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Doug Bauder, the director of the LGBTQ+ Culture Center, is retiring at the end of the fall semester this year. Bauder has been the director of the culture center for 25 years and helped create the center.
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Doug Bauder, the director of the LGBTQ+ Culture Center, is retiring at the end of the fall semester this year. Bauder has been the director of the culture center for 25 years and helped create the center.
Doug Bauder, the director of the LGBTQ+ Culture Center, is retiring at the end of the fall semester this year. Bauder has been the director of the culture center for 25 years and helped create the center.
"It's On Us" flyers are posted in many of the bathrooms on IU's campus. Half of IU-Bloomington students were selected last spring to participate in the 2019 Campus Climate Survey, and about 3,000 of them completed the survey.
Jeremy Hogan’s mailbox was hit with a balloon filled with a red substance the night between Dec. 10-11. Hogan said he believes anti-fascist protesters targeted him, along with Schooner Creek Farm, professor Eric Rasmusen and others.
Sarah Dye and Doug Mackey, owners of Schooner Creek Farm, found dozens of nails in their driveway the morning of Dec. 11 in Brown County. The vandalism was believed to be tied to several other accounts in Bloomington, including a red substance found at a business and other homes.
The back windshield of Josh Graham’s car was shattered with a stone the night between Dec. 10-11. Graham was one of several people affected by a string of vandalisms.
Stones painted with “Happy Holidays XoXo” were used to break the back windshield of Josh Graham’s car the night between Dec. 10-11. Several places, including Schooner Creek Farm, were vandalized overnight.
Jeremy Hogan, a creator of The Bloomingtonian news site, had his porch and mailbox vandalized with a thick red substance the night between Dec. 10-11. Hogan was among a few who were targeted, including Sarah Dye, Doug Mackey and professor Eric Rasmusen.
Susan Welsand, known as the Chile Woman, speaks at the Farmers Market Advisory Council’s meeting Dec. 9 in City Hall. Changes to policies of the Bloomington Community Farmers Market were discussed during the meeting.
Robert Hall, leader of Grassroots Conservatives in Bloomington, takes photos of Lesamarie Hacker speaking at the Farmers Market Advisory Council meeting Dec. 9 in City Hall. Members of the Purple Shirt Brigade spoke during the meeting about their ability to protest at the market and the presence of certain vendors.
Members of the Farmers’ Market Advisory Council discuss the future of the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market on Dec. 9 in City Hall. Members of the community, vendors and members of the Purple Shirt Brigade were in attendance at the meeting.
Straight No Chaser members Jerome Collins and Walter Chase dance June 9, 2018, during their first of three songs performed at the IU Alumni Association luncheon and meeting. The group will perform Dec. 13 at the IU Auditorium.
The Sample Gates are decorated with red ribbons and wreaths for the winter months. Different parts of campus are often decorated in conjunction with the season or holiday.
One side of the bridge crossing Jordan Avenue near the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center was painted to say, “Fire Eric Rasmusen” sometime throughout the night between Nov. 20-21. Rasmusen, a Kelley School of Business professor, is under scrutiny for retweeting an article with a headline that read, “Are Women Destroying Academia? Probably.”
One side of the bridge crossing Jordan Avenue near the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center was painted to say, “No Bigots Allowed” sometime in the night between Nov. 20-21. The message is in response to Kelley School of Business professor Eric Rasmusen retweeting an article on Twitter stating women are “destroying academia.”
Fans cheer after IU begins to catch up to Ohio State on March 14 during the Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament in Chicago.
The Center for Veteran Military Students is located at 823 E. 11th St.
There are masks, strips, gels and more for different parts of your body; not just ones for your face.
There are masks, strips, gels and more for different parts of your body; not just ones for your face.
Sarah Dye’s booth for Schooner Creek Farm is decked out in handmade textiles for sale Nov. 9 at the Bloomington Community Farmers’ Market. Many vendors began switching what they sold due to the cold temperatures and end of the produce season.