Writers Abroad: Don’t call the French rude
While working at a golf course snack bar this summer, I often struck up small talk with customers by telling them I was going to study abroad in Paris this fall.
111 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
While working at a golf course snack bar this summer, I often struck up small talk with customers by telling them I was going to study abroad in Paris this fall.
Senior Dana Brej had been waiting for this moment since the first time she watched “Cruel Intentions”: the chance to meet Ryan Phillippe.She had a test in two hours, but Brej and her friend, senior Hannah Todd, waited in line outside of Nick’s English Hut on Wednesday afternoon to meet their heartthrob.
Magic major Jordan Goldklang presented his magic show Tuesday in Alumni Hall in the Indiana Memorial Union to an audience of about 300.
Known as The Great Jordini to some, Jordan Goldklang is a senior from the San Francisco area. He is the only student at IU, and the only one in the U.S., who is majoring in magic — a major he created through IU’s Individualized Major Program.
Two students saw a problem at local Fairview Elementary School. As the elementary school with the lowest socioeconomic status in Bloomington, some kids don’t have books to read. Through the Hutton Honors College, juniors Hannah Wert and Adeel Chaudhry are doing something about that.
Red gum is wedged into the corner of the wall. When practice room 228 sits empty, it still resonates from the droning cello and soaring voices of students in neighboring rooms. Its baby grand piano fills most of the space, and a chair confronts a full-length mirror, waiting for a musician to fill the chamber with sound. Water stains pattern the peg-board walls. Outside, the door is gray and covered in scuff marks from violin, cello, and saxophone cases bumping into it. There’s a small square window for practice-room-hopefuls to peek in and see if the room is occupied. The walls lining the hallway are green or blue depending on the light.
As far as study spots go, the South Lounge in the Indiana Memorial Union is ideal. With a room full of couches, a Starbucks caffeine fix just steps away, and a usually quiet atmosphere, homework is a cozy chore.
Not everyone suffers from seasonal depression, but when it’s rainy, cold, and grey outside, it’s hard to stay cheery. So what’s the best way to help those winter blues? We say music. What do these songs have in common? Well, nothing, but we hope they make you smile. Think of it as Inside on shuffle.
Balls line the field as Woman's Rugby players practice in the background.
It’s about 5:25 p.m. on a Monday in October. The members of the IU Women’s Rugby Club team trickle in from the parking lot behind the North Fee Lane Fields.
“When I’m a pedestrian, I hate people in cars. When I’m in a car, I hate pedestrians. But no matter whether I’m driving or walking, I hate people on bikes. They drive me nuts. They just come out of nowhere.” Karin Thomas, senior
IU Police Department Capt. Jerry Minger clears up transportation myths and gives his take on how to move around campus.
It was a warm day in September when junior Carley Hall raced to class in front of Ballantine Hall. Her friend Amber called her name from across the street. Hall decided to take a minute to chat.
Greg Solon, senior
The Union Board turns 100 on Friday, and it has been celebrating with events throughout the semester to get the whole campus involved.
Staff members say they are confused after receiving an invitation to donate to IU's "Matching the Promise" campaign after the University implemented a salary freeze.
With three meals a day, a house full of girlfriends and a peaceful place to sleep, Kristin Burt said she has it made as a resident of her sorority house, Phi Mu. “No living situation is going to be perfect, but I feel like I have the ideal situation,” Burt said.
Senior takes advantage of IMP program to major in film composition, applying his new knowledge to ‘Only Human.'
If you’ve been a Backstreet Boys fan since “Quit Playing Games (With My Heart),” you’ll want to like this album. But while some songs are catchy, the group lacks the maturity they should have after 16 years together.
Inside set out to find the freshest people on campus. Our criteria were simple: students of any age, in any discipline who turn our heads and energize our world. They aren’t necessarily at the top of their classes, and they aren’t all presidents of student organizations, but they’re looking forward and taking action. We found more innovators, risk-takers, and trendsetters than we could fit in the magazine (so check our Web site), but we narrowed down the list to eight people we think you should see.