Transgender students advocate for safety, gender-neutral restrooms
Aimes Dobbins was walking home alone from a party last fall.
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Aimes Dobbins was walking home alone from a party last fall.
Aimes Dobbins was walking home alone from a party last fall.
Having recently moved to Bloomington, Logan Hendry wanted to get involved with the community and raise money for presidential candidate Bernie Sanders’ campaign.
Growing up in West Lafayette, Indiana, Alexi King said her time revolved around athletics and singing.
Ben Craig, Duk Groves and Stone Irr all started writing their own songs in junior high, but it wasn’t until each moved to Bloomington that they became part of a larger music community.
Although he is in charge of most of the planning, organizing and promotion of the annual Italian film symposium, Antonio Vitti, a professor of Italian cinema at IU, said his favorite part is naming and grouping all of the panel presentations.
As she watches the trailer for “Trapped” on her computer, Jessica Levandoski laughs, not because it is funny, but because she can’t believe what she’s seeing.
Bernice Pescosolido has been waiting 30 years for a movement in mental health awareness on the college level, she said.
After being host to the Oscar Shorts Festival and the Children’s International Film Festival for the past six years, Peter LoPilato said he and the Ryder want to try something new.
In the mid-1960s, Jonathan Banks stepped onto IU’s campus. Having grown up on the northeast side of Washington D.C., he said coming to school felt like paradise.
What was meant to be an open-air music festival turned into an indoor, all-day concert.
When Bloomington residents supported a group of students making a film about an amateur bike race, Tom Miller said he received undeniable Hoosier hospitality.
Although her tenure as director of IU Latino Studies began in January 2015, Sylvia Martinez said she began planning the film festival months prior to officially starting.
It sounds cliché, Crescent Ulmer said, but her songs find inspiration through both positive and negative aspects of life.
Given Bloomington’s relatively large Colombian community, Israel Herrera said he and other local Colombians are proud to see “Embrace of the Serpent” in their town.
Hildegard Elisabeth Keller spent seven years traveling South America and Europe, learning everything she could about Alfonsina Storni.
Because his family was the first Asian family to live in Seymour, Indiana, Tony Nguyen said experiencing racism was an inevitable part of growing up in southern Indiana.
Even before she became a mother, Kris Swanberg said motherhood had always interested her.
Because of the strong racial implications and questions presented in his film, Marcos Barbery said audiences have had many different reactions.
Alex McGill said she wants student filmmakers across campus to tell a story they are passionate about. Regardless of genre or topic, she said she wants to give students the chance to show their films on the big screen.