IU welcomes transfer students
New Student Orientation is well under way, but IU welcomed a different kind of new student Friday – transfer students.
New Student Orientation is well under way, but IU welcomed a different kind of new student Friday – transfer students.
Mundane poems and tales of death and drug use filled the John Waldron Arts Center on Wednesday night. As a part of the IU Writers' Conference, workshop participants recited their latest creative work, which included portions of short stories, poems and published books.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Dalai Lama’s escape from Tibet to India and the Chinese government’s establishment in Tibet.
Brian Hettmansperger's review of Mos Def's "The Ecstatic."
Fun Frolic, put on by IU Campus Child Care and Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central Indiana, will kick off Friday. The carnival event will run for nine days until June 27.
About 500 participants will descend upon Bloomington on Monday for IU’s Mini University. The weeklong program will place adult learners from around the country in 112 different classes taught by more than 100 of IU’s top professors.
Orientation is as much a rite of passage as it is tradition here at IU.Incoming freshmen and their parents have arrived at IU this week to explore campus and register for classes.
Bloomington cover bands feature.
Stefania Marghitu's first-hand account of the 2009 Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival.
Fifty years after graduation, members of the class of 1959 will flock to Bloomington for their 50th reunion, part of the annual Cream and Crimson Alumni Weekend sponsored by the IU Alumni Association.
Cory Barker's weekly TV Surveillance column
There’s only one place in Bloomington where residents can eat foods from 40 different locations without having to walk more than a few steps in between each bite.
Chris Pickrell's review of "Land of the Lost."
Yayha Chaudhry's review of Dirty Projector's "Bitte Orca."
Yayha Chaudhry's review of Sonic Youth's "The Eternal."
Tyler Perry's review of 311's "Uplifter."
Sammy Sosa became the latest in a string of baseball stars implicated in the sport’s steroids scandal of the past decade when The New York Times reported that he tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug in 2003.
Senior Emily Kasavana is just like any other IU student, except for two distinct differences.
While citizens rally in the streets, one group of Iranians spoke on the field in Iran's game against South Korea to protest the election proceedings in the nation.
The official first day of summer is just a few days away. So instead of sweating it out in wool and thick denim, it’s time to pay close attention to the fabrics you wear.