caComingout
Justin Ford shares his coming out story at the Backdoor on national coming out day.
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Justin Ford shares his coming out story at the Backdoor on national coming out day.
IU and Bloomington celebrated National Coming Out Day on Tuesday through events at both GLBT Student Support Services and the Back Door, a queer bar.
Drivers accelerated onto the Third Street sidewalk, directly at those protesting in a circle at the intersection just outside the Bloomington Police Department. Young women and men, gripping posters inscribed with names of black lives lost, darted to block the vehicles.
After the words ended and before the silence began, those who had filled the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center Grand Hall spilled onto the dim plaza just outside. They lit candles for every black life, but this moment of illumination belonged especially to Joseph Smedley.
Jo DiBenedetto heard another catcall, aimed at one of his female friends, coming from People’s Park. Then a barrage of blue and red lights illuminated DiBenedetto’s walk home from class. Later that night screaming from the park filtered into DiBenedetto’s room in his Kirkwood Avenue home.
IU sophomore Adrian Jimenez was like a tree, his aunt Suebrina Beck said. His branches stretched through his family, his classmates and his coworkers to form a network of people he loved and who loved him.
One week remains to help decide the new name of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Student Support Services. The survey to rename the office closes Oct. 7.
There’s an 18-headed monster, Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, said, and we’re playing whack-a-mole.
A robbery occurred in Dunn’s Woods at about midnight Monday, triggering an IU Notify alert.
Students can apply to the IU Police Department Cadet Officer Program, the only of its kind in the U.S.
While eating turkey sandwiches and Cheetos, former justice of the High Court of Australia Michael Kirby discussed religion and the history of IU with students and faculty Thursday afternoon.
Chief Michael Vargas of Sacred Nations Cultural Center squinted into the sun before a crowd of sign-holding students, faculty and community members. Showalter Fountain flowed in the background, filling the pauses in his speech.
Students, faculty and members of the Bloomington community discussed Islamophobia Wednesday evening as part of the 2016 Elimination of Prejudice Week.
The pilot stock of 20 free kits, which would ordinarily cost about $100 each, is part of OASIS’s newest program, Drug Overdose Prevention Education. It began as the result of years of research and planning spearheaded by OASIS Director Jackie Daniels.
Students Against State Violence voted Sunday night at its first mass meeting of the semester to ratify three demands, which were the dissolution of the IU Police Department, a restructuring of the Office of Student Ethics and a change in general education requirements. They also voted to approve a mass demonstration.
A masked man broke into four unlocked homes south of the IU campus this week and — in two separate break-ins — attempted to sexually assault women.
A skunk waddles around the Northwest neighborhood nightly. Some residents of Foster Quad call her Petunia.
Psychologists at IU’s Counseling and Psychological Services are working to revise and revive a support group for gender-nonconforming students that fell through last year.
Sophomore Libby Whiting did not customize her pasta Wednesday evening. Once she had reached the front of the line for Mangia, the Italian option at the Restaurants at Woodland, she learned Pasta da Vinci had been replaced by five signature bowls.
The IU Police Department released plans Wednesday to implement body-worn cameras. Though students likely won’t see the devices on officer uniforms until the spring semester, the process has reached the beginning of the end.