SustainIU presents events this month
IU is spreading sustainability awareness this month with events on and off campus. SustainIU will include events aimed to educate the community on sustainable issues.
IU is spreading sustainability awareness this month with events on and off campus. SustainIU will include events aimed to educate the community on sustainable issues.
The Hoosiers (7-28, 3-7) couldn’t have asked for a better weekend at Michigan State (13-22, 0-9).
Opening their road trip with a 6-1 win against Penn State, the Hoosiers (13-8, 5-3) closed the weekend losing 7-0 to No. 43 Ohio State.
Eight IU athletes earned trips to the NCAA regionals in May in Louisville, Ky., by posting impressive performances at this weekend’s Sea Ray Relays in Knoxville, Tenn.
Dominated by Ohio State on Friday, the IU men’s tennis team came from behind to beat Penn State on Sunday.
With eight returning players who batted at least .300 last season, the IU baseball team entered 2009 certain that hitting would be its biggest strength.
The Btown ticket is accepting applications for positions in its 2009-2010 IU Student Association administration.
Moving junior Ben Chappell to the primary quarterback position this spring seemed to be working well.
The IU Campus Bus Service and Bloomington Transit will have a public forum today to discuss a proposed new bus service that could expand hours of operation to 4 a.m. Thursday through Saturday.
IU Police Department officers armed with a defibrillator saved the life of an IU staff member early Sunday morning.
IU's Active Minds chapter will work to spread mental health awareness at IU through educational campaigns and events. So far they have plans to celebrate National Stress Out Day, which runs Monday through Friday, during which they will offer relaxing activities such as massages and games.
This week is Sexual Assault Awareness Week for the IFC, and members of fraternities will be participating in a variety of events to raise awareness, said IFC Vice President of Communications Mike Antonelli.
The University of Notre Dame has outdone itself in stupid ideas. Its decision to invite President Barack Obama to speak at their commencement is, by all regards, far worse than its decision to sign Charlie Weis to a 10-year contract.
Sri Lanka’s president ordered a two-day suspension of offensives against Tamil Tiger rebels to enable tens of thousands of trapped civilians to leave the war zone, his office said Sunday.
Parents often cry at graduation ceremonies. They are eager to see what their sons and daughters will become, proud of the accomplishments about which they can already boast to their friends and thrilled to be finished dealing with the stresses of the big, bad bursar bill.
Swarms of anti-government protesters attacked the prime minister’s car, seized control of major intersections in the capital and commandeered buses, bringing new chaos to the Thai capital as the country’s ousted leader threatened to return from exile to lead a revolution.
Firefighters in Texas faced calmer weather conditions Saturday while attacking deadly wind-driven wildfires, but worried that approaching thunderstorms could create new problems.
It’s a scene straight out of a 1950s comic book. The American heroes, hardened by the horrors of war, set out to ravage their enemies without messy guns or nuclear warheads. Instead, they drop their most surprising, most secret, most dastardly of all weapons designed to weaken their opponent and render him unable to fight back: the “gay bomb.”
If you are a woman about 5 feet 8 inches tall, 140 pounds and willing to stick your head in a toilet, a northern Wisconsin prosecutor wants your help in proving a high-profile homicide case.
The company that owns the American ship seized this week by Somali pirates says the captain that has been held hostage for days has been rescued.