Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Wednesday, April 22
The Indiana Daily Student

Region


The Indiana Daily Student

The Secret Is Out

·

What started as a whim for Frank Warren has turned into an international phenomenon, resulting in millions of strangers sharing secrets daily on postsecret.com. In November 2004, Warren, the owner of a document delivery company in Germantown, Md., passed out 3,000 postcards. On them, he asked complete strangers to write down their secrets. The 100 that came back became part of an art exhibition Warren entered.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

·

Students at IU should be very concerned about the position that IUSA has taken with regard to the Rape Crisis Fund. Rather than examining why the fund has lost so much money, instead it is questioning the involvement and funding for the Middle Way House Rape Crisis Service. Although on campus there is the Sexual Assault Crisis Service (at the IU Health Center) and various programs run by the Office for Women's Affairs, there is no emergency service other than that provided by Middle Way. When women are assaulted or raped, it is Middle Way staff or volunteers, trained by professional staff, who support women at the hospital and provide immediate support and assistance.


The Indiana Daily Student

Speak out, get active!

·

Who among the student body has never complained about University policies? Who has gotten an outrageous bursar bill without reflexively cursing the University's management of funds? Who in the sciences has not lamented the inadequate funding of research? Who in the dorms has not whined about living on a "dry campus?" Who hasn't kvetched about the lack of diversity or unyielding attendance policies? Everywhere you turn you can hear about how dumb of an idea Ruckus is, the inefficiency of OneStart, the dearth of inaccessible parking and so on without end. With any problem a student might encounter on the campus, the nebulous entity that is "the University" is a frequent target for blame. If one were to judge from the amount of complaints heard around campus, it might be reasonably surmised that a large community of students must be actively protesting University policies. Oh, wait. That would assume the University wasn't brimming with fractious, apathetic egoists.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man with handgun robs Super 8 Motel

·

Police say an armed man robbed a Bloomington motel early Wednesday morning. The clerk at Super 8 Motel, 1000 W. Rappel Ave., told police that a man walked into the building and displayed a semi-automatic handgun, said Bloomington Police Department Detective Sgt. David Drake, reading from a police report. He pointed it at the clerk and demanded money.


The Indiana Daily Student

Poll: State heading in right direction

·

A new statewide poll has found greater support for Democrats regaining control of the closely divided Indiana House, while also finding more people saying the state is heading in the right direction than in the wrong direction. Republicans now hold a 52-48 majority in the House, but 45 percent of those surveyed said they wanted to see the Democrats win control, with the GOP picked by 39 percent in the WISH-TV Indiana Poll released Tuesday night. Sixteen percent were not sure.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ukranian judges visit city to see example of U.S. justice system

·

Some IU students will spend their whole college careers trying to understand the U.S. court system. A group of Ukrainian judicial officials will try to do it in one week, with one of those days spent observing court procedures in Bloomington and Nashville, Ind. The group arrived in Washington, D.C., last week as part of a program sponsored by the Open World Leadership Center, created and funded by Congress. The program has brought more than 11,000 emerging leaders from post-Soviet countries, including Russia and Ukraine, since it started in 1999.


The Indiana Daily Student

New movie features first black Jesus

·

It's a familiar image for millions of Christians: Jesus, with a crown of thorns, hanging from the cross. What color is he? In a controversial new film opening Friday, he is black. "Color of the Cross" tells a traditional story, focusing on the last 48 hours of Christ's life, as told in the Gospels. In this version, though, race contributes to his persecution. It is the first representation in the history of American cinema of Jesus as a black man.



The Indiana Daily Student

TV themes losing place in prime time

·

I don't remember much about high school biology or physics, and I couldn't tell you how to compute a calculus problem, but, for the love of Will Smith, the theme song to "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" remains fresh in my mind. Smith's catchy rap opened each episode of his hit '90s sitcom, in which he starred as a street-smart teen from Philly who moves in with wealthy relatives. A whole generation knows the rap by heart, as well as the "Saved by the Bell" song.


The Indiana Daily Student

Artist demonstrates calligraphy as part of ongoing exhibit

·

Zhiyuan Cong stands with his eyebrows arched and his hand raised with a brush angled, ready to dive into the paper. After a slight hesitation, he sweeps his brush across the page, forming black lines that look like a waterfall. After adding a mixture of blues, greens and grays, the picture is complete. Cong, an art professor at William Paterson University, holds up his finished Chinese ink painting with calligraphy. The painting depicts a red flower emerging from a dark background. Jaws drop as members of the audience marvel at the creation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Putin says he won't run for 3rd term, promises justice for slain journalist

·

MOSCOW -- President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Wednesday that he would not try to run for another term but said he would retain influence over Russia even after leaving office in 2008. The immensely popular Putin is constitutionally barred from seeking a third consecutive term, but supporters have called for a referendum on amending the country's laws to allow him to stay in power.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man alleges sexual abuse by same priest who fondled Foley as a boy

·

Another former altar boy says he was sexually abused in the 1970s by the same retired Catholic priest who acknowledged fondling former Rep. Mark Foley when Foley was a teenager, the man's attorney said Wednesday. The new allegations against the Rev. Anthony Mercieca were made by a man who lived in North Miami and was an altar boy at St. James Catholic Church, where Mercieca worked, attorney Jeffrey Herman said.



The Indiana Daily Student

Faith vs. prejudice

·

This weekend, I attended an InterVarsity Christian Fellowship conference in Washington, Ind. I would call myself a Christian with many struggles; some are with myself, but some are with trends in the Christian community that I find troubling. One of these trends presented itself through a chance encounter I had during the conference.


The Indiana Daily Student

Blood and guts

·

It may still be a week before Halloween proper, but one of the best things about the holiday has already arrived: the proliferation of horror movies on your TV.


The Indiana Daily Student

Everybody spills

·

Oops, I spilled on myself -- again. By the time you read this, I might have spilled thousands of food items all over my clothes. In the course of a day, I can spill an entire list of things on myself, including nacho cheese, maple syrup, Salisbury steak, Chanel No. 5, and two-thirds of an iced venti mocha chai machiatto frappuccino with an extra shot of albino koala tears.


The Indiana Daily Student

Shhh! We're huntin' presidents

·

Last week, some IU faculty expressed concern about the secrecy in the ongoing search for the University's next president. The search, which could continue into 2008 when current President Adam Herbert's term is set to expire, has thus far been confidential. The candidates' names have not been made public -- those in consideration for the position are only known to the 13 representatives on the presidential search committee.


The Indiana Daily Student

Study fuels debate of life on Mars

·

A new IU study that found a self-sustaining community of bacteria living 2.8 kilometers below the Earth's surface fuels optimism that similar life could exist on Mars.


The Indiana Daily Student

Business Travelers

·

The most frightening part of Anna Satrom's ten-day journey in India was getting on the bus. Satrom was one of 60 sophomore business students to travel to Delhi, India to study different aspects of the economy and culture as part of an advanced program offered through the Kelley School of Business. But while the traffic situation might not show it, in the last 10 years India has emerged as the fastest growing economy in a rapidly shrinking world, said Dan Smith, dean of the Kelley School of Business.