Families capture Easter memories through photos with Easter bunny
Letting go of her mother’s hand, a girl skipped past pink, purple and yellow pastel Easter eggs to a person in an Easter bunny costume.
216 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Letting go of her mother’s hand, a girl skipped past pink, purple and yellow pastel Easter eggs to a person in an Easter bunny costume.
Flags wound around the edges of the walls of the gymnasium as children ran from table to table, dragging their parents behind them.
When the 2014 Bollywood film “2 States” came onto her laptop screen, IU freshman Khushboo Chougule spent two hours and 29 minutes watching and laughing at the cultural misunderstandings between the romantic leads.
Embracing Latino diversity
As part of a seven-week class combining art and Spanish language learning, second and third graders gathered Saturday to record videos for parents to see during an open house. During this class, the last one of the series, students used Spanish to describe the clay monsters they created in a previous class.
As part of a seven-week class combining art and Spanish language learning, second and third graders gathered Saturday to record videos for parents to see during an open house. During the class in the School of Education, the last one of the series, students used Spanish to describe the clay monsters they created in a previous class.
IU junior Nurul Huda Mohammad Zal and her friends window shopped at the College Mall in Bloomington. They wore western clothes, but one thing stood out. They donned hijabs, the traditional headwrap worn by some Muslim women.
Clad in all black, members of Hooshir, an IU a cappella group, stood before a lecture hall full of people and sang a Hebrew song, followed by the national anthem. Attendees in the front row mouthed along and swayed to both.
With a brown leaf, glass jar of seeds and plant care instructions in hand, attendees entered the sanctuary.
Conservative Jewish synagogues can now officially choose whether they want to allow non-Jews as congregation members, according to a resolution made this month by the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism.
Amrita Myers went to her meeting Wednesday while wearing a red shirt and red shoes.
Clad in a black suit, a contestant stepped up to a microphone to sing Michael Bublé’s “You & I” as three judges listened from a panel beside him. Behind him was a silver star with the words “Campus Superstar” written in purple.
When he joined the military to pay for his college tuition as an undergraduate, Terry Holdbrooks didn’t expect to walk away with a newfound Muslim faith.
For graduate student David Silverstein, most Christmases are spent eating Chinese take-out with his family. However, for one Christmas in middle school, Silverstein found himself decorating a Christmas tree and exchanging gifts at his grandmother’s house.
Christians gathered at parishes around Bloomington on Wednesday to observe Ash Wednesday. The day marks the beginning of Lent, the 40 days leading up to Easter.
Children gathered in the front of the sanctuary to listen to two storytellers speak. While one told a story of a boy transforming into a dragon, the other ran up and down the steps to play the character, earning the laughter of the audience.
One child hand-picked purple pom-poms and feathers out of a plastic tub filled to the brim with multicolored craft supplies. Another twisted netting to form the base of a mask.
The event was titled “Introduction to Sound Healing,” but the evening began in silence.
When senior Tyra Meely slipped into the pews beside her family at her old church several years ago, she didn’t expect politics to be involved.
Representatives from Bloomington’s National Alliance on Mental Illness led a class Tuesday intending to help educate relatives of those with mental illness. The organization and its classes work to offer resources and educational tools for caretakers of the mentally ill, NAMI family support facilitator Laura Jesseph said.