Federal hiring freeze affects students pursuing internships
Before President Trump took office, junior Anabel Carmona-Gutierrez had a plan. She would get a job for one year and then return to her home country, Spain, to get a master’s degree.
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Before President Trump took office, junior Anabel Carmona-Gutierrez had a plan. She would get a job for one year and then return to her home country, Spain, to get a master’s degree.
Scaffolding looms overhead while steel beams and wooden crates of rebar and metal piping litter the lawn. This is part of the Swain Hall renovation process.
Full-time officer Pablo Padilla, clad in a navy blue beanie and short sleeve IU Police Department uniform, left the police station.
The Jacobs School of Music’s Philharmonic Orchestra had its final performance of the year Wednesday at the Musical Arts Center.
The light shines off hundreds of glass bottles. The bottles clink as more glass is tossed into the large metal bin at the Bloomington Downtown Recycling Center.
IU and Bloomington celebrated National Coming Out Day on Tuesday through events at both GLBT Student Support Services and the Back Door, a queer bar.
In the midst of the clash of capitalism, republicanism and socialism, mid-19th century France doesn’t look pretty.
Lauren Blackwell stopped into the Neal-Marshall Black Cultural Center her freshman year after the student involvement fair not knowing what the building and center had in store.
A recent study done by an economic research group claims our labor market is rapidly heading in a new direction.
Art history graduates face a huge challenge in seeking traditional major-related jobs even though the overall employment climate has improved.
Ben Arvin admits he watches almost exclusively horror films.
For the full 24 hours of April 12, IU campuses, students, staff and alumni across the globe celebrated the first-ever IU Day. The campaign sought to promote school spirit, a greater sense of community and support for new campus initiatives, according to an IU press release.
IU has been named one of the top 10 producers of Fulbright U.S. Student Program grant winners.
With graduation around the corner, a number of my classmates are planning summer travel plans. They’re motivated and funded by many sources. The most noble desire is to meet people from different cultures. The least is hoping for an interesting Instagram feed.
I started last year as a finance major, but later found myself uninterested in doing spreadsheets for the rest of my life.
Graduate students in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs presented results of three energy studies to the Naval Support Activity Crane facilities Tuesday.
Picture a bustling nursing home, the activity director running around creating events for the guests to feel at home. Now picture a broken family, torn apart by addiction and divorce. Someone comes in to speak with the children to get their perspective and make sure they feel loved. Switch again to the ends of South Africa, a foreign woman tending to the native children. Finally, picture sitting in the middle of a big purple couch shoved in the back corner of a tiny room, facing the therapist asking questions about feelings.
Jane Miller glides her fingers across the beads of her rosary. Her slender, almost translucent hands move down the strand, blue veins against blue beads.
The Mathers Museum of World Cultures’ exhibition “Cherokee Craft, 1973” hones in on basketry and other crafts made by the Cherokee people in the 1970s. It is one of a few basketry-themed Themester exhibits at the museum this semester.
Fall is usually thought of as time to pick pumpkins, drink apple cider and play in the leaves.