U.S. News & World Report ranks IUB programs among top in nation
U.S. News & World Report has named several IU-Bloomington programs among the best in the country for the second year in a row.
U.S. News & World Report has named several IU-Bloomington programs among the best in the country for the second year in a row.
A young, good-looking businessman meets the girl of his dreams and it turns out to be his boss's daughter. In a hysterical attempt to date her, she thinks he's gay. He discovers her assumption and is embarrassed but ends up dating the beautiful daughter behind his boss's back. Laugh out loud scenes about the couple's hidden romance from the ass-hole father make for a fun, romantic comedy.
Call it what you will -- country music, Texas country music, or Seattle grunge --it just doesn't matter to Pat Green. Formed from his Texas roots, the unique blend of music Green has developed is honest, strong and truly unique unto him. He is quite possibly, and often labeled as, the most famous country music singer that you have never heard of. All of that seems to be on the verge of changing, however, as Green branches out onto a national scene, including a show at the Bluebird Sept. 4.
INDIANAPOLIS -- A 14-month-old girl who was born without the ability to digest food was recovering Wednesday after undergoing surgery to replace her intestines, liver, pancreas and stomach.
In late December, Linda Kapolas eagerly waited for the news while her daughter Nicole was on the phone. She broke into tears when she got the thumbs up that her daughter had been named a 2003 Wells Scholar.
Leg cramps and sweat-drenched shirts shouldn't be a problem for students during Welcome Week. Pedestrians won't have to shell out any cash to hitch a ride between classes since all rides on campus buses will be free Sept. 1-7.
The power of reggae music will return to Bloomington as summer wanes, only this time, it's with a difference.
Students will now have to pay to park at the Student Recreational Sports Center.
In an amendment to the 1993 campus smoking policy, IU-Bloomington Chancellor Sharon Brehm has decided to ban smoking within thirty feet from all campus buildings, including dorms.
LOS ANGELES -- Like a real-life Willy Wonka, Michael Jackson has announced plans to open his carnival-style Neverland Ranch estate to 500 guests.
LOS ANGELES -- Mourners reflecting the range of Bob Hope's impact on culture gathered at a North Hollywood church Wednesday for a memorial Mass.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Toby Keith got seven nominations for the Country Music Association Awards Tuesday, with Johnny Cash picking up four, two involving his rendition of a song by rock act Nine Inch Nails.
LOS ANGELES -- A half-dozen women gather in a house to help each other improve one anothers' lives, all the while being filmed for television.
VENICE, Italy -- Woody Allen has a past in Venice: The 67-year-old filmmaker got married here, he's filmed in the canal city and he's won awards here. But never before has he turned up at the world's longest-running film fest -- until now.
Wayne Manns says he probably has more paintings on campus than any other living IU artist. The Arts Administration graduate student and oil painter has been using a paintbrush and canvas as his means for political expression, and not even a serious medical diagnosis can stop him.
MISHAWAKA, Ind. -- A tornado touched down briefly in northern Indiana, but most damage caused by fierce thunderstorms was done by straight-line winds, the National Weather Service said Wednesday. The tornado touched down Tuesday near Marian High School in Mishawaka, less than a mile from the eastern edge of South Bend. The funnel cloud ripped a path about 100 yards long by 100 yards wide, meteorologist Aaron Stevens said. There were no reports of injuries.
At Tuesday's Freshmen Induction Ceremony, hundreds of new faces eager and nervous to begin their first year at IU crowded Assembly Hall. Included among the new faces was IU's new president, Adam Herbert.
State officials visited IU's campus Wednesday to promote the recently approved Energize Indiana plan in the south central part of the state.
The first 2,500 people to enter the IU Auditorium for CultureFest today will receive an IU "Unidiversity" T-shirt. But students could go home with a lot more than a freebie. Organizers hope to instill an eagerness to meet and understand others.
Changing clothes, changing lives and changing homes. Incoming students and their parents were introduced to IU Wednesday -- student move-in day -- with sweltering heat. As they carried mini-fridges, TVs and piles of clothes into their new rooms, sweat dripped from their foreheads.