Christine Rubeiz, neuroscience and biology major
"Being different and doing what I love" is her secret to happiness.
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"Being different and doing what I love" is her secret to happiness.
"Live, Laugh, Learn" is his secret to happiness.
"Doing something nice for another person" is her secret to happiness.
"Music and friends" are her secret to happiness.
"Realizing my potential" is his secret to happiness.
"Mom says...Don't sweat the small stuff" is his secret to happiness.
"Elmo" is her secret to happiness.
The man on the other side of the confessional has to keep secrets.
Rena Kirk kisses her camel, King James, at her farm off State Road 46, 20 minutes east of campus.
Beta Theta Pi rider Jacob Gorgol competes in the Little 500 Individual Time Trials on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Beta Theta Pi rider Jacob Gorgol competes in the Little 500 Individual Time Trials on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A rider competes in the Little 500 Individual Time Trials on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A rider is cheered on by supporters in the Little 500 Individual Time Trials on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
A Black Key Bulls rider competes in the Little 500 Individual Time Trials on Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Jim Eagleman, 62, talks during an interview Feb. 11 in his nature center office at the Brown County State Park in Nashville, Ind. Eagleman has been interperative naturalist at the park for 37 years.
Eagleman looks into the trees while speaking to his group. Eagleman has a deep connection to nature. “How can I love something inanimate like the land?" he said. "Well, it’s not inanimate. It’s living and it’s an organism."
Eagleman picks up a leaf to identify it for the group.
Eagleman shows his Winter Tree ID group buds, bark, where trees grows and silhouettes of trees during a hike at the park. The program teaches people what trees are native to the land.
Steiner places lithostone on the paper to use as a weight for drying. Lithostones are alse used for cutting and scoring the leather on books' covers. Not including drying time it takes about four hours to make all of the measurements and folds.
Steiner attaches the edges of the shell to the adhesive. Measurements must be very precise so the book doesn't move inside the enclosure when it is moved throughout the library. She said the main tools she needs are a bone folder, a sharp blade, a straight edge and a steady hand.