IU accepts invite to prestigious tournament
After finishing 21st last season in their first NCAA tournament appearance in more than a decade, the IU men’s golf team hasn’t slowed down.
After finishing 21st last season in their first NCAA tournament appearance in more than a decade, the IU men’s golf team hasn’t slowed down.
As part of the Summer Music Festival, Jacobs School of Music faculty member and pianist Evelyne Brancart will perform at 8 p.m. Sunday in Auer Hall.“(The Summer Music Festival) is diversifying IU music,” Jacobs School of Music Director of Marketing and Publicity Alain Barker said. “The festival is growing every year.
The College Audition Preparation Faculty Concert will kick off the week-long CAP workshop 7 p.m Sunday in Ford Hall.“It is a great concert,” said Alain Barker, the Jacobs School of Music director of marketing and publicity. “There will be a lot of wonderful music by the Jacobs School of Music Faculty.”
Twelve years after passing away from a brain aneurism during March of his senior year at IU, John Jackson, who served as the Indiana Daily Student’s editor-in-chief for the summer of 1995, is still being publicly remembered by his friends and family.
Unless you count the piano for the music and the all-black costumes, two benches were all that were used for Eric Anderson Jr.’s production of “Down In The Valley.”The one-act opera began
I have to say I was interested in your article about I-69 when I first saw it mentioned on the second section of the latest IDS. I have been wondering what everyone’s HUGE complaints were. When I moved back to Bloomington in December of 1996, one of the first things I saw of this town was an I-69 protest meeting at my new middle school. First they were complaining that they should take care of the roads they have, that the highway was going to go through Amish property, along with the obvious environmental issues. I never knew how much of a compromise was struck on some of the issues that could be tackled like going through Amish land, and that’s what I was really interested in.
We are writing to say goodbye to a dear friend and colleague, Damon Sims, associate vice provost for student affairs. Damon is leaving IU for Penn State where he will be vice president of student affairs. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and work with Damon over the year, know that he is an exceptionally gifted, intelligent and caring human being. We can only express our sorrow and regret that we are losing such a fine and vital member of our community.
Though I applaud the IDS for addressing the issue of poverty in Bloomington (“Getting By,” 07/03), I took great offense at the article’s moralizing conclusion that “one thing is uniformly detrimental to curing the problem of poverty: giving spare change to panhandlers.”
There’s not much that can ruin a college basketball game, no matter who is playing or what the outcome is, especially during March Madness. But each and every year, there is one thing – a man actually – who ruins everyone’s viewing experience: Billy Packer. For fans like me, today couldn’t be better. The sun is shining, there are no clouds in the sky and Billy Packer was finally removed from his position at CBS as main college basketball analyst.
His evident mentality of division is why I feel sorry for the man who thought slapping this sticker on his pickup truck was a good idea. He’s an unfortunate addict of the poisonous negativism cooked up by the likes of Karl Rove, although he has plenty of contemporaries across the partisan divide.
It’s July in Indiana, and that can only mean one thing: County fair season is upon us! No matter which Indiana county you call home, it is important that you heed certain behavioral “musts” in order to enjoy your fair fully. Almost all of us will share a very similar experience which will unite us with our brothers and sisters across the state the way television does when it isn’t July and people don’t have to eat fried things in order to have fun.
The current trends in gasoline prices have led many Americans to envision a world in which the price displays on gas pumps resemble slot machines along the Vegas strip, numbers spinning in constant upward motion. Already, I find myself saying, “In the good old days, I could fill up my car for less than $20!”
The editorial cartoonist and his or her editor make an odd couple: One doesn’t like getting censored, the other doesn’t like getting sued. More intriguing, however, is the relationship of a cartoonist to the people, groups and ideas he or she satirizes, if not the government that punishes him or her for doing so.
A robbery occurred Monday around 11:41 a.m. at the Peoples State Bank, 525 S. Clarizz Blvd.
Free Vans Warped Tour backstage passes will be given away to anyone donating blood for the American Red Cross on Friday at designated locations in Indiana and Kentucky.
Downtown Bloomington was buzzing for Obama at Monday evening’s opening party for one of the first six “Indiana for Change” campaign offices to open in Indiana.
Regulars of Delilah’s Pet Shop mourned the loss of the store’s pet icon July 2 after Delilah, the beloved Saint Bernard, passed away at the age of 13.
This issue, WEEKEND finds five regular 21+ events around town that highlight local, regional and national acts – from singer/songwriters to Jazz performers and DJs.
The Monroe County Fair is considered one of the largest fairs in the state. This year, the fair will offer over 30 events, with everything from a rodeo to a baby contest.
IU senior Audrie Garrison discusses the political nuance in everything from drink specials to baseball in our nation's capital