360 Huntington Ave
Boston, MA 02115
(617) 373-2000
Afterhours is Northeastern University's private performance venue located on the ground floor of Curry Student Center in Boston, MA. We offer free entertainment for Northeastern students every night of the week. Afterhours features state-of-the-art audio and visual technology and a full-service Starbucks. Afterhours offers programming almost every night of the week and supports programming for over 200 student organizations! Come by for music, movies, games, coffee and so much more!
Northeastern University Libraries consists of Snell Library, John D. O’Bryant African-American Institute Library, and Marine Science Center Library. The libraries welcome over two million online and walk-in visitors a year. Collections include 964,000 volumes, 139,000 e-books, and 42,500 electronic journals.
The Cabot Center is the home of several indoor athletic teams of Northeastern University Huskies in Boston, Massachusetts. Built in 1954 and named in 1957 for patron Godfrey Lowell Cabot, the building houses a variety of facilities for the various teams. The arena is built on the site of the old Huntington Avenue Grounds, where the first-ever World Series baseball game was held in 1903, and is barely over a quarter-mile away to the southwest from the Matthews Arena, the original home of the NHL's Boston Bruins ice hockey team in 1924.
This is the official Facebook page of Northeastern University's College of Engineering. Learn more about the College of Engineering at http://www.coe.neu.edu
In 1994, the Latino/a Committee, a group of NU faculty, administrators, staff, and students proposed a unique plan: a Center that they could call home. Their vision was to create a Center in which people could come together and share their academic struggles and achievements, as well as their culture. This Center would also find a way to give back to their community. The vision of a Latino/a Center was a way to take a theory and to put it into practice. This theory centered around the idea of transforming the classroom experience into community related activities and services. The work of this group culminated in the creation of the Latino/a Student Cultural Center and its opening on October 2, 1997. The Ground Breaking Ceremony took place on April 29, 1997. These are some of the many people who have been and continue to be great contributors to the development of the Latino/a Student Cultural Center at Northeastern University.
We strive to be the most comprehensive, inclusive, and progressive recreational sports program in the country. Our campus recreation department has 3 facilities on the Northeastern Campus. For more information about our services visit these web address: Group Fitness: http://www.campusrec.neu.edu/groupfitness/ Personal Training: http://www.campusrec.neu.edu/personaltraining/ Intramural sports: http://www.campusrec.neu.edu/intramurals/ Club sports: http://www.campusrec.neu.edu/clubsports/
Northeastern University’s D’Amore-McKim School of Business provides its students – undergraduate, graduate and executive – with the education, tools, and experience necessary to launch and accelerate successful business careers. The school credits its success to expert faculty, close partnerships with the business community, and its emphasis on rigorous academics combined with experiential learning. The school is nationally ranked by several prestigious publications. Most recently, Bloomberg Businessweek ranked the school’s undergrad business program at #19 in the U.S.. Bloomberg Businessweek also ranks the full-time MBA program #51 in the nation’s top U.S. MBA programs. U.S. News & World Report ranked the school’s undergraduate International Business program #8 nationally.
Gallery 360 celebrates creative expression and the visual arts. It advances Northeastern’s mission to enrich the intellectual lives of students and the broader community through creative endeavors. This elegant, 1,000-square-foot space displays works by students, faculty, and alumni, as well as emerging local, national, and international artists. The gallery operates year-round in Ell Hall, with easy access from Curry Student Center.
At Northeastern we bring together a very strong faculty, which excels in both practice and research, with an explicit mission to engage the practical problems of the contemporary city. Free and open to the public January 23: Jane Amidon, "Contemporary Urban Landscape" January 30: Stratton Newbert of Buro Happold, "Recent Work" February 6: Chris Reed of StoSS, "Landscape Urbanism in Practice" March 26: Eric Höweler, Höweler + Yoon Architecture "Fail Fast" April 2: Dr Catherine Burke, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge and Dr Jeremy Howard, Art History, University of St Andrews "The Decorated School"
About the Co-op Experience at D'Amore-McKim School of Business: http://www.damore-mckim.northeastern.edu/academic-programs/undergraduate-programs/cooperative-education
The Northeastern Center for the Arts has been responsible for organizing public events in the performing arts for the university and local community since 1993. In 2010, The College of Arts, Media and Design was created as part of the restructuring of the former College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Criminal Justice. As part of this restructuring, the Center for the Arts was realigned as a unit within the College of Arts, Media and Design (CAMD) under the leadership of Dean Xavier Costa. Given the new vision and structure of CAMD, the Northeastern Center for the Arts under the leadership of Director Bree Edwards, launched in 2013 with the mission to present collaborative and socially engaged public programming.
The Center for Student Involvement encourages and facilitates a broad spectrum of educational and social co-curricular opportunities designed to enhance the experiential learning and holistic development of our students. Through innovative leadership offerings, student organization and fraternity/sorority advisement and employment opportunities, we empower students to be visionary, ethical, culturally competent and responsible members of our global community.
Welcome to the Facebook Page for Northeastern University Student Life! We've got our fingers on the pulse of what's happening both on the NU campus and in the city of Boston. From student organization meetings, campus workshops, career fairs, and athletic events to college nights at area museums, the best live music in the city, and whatever else goes on in Boston, you'll see it covered here. For additional information on events, check out the following: Our groundbreaking blog: www.nustudentlife.wordpress.com/ Our fantastic twitter: @NUStudentLife ~ If you've got an event you want to see on either the blog, Facebook, or Twitter, don't hesitate to contact us! You can email the Student Affairs social media coordinator at the following address: Kayley Kravitz at [email protected] OR, if you have a question AND a phone, you can call the Office of Student Affairs directly at 617.373.4384
Northeastern University Libraries consists of Snell Library, John D. O’Bryant African-American Institute Library, and Marine Science Center Library. The libraries welcome over two million online and walk-in visitors a year. Collections include 964,000 volumes, 139,000 e-books, and 42,500 electronic journals.
This is the official Facebook page of Northeastern University's College of Engineering. Learn more about the College of Engineering at http://www.coe.neu.edu
About the Co-op Experience at D'Amore-McKim School of Business: http://www.damore-mckim.northeastern.edu/academic-programs/undergraduate-programs/cooperative-education
The Northeastern Center for the Arts has been responsible for organizing public events in the performing arts for the university and local community since 1993. In 2010, The College of Arts, Media and Design was created as part of the restructuring of the former College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Criminal Justice. As part of this restructuring, the Center for the Arts was realigned as a unit within the College of Arts, Media and Design (CAMD) under the leadership of Dean Xavier Costa. Given the new vision and structure of CAMD, the Northeastern Center for the Arts under the leadership of Director Bree Edwards, launched in 2013 with the mission to present collaborative and socially engaged public programming.
Welcome to the Facebook Page for Northeastern University Student Life! We've got our fingers on the pulse of what's happening both on the NU campus and in the city of Boston. From student organization meetings, campus workshops, career fairs, and athletic events to college nights at area museums, the best live music in the city, and whatever else goes on in Boston, you'll see it covered here. For additional information on events, check out the following: Our groundbreaking blog: www.nustudentlife.wordpress.com/ Our fantastic twitter: @NUStudentLife ~ If you've got an event you want to see on either the blog, Facebook, or Twitter, don't hesitate to contact us! You can email the Student Affairs social media coordinator at the following address: Kayley Kravitz at [email protected] OR, if you have a question AND a phone, you can call the Office of Student Affairs directly at 617.373.4384
Jainism is based on the principle of ahimsa or non-violence. The Jain Student Association promotes awareness of Jainism through meetings and discussions on Jain philosophies, the nature of God and the universe, compassion, and vegetarianism, and through organizing trips to Jain temples.
The faculty in the Department of Psychology are actively engaged in the multidisciplinary study of mind, brain, and behavior. Their internationally recognized research programs, which are supported by both federal and private granting agencies, fall within the department’s four broad areas of scholarship: behavioral neuroscience, cognition, perception, and social/ personality. Graduate training plays a key role in the department, preparing students for research and teaching careers in a variety of settings, including academia, government, and industry. The department is also dedicated to excellence in undergraduate education, and offers courses in the fundamental science of mind, brain, and behavior, as well as courses relevant for educational, clinical and counseling settings. Undergraduates also benefit from doing research in faculty laboratories, where they learn cutting-edge research techniques in a hands-on setting.
In 1994, the Latino/a Committee, a group of NU faculty, administrators, staff, and students proposed a unique plan: a Center that they could call home. Their vision was to create a Center in which people could come together and share their academic struggles and achievements, as well as their culture. This Center would also find a way to give back to their community. The vision of a Latino/a Center was a way to take a theory and to put it into practice. This theory centered around the idea of transforming the classroom experience into community related activities and services. The work of this group culminated in the creation of the Latino/a Student Cultural Center and its opening on October 2, 1997. The Ground Breaking Ceremony took place on April 29, 1997. These are some of the many people who have been and continue to be great contributors to the development of the Latino/a Student Cultural Center at Northeastern University.
in the fields of medicinal chemistry, chemical biology, molecular biology, cell biology, tissue culture biochemistry, behavioral studies, proteomics, metabolomics, in vitro characterization, in vivo profiling, chemical synthesis, biophysics, radiochemistry, and imaging.
1. We provide a visible presence committed to social justice on Northeastern’s campus. 2. We provide support to Northeastern student groups focused on social justice causes. 3. We build the capacity of all students to think critically and respond effectively to social challenges. 4. We provide a space for dialogue, collaboration and reflection between students, faculty and staff. 5. We provide resources to the NU community about social justice theory, leaders and movements.
Current students can book appointments themselves using their myNEU portal, or for resume/cover letter assistance they can stop in the lobby of Stearns any weekday for walk-ins (resume/cover letter critique) between 1:30-3:30pm.
The Division of Student Affairs was originally known as the Office of the Dean of Students. The first dean was Harold Wesley Melvin, who served from the office's inception in 1930 until 1957. In the 1950s, the office comprised a dean of freshmen, dean of women, and dean of men. In 1970, the Office of Dean of Students was reorganized into the Division of Student Affairs, and many of the tasks that had originally been handled directly by the dean and his assistants were separated into departments that reported to the Vice President of Student Affairs.