IU's Eppley Institute receives National Park Service award
After a 15-year affiliation, the National Park Service awarded IU’s Eppley Institute for Parks and Public Lands with its first ever Excellence in Partnership Award at a ceremony last week.
After a 15-year affiliation, the National Park Service awarded IU’s Eppley Institute for Parks and Public Lands with its first ever Excellence in Partnership Award at a ceremony last week.
Alumni who lived in the Collins Living-Learning Center during their college years had another chance to see the residence hall and reunite with old friends Saturday during the Collins LLC Alumni Reunion.
With Memorial Day just around the corner, the season of summer is almost upon us. And aside from scorching heat waves, one of the best things about the summer months is the tremendous tours and festivals that cross the United States. Although not all of them roll through our neck of the woods, the following are going to be some of the summer’s hottest tickets. Get your sunscreen and bottled water ready.
Zoso, the “ultimate Led Zeppelin experience,” rocked an at-capacity Bluebird on Saturday night, playing to a packed room of adoring fans. And when they say it’s the “ultimate” experience, they aren’t kidding. From the precision of every song played to the flowing, curly locks of “Jimmy Page” to “Robert Plant”’s cocky strut across the stage, watching this band perform was like being thrown back 30 years in time.
Tucked away in the back of Bear’s Place, old friends, family, and some fresh faces gathered to see the Üt Haus jazz band perform their 18th anniversary show for the Jazz Fables concert series Thursday evening.
On paper, it looks like an exceptional deal. A feat of bipartisan cooperation conceived out of deep concern for America’s returning veterans, the “Post-9/11 Veterans’ Educational Assistance Act of 2007,” sponsored by Jim Webb, D-Va., was recently passed by the House and is headed to the Senate, where its fate is uncertain.
The latest campus accessory doesn’t have wires or batteries. It doesn’t have a designer logo, and although it is in increasingly high demand, you won’t find it in any stores – it is a double major.
It would be much easier if, during election years, we simply abandoned the boring process of legislation. Instead, candidates could send elaborately decorated cards to sections of the American public, punctuated with construction-paper hearts and glued-on elbow macaroni. It might be pandering, but at least it would be honest – they would spare their poor economic advisors who have more reason than usual to cringe at what arrives at Congress.
A few things have been happening lately that make me realize it’s probably time for me to find a summer job.
Barack Obama collected the support of four of John Edwards’ Democratic National Convention delegates on Thursday, then gained the backing of four superdelegates and a large labor union as he marched steadily toward the party’s presidential nomination. BLOG: The Politiker
The California Supreme Court has overturned a gay marriage ban in a ruling that would make the nation’s largest state the second one to allow gay and lesbian weddings.
Dallas based band Old 97’s have been one of the key alternative country/rock bands since their arrival on the music scene in the early ‘90s. Although they never really achieved the level of commercial success that was at one time expected of them, they have stuck around and have managed to stay true to their sound. Part of the band’s unique sound is based on their wide range of influences; from Johnny Cash to The Kinks. Blame It On Gravity is their seventh studio album.
A Bloomington man was arrested Tuesday and charged with the attempted murder of his 9-year-old child.
The change of this new millennium fueled new sides of the industry that have now become household names. The teenage era, filled with pop sounds and lackluster lyrics, were prominent as Britney Spears, *NSYNC, and Backstreet Boys dominated the charts. Winning the hearts of millions of teens brought huge revenues that are unheard of in our present era, although British singer and songwriter Craig David has experienced similar success.
After more than 40 years of teaching folklore and showing more than 100 doctoral students what he learned in his studies, IU professor Henry Glassie is retiring.
“I-Bucks” are the new meal points. Students who have been eating at Residential Programs and Services dining halls for the past few years will see a change when they come back in the fall.
A realistic and refreshing love story is hard to come by these days, but "P.S. I Love You" nails it brilliantly. The film, which varies constantly between being heartbreakingly sad and charismatically funny, is truly untraditional and captivating.
IU coach Tom Crean has had a busy last few weeks. While most of his attention is directed toward filling the decimated Hoosier roster, Crean has also been focusing on filling his coaching staff as well.
Not many other bands have personified the emo kid stereotypes as much as From First To Last. The young band has had many arguments that led to members leaving and new ones being found via MySpace. Meanwhile, their heavy use of guyliner, black T-shirts and lyrics about love lost have made them stars in the minds of those who learn about new music from Hot Topic. Now they’re back, armed with a new self-titled album and yet another new vocalist.
After Radiohead’s release of their album In Rainbows last fall for any-price-you-want-to-pay, Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor decided to take the formula one step further: Why not just give the album away for free?