Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Sunday, May 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Region


The Indiana Daily Student

IU students make trek to Miami

·

Like many other times in his life, sophomore Jason Fried is traveling to Miami. But his trip down south this weekend isn't about getting a tan, swimming or visiting relatives. After spending some serious coin, Fried will travel to Miami this Saturday to make a trip to football's mecca: the Super Bowl.



The Indiana Daily Student

Man stole thousands from Katrina relief

·

A Bloomington man pleaded guilty Wednesday to collecting nearly $44,000 in funds meant to help Hurricane Katrina victims and $105,000 in fraudulent student college loans, federal authorities said.


The Indiana Daily Student

SoFA features MFA art with reception tonight at gallery

·

Freshman Alex Schultze walks around the School of Fine Arts Gallery with a watchful eye and curiosity as he looks at the metals, ceramics and graphic pieces displayed. Today is the last day for the MFA show, with a reception from 7 to 9 p.m. in the SoFA Gallery to close the MFA Metals/Ceramics/Graphics Design Area Show.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU professor gives noon talk at IUAM on virtual art

·

You climb a tall set of stairs. Tiny sculptures and rooms dot the landscape below. The height is dizzying. Before you is a solemn mask obscuring a woman's face. Her eyes are closed and a steady "om" reverberates from her clenched mouth. As you step forward you are consumed in her mouth and engulfed by a dark tunnel. The subconscious ramblings of this mystical lady echo all around you. You are not in a dream, nor are you tripping on acid. You are experiencing the art of Margaret Dolinsky and the CAVE program.


The Indiana Daily Student

Critic defines opera terms, etiquette

·

In preparation for this weekend's production of "Arlecchino" and "Too Many Sopranos," I would like to offer a quick overview -- a primer, if you will -- of the fundamental aspects of opera in the hopes that understanding each one will make attending the it a little less confusing, inaccessible, and dreadfully unappealing.


The Indiana Daily Student

This week in the Jacobs School of Music

·

Under the baton of recent faculty addition Uriel Segal, the Jacobs School of Music Chamber Orchestra opened its concert Wednesday night with Johannes Brahms' "Serenade No. 2" in A Major. The piece is notable for the absence of violins, which not only gave the viola section the rare opportunity to act as the upper voice, but gave the principal violist the even rarer opportunity to act as concertmaster, if only for one piece.


The Indiana Daily Student

That's 'soy' gay!

·

The secret is out. I'd hoped my people would keep it under wraps a little bit longer, but unfortunately James Rutz, the founder and chairman of Open Church Ministries, let the cat out of the bag. The all-powerful weapon for advancing the gay agenda is soy.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pandora's 'digital' box

·

The power of the free market is such that it can (and will) commodify everything from fresh water to professional sports. Whether it's tanning salon-induced melanoma or reselling compost yard trimmings, someone is always trying to make a buck, even off "high art."




The Indiana Daily Student

Black History Month kicks off

·

Dennis Laffoon was successful in silencing the stir of the crowd as he belted, in high alto, a religious piece from his own musical selection. It was the kickoff to Black History Month.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the World

An animal-rights worker charged with dumping the bodies of euthanized dogs and cats apologized in court Thursday, saying she left the carcasses in a trash bin because they stank. Adria J. Hinkle and Andrew B. Cook, both PETA workers, are on trial on 21 counts of animal cruelty, along with charges of littering and obtaining property by false pretenses.


The Indiana Daily Student

Purchasing power

·

Everyone loves a political scandal. Something about sleazy bigwigs in Brooks Brothers suits getting shamed in front of the American public has an appeal we all oh-so-sadistically enjoy. But school-board political scandals? Can that even happen?


The Indiana Daily Student

Palestinian cease-fire dissolves

·

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip -- Gunfights between Hamas and Fatah gunmen erupted across the Gaza Strip on Thursday, killing four people, wounding several others and effectively destroying a three-day truce that brought a brief period of quiet to the volatile area.


The Indiana Daily Student

Suicide bombers strike Shiite city; bombs rock Iraq capital

·

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Two suicide bombers blew themselves up Thursday in a crowded outdoor market in a Shiite city south of Baghdad, killing 45 people and wounding 150, police said, the latest in a series of insurgent attacks against the majority sect during the Islamic holy month of Muharram.


The Indiana Daily Student

Storming to victory

·

After IU's 71-66 upset win against No. 2 Wisconsin on Wednesday night, junior guard A.J. Ratliff tried to get to the IU locker room to celebrate the win with his teammates. The routine is familiar; he's done the same thing after IU's 11 other home wins this season, and with little resistance. This night, though, the exit was not so easy. "I'm claustrophobic," Ratliff said. "And some dude in a wig just came up to me and tackled me. It's fun, standing there jumping up and down, but it's also kind of scary at the same time." A few thousand fans, several of them in wigs, stood between Ratliff and the IU locker room Wednesday night, the product of a celebratory court-crash from the Hoosiers' student fans. The fan celebration was the first of its kind this year for IU, and the first since the Hoosiers defeated Illinois 62-60 Jan. 1, 2006. Sampson had similar problems exiting the court after the win, but was helped away from the friendly fray by a group of security guards. "I kind of felt like (San Diego Chargers running back) LaDainian Tomlinson," Sampson said. "I had pretty good blockers. I had a lot of confidence in my offensive line at the end of the game." The crowd might have made the most physical impact on Sampson and his players after the game, but the coach said the 17,283 fans had a major impact throughout the contest. The student crowd -- which has rarely filled the majority of its seats before halftime of any home game this year -- was packed before tip-off. Not only that, but students organized an impromptu "White Out," drenching much of Assembly Hall in white. Those student fans -- in addition to alumni seated all over Assembly Hall -- created a deafening environment for the usually steady Badgers. The Hoosiers are now 12-0 at Assembly Hall this year, with a 19.5 average margin of victory in those wins. IU is one of only four teams in the Big Ten (Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio State) with an undefeated home record.


The Indiana Daily Student

Online Only: Power of the purse

·

An interesting thing happened this week. And no, it wasn't realizing that we might be going to war with Iran. It was discovering that Democrats are planning to do something about Iraq. First, there was Sen. Hillary Clinton's call for troop redeployment before President Bush left office. Her rationale was that it was "irresponsible" to pass the war onto the next president. And Clinton voting for the Iraqi invasion wasn't? Next, there was the "symbolic" vote that the Democrats were planning in order to highlight their opposition to troop escalation. Did I mention that the vote is nonbinding


The Indiana Daily Student

Personal politics

·

Personal lives and politics often prove to be a bad mix. Just ask former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. He was overheard making flirtatious comments to women at a TV awards dinner last week. His wife of 20 years, Veronica Berlusconi said he told a woman "if I wasn't already married I would marry you right away." He was also quoted as telling TV presenter Aida Yespica, "I would go anywhere with you."