COVID-19 testing is meant to keep IU safe. Students with disabilities say it’s inaccessible
Sometimes when junior Daisy Luck is walking to or from COVID-19 mitigation testing, she has to stop to catch her breath.
126 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Sometimes when junior Daisy Luck is walking to or from COVID-19 mitigation testing, she has to stop to catch her breath.
Twice-a-week COVID-19 mitigation testing for students living on campus began last week. Some students began to schedule appointments for mitigation testing but noticed there were no longer open spaces at testing sites, such as the IU Auditorium and Cramer Marching Hundred Hall.
As Indiana rolls out the COVID-19 vaccine for older populations and essential workers, some local sheriffs and advocates are encouraging the state to also vaccinate people who are incarcerated.
The IU Board of Trustees unanimously voted to approve a $23 million renovation of the Collins Living-Learning center during a virtual meeting Friday. The renovation is expected to be finished in July 2022, according to a Herald-Times article.
Sophomore Maeve Reilly is in financial limbo.
The majority of the Bloomington Fire Department has received COVID-19 vaccinations, following months of precautions such as limiting dispatchers at its scenes during the pandemic.
All IU Health locations are allowing patients free of COVID-19 to have one visitor per day as of Jan. 19. This excludes end-of-life and pediatric patients who are still allowed to have more than one.
Thousands of Americans are aware of and believe untrue narratives pertaining to the recent presidential election, according to a survey by IU’s Observatory on Social Media.
The City of Bloomington is seeking applicants to help foster diversity and equity in a new resident-led Racial Equity Task Force based on recommendations of the city’s Plan to Advance Racial Equity.
The first song of the Broadway musical “Into the Woods” speaks of wishes: characters wish for milk, for children, to go to the festival. Each character wishes for adventure, for sustenance and for better lives.
Dr. Joycelyn Elders, former U.S. surgeon general and currently a professor at the University of Arkansas, was presented Thursday with the 2020 Ryan White Distinguished Leadership Award by the IU School of Public Health and the Rural Center for AIDS/STD Prevention.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, IU is asking that as few students be on campus as possible during the upcoming winter intersession, where classes will take place completely online and students will be encouraged to leave campus until Feb. 7.
The Office of Substance Use Intervention Services is organizing a focus group with student volunteers to discuss substance use in the IU-Bloomington population.
The Bloomington Faculty Council voted in favor Tuesday on a proposed policy amendment to extend the auto-W deadline, the time until which a student will automatically receive a grade of “W” following a successful withdrawal request, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
A new model of the human brain has been constructed by a team of IU neuroscientists and is being used to study brain diseases like Alzheimer's disease. The model provides new insight into features of the brain that haven’t previously been explored in the same way.
I n a normal school year, Rachel Dyer, an IU School of Education student, would be in a classroom, helping children learn to read and teaching them how to make words into thoughts and ideas on a page.
In years past, people with permits for Memorial Stadium parking lots have had to move their cars on home game weekends to make room for fans. Despite no fans being allowed at the games this year, people are still required to move their cars.
Provost Lauren Robel speaks Tuesday during the virtual Bloomington Faculty Council meeting. The council presented updates from the employee benefits committee, voted on a resolution on the use of Online Course Questionnaire data from fall 2020 and discussed admissions reports from 2020.
The Bloomington Faculty Council presented updates from the employee benefits committee, voted on a resolution on the use of Online Course Questionnaire data from fall 2020 and discussed admissions reports from 2020 during Tuesday’s virtual meeting.
Speaker Ash-Lee Woodard Henderson talks Thursday during a virtual town hall meeting. IU professors and local activists discussed white supremacy, voter rights and the Black Lives Matter movement during the meeting.