The newly restored and renamed Pfendler Hall
A celebration at the Black Cultural Center
Child Development and Family Studies
Purdue's Black Cultural Center
An aerial view of the West Lafayette campus
Students in the atrium of the new Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering
Before kickoff with the Purdue Drumline
The Black Cultural Center's annual "BoilerFest"
The West Lafayette campus is bike-friendly
Dusk comes to the West Lafayette campus
A light snow brightens the West Lafayette campus
Students stroll across campus between classes
A view of the Engineering Mall
Purdue cheerleaders build spirit until the buzzer sounds
A cyclist pedals across campus
Autumn brings an array of colors to campus
Students pass the Engineering Mall between classes
A piece of space history comes to Purdue
Martha Chaffee (left) presents a moon rock particle to Purdue President France A. Cordova during halftime of the Purdue-Ohio State football game. On October 6, Martha Chaffee (left), widow of astronaut and Purdue alumnus Roger Chaffee, presents Purdue President France A. Cordova with a lunar sample collected during the 1972 Apollo 17 mission commanded by Eugene Cernan, a 1956 Purdue alumnus and the last astronaut to walk on the moon. Roger Chaffee, along with fellow Purdue alumnus Virgil "Gus" Grissom and Ed White, perished in 1967 in a fire during training for NASA's first Apollo mission. The moon rock, on long-term loan from NASA, was acquired by Martha Chaffee as part of a NASA program that allows each astronaut (from the Apollo, Gemini, and Mercury programs) or his survivor to donate to the educational institution of his or her choice a piece of the 842 pounds of moon rocks and soil collected during the six lunar missions.