Local moms discuss parenting culture
Inside The Green Nursery store, by the cloth diapers, teething necklaces and baby carriers, stand Merrisa Hunting and the daughter she birthed in her home three and a half years ago.
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Inside The Green Nursery store, by the cloth diapers, teething necklaces and baby carriers, stand Merrisa Hunting and the daughter she birthed in her home three and a half years ago.
People were crowded shoulder-to-shoulder Saturday morning at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market. Instead of buying apples and potatoes, they were gathered to watch cultural dances, discuss cultural identity and learn to write their names using calligraphy.
When discussing a bill that could change the way sex education is taught in Indiana, Sen. Mark Stoops, D-Bloomington, was berated by 15 to 20 people demanding their traditions of abstinence education stay.
With Little 500 approaching this weekend, local residents and business owners have varying opinions about its effects on the city.
With his thick dreadlocks hanging over his head, Luri Santos sat behind his stall containing Brazilian ice pops in the parking lot of Rhino’s All Ages Club. Despite completely selling out last year, there was no one in line for Rasta Pops at this year’s Culture Shock.
Ivy Andrews and Kody Lydy are engaged with a baby on the way, and their home is a tent behind the Arlington Park Apartments.
The words “help slay the gerrymander” were printed on a slip of paper in the Monroe County Public Library on Tuesday night.
Local Muslims gather and pray Friday at the Islamic Center of Bloomington.
(Name) speaks during a religious ceremony in fron tof local Muslims Friday at the Islamic Center of Bloomington.
(Name) speaks during a religious ceremony in fron tof local Muslims Friday at the Islamic Center of Bloomington.
Local Muslims gather and pray Friday at the Islamic Center of Bloomington.
The 2016 presidential race has been an interesting one — one candidate is a social Democrat and another is an ex-reality show host — and has often centered on discussion concerning the Muslim community.
The 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia had major effects on Indiana’s crops and wildlife during the year Indiana would attain statehood, but the first Hoosiers perservered through the challenges. Because of their efforts, Indiana was eventually able to join the Union.
At Girls Inc., girls would frequently knock on the door to ask the program director questions. Or they would slide open her small window to tell her they had forgotten her name before closing the window so hard it’s miraculous the glass didn’t shatter.
Women in all professional settings are working to push past the metaphorical glass ceiling. But for some women, that ceiling is made of stained glass, a female pastor at First United Methodist Church said.
Ryker and Beckett Dodd were eating breakfast, but their minds were on the candy they would soon track down during the Bloomington Township Fire Department’s annual Easter egg hunt.
His introduction said he was so assimilated he did not have the ability to use chopsticks. A small audience gathered to hear John Hawn and Eric Rensberger read their poetry aloud in the Bloomingfoods sunlit patio room Thursday night.
James Jackson and Elira Kadriu, two Bloomington residents who have traveled to the city from their homes abroad, said they think Bloomington is a diverse place.
Surrounded by business women and doctors at the Bloomington-Monroe County Convention Center, local Girl Scouts led the 31st annual luncheon for Women’s History Month by raising flags and saying the Pledge of Allegiance.
A hand-knit quilt depicting historic barns from the 92 counties in Indiana is on display in the Monroe County Courthouse until March 26.