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(04/12/16 4:01am)
In the past few months, Bloomington women’s shelter Middle Way House has seen a surge in donations from all over the world, including a student group in India, a man in his seventies who had never made a donation before and hundreds of IU students.
(04/10/16 11:17pm)
Rhonda Patterson, founder of Unslaved, a movement to promote awareness of human trafficking victims, spoke at the Indiana Memorial Union to a crowd of about 100 students March 30.
(04/10/16 10:27pm)
Girls Inc. participant Sabrina Gasana said she didn’t know Bailey Miller well.
(04/08/16 1:55am)
A few minutes before 6 p.m., Rainbow Bakery had only three customers sitting at its tables. But fifteen minutes later, the bakery was filled with students buying coffee, eating donuts and challenging each other to play the Pac-Man machine in the corner.
(04/05/16 1:11am)
Late Saturday night, freshmen Emily Gordon, Hannah Perkins and Crystal Le hopped onto the IU Night Owl bus on their way to a friend’s house near the football stadium.
(03/31/16 1:34am)
In Muncie, Indiana, two teenage girls entered the car of two men who said they were going out for pizza. When they got in the car, they were beaten, drugged, raped and then forced into sex slavery.
(03/29/16 3:49am)
As tornado sirens sounded all over the state last Tuesday, emails and texts were sent to every student’s phone and computer as part of the annual IU Notify test.
(03/27/16 10:56pm)
When Joe Einterz was on the wrestling team in high school, Jack Banks, then a middle school wrestler, came to watch a match. Within minutes, Einterz sat down next to Banks and started explaining the matches and the decisions the wrestlers were making.
(03/24/16 4:14am)
When sophomore Josh Margolis sits down to study for a test, he said he sometimes can’t get his thoughts under control. They race through his brain. He can’t keep track of what he’s trying to
focus on.
(03/03/16 5:38pm)
On Wednesday evening, at a panel discussion on the Black Lives Matter movement and policing, IU Police Department Chief Laury Flint asked the audience to take their notebooks and draw three lines, a circle on each line and a line connecting the first three.
(02/29/16 3:11am)
Students sang, danced, played instruments and showcased their talents in other ways to earn scholarship money at the Miss Indiana University scholarship pageant Sunday evening in the Indiana Memorial Union’s Alumni Hall.
(02/26/16 3:11am)
Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller said when he was in college, he had no interest in politics at all.
(02/23/16 5:06am)
As graduate student Dorian Davis walked to his car after leaving Kilroy’s Bar and Grill, a car rolled up next to him. At first, he thought it was a friend of his. But then someone in the car threw a drink onto his jacket. Someone else called him the N-word.
(02/21/16 11:13pm)
IU Police Department officers Joshua Sung and Johnny Goode arrived at Assembly Hall a few hours before the IU men’s basketball game started Wednesday night. They stood in a corner of the north lobby next to the trophy case, out of the way and watching closely.
(02/18/16 3:37am)
Sophomores Marissa Gallardo and Alicia Pickens work out in the Wildermuth Intermural Center almost every day. This month, they’ve been even more motivated to avoid skipping a day, Gallardo said.
(02/11/16 4:35am)
Following incidents of highly publicized violence between police officers and the public in Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland and Ferguson, Missouri, police departments around the country, including the IU Police Department, are evaluating the use of body-worn camera technology for their officers.
(02/11/16 4:37am)
By Sarah Gardner
(02/10/16 5:34am)
Senior Lily Feldman has switched her area of study countless times, from psychology to music therapy to sociology. But at the Tuesday night criminal justice networking event, she said she finally made her decision.
(03/02/16 4:41pm)
The Indiana Memorial Union has always been an essential part of campus life, said Cheryl Crouch, assistant director of marketing for the Union.
(02/07/16 11:58pm)
Ochmaa Escue learned how to play the yatga, a Mongolian string instrument, when she was in middle school. After moving from Mongolia to the United States 14 years ago, Escue said her instrument still provides a connection to her culture and her home.