IU hits the road to face Buckeyes
Following Tuesday’s 9-7 loss to Indiana State, IU baseball coach Tracy Smith expressed concern not that his team had lost, but how it lost.
Following Tuesday’s 9-7 loss to Indiana State, IU baseball coach Tracy Smith expressed concern not that his team had lost, but how it lost.
People seem to have a sick fascination with things that are morbid. The consequences of this fascination rarely affect me. At worst, my four-hour drive to Chicago will become a 4 1/2-hour drive because everyone wants to slow down to gawk at a car wreck on the side of the road.
Sunday afternoon, seniors Laura McGaffigan and Cecile Perton will play their final match in Bloomington. The senior co-captains of the IU women’s tennis team have been staples in the team’s lineup since their freshman year, and their importance on and off the court has continued to grow.
If the walls in the Jacobs School of Music could sing this weekend, they would reverberate with remembrance. Friday marks the one-year anniversary of a plane crash just south of the Monroe County Airport that killed five music school students. One-year anniversary
Battling cold winds that flickered candles held in remembrance, between 50 and 80 students attended a late-night vigil Wednesday evening outside Eigenmann Hall in memory of the victims of Monday’s shootings at Virginia Tech.
As the cyclists for Kappa Delta drove from place to place during their spring-break training trip, a photo from the finish of last year’s Little 500 hung in their car. The photo shows then-Kappa Delta senior Lauren Ziemba crossing the finish line a mere inches behind Kappa Kappa Gamma’s Jess Sapp. And at the bottom their coach wrote “2007 will be different. Expect to win.”
The IU water polo team is undefeated in conference play, and it’s riding a seven-game winning streak. IU’s last game was an emotional overtime victory against rival Michigan. But heading into the Western Division Championships this weekend in Ann Arbor, Mich., none of it matters.
As the year comes to an end, the stress of final exams, finding summer employment or ending an ill-fated relationship can easily push a student over the edge. Sometimes a night on the town with friends, or 57 straight hours of sleep is all you really need to work through the life’s trials and tribulations.
The IU men’s golf team will play its last regular-season tournament this weekend at the Fossum/Spartan Invitational in East Lansing, Mich.
The printmaking Master of Fine Arts students will be hosting a show tonight at the historic Ladyman’s Cafe. This is going to be a unique show because the artists had complete freedom to demolish walls and paint the floors to display their work. We at the Arts Desk highly recommend you take a break from your Little 500 festivities to see this exhibition and take a look at a list of terms to help you understand the artwork.
Take "Dances with Wolves," remove any discernible plot and the brilliant acting and you have "Pathfinder." "Pathfinder" opens with an American Indian woman finding a young boy on a wrecked Viking ship. The Vikings had destroyed most of the woman's village but they decided to take the boy in and raise him as their own. Fifteen years later, the Vikings return to cleanse the American shore of the "savages" before they settle it.
Many students would consider it a dream job. While others toil away at cash registers or deep fryers to make slightly better than minimum wage, sophomore Zach Yarnoff's job is to play the latest and greatest video games from EA. Yarnoff is the campus representative for the company, the largest video game publisher in the world, known for such hit titles as "The Sims" and the Madden football franchise. As campus representative, it's his job to promote EA's newest titles through contests and events throughout Bloomington.
MONTE CARLO, Monaco – Rafael Nadal extended his winning streak on clay to 63 matches Wednesday after beating Juan Ignacio Chela 6-3, 6-1 in the second round of the Monte Carlo Masters.
INDIANAPOLIS – Coaches have spent the last several years upgrading their gadgets and learning the new tricks of recruiting. Now it may be time to turn back the clock.
BAGHDAD – Suspected Sunni insurgents penetrated the Baghdad security net Wednesday, hitting Shiite targets with four bomb attacks that killed 183 people – the bloodiest day since the U.S. troop surge began nine weeks ago.
Partial-birth abortions inches from infanticide In response to Grace Low’s “Ugly reality” (April 16), and without even getting into whether or not abortion in general should be legal, I suggest whoever reads this to go online and look up the definition of “partial-birth abortion,” also known as “intact dilation and extraction.” Looking up images may help you further understand the concept. This procedure is used for terminating late-term pregnancies and involves inducing labor, delivering the child breech up to his or her shoulders, stabbing the child in the base of the skull, and inserting a catheter to remove the child’s brain, causing death. The child’s skull collapses and the rest of his or her body is easily delivered. While Low agrees that the procedure is “not pretty,” she still advocates for the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban of 2003 to be deemed unconstitutional, partially based on its lack of an exception to protect the life of the mother. First of all, partial-birth abortions are never needed, so there is no need for a medical exception, despite what some pro-choice medical professionals may attempt to convey. Even if a pregnant woman in her third trimester becomes ill enough that she can no longer support the growing child within her, that child can simply be born, even if premature, and at least attempted to be kept alive. With current medical technology, the generally accepted viability age is around seven months gestation, which is also the beginning of the third trimester. What is the point of stabbing a viable child in the base of the skull and vacuuming out his or her brain, as the rest or his or her body flails madly outside the birth canal, then falls limp? Move that child just a few more inches out of that birth canal and the doctor performing the procedure would be charged with infanticide. How disturbing it is that such an act is advocated by some individuals. Oh, by the way, half of those babies are female. So much for women’s rights. Breanne Vassar Sophomore
Sierra Club teaches good ways to help environment This past week’s weather has been hell on us. It seems like summer decided to take a step back and let winter move in again in April. But aren’t environmentalists saying that we are currently going through global warming? This strange weather got me to start to think: March’s weather was more like April’s, and April’s weather is more like March. Maybe Al Gore was on to something with his hit movie “An Inconvenient Truth.” I strongly believe in global warming and have tried to make large-scale changes in our society. The strange weather we are currently having is just more evidence. Scientists are saying that if we continue on our path, Miami, parts of New York City and all the Florida Keys will be under water within 100 years – and that is during our lifetime. We have such a strong impact on our environment, but how do we do fix it? It seems like every time we turn around, we are just bombarded with more ways that hurt the environment and are left feeling hopeless. However, you can help! Recently, I have been contacted by the Sierra Club asked if I would help train college and high school students over the summer. I have done similar trainings and am now a trainer at the Sierra Club’s Los Angeles’ training. These trainings open a world of possibility for everyone interested in helping our environment. With a mix of hands-on experience and interactive lessons, students at this training will learn how to efficiently plan a campaign, effectively communicate, activate other students and will also learn from some of the world’s leading speakers. You can get more information on the Sierra Club’s sessions online or apply at www.ssc.org/sprog. Steven Furr Junior
The nicest thing I can say about "Disturbia" is that I might have liked it more had I seen it when I was 11, but even at that age I think would have been hesitant to admit that I was at all entertained by such a lame cinematic offering. Other than the absolute climax of the film, "Disturbia" is not suspenseful, let alone scary. The plot consists of the tired "the guy living next door hitting on my mom is an alien/psycho/vampire" stock story line used by countless films and young adult novels.
Staff, faculty and students from the IU School of Journalism are being nationally recognized for their contribution to an award-winning book.
Only nine months after WIUX went FM and abandoned our tiny AM signal, a country station in Columbus, WYGB, wanted to expand. Because WYGB was a full-power station, it received our same signal; this process is called encroachment. Now, more and more low-power (LPFM) radio stations nationwide have fallen victim to encroachment. Recently, Prometheus Radio Project, a nonprofit organization fighting for LPFM stations, asked for WIUX's help in the case of fellow station KDRT in Davis, Calif. Like WIUX, a full-power station has threatened KDRT's existence, but it has no way out. KDRT and WIUX have begun grassroots campaigns to combat the The Federal Communications Commission's dismissal of this injustice.