Laura Bush speaks on campus
Former first lady Laura Bush spoke at Ivy Tech Community College-Bloomington's O'Bannon Institute on Thursday in the Union. She brought along her bobblehead doll.
Former first lady Laura Bush spoke at Ivy Tech Community College-Bloomington's O'Bannon Institute on Thursday in the Union. She brought along her bobblehead doll.
Three speakers, including Ryan White’s mother, will speak 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Friday at the Indiana Memorial Union on the history of HIV and AIDS education. White died 20 years ago Thursday.Watch President Obama sign the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Act in October 2009 alongside White's mother.
2010 Spring Commencement speakers are Nobel Laureate and IU professor Elinor Ostrom as well as jazz record producer Quincy Jones Jr.
Little 500 riders call Miss ’N Out an event of musical chairs. When the music stops playing, who will be left riding?
Junior Emily Nicholls painted her toenails with gold glitter nail polish and marked her feet with “1 DAY SHOE LESS” and the TOMS Shoes logo on the back of her ankles.
IU coach Tracy Smith tweeted early Thursday morning that he couldn’t sleep, but he didn’t blame it on the fact that his team would take the field against one of the nation’s best collegiate pitchers Friday at Ohio State.
Two years ago, sophomore outfielder Alex Dickerson and sophomore pitcher Drew Leininger were playing for Poway High School in San Diego, Calif., a team that has produced eight Division-I players in the last two years.
New IU men’s soccer coach Todd Yeagley couldn’t be happier being back at his alma mater. “Every day, I kind of step back from what I’m doing and say, ‘I have the best job in college soccer,’” he said. “I’m very fortunate.” And if the beginning of the spring season is any indicator, the new era of Hoosier soccer is progressing well.
Having lost 20 seniors and returning only four defensive starters from last season, IU coach Bill Lynch ended 2009 with a hazy view of his team’s on-field leadership. Entering the spring, things have become much clearer.
Double features are long gone from the world of movie theaters, but this weekend Theatre of the People will bring the double feature back with something old and something new.
With 26 competitors from around the world, the Jacobs School of Music has completed its first annual Guitar Festival and Competition by announcing not one first-place winner, but two.
With pieces that range from an interpretation of the game “rock, paper, scissors” to football as a metaphor for human interaction, the original work of emerging choreographers and composers will be performed in the two-part “Hammer and Nail” program on two different nights at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.
The first half of the show will feature five collaborations choreographed by dance company students. This year, the students have an environmental justice theme. The second half will feature African American Dance Company Director Iris Rosa’s choreography and performances by two guest performers from Ghana, graduate student Bernard Woma and his niece, Yaa Bekyore.
In four weeks, the two cadets and 35 others will enter the IU Police Academy, the only one of its kind in the country, and will become fully sworn officers, working part-time for IUPD in the fall.
This Saturday, the Business Careers in Entertainment Club will sponsor the fourth-annual King of the Court basketball tournament at the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation Wildermuth Fieldhouse from noon to 5 p.m.
This weekend, five events will raise money for greek philanthropies.
In the second semester of that year, the Office of Student Organizations and Leadership Development recognized Greeks Go Green as an official club. And while Crosh said progress has been slow, the community has been supportive and is becoming more environmentally conscious.
For 40 years, the department of African American and African Diaspora Studies has tried to educate the IU community about the experiences of black people in different parts of the world. This weekend, in conjunction with a year-long 40th anniversary celebration, the department will sponsor the seventh annual Herman C. Hudson Symposium at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center.
Flowers are in bloom, the birds are chirping and the sidewalks have been taken over by runners. Whether they are training for a marathon, Little 50 or running just to stay in shape, they can be found all over Bloomington.