Ad6
Not to be confused with the chinchilla ad I wrote about in my Inside article. Apparently there is a market for chinchillas in Bloomington.
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Not to be confused with the chinchilla ad I wrote about in my Inside article. Apparently there is a market for chinchillas in Bloomington.
This ad isn't very exciting, but I'm curious about the story behind the items. Feel free to come up with your own explanation for the ad...
Two found earrings in one day. Jackpot!
This is the ad that started my collection. I'm not sure what is more frightening: that someone would sell a python, or that someone would want to buy one.
Create the exotic aquarium of your dreams.
My favorite find of the year. I wonder if anyone ever claimed this fashion statement?
Inside cover shoot preview
Hai “Howie” Yu, a sophomore facing felony rape charges for a sexual assault that took place at Foster Magee residence hall, remains in the Monroe County Jail despite a bail reduction.
IU sophomore Hai “Howie” Yu, 19, faces two counts of rape, class B felonies, and one of criminal confinement, a class D felony, for a sexual assault at Foster Magee residence hall March 11.
After a series of vehicle break-ins in the last week, IU police officers identified and arrested a Bloomington man responsible for burglarizing the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and stealing items from multiple cars on campus.
A 21-year-old IU student was arrested after he used a loaded handgun to assault a man at Kilroy’s Sports Bar early Saturday morning. Bloomington police Sgt. Jim Batcho said officers arrived at the bar around 2:45 a.m. Saturday and walked down an alley where they found Alexander Edward Brill with his hands in the air, surrounded by bar employees.
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.
A strait-laced Baptist stood in a Bloomington courtroom Friday and tried to explain the death of a Purdue University psychologist he shot and killed in 2008. The gunman, John R. Moore III, said he was protecting his three children and his wife from a sexual pervert. But for the victim’s family and friends, it was execution.
The last time senior Ryne Shadday saw his roommate and friend Mike Land, a 23-year-old part-time IU student, they were out in the backyard making naked snow angels. It was Saturday and Shadday said Land seemed excited, a change from his increasingly reclusive behavior.
A 24-year-old man suffered lacerations to the back of his head when a patron of Kilroy’s Sports Bar hit him with a bottle early Saturday morning.
He's surrendered the crown, but Steve Rothkopf is still a big voice on campus
In the Ballet Department, preparing for your career can make you stronger or break you down. A dancer takes us inside her uncontrollable world.
The dreaded “freshman 15” is a concept well-known to college students. But the perils of the 15-lb. weight gain can extend beyond the first year of college.
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.
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.