Braille transcriber helps meet students’ alternate media needs
A red mug full of mint tea sits to the right of two computer monitors on Chris Goodbeer’s desk.
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A red mug full of mint tea sits to the right of two computer monitors on Chris Goodbeer’s desk.
Etai Pinkas, an LGBTQ activist in Israel, spoke to a 12-person audience about the history of LGBTQ rights in Israel on Thursday evening in Woodburn Hall.
Candlelight flickered on the white walls of the living room chapel at the Canterbury House on Tuesday night where a Jesus statue hung on the cross. About 13 people gathered for the Episcopal Campus Ministry’s Taizé service in the low-lit room to sing and pray together, as well as to honor Black History Month.
As a non-binary student, freshman Spencer Biery identifies outside of traditional gender norms, which are based on the idea that there are only two genders: male and female.
Thao Nguyen, a junior studying neuroscience, was born in Vietnam and moved to Indiana when she was 4. She said she understands the struggle of learning a new language. Now she’s an English tutor at the Asian Culture Center.
IU junior Austin Williams said he had been struggling with a lot of stress in his life, so he came to Neal-Marshall Black Cultural Center on Wednesday to connect with friends and do homework.
Designed to allow students to have their voices heard, Students United is a new club on campus created with the intent of bringing people and their view points together in harmony.
While some IU fans gathered in Assembly Hall to watch the rivalry game between the Hoosiers and the Purdue Boilermakers, others circled around tables in Franklin Hall to discuss the rivalry between facts and fake news.
When she was growing up listening to Spanish soap operas in the background of her home, Patricia Gonzalez learned Spanish and English at the same time throughout her youth. Her bilingual background now allows her to be a counselor at the Center for Human Growth, a member of the Unidos team and a mental health consultant at La Casa Latino Cultural Center.
A physical and symbolic entryway to campus, the Sample Gates stand at the crossway of Kirkwood and Indiana avenues on the west side of campus.
The IU Office of Financial Literacy and its program, MoneySmarts, are working to develop a new platform through which students can access information and make educated decisions regarding their finances and education.
Gathered late Thursday afternoon in the Whittenberger Auditorium, students, staff and community members listened to Kay Redfield Jamison discuss and answer questions on mood disorders and suicide.
On Friday morning at the DeVault Alumni Center six state legislators will gather to address local concerns and answer questions about the past and current Indiana state government in a forum.
Friends and strangers carefully balanced black plastic plates piled high with food and clear plastic cups filled with various drinks as they laughed and caught up with one another Saturday night in Grazie! Italiano.
Attached to lamp posts on Seventh Street, crimson banners advertise the GLBT Alumni Association’s 20th anniversary.
Lit with spotlights in the center of the Indiana Memorial Union’s East Lounge, the curving structure of the “Legacy Wall” displays information about the LGBT community and its history on the blue fabric hook background.
Friends yelled across the room to one another while they waited for food to be served. The salmon-colored walls gave the room a light atmosphere, and the paper plates and bowls sat on tables. They would eventually be filled with matzo ball soup and more.
Entering the Spirit of 76 Suite in Assembly Hall an hour and half before the IU women’s basketball game against Purdue, attendees of Pride Night were greeted by friends and strangers alike with smiles and hugs.
Set up in the front corner of the La Casa Latino Cultural Center, Aaron G. Fountain Jr. presented information on Latino urban riots to a small crowd.
In order to reflect an atmosphere of inclusivity, the previously named Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Student Support Services has changed its name to the LGBTQ+ Culture Center.