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(06/05/11 8:53pm)
Upland Brewery bartender Fred Risinger hands a sample of wheat ale to a taster during the Bloomington Craft Beer Fest on Saturday at the Woolery Mill. Risinger first worked as a bartender at his dad's bar in Padukah, Ky., when he was 12 years old. "I just love the whole town and concept of Bloomington," he said.
(06/05/11 8:53pm)
Festival-goers stand in line for a taste of beer from the new Cutters Brewing Company during the Bloomington Craft Beer Fest on Saturday at the Woolery Mill. The company used the festival to premiere their first beverages, which will be available later this month.
(06/05/11 8:52pm)
Robert Spierer and Keenan (no last name given) make plans to continue the search for Spierer's daughter, Lauren, on Sunday in Camp Maumee in Hoosier National Forest. Lauren Spierer was last seen at 4:30 a.m. Friday morning near 11th Street and College Avenue.
(06/05/11 8:52pm)
Keenan (no last name given) gives suggestions to Robert Spierer on a map of Lake Monroe during the search for Spierer's daughter, Lauren, on Sunday in Camp Maumee in Hoosier National Forest. Keenan, who brought two children with him, was in front of Smallwood Plaza at 10 a.m. at the start of the search. He said he thought of what he would do if one of his children got lost, and said he wanted to do anything he could to help the Spierers.
(06/05/11 8:52pm)
Robert Spierer helps coordinate search plans during the search for his daughter, Lauren, on Sunday near the Paynetown State Recreation Area. Friends and others who said they wanted to help gathered at Smallwood Plaza at 10 a.m. Sunday to begin the search, which would spread into the areas around Lake Monroe, Griffy Lake and the Hoosier National Forest.
(06/05/11 8:52pm)
Robert and Charlene Spierer listen to search supporters as they make plans before the search for their daughter, Lauren, on Sunday in front of Smallwood Plaza. Lauren Spierer has been missing since 4:30 a.m. Friday morning, when she was walking back to her apartment in Smallwood.
(06/05/11 8:51pm)
David Bailey and Angela DiVeglia of RPM Puppet Conspiracy perform "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. Bailey and DiVeglia have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(06/05/11 8:50pm)
Angela DiVeglia of RPM Puppet Conspiracy performs "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. DiVeglia and David Bailey have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(06/05/11 8:50pm)
David Bailey and Angela DiVeglia of RPM Puppet Conspiracy perform "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. Bailey and DiVeglia have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(06/05/11 8:50pm)
David Bailey and Angela DiVeglia of RPM Puppet Conspiracy perform "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. Bailey and DiVeglia have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(06/05/11 8:50pm)
David Bailey and Angela DiVeglia of RPM Puppet Conspiracy perform "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. Bailey and DiVeglia have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(06/05/11 8:49pm)
David Bailey and Angela DiVeglia of the RPM Puppet Conspiracy perform "The Standard Model: A Science Fiction Puppet Show" on Thursday at Max's Place. Bailey and DiVeglia have been performing the show on tour since May 12. They described the play as full of "space, physics, friendship, particle acceleration and lasers."
(05/31/11 6:31pm)
IU president Michael McRobbie and Board of Trustees chair William Cast talk after a Board of Trustees public forum Tuesday on the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis campus. "There are no ribbon-cutting ceremonies for a new roof or a new chiller," McRobbie said before the Board voted unanimously to instate university-wide fee increases, in part to replace state funding for upkeep and renovation of buildings.
(05/31/11 6:27pm)
IU president Michael McRobbie gives a statement during a Board of Trustees meeting Tuesday on the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis campus. "There are no ribbon-cutting ceremonies for a new roof or a new chiller," McRobbie said before the Board voted unanimously to instate university-wide fee increases, in part to replace state funding for upkeep and renovation of buildings.
(05/31/11 6:25pm)
IU president Michael McRobbie and Board of Trustees chair William Cast talk with IU Student Association president Justin Kingsolver after a Board of Trustees public forum Tuesday on the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis campus. "There are no ribbon-cutting ceremonies for a new roof or a new chiller," McRobbie said before the Board voted unanimously to instate university-wide fee increases, in part to replace state funding for upkeep and renovation of buildings.
(05/31/11 6:22pm)
IU president Michael McRobbie listens to vice president Neil Theobald during a Board of Trustees public forum Tuesday on the IU-Purdue University Indianapolis campus. "There are no ribbon-cutting ceremonies for a new roof or a new chiller," McRobbie said before the Board voted unanimously to instate university-wide fee increases, in part to replace state funding for upkeep and renovation of buildings.
(05/26/11 6:31pm)
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>Students and others working in the Herman B Wells Library on Wednesday moved to the library’s basement at about 10:15 p.m. to wait out the storm that damaged Sam Mason Properties and uprooted trees across the IU campus.Matt Duff, an auditor at the library, encouraged everyone to move from the Information Commons, which was surrounded by windows in its corner of the West Tower.People moved slowly as they saved projects and gathered their things, but once the windows started shaking, progress was much quicker.Once in the basement, student Max Newman called his dad. He had been in the library for about 20 minutes printing documents. He said a tree had fallen on his friend’s house during Monday’s storms.“My house doesn’t even have a basement,” he said. “I’m worried about my friends there.”Rising junior Tara Nei ran through the south door into the library soon after people were moved into the basement. Duff called the basement one of the safest places on campus during a storm, and he said he would wait until confirmation from IU before advising students to leave.“The library is very sturdy,” he said, “but it’s not built to withstand a tornado.”Rising senior Kirsten Powell had been at the library for 10 minutes when she heard Duff advise people to go to the basement. Duff let people leave the basement around 11 p.m., when most people saw that the worst was over.“I was a little annoyed because I thought he was overreacting,” she said after students were let out of the basement. When she heard the windows and lobby doors rattle, however, she said she was convinced.Some students stood on the south patio, watching the storm die down. They noticed that a tree had fallen onto the patio.The tree was one of several that fell along that street, as well as on Atwater Avenue, Second Street, Fourth Street, Seventh Street and 10th Street. The IUBloomington Twitter feed reported this morning that the IU Police Department found no major building damage or injuries from the storm.
(05/26/11 6:16pm)
Illinois' Mike Davis grabs a rebound over other Illinois and IU players during the Hoosiers' 72-48 loss to the Fighting Illini on Saturday at Assembly Hall in Champaign, Ill.
(05/26/11 5:10pm)
A tree lays across Hunter Avenue on Thursday morning near Fess Street. Because the tree did not break through the home or any power lines, the city workers decided to wait until morning to move it so they could take care of other damage.
(05/26/11 5:09pm)
IU-Bloomington Campus Division worker Joe Jones power-saws through the trunk of a tree to make it easier to move early Thursday morning at Third Street and Jordan Avenue.