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Welcome to Hoosier Hype!
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Welcome to Hoosier Hype!
The opportunity to walk on to Division-I team is not something that comes along often. Indiana’s novice rowing team is in the unique situation of offering girls just that.
All tailgaters must vacate the Hoosier Village 10 minutes before today’s 8 p.m. kick-off, according to an IU Alumni Association press release.
Big changes are coming for IU’s ice hockey team.
One of the year’s final Welcome Week events will offer students a chance to learn about and join about 40 sports, ranging from ice hockey to hapkido.
With the economic crisis getting deeper, people are doing whatever they can to obtain information on what is next. Indiana’s Department of Economics presented “Worldwide Economic Crisis: Proximate Historical Perspective and Policy Response” on Friday to a packed audience in Woodburn Hall.
New York Times reporter Michael Barbaro spent time discussing his experiences covering Wal-Mart scandals and New York City politics, along with his views on the direction of the newspaper industry.
Journalism students will have an opportunity to see the success of one of their contemporaries this weekend. New York Times reporter Michael Barbaro will speak at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Edmondson formal lounge in Collins Living-Learning Center.
Whether it’s an Ethiopian cross, a new fur rug or a silver spoon, it could have been found at the Bloomington Convention Center during Kappa Alpha Theta’s 48th Annual Antiques and Decorative Art Sale.
Students uncertain about their housing had the chance to view all of their options in one room on Thursday. More than 100 housing options were available during the 13th annual Indiana Daily Student Housing Fair on Thursday in Alumni Hall in the Indiana Memorial Union. Last year more than 1,000 students attended the housing fair, compared to this year’s student attendance of 850.
Though students complain about their homework load and cost of tuition, professors have their own complaints. Class sizes can affect the relationship between student and professor. Kari Johnson, a business professor for K-201, explains that with the amount of students enrolled in introductory level classes, large class size is the most efficient and sometimes the only way to provide students with the necessary amount of class sections.
Every student at IU has to make a grown-up choice at some point – where to live in the coming year.With second semester under way, students who have not already must begin deciding their residence for next school year, and with this search comes enormous stress.