Su Li waits for a friend she plans to eat dinner with on a bench outside of Forest Residence Center. Even though she lives in Foster, a dorm on the north side of campus, she took a bus to the south side to meet her friend.
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Chinese flower tea and milk tea sits on the Su's nightstand. She didn't bring any objects with her from home, but buys Chinese tea to remind herself from home. The teas are the only Chinese brand product in her room.
Su Li runs during the annual Jill Behrman 5k on Oct. 24, 2015. The point of the run is to honor the memory of Jill and bring awareness to issues of violence in the IU community.
Su Li walks alone on the Indiana University campus in between classes. Since she is in her first semester at IU, she is taking an array of 100-level courses, many involving music.
Su Li sings karaoke below Lotus Garden in Bloomington, Ind. on Oct. 17. Su, along with her friends Wenzhou "Jody" Jiang and Xu "Anna" Pan, were practicing for a Chinese singing competition hosted by IUCSSA that would take place the next day.
Indiana University students walk on campus in-between classes. While IU has a heavy majority of white students at 67.7 % Chinese international students lead national and racial minority groups at 5.9%, compared to 4.9% for Hispanic/Latino, and 4.1% for African-American students out of 42,588 total students according to the 2015-16 first semester enrollment.
7,136 miles from home
Su Li is a Chinese international student experiencing her first semester at Indiana University. Not being able to bring anything with her from China but clothes, she tries to find a new home in America by attending inclusive activities hosted by university organizations. Li sits on a chair next to a standup piano in Merrill Hall at Indiana University after playing "River Flows In You" for an upcoming class performance. Su learned piano at age 4, but takes a beginner class through Indiana University, so many of the pieces she plays are levels below her skill level.
Su Li talks with other students during a Bridges International Cafe meeting at Reid Hall on Oct. 16. The meeting was held to bridge the gap between domestic students and Asian international students.
Associate Researcher Robert Eisman organizes test tubes filled with fruit flies. The tubes are organized by mutation.
Members of Dietrich Jon, a local band from Bloomington, perform during the Culture Shock Music Festival hosted by WIUX on April 10, 2015.
Professor Ted Castronova, the director of the game design major in the Media School, speaks with prospective students during the launch for the game design major at the Radio and Television Building on Tuesday. Many of the attending students are members of Hoosier Games, an independent student group of video game developers.
Jeff Gott, a superintendent with Milestone Contractors, drives beams into the ground on Jordan Ave. Wednesday. Construction has been slowed down by the rain, but construction workers have been working through the rain to get the job done, he said.
Hasan Ahmad serves food to other men after nightfall while celebrating Ramadan at the Islamic Center of Bloomington on Friday. Even though they eat separately, dozens of men and women arrive at the ICOB every night to break their daylong fast.
Crops of lettuce sit inside the Growing Opportunities greenhouse on Sunday. The program is distibuting its lettuce to multiple local eateries, supermarkets, hospitals, and schools, and plans to sell other crops to them in the future.
Hasan Ahmad serves food to other men after nightfall while celebrating Ramadan at the Islamic Center of Bloomington on Friday. Even though they eat separately, dozens of men and women arrive at the ICOB every night to break their daylong fast.
Jared Fogle shared a wall with the Subway location on the corner of Atwater and Woodlawn Ave. After starting the diet that made him famous, he would eat two meals at this Subway every day.
Joe Peden poses in front of a bale of hay on his property at Peden Farm in Bloomington on Wednesday. While the rain has not affected his crops directly, the farm has not been able to harvest hay due to it not being dry. Peden usually expects to harvest all of his hay by the end of June, he says, but so far he has only harvested 25 out of 800 bales.
Benedict Jones poses in the living room of his Bloomington apartment Tuesday. Jones, who is considered a quadriplegic, was accidently shot by a friend at the age of 11.
After a firearms accident at age 11, Benedict Jones has no feeling from his chest down. His story was featured in Rolling Stone Magazine last year.
Part of the July arts exhibit titled "Earth, Water, Sky" by Margaret Gohn sits in the Ivy Tech John Waldron Arts Center. The exhibit will have an opening this Friday.