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(06/20/11 12:33am)
Smallwood Plaza doesn’t try to deny that it attracts East Coast students with apartments named Manhattan, Soho and Carnegie. Ernie Reno, the spokesperson for Smallwood Plaza, describes the location
as a Class A property that is an investment for residents who can
afford to live there.
(06/14/11 5:33pm)
On the 12th day in the search for Lauren Spierer, the Bloomington Police
Department still has no leads or suspects, but they do have a better
description of what Lauren was wearing the night she disappeared.For full audio click here.
(06/14/11 1:35am)
When Lauren Spierer’s uncle called Texas EquuSearch last week, Tim
Miller said he couldn’t help unless law enforcement asked him. Within a
few hours, Miller received a call from police and booked the next flight
to Indiana.
(06/13/11 6:19pm)
Capt. Joe Qualters said at least one vehicle has come to the attention
of the Bloomington Police Department in their search for Lauren Spierer,
a 20-year-old IU student who has been missing since June 3.
(06/13/11 12:49am)
Throughout the last 10 days, the search for missing student Lauren
Spierer, has grown from her parents and friends searching for her to
about 1,000 people volunteering each day.
(06/12/11 5:41pm)
Lauren Spierer’s mother Charlene said she wakes up every day and asks herself what do I want to accomplish today.
(06/11/11 5:51pm)
Although there have been no significant developments in the case of
missing IU student Lauren Spierer, the Bloomington Police Department
said that does not mean it will lessen its investigation.
(06/10/11 5:57pm)
The search for Lauren Spierer is about to get bigger. Lauren’s case will be aired on America’s Most Wanted on Saturday.
(05/19/11 12:58am)
Erick and Omar Gama moved from Mexico to Indianapolis when they were 11.
They didn’t know the language, they didn’t have documentation and they
were often made fun of at school because of their lack of English
skills. The two brothers aren’t sure how they passed that year of fifth grade but
by the eighth grade, they were moved out of the English as a second
language program and were accepted into the Magnet program, which is for
advanced students in Indianapolis Public Schools.
(05/18/11 10:22pm)
Theresa Ochoa walked up to a food cart during her lunch break in her red
high heels and examined the workers wearing T-shirts that read “Happy
Pig.” She looked at the empty grill at the corner of Indiana and
Kirkwood avenues before asking, “What are you selling?”
(04/26/11 4:18am)
For the students at Aurora, high
school at Bloomington North or South wasn’t just difficult; it was a
nightmare. They dreaded school dances, hated the cliques and didn’t
bother to attend homecoming. The students at Aurora were students who
were bored at North and South, the drop-outs, the junior with only nine
credits and the student who the guidance counselor said would never
graduate. The system had failed these kids and most had lost hope in
graduation. Aurora Alternative High School, a small building tucked away
on the corner of North Fairview and Ninth Streets, was their last
chance.
(02/15/11 5:47am)
As part of Black History Month, the Indiana Daily Student talked to
seven black student leaders from across campus. Here is a snippet of how
these leaders impact the University each day.
(04/02/10 3:47am)
Although the runners in the Little Fifty might not prepare by shaving
their legs and arms as Little 500 riders do, it is still a part of the
Little 500 tradition.
(03/03/10 6:44am)
Senior Stephanie Foreman was at a club listening to Justin Timberlake
blare through the speakers when she began to feel the ground shake
below her. At first she thought the vibration was from the people
around her jumping, but soon she realized nobody was jumping as the
ground began to increasingly tremble.
(02/22/10 1:35am)
Parents, students and alumni of Aurora Alternative High School stood in
a circle around principal Chuck Holloway after the school board
confirmed that their school would close.
(02/19/10 5:02am)
Alpha Kappa Alpha will board a plane at 2 p.m. Friday to compete against five
other teams for the first place prize of $100,000. That money, $10,000
for each woman, will go directly to their Bursar accounts.
(02/16/10 5:29am)
“Smile and look happy. Look smart. Look intelligent,” Chuck Holloway joked to his students. However, the signs saying “Save Aurora” and “Doesn’t Our Education
Matter?” that principal Holloway’s students held up at the town square
Monday were not something to laugh about. Aurora Alternative High School might close because of the Monroe County Community School Corporation’s $4.5 million budget cuts.
(02/10/10 6:07am)
Part two of a series investigating the day care system at IU and in Bloomington.
(02/09/10 5:10am)
When it comes to day care in Bloomington, three nationally accredited IU centers offer 165 spots for children
ranging from birth to 5 years old. Two co-ops add an additional
18-20 spots. But the wait list to obtain one of these spots is more than
100-names long.
(02/05/10 4:02am)
About three dozen faculty members from IU campuses received New Frontiers in the Arts and Humanities grants for 2010.