Prism gives a community lesson in LGBT history
The American Gay Rights Movement began in the 20th century.
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The American Gay Rights Movement began in the 20th century.
Early Saturday morning, 1,106 pumpkins sprouted up on the lawn of the Monroe County Courthouse.
Students struggled to keep their balance on foam Key Log brand rolling logs at the Student Recreational Sports Center pool Tuesday evening.
At its busiest, appointments with Counseling and Psychological Services can take up to three weeks to schedule, CAPS director Nancy Stockton said.
Tables at Pourhouse Café were crowded with canvases, paint and pictures of animals for the Coffee and Canvas Paint Your Pet on Sunday. Participants brought photographs of their pets to paint by number and raise money for Our Lil' Bit of Heaven Animal Rescue & Sanctuary.
In the waning Thursday evening light, demonstrators in front of the Monroe County Courthouse formed a tight circle.
The Indiana Memorial Union was quiet. A fire crackled in the South Lounge, where a few students studied in armchairs and sofas. Light conversation drifted from Starbucks. Facility workers rolled carts of supplies for an upcoming conference.
Islamophobia has received more attention recently in today's political climate, but the negative association many Americans have with Islam needs to stop, said junior Luma Khabbaz, president of the Muslim Student Association.
John Gouwens, a frequent guest carillonneur at IU, descended the Metz Carillon tower to greet those who attended the instrument's final performance. His large, red-orange beret overshadowed much of his face. Listeners asked him to autograph programs and answer questions .
Kurt Vonnegut, witty 20th-century science fiction writer and native-born Hoosier, once wrote of a place of learning that existed beyond the boundaries of classrooms, lectures, professors and buildings.
On the third floor of Ballantine Hall, a small group of undergrad and graduate students met to discuss drug policy as a part of the first meeting of the newly formed IU chapter of Students for Sensible Drug Policy.
Jon York, director of the Boys and Girls Club of Bloomington's Crestmont Unit, stood outside the doors of the club’s new $3 million facility on West 12th Street, waiting for kids to arrive after school Monday.
Hurricane Irma caused destruction in Southern Florida and the Caribbean, but some of IU’s 542 students from Florida have also felts its effects. And with 414 of those students from the southern counties of Florida, many of their families were right in Irma’s path.
A maze of bodies strewn across the sidewalk Monday outside Woodburn Hall could be seen as students made their way to class.
Awkward Silence Comedy filled the Georgian Room in the Indiana Memorial Union with about 60 students and Bloomington residents ready for a night of laughs through long-form improvisational comedy.
A lack of speakers to play music didn’t stop HooSher Bhangra from teaching a room of about 25 prospective dancers a few moves Tuesday at the Ora L. Wildermuth Intramural Center. For two hours, new dancers learned the basics of a Punjabi dance style. Many attendees were freshmen who had no prior experience and just wanted to try something new.
For two nights on Kirkwood Avenue, the notorious college party company, I’m Shmacked, organized a concert promised to be a massive party. But after both nights failed to bring in more than 50 people to the Buskirk-Chumley theater, IU students were more interested in getting a refund than getting “shmacked.”
The second annual Quarry Festival of Books took place Saturday, bringing local and regional authors to Dunn Meadow to sell, sign and share their books with students and Bloomington residents. The festival was organized by Indiana University Press, Bloom Magazine, WFIU and WTIU.
Only 10 students showed up to the Saturday callout meeting for the live action role-play Camarilla Student Group, reflecting a decline in LARP-ing groups nationwide.
At the student involvement fair Monday afternoon, 28 new organizations will bring the total number of student groups to 735. These new organizations range from advocacy and political groups to academic social organizations, including Tee Off at Kelley and Read to Succeed.