
An opening reception is set for 4:30-7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 18, at the museum. In|Dignity will run through Dec. 11.

"I would like to extend my appreciation and thanks to all members of the CSUSB community that were on campus last evening during the extensive lockdown and closure," President Morales wrote.

Below is a sampling of the news coverage from the Wednesday night incident at Cal State San Bernardino.

While the campus is closed for the holiday, the university’s Coussoulis Arena will be the venue for the Inland Empire Concerned African American Churches’ 38th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Prayer Breakfast.

Details of the new program, the Sheriff’s Parole-Reintegration Program, will be unveiled when CSRI hosts an open house at its new San Bernardino location.

The theme for this year’s summit, “¡Viva La Mujer!,” honors women and the positive impact they have made. Honorary chairs for 2018 are longtime community leaders Gloria Macías Harrison and Marta Macías Brown.

“In|Dignity,” an exhibit aimed at exploring and dismantling intolerance through the experiences of Inland Empire residents, officially opened at Cal State San Bernardino’s Anthropology Museum on Jan. 18 and will remain on display through Dec. 11.

The expertise David Yaghoubian (history), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and a study by Daniel MacDonald and Yasemin Dildar (economics) were highlighted by news media over the weekend.

Jim Clover, a lecturer in the CSUSB kinesiology department and currently sports clinic coordinator at Riverside Medical Clinic, will be be inducted into Riverside Sport Hall of Fame.