IUSA congress votes to support sustainability
The IU Student Association will support an initiative to make IU an environmentally healthy and sustainable institution.
The IU Student Association will support an initiative to make IU an environmentally healthy and sustainable institution.
Bragging doesn't always have to be a bad thing.
In a march Wednesday from the Indiana Memorial Union to Ballantine Hall, a group of 14 students protested IU's contract to sell Coca-Cola products. The students were members of No Sweat!, a student organization opposed to labor abuses and corporate globalization, according to the group's Web site.
A building that has served several Christian denominations during the past few decades will be auctioned off to the highest bidder this November. The Center for University Ministry, located at 1415 E. Third St., will be sold after ceasing its operations late last year because of a decline in student interest.
Bragging does not have always have to be a bad thing. That was the topic of a talk given Tuesday Night by author and communications specialist Peggy Klaus at Whittenberger Auditorium.
The three jury alternates selected Monday morning for the murder trial of John R. Myers II will not be named until the jury begins deliberations, the Morgan County Superior Court said Tuesday.
Freshman tosses pet guinea pig out window. Student gets into police squad car thinking he hailed a cab. Juveniles make fake 911 call to try and catch police eating doughnuts on the job.
NEW YORK -- At a pivotal time in the abortion debate, Ms. magazine is releasing its fall issue next week with a cover story titled "We Had Abortions," accompanied by the names of thousands of women nationwide who signed a petition making that declaration.
In an event Tuesday that was both literally and figuratively groundbreaking, officials ceremoniously dug shovels into the future site of the nation's first proton therapy training center.
Eight IU professors from a diverse range of academic departments were recently named Poynter Center fellows and will be meeting throughout the year to discuss "Memory, Ethics, Politics and Aesthetics" at the Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics and American Institutions in Bloomington.
See what's going on around the IU campus.
A new study co-authored by an IU professor reports crime directed toward abortion clinics in the United States has not dwindled.
IU's Relay For Life is looking for volunteers and team members to participate in its annual walk against cancer this spring.
To kick off the first event of Archives and Special Collections Month, students and faculty gathered to hear how an IU professor used the University's records to chronicle the life of former IU president Herman B Wells in a book he is writing.
Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan proclaimed October Archives and Special Collections Month at an event held at the Herman B Wells Library Tuesday evening.
As the Indiana Memorial Union prepares to open newly renovated facilities -- the Whittenberger Auditorium and a Starbucks on the first floor near the Student Activities Tower -- the Union Board continues its storied history as the governing body of the IMU and one of the strongest student organizations on campus. Sixteen student directors, three nonstudent directors and some 300 student committee members and assistant directors make up the board.
I'm in a bit of a pickle, and I think I share my conundrum with many of you readers. The dilemma is this: In a few short months, I will graduate. Then what? Graduate school? A career? The Peace Corps? Teach for America?
Like every good child from a liberal family, I was raised with the belief that Wal-Mart's existence was nothing less than the work of the devil. I learned that it represented capitalism gone awry: It squelched small businesses, had some very questionable labor practices and stole your soul. Besides, that happy face just got annoying after a while.
Sydney McGee, an award-winning art teacher of 28 years, was recently fired from her job at a Frisco, Texas, elementary school. Did she abuse a student? Sell drugs on the playground? Accept a bribe?
The first half-point of the AT&T Crimson & Gold Cup -- an annual duel for bragging rights between several Purdue and IU varsity sports -- will be decided Wednesday.