The glory of old IU?
Hoosiers like to consider their athletics department among the Big Ten’s elite. But Big Ten title times have been tough in Bloomington lately.
Hoosiers like to consider their athletics department among the Big Ten’s elite. But Big Ten title times have been tough in Bloomington lately.
This month, IU Muslim students are fasting in observance of Ramadan, a time of spiritual reflection and self-sacrifice observed during the ninth month of the Islamic calendar. The fasting, which includes abstinence from water as well as food, begins at sunrise and ends at sundown with prayer and a meal called iftar.But some say fasting is difficult in college because students have to balance so many responsibilities.
Could a new hit video game be the next step in teaching evolution? Will Wright, the game designer behind The Sims, spent years creating "Spore," a new video game that is supposed to simulate the process of evolution. But, local specialists in both biology and learning sciences say that Spore is a fun game and nothing more.
Combine Latin music and salsa dancing with resistance training, and you have the recipe for “Zumba,” the new exercise dance craze that’s trying to make working out fun again.
The financial crisis that took place on Wall Street last week can be summed up in one word: chaos. Lehman Brothers, one of the top investment banks in America, filed the largest bankruptcy claim in U.S. history after going $613 billion in debt. One of Lehman’s main rivals, Merrill Lynch, nearly suffered the same fate before being bought out by Bank of America. And in the largest government bailout ever, insurer AIG was given an $85 billion loan from the Federal Reserve after plummeting share prices and credit downgrades caused investors to sell shares. Now, President Bush is requesting that U.S. lawmakers pass a $700 billion bailout plan to help financial institutions holding large amounts of bad mortgage debt. The turmoil leaves students with plenty of questions.
The IU-Northwest campus in Gary will remain closed for a second week as parts of the campus are still under water. All events and classes have been canceled through this week and campus is expected to reopen Sept. 29.
While pizza might be thought of as a college food staple, students can’t eat it every day. As a result, Residential Programs and Services is trying to provide healthier and more sustainable options in food courts.
Bloomington residents and IU students have the chance to meet seven local Playboy models today. The seven IU women pictured in Playboy’s recent “Girls of the Big Ten” pictorial will sign autographs from 4 to 6 p.m. at Campustown, located at 306 N. Walnut St.
It often goes unnoticed, hidden among the likes of Ballantine Hall, the Chemistry Building, the Indiana Memorial Union and other buildings. However, this small, tucked-away building houses the many faiths of IU, from Islam to Judaism, Christianity to Buddhism, and everything in between.
The question I am most often confronted with is, “Why fashion?” The answer is quite simple: Because I love it.
Few local bands can claim their music has aired on radio stations across the world, but emerging local pop/rock band South Jordan has already had music featured on Malaysian airwaves.
Mammoths once walked the Hoosier state, audience members at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater discovered on Sunday.
The University Theater will get a new look next March when renovations start to transform the decades-old stage into a cinema.
Bloomington has been named the first “Playful City” in Indiana by KaBOOM!, a national nonprofit entity that encourages the formation of strong and healthy communities nationwide.
Gov. Mitch Daniels’ request for a $10.4 million national emergency grant to support displaced RV workers was approved two weeks ago after an economic downturn and rising gas prices have left many RV employees in Indiana jobless.
A Bloomington resident was held at gunpoint at about 9 p.m. Sunday while walking to his car.
The Community Foundation of Bloomington and Monroe County has committed more than $150,000 to jump start after-school programming for middle school students. “Students in middle school are at a difficult age because they want independence but aren’t necessarily prepared for that independence yet,” said Ken Miller, a Community Foundation board member.
Despite what the Census Bureau reported last month – that the numbers of uninsured Americans fell slightly between 2006 and 2007 to about 46 million – the health care access picture, to say nothing of its quality and cost, is bleak. The report, for one, did not take into account the economic downturn. That aside, one of the fastest growing and largest groups of uninsured is the “young invincibles,” individuals between the ages of 19 to 29. This is a group that numbers 13.4 million.
When it comes to IU football, some fans want to go big or go home. Others just want to go big and then go home. I’m referring of course to IU’s largest and most esteemed athletic tradition: the football tailgate. Ah, the smell of hamburgers on the wind as corn-hole bags fly by. To anyone who has stopped to bask in the glory of these festivities, it might come as a surprise that this year’s football attendance has hardly budged from last years’ numbers.
I think we are probably all in agreement that democracy is a really good thing. Of course there are the obvious freedoms and pleasantries affixed to this governing style, such as greater individual liberty, political stability, freedom from governmental violence and enhanced quality of life relative to non-democracies. Amartya Sen, the winner of the 1998 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, has pointed out that “no famine has ever taken place in the history of the world in a functioning democracy.”