Family of Wade Steffey receives $500K from Purdue
Purdue University reached a settlement with the family of Wade Steffey, a freshman who died from accidental electrocution in January.
Purdue University reached a settlement with the family of Wade Steffey, a freshman who died from accidental electrocution in January.
The Indiana Daily Student announced Monday the appointment of Nancy Comiskey as interim director of student media. Previous director of student media, David Adams, passed away during the summer after serving as director since 1989.
He wasn’t always a Hoosier. Growing up in Afghanistan, Ashraf Haidari survived on the hope that one day he would be able to receive the U.S. education he always wanted. Now, the current counselor for political, security and development affairs at the Embassy of Afghanistan in Washington, D.C., can confidently say that his journey from the streets of Kabul to the Capitol building is everything he could have imagined.
After two years of financial struggles, the Tibetan Culture Center, 3655 Snoddy Road, has paid off its debt. The announcement came Thursday afternoon in conjunction with another announcement outlining the visit of the Dalai Lama in October. The Dalai Lama’s older brother, retired IU professor Thubten Norbu, founded the center in 1979. The center was almost auctioned off in 2005 after it incurred more than $1.7 million in debt. It escaped being auctioned, and in June 2005 the Dalai Lama brought in current Director Arjia Rinpoche to rehabilitate the center. Rinpoche requested that the Buddhist spiritual leader visit this fall for his fifth visit to Bloomington, in order to help the center and its teachings be more well-known in the community.
The 2007-08 Indiana University men's basketball schedule will test the Hoosiers against four non-conference teams that advanced to the NCAA Tournament. For analysis and a look at the most interesting games of the schedule visit the IDS Basketblog.
A task force at IU is considering whether putting locks on the inside of classroom doors could improve campus safety.
Gov. Mitch Daniels reappointed one member and appointed two new members to the IU board of trustees, including one undergraduate student Thursday, Aug. 2. Daniels’ announcement comes nearly a month later than expected.
The whir of chains and hum of wheels filled the air Saturday afternoon on Kirkwood Avenue as a crowd gathered and several blocks were closed to downtown traffic for the Bloomington Cycling Grand Prix. The sixth annual bicycle race, consisting of a women’s race and men’s races of different skill levels, was organized by TrueSport.com and co-sponsored by local cycling club Team Tortuga.
Changes in Indiana’s Department of Child Protective Services are being applauded by public officials. Lindsey Smith, director of the Monroe County Department of Child Protective Services, said when Gov. Mitch Daniels was elected, two of his first official acts in office were creating the Department of Child Protective Services and hiring Judge James Payne as the state director of the department.
Police are warning students and Bloomington residents that burglaries could be on the rise as students return to campus. Both the Bloomington and IU police departments stress that taking simple preventative measures, such as locking doors and being aware of suspicious activity, can easily deter theft.
IU student Edward Uyesugi II, of Paoli, Ind., the man who performed an unauthorized exorcism on a 14-year-old autistic boy in May, will have his initial hearing Friday, Aug. 10.
As the IDS Editorial Board sat down to discuss Blake Powers’ water balloon assault on IUPD Officer Paul Wampler, we couldn’t help but laugh at the irony of the former starting quarterback hitting a moving car from the backseat of an SUV at high speed. It was only made more impressive when an analysis of the police report detailed the aqua-missile’s incredible trajectory.
Monroe County will be using the same voting machines the state found to have caused 198 violations of Indiana election law.
The Monroe County Jail is suffering overcrowding and a shortage of jailers, according to a report released by the Indiana Department of Corrections. The report also found several other minor infractions, including a lack of adequate shower space and corrosion in the sprinkler system.
As IU students move back to Bloomington this month and reunite with friends, they might realize they shouldn’t “socialize” as loudly as they did this past spring.
Briefs on important happenings from around the globe
“Peau Rouge Indiana”, the sculpture in front of the Musical Arts Center, will undergo a complete restoration beginning Aug. 6, according to a press release from IU Media Relations.
For more than 30 years, the Fourth Street Festival of Arts and Crafts has been a Bloomington tradition.
Torrents of water washed away homes, crops and cows, leaving hungry and frightened villagers perched in treetops or on roofs as the death toll rose Friday from monsoon rains across northern India and Bangladesh.
Divers looking in the Mississippi River for victims of a bridge collapse were forced to suspend their search Saturday, hampered by debris shifting in the swirling, murky current.