Graduation rates improve
Though the most updated statistics report a 58-percent on-time graduation rate for the IU-Bloomington campus for students seeking a four-year degree, IU administration is putting on-time graduation as a top priority.
Though the most updated statistics report a 58-percent on-time graduation rate for the IU-Bloomington campus for students seeking a four-year degree, IU administration is putting on-time graduation as a top priority.
TheJacobs School of Music presented their Jazz Ensemble at the Buskirk Chumley theater Monday night.
Columnist, Eshley Spitzer gives advice about internships in new cities.
Bloomington electric car dealerships discuss the pros of buying green.
Don Seader, owner of World Wide Automotive Service, said the abundance of electric vehicles will be directly related to the price of electric batteries and the price of gasoline.
The Senate Appropriations Committee is currently deciding on proposed budgets for higher education institutions in Indiana.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is three years old, as of this past weekend, but its controversy continues.
The Indiana State Police is shifting from paper applications to online only applications.
Proposed legislation in the Indiana Statehouse would allow children under the age of 14 to be paid athletic officials.
IU Coach Tracy Smith tweeted Monday afternoon that the game, originally scheduled for 7 p.m. today, will instead begin at 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Junior guard Victor Oladipo is one of four finalists for the 2013 Naismith Men’s College Player of the Year Award.
Certainly, this wasn’t the season first-year IU Coach Curt Miller had hoped for, but the program is trending in the right direction.
The discovery of rats’ source memory means that animals can be used to discover a cure for Alzheimer’s disease.
17 students traveled to Guatemala to set up medical clinics to treat people and distribute medicine and vitamins.
Since he was Temple’s leading scorer by nearly nine points entering Sunday’s game, IU knew the man they would have to stop was Khalif Wyatt.
Unbelievable. It’s the only way to describe the finish between IU and Temple that saw the Hoosiers close out the game on a 10-0 run to win 58-52.
The Hoosiers managed to clinch a berth to Washington, D.C. in the Sweet 16 Thursday against Syracuse.
The Hoosiers lost to the Nittany Lions by a 4-3 margin on Friday, but defeated the Buckeyes 5-2 on Sunday.
Claiming the pole starting position was Kappa Kappa Gamma, which qualified with a time of 2:42.54. The finish resulted in a six-place jump from last year’s qualifications, in which Kappa Kappa Gamma earned a seventh-place starting position.
The IU women’s golf team will continue its season today at the Briar’s Creek Invitational in John’s Island, S.C.