UM Solidarity had a closed-door meeting on Sunday to discuss plans to move forward after protesting the Institution of Higher Learning’s new hire of Glenn Boyce as the
Executive officers of the University of Mississippi Faculty Senate have publicly condemned the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees’ handling of the chancellor search, according to a statement released on Friday.
The Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees selected Glenn Boyce as the next chancellor before completing the 20-step process because the campus needed to be unified as soon as possible, according
Glenn Boyce, the newly appointed chancellor of the University of Mississippi, will assume his position starting “on or before” Sunday, October 13, according to a statement from Interim Chancellor Larry Sparks. In
The meeting to announce the next chancellor was postponed amid protests at The Inn at Ole Miss. Just after University Police Department Chief Ray Hawkins announced that the meeting would be postponed,
If there were any questions as to whether the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees cared what the university community thought of its next chancellor, now we know. Students, faculty and
In response to the news of Glenn Boyce being chosen as the next chancellor of the University of Mississippi, students and faculty have planned protests outside of The Inn at Ole Miss
Members of the Institutions of Higher Learning board of trustees gathered at Old Waverly, a high-end private golf club in West Point, in mid-September for their annual retreat. The 12-member IHL board,