Demonstrators march for Palestinian freedom
Twenty-one students and Bloomington community members marched Saturday as part of the Free Palestine Walk 2010 in a nationwide effort to bring awareness to the Palestinian situation in Israel.
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Twenty-one students and Bloomington community members marched Saturday as part of the Free Palestine Walk 2010 in a nationwide effort to bring awareness to the Palestinian situation in Israel.
Members of Habitat for Humanity face quite a challenge: building a house for Trish Vosekas in 10 days in the Memorial Stadium parking lot. Vosekas will receive her keys on Oct. 2.
A new dorm will be joining the southwest neighborhood in the next few years as plans for a new building, set to open in fall 2013, have now been approved.
After almost two years of funding from the Bernard Osher Foundation, Bloomington Continuing Studies may be eligible to receive a $1 million endowment.
General studies might be a major many have not heard of — perhaps because it’s not open to scores of IU undergraduates.
IU Libraries and the American Folklore Society have started work on Open Folklore, a new, free search engine that will allow users to access most of the already published folklore studies, as well as the previously elusive “gray literature,” all in one place.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, an organization that aims to defend students’ rights on college campuses, has identified IU-Bloomington as a “yellow light” university, meaning FIRE has found several policies to be too vague and allow for too much discretion on the part of university administrators.
The Sizzler, Sea Ray and Super Slide were only a few of the attractions available for carnival-goers attending Fun Frolic, an annual event benefiting IU Child Care Centers and Big Brothers Big Sisters.
New York Times best-selling author Karen Kingsbury visited campus for the first Baxter Family Reunion on Tuesday at the IU Auditorium in honor of her 18-novel series revolving around a fictional Bloomington family.
The first day of new student orientation started Tuesday with a tornado warning, severe thunderstorms and a fractured schedule.
For the first time in IU’s history 20 high school and middle school students will take on the African language of Swahili in a free four-week course that starts Monday.