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Members of Kappa Alpha Theta hug on the track to celebrate their win of the Little 500 race. The race took place Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
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Members of Kappa Alpha Theta hug on the track to celebrate their win of the Little 500 race. The race took place Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Members of Kappa Alpha Theta cheer after their win at this year's Little 500 race Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A Phi Gamma Nu member passes the finish line after the riders are instructed to continue after a crash.
A member of Phi Mu holds a sign that says, "Feeling good?" Phi Mu was team No. 6 during the 2018 Little 500 race.
Kappa Alpha Theta fans and members of cheer for their team during the 2018 women's Little 500 race. Kappa Alpha Theta won the race Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A member of Alpha Gamma Delta trails behind Phi Mu during the 2018 women's Little 500 race Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Team members of Phi Mu alternate during the 2018 women's Little 500 race.
Balloons are released at the beginning of the women's Little 500 race Friday, April 20, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A team member of Alpha Chi Omega leads a group of cyclists during the 2018 women's Little 500 race.
The women's Little 500 Borg-Warner trophy sits on the stage in the middle of Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Cutters celebrates after winning the 2018 men's Little 500 race. The Cutters team won its 13th Little 500 race Saturday, April 21, at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
The Kappa Alpha Theta team raises its bike in celebration of its repeat Little 500 win. The women raced April 20.
Bookseller Jonathan Kearns reminisces on his first time reading "Frankenstein." In his talk at the Lilly Library on Thursday, he discussed the origins of “Frankenstein” and the eccentricities of Mary Shelley’s circle of friends.
Student Lauren Buchanan works on her laptop at College Internship Program Bloomington. Buchanan, 19, aspires to be an applied behavior analysis therapist, but her learning differences make it more difficult for her to acquire the social and life skills her peers without autism often take for granted.
Student Adviser Raphael Comford speaks with student Andrew McKearin in his office. College Internship Program provides students with extra academic support, basic life skills coaching and an IU student mentor to help students become independent.
The College Internship Program Bloomington building is located at 425 N. College Ave. CIP Bloomington serves young adults with Asperger's Syndrome, High-Functioning Autism, ADHD, Nonverbal learning disabilities and other learning differences.
The corner of East Fourth street and Indiana Avenue is the original location of the sighting of the "Woman in Black." In the past, students said they have seen a woman with a cane who appeared angry while muttering words under her breath. When students approached her, she disappeared.
Read Residence Hall is home to more than one ghost story. One involves a student stabbing his girlfriend to death and burying her body in the basement of the building, and the other is about a resident assistant suicide.
A grand piano with a broken frame sits in Merrill Hall, waiting to be moved to the Bloomington Transit Center. The piano will be moved for a program called The Giving Piano Initiative, which allows people to play the piano for a week and attend small piano concerts in the transit center.
Alex Tanford, the president of the Bloomington Faculty Council, holds a framed photo of an asterisk he calls the Asterisk of Reality. The BFC met for the last time this semester Tuesday, April 17, in Presidents Hall.