IU falls to Miami (OH), 8-6
The Hoosiers' four-game winning streak was snapped Tuesday night after surrendering an early lead to Miami (OH).
The Hoosiers' four-game winning streak was snapped Tuesday night after surrendering an early lead to Miami (OH).
Professionals from several fields in marketing, communications and television visited IU and gave advice to a room full of hopeful students. The main message: to build relationships that would foster a professional career.
When it comes time to find a Little 5 artist, the Union Board knows it’s in for a bit of a tough ride. “The search is a little nerve-wracking,” said junior James Still, the Union Board director for concerts.
Technology can be a dangerous thing.
This Earth Week, I want to share the three simplest environmental concepts: the three R’s.
The protesters are not the dangerous loons most critics imagine them to be.
Like the attack on Pearl Harbor, Hannes has awoken the sleeping giant.
If there’s one lesson I’ve learned about managing my money (which I’m notoriously bad at), it’s that banks are out to get me.
WE SAY Pending legislation in Arizona will sanction racial profiling in a region already fraught with racial and ethnic tension — allegedly in an effort to secure the border.
Gov. Mitch Daniels is urging Indiana’s colleges and universities to begin offering three-year bachelor’s degrees that he said would give students a way to “fast-forward” their college careers.
Although last year’s Little 500 race was perhaps one of the greatest sporting events I’ve ever witnessed, I can’t pinpoint when it was I realized that.
Three years ago, the NCAA adopted a rule that no team would be eligible for the Men’s Golf Championships if its record was not better than .500 for the season.
Zeta Tau Alpha’s Big Man on Campus won’t be until mid-October, but philanthropy chairwoman and sophomore Kalina Dalecki is already creating and staffing 16 different committees that will ultimately help sponsor the event. This is the life of a philanthropy chair.
The IU softball team has found its winning touch, but it’s getting a tough test today.
A group of retired military officers is giving school lunches a new label: national security threat. They say school lunches have helped make young people so fat that fewer of them can meet the military’s physical fitness standards, and recruitment is in jeopardy. A report released Tuesday said more than 9 million young adults, or 27 percent of Americans ages 17 to 24, are too overweight to join the military. Now, the officers are advocating for passage of a wide-ranging nutrition bill that aims to make the nation’s school lunches healthier.
A judge in Austin granted the divorce, but Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott is appealing the decision, as well as a divorce granted to a gay couple in Dallas, saying protecting the “traditional definition of marriage” means doing the same for divorce. A state appeals court is scheduled to hear arguments in the Dallas case Wednesday.
Every Saturday for one hour, tutors — usually IU students — and foreign students meet to learn English as a day-to-day language for the Practical English Tutorials program sponsored by the Leo R. Dowling International Center. Unlike the English language classes some international students take, the PET program is informal and friendly. The tutors are, for the most part, their peers. They can ask questions about vocabulary, culture and pronunciation.
For the spectator, there’s a lot going on at the track during the race — 33 teams operating on different race strategies with different goals in mind. Several veteran riders offered keys to doing well in the race for any team.