Hoosiers to take on No. 6 Gators
Riding a 3-0 record into the weekend, the Hoosiers will face No. 6 Florida Gators (3-0) at 1 p.m. Friday in Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Riding a 3-0 record into the weekend, the Hoosiers will face No. 6 Florida Gators (3-0) at 1 p.m. Friday in Bill Armstrong Stadium.
She wore ruby-red slippers and traveled to Oz, but instead of going back to Kansas, she’s arrived in Indiana. IU’s Hoosier Musical Production aims to pay tribute to Judy Garland 8 p.m. on Sunday in the Frangipani Room at the Indiana Memorial Union. Tickets are $10 with valid student ID and doors open at 7:30 p.m.
On Friday, IU field hockey takes on the Ohio University Bobcats for the teams’ fifth all-time meeting.
Bloomington artist Yelena Yahontova knows no bounds. The Belarusian-American photographer’s exhibit decorates the walls of Bloomington’s Wandering Turtle Art Gallery & Gifts. Her artist’s reception will take place from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday.
The empty space the Cinemat left behind at its closing has now been put to use. The Bishop is a new bar in Bloomington and will have a grand opening Friday and Saturday. It will serve patrons both beer and live music. The opening on Friday is at 11 p.m. and is open to those 21 and over. Saturday’s opening at 10:30 p.m. is open to those 18 and older.
The seven freshmen volleyball players have yet to play a match at home with the added excitement of familiar surroundings and an overwhelmingly cream-and-crimson fan base. This weekend, they'll get their chance.
Growing up in a small college town in Illinois, graduate student Kristin Carlson lacked a lively downtown similar to Bloomington, and after returning from a summer abroad in Venice, she was inspired by the “city of many squares.” This inspiration became a collaborative art display titled Interpreting the Square: Thirty Artists Explore Downtown Bloomington. The display opens with a reception 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at the Bloomington City Hall Atrium. The exhibit can be viewed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday until Sept. 30
The sun set over Bill Armstrong Stadium on Wednesday night while the Hoosiers took to the field for their final full practice before Friday’s opener against No. 5 St. John’s.
Learning about climate change goes beyond the lecture hall and becomes visual as the School of Fine Arts Gallery opens the Canary Project: Works on Climate Change 2006-2009.
Looking for something to do this weekend? Check out some of these events.
After six years of being banned from campus, Larry Faulkner, 27, is back at Indiana State University. But this year he’s taking on a new role as student in addition to his usual one as street preacher.
Two IU students have probable cases of H1N1, the University confirmed Thursday.
One day after President Barack Obama gave a speech in Wakarusa, Ind., on Aug. 5, IU faculty met with government representatives and IU–Purdue University Indianapolis faculty to create a plan to research alternative energy systems.
WE SAY IUPUI’s Greenwood campus is wasteful spending that benefits few.
Time, though, has shown that while America was quick to accept Obama as a liberator, they are also unsympathetic in any shortcomings he might have.
I get that you’re drunk but, ladies and gentlemen, saying something Ron Jeremy would say probably isn’t the best way to hop in the sack. And even if that line does work, I don’t think it would be a good idea to get down and dirty with the person who went for it.
Lights atop fire trucks will flash and horns will blare this weekend, but not because firefighters will be called into action. Bloomington firefighters will show off their fire trucks to visitors at their annual Be Safe Fire Department Open House, from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Bloomington Fire Department on Fourth and Lincoln Street during the 4th Street Festival.
IU alumni and current bar owner Paul Murzyn decided Indianapolis was the perfect place to create a neighborhood bar with a name familiar to many Bloomington residents – Kilroy’s Bar & Grill.
Henry Louis Gates Jr., the Harvard professor at the center of a race conflict with President Barack Obama and a Cambridge officer last month, will give two talks at IU in April.