(9) videos
Douglas Starr talks about how 19th-century medical investigators found new ways to learn whodunit.
Read the story on Bostonia:
/bostonia/winter-spring11/detectives/
More info
Stephen Paulus, composer for the opera The Postman Always Rings Twice, stopped by the Boston University Opera Institute to give a master class for graduate students. Paulus discusses working with students, the inspiration behind Postman, and why [...]opera is the most gratifying medium for a composer.
Read the story on BU Today:
/today/node/12373
More info
Students respond to the question of whether juveniles found guilty of taking a life should be sentenced to life without parole.
Read the full story on BU Today: /today/2012/youspeak-justice-for-juveniles/
More info
Amanda Bailey, Vice President of Human Resources at Boston University, talks about the impact of George Floyd's murder on her work as an HR professional.
More info
Andre DeQuadros, a professor at Boston University College of Fine Arts, talks about the desire for change, reaction, and activism that he witnessed globally in the wake of the murder of George Floyd.
More info
Imara Joroff, a student at Boston University School of Law, talks about the impact that the murder of George Floyd had on her life.
More info
Kaye-Alese Green, a student at Boston University School of Medicine and Boston University School of Law, talks about the reality with which she was faced after hearing about the murder of George Floyd.
More info
Nana Boateng, a student at Boston University School of Law, talks about how his perception of policing changed in the wake of the murder of George Floyd.
More info
Saida Grundy, an assistant professor at Boston University College of Arts & Sciences, discusses why looting and rioting should not be seen as an unacceptable reaction to an event such as the murder of George Floyd.
More info