cabacktoschool083020_zoom.jpg
IU theater instructor Anna Doyle leads a class on Zoom on Thursday. “So much of acting has to do with feeding off each other's energy,” she said in an email. “That's just not the same over Zoom.”
10 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
IU theater instructor Anna Doyle leads a class on Zoom on Thursday. “So much of acting has to do with feeding off each other's energy,” she said in an email. “That's just not the same over Zoom.”
After six months spent totally isolated, walled in with parents or even simply ignoring the pandemic as it transformed the world in irreparable ways, IU’s students returned to the campus they left in March. It was the same place it had always been when they arrived more than a week ago, but so much about their lives in Bloomington was unfamiliar.
For students taking all online classes and not in Bloomington, IU is offering a discount on the Combined Mandatory fee.
A Bloomington Transit bus driver tested positive for coronavirus on Aug. 1.
When Jordan Davis saw the tweets, she gasped.
As with virtually everything on campus, student housing in the fall semester will look very different.
Bloomington’s neighborhood residential parking permit applications have been transitioned online in accordance with social distancing guidelines, according to a press release sent by the city of Bloomington. Residents can now submit applications to purchase a 2020-2021 parking permit. Residents can view a map of which neighborhoods require street parking here.
As the pandemic hit and the country launched into an economic crisis, the U.S. Small Business Administration released the Paycheck Protection Program to financially support businesses through the pandemic. The goal of the program is to keep businesses afloat and retain workers. Since then, 4.9 million businesses have received loans, including over 79,000 in Indiana.
In an email Friday, IU announced that all IU students living on campus — in dorms, greek houses or campus apartments — will be required to be tested for COVID-19 within 10 days of arrival to campus. Students who test positive will be required to come home. Students not living on campus are strongly encouraged to get tested. This is a change from last week’s announcement, which said all IU students coming to campus must be tested.
The month of June is typically marked by large parades full of festive floats, colorful outfits, rainbow flags, music and food. June has been recognized as Pride Month since the 1999 to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall riots, which were a series of demonstrations by members of the LGBTQ community against police harassment and persecution at the Stonewall inn in New York City.