The Lantern newspaper 

Butler’s award-winning student newspaper 

The paper is known for its thorough coverage of campus and community news, thought-provoking op/ed page and accuracy in reporting. Interested in joining the team? There are journalism scholarships available! You do not have to be a Mass Communications major to earn one!

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Posts about News:

Open forum held for vice president role: Malone speaks of being ‘learning centered’

Open forum held for vice president role: Malone speaks of being ‘learning centered’

On Tuesday, Jan. 27, Butler Community College (BCC) hosted an open forum for the position of executive vice president of Academics (EVPA). College employees and students assembled at the Welcome Center in welcoming a candidate for the EVPA role. Marc Malone, discussed leadership, institutional values and quality of education at Butler.

John Oehm: Waking Up

John Oehm: Waking Up

Former faculty and artist John Oehm was recently part of a gallery exhibit at Harvester Arts, curated by Trish Higgins. John generously shared a few moments as the crowds gathered to delve deeper into the processes of art, the people portrayed, and the ideas that shape our perception. 

Food insecurity: Human resilience

Food insecurity: Human resilience

One of the most important conversations happening today: “Who is responsible for putting food on the table?”  People used to say it was the man’s job, but as society turned away from “the man” has the situation turned into “every man for their self”? The U.S. president is now demanding food assistance money be repaid by states like Kansas who paid full benefits to their citizens for the month of November. 

Opinion: Trump’s executive order is not the immigration reform we need

Opinion: Trump’s executive order is not the immigration reform we need

Among one of President Donald Trump first acts, he signed an executive order shutting down the U.S. southern border to prevent immigrants from coming over illegally. Weeks later, Trump said that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) could go into schools, churches and hospitals, which were once safe sites. Trump has even called immigrants “dangerous aliens.” Unfortunately, some families have been separated and torn apart; as a result, this country continues to be more divided than ever. 

 

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