Nearly 60 employers to seek applicants at Thursday's annual summer internship fair
It's only the beginning of spring semester, but students are already thinking about summer internships.
It's only the beginning of spring semester, but students are already thinking about summer internships.
A pianist with a broken hand is like a hurdler with an injured leg -- both are brought to a halt until fully healed. But for Maxim Bernard, an IU graduate student working toward his artist diploma in piano performance, a broken hand from a bicycle accident did not present a crisis, but an opportunity. "Instead of just taking the time off, he decided to prepare an entire program with his left hand," said Bernard's friend and fellow pianist Melinda Baird, who added that Bernard not only voluntarily prepared the program in two months, but performed it in a recital.
PARIS -- Veteran designer Karl Lagerfeld defied predictions Tuesday that Paris haute couture will soon die out with a display of feather-light gowns for Chanel destined to lure a new generation of clients.
Jim Gaffigan is no stranger to television, commercials, movies or comedy nightclubs. If you don't recognize his name from his recent successes, chances are you have seen him somewhere. His one-hour special on Comedy Central and subsequent CD and DVD releases have given him the rare comedic stardom of his own national tour.
Bloomington Police are still looking for a man who robbed the Circle K gas station at 527 E. Third St. early Tuesday morning. The gas station at the intersection of Third Street and Indiana Avenue was robbed at about 1:10 a.m. by a man in his 20s or 30s, said BPD Sgt. Jeff Canada, reading from a police report.
JERUSALEM -- Israel's attorney general said on Tuesday he intends to indict President Moshe Katsav on charges of rape and abuse of power, a stunning accusation against the ceremonial head of state.
In a quote that ran in the Jan. 19 IDS article "Committee pleased with candidates for next IU president," the administration articulated exactly what we have suspected all along: Those responsible for spending our money and ensuring our education couldn't care less about the undergraduate voice. Sue Talbot, an IU trustee who chairs the presidential search committee, responded to questions regarding recent comments by IU Student Association Vice President Andrew Lauck on the matter of undergraduate representation lacking in the presidential search with, "Yes, we considered their suggestions, and no, we did not choose to involve them (undergraduates) in the process."
"Warning: Contents of this file may induce feelings of severe inadequacy and depression. Remove all razor blades from the room before accessing." This disclaimer should precede entrance into all Facebook photo albums. Because face it: Browsing these pictures makes you want to dye your hair black and cry a lot. It feeds your low self-esteem like firewood to an open flame. You simply aren't prepared for the emotional detriments that accompany the privilege of visual access into the personal lives of every person you have ever met.
OXFORD, England -- A pair of tennis shoes, a bottle of milk. Canisters of cologne, shampoo, one festively wrapped bottle of French champagne. The end of the holiday season is a bad time to travel from London by air. The stacks of food, hair spray, sodas, pocket knives and clothing that littered London Heathrow Airport's security line the weekend after New Year's is testament to air traveling's rigors.
As the Chicago Bears advance to the Super Bowl and the infamous "Super Bowl Shuffle" video makes the rounds via YouTube, it has made me wonder -- have we finally managed to turn the clock all the way back to the 1980s?
We could all learn a lesson from Justin Timberlake. He showed a lot of initiative when he brought sexy back. He recognized a sexy-shaped void in our world and filled it. Maybe it's time for each of us to bring something back. But first we have to consider the consequences. You can't just bring stuff back willy-nilly. For example, bringing people back from the dead always seems like a good idea until zombies are trying to eat your flesh.
Three people were killed and 43 others sustained gunshot wounds during a Hezbollah-led protest that paralyzed Lebanon Tuesday.
Bloomington Police are still looking for a man who robbed the Circle K at 527 E. Third St., early Tuesday morning.
Two men from Park Hills, Mo., were questioned Monday in the disappearance of missing Purdue University freshman, Wade Steffey. But Purdue police came up with no evidence that the men were involved, after interviewing the former possible suspects.
When Amanda Shettlesworth sent the School of Public and Environment Affairs' students a mass e-mail last spring describing a competitive internship opportunity, she got an unlikely reply -- from a student's mother. "She called me up and asked that her son be given a leg up in the process," Shettlesworth said. Confused by the mother's involvement, Shettlesworth, an assistant director in SPEA's career-services office, said she couldn't do anything to help. "This is your son's responsibility," she told the mother, "and hopefully he will write the essay well and apply." But the mother fought back, arguing that the school should help him get ahead. "It's almost like she didn't hear me at all," Shettlesworth said. Some say her situation underscores a growing trend across the country. An upward trend In what's been called the age of the "helicopter parents" -- those who hover over their children's lives -- school officials say parents are becoming increasingly involved in their children's career searches, doing everything from writing students' resumes to accompanying them at career fairs.
Looking for a local coupon? John Evons wants to help. The senior entrepreneurship major recently created a Web site, www.iucoupons.com, that lets students and faculty access coupons from local businesses. "It's a kind of whole new industry," Evons said. "It's really an on-demand coupon system." On the site, which makes its official debut today, users can print coupons or have them sent electronically to a cell phone in the form of a text message. Nineteen merchants, from local sandwich shops to hair salons, are offering deals on the site.
As the sun sets over a brisk IU campus, junior Geoff Stewart begins his ascent over his next obstacle: the red, loopy statue outside the IU Art Museum. The fading light casts eerie shadows on his determined face as he mounts the statue and clambers down on the other side, finishing the stunt with a forward roll. While this is just a normal occurrence in Stewart's daily life, a group of passers-by stops in its tracks after seeing Stewart's stunt. But staring is something he is used to. A participant of Le Parkour, or a "traceur," Stewart has been finding his own way to maneuver around obstacles for a year. He first learned of the sport after it was featured in a Nike shoe commercial and decided to research the philosophy before practicing. Le Parkour -- a term derived from the French word "parcours" which translates as "course" -- is a physical discipline based on the idea of finding a creative way to move around obstacles.
IU professor Karl MacDorman can't replicate a da Vinci, but that doesn't mean he isn't interested in creating a masterpiece. It's just that in his "Mona Lisa," the enigmatic smile would come and go as you did. The psychology of human-computer interaction instructor is part of a team diving into the up-and-coming field of android science, a high-tech robotic-oriented answer to the study of human interaction.
After the Hoosiers finished a thrilling nonconference road win Saturday at Connecticut, IU junior forward D.J. White was asked to sum up the 77-73 victory's effect on his team. "Confidence," White said. "One word -- confidence."
The more than 4,200 women across campus who purchase their birth control at the IU Health Center face dramatic prices increases this year as a result of change in federal law and new pharmaceutical industry practices, health center officials said.