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(04/07/20 9:51pm)
On the cusp of spring break, IU’s students had filled their calendars with flights, weddings and trips to faraway beaches. But as emails flooded in, events were postponed indefinitely or canceled one by one.
(04/06/20 9:59pm)
He was used to making models of fossils for the geology department, “World’s Greatest Dad” tokens, even a 10-inch span of intestine. But IU’s 3D lab coordinator Andrew Webb never thought he’d be 3D printing masks to fight a global pandemic.
(02/18/20 1:01am)
A reported 250,285 students’ grades were vulnerable to being searched using an official IU GPA calculator that gave students, faculty and staff access to other students’ grades, IU spokesperson Chuck Carney said Monday. IU has yet to release specific information of how many students’ grades were searched by another person.
(02/05/20 12:05am)
An official IU GPA calculator allowed students, faculty and staff to access the grades of at least 100,000 current and former students in apparent violation of federal privacy law.
(01/27/20 5:01am)
The night before the resurrection, the new owners couldn’t sleep.
(08/29/19 9:50pm)
GarlicFEST is back Aug. 31 to Sept. 1 at the Waldron Hill Buskirk or Third Street Park. While the festival features local artists, live music, yoga and even a beer garden, the focus is, as always, on garlic. To get you ready for the festival, we've prepared an infographic to help you learn a bit more about the beloved stinking rose.
(04/01/19 9:19pm)
Every day, senior D’Amani Hillman logs into Canvas and finds her class page for public oral communication. She begins to wade through a series of readings, mini lectures and quizzes.
(12/06/18 1:08am)
Bloomington audiences will be able to tune into a retirement home radio show with the musical “Tuning In.”
(12/03/18 11:08pm)
Once a year, my mom pulls a Santa Claus suit — fire engine red, white fur-trimmed, and soft as fleece — out of storage. Then, at our annual Christmas party, we hand it off to one chosen uncle. We quickly train him before the kids scramble to our Christmas tree — be jolly, say “ho, ho, ho,” always smile.
(11/26/18 11:58pm)
The idea of public art as memorials and commemoration is nothing new. There are the heads of obas, rulers of the kingdom of Benin in what is now Nigeria, that began commemorating leaders in the year 1300. There is the Jing gui, a bronze bowl honoring a young archer in China 3,000 years ago. And of course, statues of pharaohs in ancient Egypt.
(11/27/18 11:35pm)
Since the cusp of adolescence, we’ve been curating our own tastes. We’ve carved out our own little rooms in the cultural world and filled it with Sylvia Plath spines on shelves, pop punk posters on walls, classic horror movie DVDs stacked on tables, and — Lord, help me — Aeropostale shirts tucked into drawers.
(11/12/18 11:33pm)
You’ve seen it a hundred times in a hundred permutations. The one plucked from normalcy and propelled into a world of magic, destined to defeat the Dark Lord. The one born into every generation to drive out evil. The Chosen One.
(11/06/18 12:41am)
Growing up, I hated my middle name. I hated teaching people how to pronounce it. I hated that it made me feel like an “other,” fundamentally different from my peers.
(10/30/18 12:27am)
When my friends and I watched our first horror movie — “The Ring” — in third grade, we had nightmares for days about Samara crawling out of the TV with her rotting flesh and iconic, unkempt black hair. But we were hooked.
(10/22/18 11:07pm)
Actress and overall badass Keira Knightley made headlines this past weekend when she told reporters her daughter is banned from watching Disney movies, including “Cinderella” and “the Little Mermaid,” that she deems anti-feminist.
(10/15/18 11:27pm)
For the last few years, our feeds have transformed into aesthetic rosy blurs of dusty rose duvets and strawberry frosting pink sweaters as the ever-popular millennial pink has seemingly become a mainstay of consumer culture, despite the infamously short life cycles of Insta-trends. It’s also moved beyond clothing — the Washington Post proclaimed that if you make any food millennial pink, it will sell.
(10/08/18 11:42pm)
My memories of video games growing up were mostly made up of being sorely beaten by my older brother or perpetually placing third in the annual Thanksgiving “Super Smash Bros. Melee” tournaments. When it came to video games, I was mediocre at best.
(10/01/18 11:45pm)
As a bright-eyed, Roger Ebert-obsessed, barely competent high school newspaper film critic, I was giddy at advanced screenings. Armed with a pen and notebook, I scribbled down barely legible notes while my eyes were transfixed on the screen.
(09/24/18 11:33pm)
This is no “To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before,” I promise.
(09/18/18 11:45pm)
For those of you who have some self-respect and are not fellow Bachelor fanatics, “Bachelor in Paradise” is a spin-off of “The Bachelor” and “The Bachelorette,” in which the spurned rejects of past seasons gather on an island resort in Mexico for another shot at love.