Police apologize for mistaking man's race
Police retracted a statement they made Tuesday that a 25-year-old Bloomington man and his wife, who were victims of a hate crime earlier that morning, were black.
Police retracted a statement they made Tuesday that a 25-year-old Bloomington man and his wife, who were victims of a hate crime earlier that morning, were black.
pitch and toss -- Senior Mariangee Bogado pitches against Ohio State at the IU Softball Field March 31. The Hoosiers will face Wisconsin at 3 p.m. Friday and noon Saturday.
Senior Shannon Johnson, after a near mistake-free outing at the Lady Illini Invitational, looks to lead the charge this weekend as the Hoosiers head east to Columbus, Ohio, for the Lady Buckeye Invitational. Johnson received Big Ten Women's Player of the Week honors after her play at the Lady Illini.
As postseason play begins Friday for the No. 16 IU water polo team, the Hoosiers have their sights set on something they have only done once before -- compete in the Final Four for the NCAA water polo championship. Before that happens, however, the Hoosiers are going to have to finish in first or second place this weekend at the Collegiate Water Polo Associate Western Division Championship at the Counsilman-Billingsly Aquatic Center, in Bloomington. This is the first time the Hoosiers will play host to the CWPA Western Championship.
With one tournament before the Big Ten Championship, the IU men's golf team is running low on opportunities to better its odds of securing a bid in the NCAA Regionals.
When the IU baseball team opens up its series against Ohio State, it will face a team that has played similar baseball over the last couple of weeks, as both teams have won their mid-week match ups heading into this weekend, and both teams have split their last 10 games. IU is 5-5 in its last 10 games but has won four of its last six after a split with Purdue last weekend and two victories in its last two mid-week games.
I'm so stretched for ideas that I will write my obligatory "goodbye" column a week early. Sure, I will have one more column run next week, but I just can't think of anything else to say right now. I'm also not a senior, but I'm about 99 percent certain I won't be returning to the IDS next year, so I feel entitled to a goodbye. Over the course of writing 29 pieces (30 including this one) for this paper, I learned the following:
Do you remember when you were little and your family filled a bunch of bright, plastic Easter eggs and hid them around the house (or maybe the yard) and then you and your siblings/cousins/friends ran around trying to find them?
The earth-shattering truth I'm about to reveal to you, dear reader, will overwhelm you with grief; your soul will dry out and crumble into thousands of colored crumbs, like Playdough left baking on the back seat of mom's Ford Explorer. The weak of heart are advised to stop here: go read the "Blender Kitty" cartoon, or "Help Me, Harlan!" until you're ready to learn what God himself is afraid to know.
There is a renewed push afoot to insure that students who have been caught in drug-related crimes are denied financial aid to universities and colleges. The idea originally came from Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind., in 1998, when he slipped a stringent no-aid-for-stoners policy into the Higher Education Act. In applications for federal financial aid, students are prompted to check the box that asks if they've ever been caught using or selling illegal drugs. If so, no aid for you.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- Defense lawyers closed their case for sparing Zacarias Moussaoui's life Thursday after the government admitted it had no evidence that he and would-be shoe bomber Richard Reid were to have joined in a hijacking as part of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, as Moussaoui claims. Prosecutors then opened their rebuttal case with testimony from psychiatrist Raymond Patterson, who has examined Moussaoui and disputes claims of doctors summoned by the defense that the terrorist conspirator is schizophrenic.
WASHINGTON -- President Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao agreed to cooperate more closely on trade and nuclear tensions over Iran and North Korea but failed to break new ground Thursday toward resolving a host of differences. Their meeting was marred by a protest. No breakthroughs had been expected during Hu's first visit to the White House as the president of China. Both he and Bush acknowledged at a picture-taking session that much work remained to be done and that the two sides would strive for progress in these areas.
Hopes of a future for the abandoned Kappa Sigma fraternity house at 1503 E. Third St. were crushed Thursday as construction crews began demolishing the historic structure.
African tunes will benefit the Darfur region of Sudan and begin Bloomington's process of humanizing Sudan's civil unrest at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the First Presbyterian Church.
Applause erupted at Wednesday's Common Council meeting as Bloomington joined 78 other cities and counties nationwide in recognizing "gender identity" as a protected class.
It's not every day that the Harley-rider, revving his engine and wearing dark-tinted, aviator sunglasses, is a police officer. But this is exactly the type of motorcycle rider the Bloomington Police Department envisions. Mayor Mark Kruzan formally introduced BPD's new Motorcycle Patrol Program at a press conference Thursday in front of city hall.
More than 100 students gathered Thursday to demand an end to the "culture of rape" at IU and called on the University to implement a mandatory rape prevention workshop for all incoming students. The demonstration behind Woodburn Hall was the second annual "Stand Up and Be Counted" protest.
The IU Police Department has experienced a larger number of thefts from vehicles within the last couple of weeks, and IUPD Lt. Jerry Minger said the warm weather is partially to blame. "Since the weather started getting nice last week, we've started experiencing more thefts from vehicles," Minger said. "So we've been putting extra people out on the lots and having extra patrols."
Sophomore Evan Holloway was shocked by the damage done to New Orleans last summer by Hurricane Katrina. But the damage he saw inspired him to help the region up close and personal. Holloway helped organize more than 200 students into Youth Advocating Leadership and Learning, known as Y'ALL, a group that has spent parts of the semester and spring break rebuilding areas the hurricane affected.
This Saturday at 2 p.m., the Jacobs School of Music will host its biannual computer music concert. The event will take place at Sweeney Hall in the Simon Music Building.