Culture Shock lineup of bands
Here's the lineup for this year's show in Dunn Meadow.
Here's the lineup for this year's show in Dunn Meadow.
WEEKEND reporter Brian J. McFillen discusses the past, present and future of WIUX’s annual Culture Shock festival.
Here's a list of bands participating in this year's Live From Bloomington club night.
Not long after the thunder of Little 500 is over, a different kind of thrill will make its way through Bloomington. On April 17 and 18, Live from Bloomington’s Club Night will shake up town for the 23rd year in a row, taking up two nights to showcase local artists and contributing its profits to the Hoosier Hills Food Bank.
Unicorns and rainbows are adorning the Bluebird while a Björk cover band takes stage. This is not your high school prom.
He is one of the first to arrive and one of the last to leave.
A quick Steak ‘n Shake run today and Wednesday can help raise money for Jill’s House. Jill’s House, which is set to open July 1, will be a temporary home for patients at the Midwest Proton Radiological Institute.
Historian Michael Beschloss said people cannot judge a president until they look beyond his legacy.
Getting your morning jolt can be tough in Hawarden, Iowa, where there are 2,600 people and not one Starbucks or Dunkin’ Donuts. It’s even harder when you’re too young to drive.
With classes, extracurricular activities and jobs, many college students find eating breakfast is the last thing on their agenda.
Summer camps just for kids with chronic diseases are booming – places to learn about epilepsy or finally meet someone else with Tourette’s tics or slice open a cow’s heart to see what’s wrong with their own.
What matters more, success or happiness?
If all college students in the United States used power-saving features on their computers, they could save 2.3 billion kilowatt hours of electricity per year, equivalent to taking 50,000 cars off the road, said Barbara Grimes, a representative of the Climate Savers Computing Initiative.
Rising gas prices could affect students’ summer plans this year, forcing them to make sacrifices to budget their money.
The Daraja Children’s Project, a student organization that works to help AIDS orphans in Africa, does not have a lot to give.
Most people are familiar with Thomas Edison – his inventions, which include the light bulb and phonograph, helped shape what modern technology is today. Yet few can say they are familiar with the Parisian inventor Edouard-Leon Scott.
Only junior Aibek Karimov and senior Ainur Aiypkhanova will be able to call themselves “Mr. and Ms. Asia” this year. The pair were part of the Kazakh Student Association that participated in the eighth annual “Mr. and Ms. Asia,” which was organized by the Asian Student Union and held Sunday in the IU Auditorium.
Several Hoosiers set career bests in competition this weekend at the Sea Ray Relays in Knoxville, Tenn. In some cases, the records came in fewer than 11 seconds on the track, while others, like junior Kristina Trcka’s, took nearly 39 minutes to accomplish.
The Hoosiers’ performance in April has fluctuated in harmony with Bloomington’s unsteady weather. A heated streak of two wins here, a chilled swing of two losses there – not a steady forecast in sight.
After a weekend of rough weather and tough losses, the IU baseball team gets a chance to rebound in a big way early this week as it travels to Louisville for the first of two non-conference games. The Cardinals (19-14) present a tall task for the Hoosiers (12-18) because they played in the College World Series in Ohama, Neb., last year.