Caitlin Clark has message for skeptics before WNBA draft: I’m ‘not here by accident’
This story was written by Bridget Hyland. It was originally published by the Tribune News Service here: https://delivery.tribuneconten...
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
This story was written by Bridget Hyland. It was originally published by the Tribune News Service here: https://delivery.tribuneconten...
Last Monday, people across a thin line of North America witnessed a spectacular event: a total solar eclipse. The last total eclipse in the U.S. was in 2017. The eclipse on Monday was slated to be much more of a spectacle than the prior, and rightfully so; the moon was almost 8,000 miles closer to Earth than the 2017 event, and the path of totality was much wider. Cities like Bloomington saw tens of thousands of viewers, and although we didn’t see as many tourists as expected, Monroe County was still a hotspot for the eclipse due to its geolocation; smack-dab in the middle of the path of totality.
The following is a press release by Monroe County Democrats for The Blue Revue.
The concert style theatre show, “The Simon and Garfunkel Story” will make its Bloomington debut at 7:30 p.m. April 25 in the IU Auditorium.
Indiana football is entering the final week of spring practice, but head coach Curt Cignetti isn’t done adding to his first roster in Bloomington.
At 6 p.m. April 10 at the FAR Center for Contemporary Arts, members of the Bloomington Poetry Slam and other community members gathered to celebrate the launch of Dan “Sully” Sullivan’s new book, “O Body,” a collection of poems that delves into questions of masculinity, fatherhood, home and the complex relationship with one’s own body.
Art is the greatest form of human expression. This form of expression has been essential in vocalizing pain as a common human experience. Confessional poetry perfectly embodies this. It focuses on individual experience generally dealing with extremely personal topics like mental illness and sexuality. It highlights the rawness of pain.
When my dad told me we were moving to Bloomington 13 years ago, I immediately started crying. I panicked. I wouldn’t live in Philadelphia anymore. I’d have to make new friends. These thoughts freaked me out, and it seemed impossible to comprehend. I remember pacing around our living room, and suddenly saying, “It’s okay. This is fine. It’ll be fun.” My coping mechanisms have always confused me.
When Devin Taylor saw a wild pitch trickle toward first base Saturday afternoon at Bart Kaufman Field, he trotted toward home plate, threw both arms in the air and flashed a wide grin.
In Indiana, one in five students haven’t mastered reading by the end of third grade. It’s just one of many states across the nation that are facing the issue of elementary illiteracy, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
After No. 15 Indiana water polo took a nail-biting loss April 6 to Arizona State University, it looked to snap a four-game losing streak with two away weekend matches against No. 17 San Jose State University and No. 3 Stanford University.
Indiana track and field split up once again this weekend, with the distance runners traveling to California to compete in the Bryan Clay Invitational and the Beach Invitational, while the field event groups and sprinters headed to Muncie, Indiana, for the We Fly Challenge.
A petition to rezone one of the largest tracts of undeveloped land in Bloomington could get its final mark of approval from the Bloomington City Council this week. The council will hear the rezoning petition, which would support the Summit District, during its regular meeting April 17.
As Indiana University gears up for the Little 500 races April 19 and 20, local authorities have tips for the community to stay safe during the “World’s Greatest College Weekend.”
The 1968 Columbia University protests represent the pinnacle of student-led activism. These protests were invoked for two main reasons. First was resistance against the proposal to build a gymnasium for the university which would lead to the displacement of the local minority population of Harlem, seen as a move toward segregation. Second was a demand for the university to cut ties with the Institute for Defense Analyses, a think tank affiliated with the U.S. Department of Defense — which at that time was involved in the bloody war of Vietnam. Opposition to this war was the primary reason they demanded divestment from IDA.
Ever since I was young, I’ve constantly heard about the importance of being healthy and taking care of yourself. Back then, being healthy was about eating vegetables, which as a child were poison, and exercising in some way, which often felt like a punishment. When I was young, I didn’t understand the importance of being healthy and what advantages it brought. Healthiness felt like a cruel idea, because what could be good for me that wouldn't let me eat candy and watch TV?
Down 8-0 after an inning and a half, things looked bleak for Indiana baseball. The Hoosiers, less than 24 hours removed from a 15-4 shellacking at the hands of Penn State’s high-powered offense, found themselves on the verge of losing their second consecutive home series against a conference opponent.
Washington State University transfer and redshirt freshman guard Myles Rice committed to Indiana on Saturday afternoon, he announced on Instagram. He was in the midst of a visit to Indiana’s campus, originally scheduled for April 12-14.
Indiana men’s basketball is slated to host four transfer portal prospects on visits April 12-16, Jeff Rabjohns of Peegs.com reported. The Hoosiers have five open scholarships with six returnees and one high school recruit locked in.
When Indiana football takes the field for its spring game April 18, it will do so without running back Trent Howland.