Flu Shots
Jimi Lee receives her flu shot at the IU Health Center on their first day of flu shots on Monday, from 8am till 4pm.
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Jimi Lee receives her flu shot at the IU Health Center on their first day of flu shots on Monday, from 8am till 4pm.
Staff member Linda Summers receives her flu shot from nurse Georgia Tucker on Monday at the Health Center. The Health Center is offering flu shots by appointment Oct. 25 to Oct. 29 and again Nov. 1 to Nov. 5 or on a walk-in basis Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Sarah 'Intellagirl' Smith-Robbins, director of emerging technologies at Kelley Executive Partners talks about leveraging technology to claim power and identiy at the Women in Technology Conference took place in the Frangipani Room in the Indiana Memorial Union. The conference included a panel discussion, a networking expo and a keynote address by Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom.
Richard Larimer, Samantha Clevenger, Anisa Vietze, Simon Smith and Shafiq Maanaki from the Harmony School stand Thursday outside the Indiana Memorial Union. The students volunteered to collect donations for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
Sophomores Nabhan Karim and Saley Sami sprint at the IU Helps Pakistan event on Thursday at Dunn Meadow. After the recent floods in Pakistan, student groups came together to organize the fundraiser, featuring performances by Straight No Chaser, Hip Hop ConnXion, and the Pharos. All proceeds go to the Edhi Foundation, a Pakistan-based relief charity.
Joseph Qualters, captain of the Bloomington Police Department, talks about his experiences with the Public Security Department. The Student Alumni Association along with the Career Development Centre with special funding by the Department of International Studies and IU Area Studies hosted the Networking Night at the DeVault Alumni Association Centre regarding Politics, Public Service and Law on Tuesday with six IU Alumni panelists.
Natalie Chanin, whose designs have been featured in Vogue, the New York Times and on CBS News speaks Monday in the Whittenberger Auditorium. She discussed how outsourcing effects manufacturing of clothes and mentioned that the finest lace is made in France.
Dr. David Teplica, a plastic surgeon and photographer, speaks as a part of Sexploration Week on Monday in Woodburn Hall. Teplica discussed why gender and artistic form should be taken into consideration while performing plastic surgery.
The Monroe Bancorp (Kirkwood branch pictured) announced its merger with Old National Bancorp on Oct. 6.
CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan talks about reporting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in the second Journalism Speaker Series event Tuesday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Logan told stories of navigating through extreme heat and cold while she was pregnant, and of sneaking through sewers to get through Taliban areas.
A representative from the IU College Republicans speaks, while members from the College Democrats listen in order to prepare for a rebuttal during a midterm election debate. Both groups said they were excited for 2017 and the new year.
Michael Bell and Dre Powell react to the results of their videogames during the 2011 Madden Tournament Monday at the Informatics Building East. The tournament was sponsored by the Men of Color Leadership Institute with assistance from Indiana University EA Sports representatives. Proceeds from the event went to funding a volunteer program at New Technology High School as well as to the Bloomington Chapter of the American Red Cross.
Attendees of the 2011 Madden NFL Tournament control their players during the event on Monday in the Informatics Building East.
Mannequin legs and an old jukebox fill the wall of the bathroom Wednesday at Soma Coffee House. The cafe-shop's bathroom also houses a chalkboard complete with chalk in a bucket for customers' drawing use.
Museum curator Diane Pelrine talks about her the pieces of display in the Arts of Africa exhibit on Thursday at the IU Art Museum.
Attendees of the From the Steppes and the Monasteries : Arts of Mongolia and Tibet exhibition reception mingle on Thursday in the lobby of the IU Art Museum. The exhibit is co-curated by Judy Stubbs, the Pamela Buell Curator and Brian Baumann, Ph.D. Mongolian Studies at IU and will be on dispaly until December 19, 2010.
Diane Rogers of HP discusses a sales job with IU student Michael Keel at the IT Career Fair on Wednesday in Alumni Hall of the Indiana Memorial Union. The IT Career Fair is an annual event that help IU students connect with major technology IT companies.
____simple_html_dom__voku__html_wrapper____>Playing Mahjong helps junior Wan Chun Chang relax. “The noise of the tiles while playing is so soothing that it relaxes you, and you can unwind from an otherwise monotonous lifestyle,” Chang said.Chang teaches students Mahjong from 2 to 4 p.m. every Friday at the Asian Culture Center. Originally from Taiwan, Chang is a transfer student from Green River Community College near Seattle, where she was the Mahjong Club’s president. She said she began teaching Mahjong at IU in fall 2010 and continued to instruct new students throughout the year.Chang took up Mahjong two and a half years ago, when her Cantonese roommate at Green River taught her how to play the game. Despite having only a few years’ experience, she is now able to teach others who wish to learn how to play.Because her family did not own a Mahjong set, Chang said they instead played Chinese Chess for fun. Mahjong is most commonly played by people of Cantonese descent, Chang said, while people of Taiwanese descent prefer Chinese Chess and poker.“They all are old, but in comparison with each other, Chinese Chess is the oldest, and hence most Taiwanese families prefer to play it,” Chang said.Chang said she personally enjoys playing both poker and Mahjong, though she said she feels that poker is more fun because it can include a larger group of players, whereas Mahjong is restricted to four people.The object of the game is to collect a set of 14 tiles grouped into four “melds” of three tiles each and a matched pair. The melds can either be a Pung, three identical tiles, or a Chow, a straight of three tiles of one suit marked with consecutive numbers.As in many other games, Mahjong also has its set of unwritten rules. During the game, players cannot say words that sound like “loose” in Mandarin, and words like “book” are forbidden because they can be taken as bad omens.“Mahjong is easy to learn, but as you keep playing it becomes difficult to win as you progress,” Chang said. “Usually, winner’s luck is a predominant feature of Mahjong. The newest player is the one who usually wins the most.”Lisha Tan, a Chinese student at IU, said she learned how to play Mahjong from Chang and won a few games in a row during her first time playing.“Initially, when you start playing, you think there are so many tiles that it’s impossible to remember each one of them,” said HaeSook Park, a secretary and administrative assistant at the Asian Culture Center. “But as you start to play, it is astonishing how easy it is to remember the tiles.”
Volunteers and Bloomington residents help themselves to food at a dinner held by Hoosier Hills Food Tuesday in the Tudor Room at the Indiana Memorial Union. They talked about their hunger relief efforts in Bloomington on Hunger Awareness Day.
Scott Miller directs the Bloomington Community Band in Bloom concert celebrated 32 years of music making on Tuesday evening at the Buskirk Chumley Theatre. This was one of the fifteen planned concerts during the summer.