An Indiana Grown employee scrapes cheese out of a wheel for attendees of the Indianapolis Fantastic Food Fest Jan. 16. The vendors said they had distributed about 80 pounds of cheese over the weekend.
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Jerry James, a retired Kelley lecturer, gives financial advice to Anita Decastro during an It's Your Money Talk to an Expert session on Tuesday at the Monroe County Public Library. The sessions are free and available every month.
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Jerry James, a retired Kelley lecturer, gives financial advice to Anita Decastro during an It's Your Money Talk to an Expert session on Tuesday at the Monroe County Public Library. The sessions are free and available every month.
Project provides free financial advising
Ryan Stacy likes to say while money isn’t everything, money is behind everything.
ciyouth
Members of the Bloomington Commission on the Status of Children and Youth met Tuesday night in City Hall to discuss their upcoming project. They are planning a media campaign to raise awareness about mental health in the city's youth.
Commission on children and youth focuses on mental health
After what they described as a successful end to 2015, the City of Bloomington Commission on the Status of Children and Youth used its Tuesday meeting to start focusing on its next project: raising awareness about mental health among Bloomington’s youth.
An Indiana Grown employee scrapes cheese out of a wheel for attendees of the Indianapolis Fantastic Food Fest Saturday. The vendors said they had distributed about 80 pounds of cheese over the weekend.
Indy food fest generates huge crowd
The pavilion was a foodie heaven. Smiling vendors offered bread piled with a smoked gouda cheese spread, freshly made island mango salsa, comforting split pea soup and fluffy Nutella swirl marshmallows.
Bloomington Negro League player remembered
George Shively wasn’t just a Negro American Baseball League player. He was a great one.
Pence addresses state
After 30 minutes, Governor Mike Pence concluded his 2016 State of the State address by referencing the song “Back Home Again in Indiana.”
Aimes Dobbins, a junior, is a transgender student majoring in queer advocacy. They, along with LGBTQ activists across the state, oppose recent state legislation perceived as especially discriminatory against the transgender community.
Proposed bill would discriminate against transgender individuals, LGBT advocates say
A commercial that ran in Houston shows a man with an eye patch walking into a women’s restroom.
New bills aim to repeal gun permits
Indiana Rep. Jim Lucas, R-Seymour, thinks you ought to be able to carry a gun on campus. In fact, he thinks it would make campus safe and he’s introduced legislation to allow it.
New program aims to help teens manage money
Approximately 62 percent of Indiana residents lack financial knowledge and decision-making, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc (FINRA).
'Undocuhoosiers'
For much of their lives in the United States, young undocumented immigrants are nearly indistinguishable from their American peers. Many of them speak perfect and unaccented English, they wear the same clothes as their friends and when the National Anthem plays in school, they reflexively place their hands over their hearts.
Michael Jackson variety show benefits animals
Santa’s been having a rough time.
Fake headline points to real problems
The headline was fake. “Spencer set to be first Indiana town to take in 200 Syrian refugees.”
Remembering lives
Each year Doris and Bob Fox attend the World AIDS Day Ceremony and think about their son.
Voice actors perform in front of a live audience during the recording of WIUX Radio Drama Wednesday evening in the Theater and Drama Building. WIUX and University Players partnered up to create the drama that will air on 99.1 after thanksgiving break.
IDS
A cat that is up for adoption perches in one of the Bloomington Animal Shelter's colony cat rooms.