Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Sunday, June 21
The Indiana Daily Student

Region


The Indiana Daily Student

How to cut a budget

·

The IU board of trustees announced a probable tuition rate hike more than the expected 4.9 percent. To be blunt, that really sucks for all returning students, but we can't blame the trustees. When a university with a long history receives a little more than one-fortieth of the expected appropriation for maintenance, there's not much else to do. IU is not alone. Federal financial aid funding is facing cuts again by $14.5 billion, and state funding across the country is decreasing alarmingly. Compared to other Big Ten schools, we're lucky tuition rates aren't rising at a greater rate.


The Indiana Daily Student

Harriet Miers' judicious withdrawal

·

We commend Harriet Miers for withdrawing her nomination to the Supreme Court. Ideally, though, she should have realized she wasn't qualified for the highest court in the land long before she "flunked" a simple questionnaire from the Senate Judiciary Committee and was requested to do it over.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hundreds arrested in Wisconsin celebration

·

MADISON, Wis. -- Police used repeated bursts of pepper spray early Sunday to break up a crowd of Halloween celebrants, part of a weekend of revelry in which more than 400 people were arrested. No serious injuries or property damage were reported. Police declared an unlawful assembly early Sunday and used officers on horseback to move chanting and beverage-tossing revelers off State Street. The pepper spray was used after cups filled with beverages and ice were thrown at officers.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU senior envisions run for U.S. presidency in 2020

·

Jon Schloesser spends a lot of time Googling the terms "president" and "2020." But Schloesser isn't just fascinated with a presidential campaign more than a decade away. Presuming the next 15 years go according to his plan, the senior education major is staking out the competition. He announced his candidacy for the election -- the first he'll be eligible for -- this summer. Schloesser said his Google searches retrieve about four other Web sites from similar students around the country who have declared their candidacy for the 2020 election. He said the candidates communicate with each other, spurring one another to take stances on various issues. "It's exciting just to compare ideas with other people," Schloesser said. "It's in the back of our minds, like our own little election. If one person on the Web site makes a statement, how are you going to respond?"

The Indiana Daily Student

Rowdy with rubbers

·

"Let's go hand out some condoms!" Junior Cara Berg, president of the group Raising Awareness of Interactions in Sexual Encounters, has just finished prepping her group of 26 volunteers for Friday night's main event. In a moment, they will descend on the Bloomington nightlife to distribute 5,000 condoms at downtown bars and restaurants. The goal is to advocate safe sex and raise awareness of sexual assault.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pakistani Student Association raises $4,500 for victims

·

After a three-day campaign across campus, the Pakistani Student Association said it has raised $4,500 for victims of the Oct. 8 earthquake in South Asia. The money, which was collected at five campus locations Oct. 24 through Wednesday, represents 45 percent of the $10,000 goal the PSA set for the campaign.



The Indiana Daily Student

Season's record-setting 13th hurricane hits Nicaragua

·

PUERTO CABEZAS, Nicaragua -- Hurricane Beta pounded Nicaragua's Caribbean coast with heavy rains and powerful winds Sunday as thousands of people rode out the storm in boarded-up homes or government shelters. The storm came ashore near the remote town of La Barra as a category 2 hurricane with 105-mph winds. But it weakened to a category 1 with 90-mph winds as it moved inland, dumping up to 15 inches of rain, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senate Democratic leader calls for Rove's resignation

·

WASHINGTON -- The Senate Democratic leader said Sunday presidential adviser Karl Rove should resign because of his role in the exposing of a CIA officer's identity, and a veteran Republican senator said President Bush needs "new blood" in his White House. Rove has not been charged, but the investigation continues in the case that brought the indictment and resignation Friday of I.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rice: Without Parks, I wouldn't be here

·

MONTGOMERY, Ala. -- Hundreds of mourners remembered Rosa Parks Sunday for her defiant act on a city bus that inspired the Civil Rights Movement and helped pave the way for other blacks, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ghost hunting:

·

A caravan consisting of 17 members of the Indiana Ghost Trackers drove down a winding road in rural Monroe County searching for a secluded graveyard Oct. 22. They were on a ghost hunt. The Bloomington chapter of Indiana Ghost Trackers is dedicated to tracking and understanding paranormal activity. The members regularly go on ghost hunts and provide investigations, which are free of charge, to individuals who feel their homes or businesss are inhabited by ghosts.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ghost hunting:

·

A caravan consisting of 17 members of the Indiana Ghost Trackers drove down a winding road in rural Monroe County searching for a secluded graveyard Oct. 22. They were on a ghost hunt. The Bloomington chapter of Indiana Ghost Trackers is dedicated to tracking and understanding paranormal activity. The members regularly go on ghost hunts and provide investigations, which are free of charge, to individuals who feel their homes or businesss are inhabited by ghosts.


The Indiana Daily Student

Getty Museum accused of purchasing stolen goods

·

LOS ANGELES -- The board of the J. Paul Getty Trust has formed a special committee to investigate claims that its world-renowned museum purchased looted art and its chief executive spent lavishly with tax-exempt funds. The committee announced Saturday will include five members of the board but not the trust's chief executive, Barry Munitz, who pledged "full support for this effort," the Getty said in a statement.


The Indiana Daily Student

Statewide anti-war rally features comparisons of Vietnam, Iraq

·

TERRE HAUTE -- Pfc. Robert Lore was just walking by the End the War rally at the courthouse Saturday in full military dress when someone asked him why the United States is in Iraq. "I'm asking the same question," he said. Immediately, one of the protesters asked him to speak. However, he was unable to because the protest was already running long. He would have been the last of the speakers that included protest organizers from all around the state and military families who used a bullhorn to address the protesters.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Frankenstein' to be brought alive at pub

·

The days of trick-or-treating might have come and gone for most IU students, but this Halloween season, there's more than scantily clad nurses and candy corn in Bloomington. Out of the eerie shadows of the Irish Lion comes a play of monstrous proportions, filled with murder, intrigue, rage and maybe even a misunderstood creature or two. "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," performed by the Monroe County Civic Theater, takes the stage at 8 p.m. tonight and Tuesday at the Irish Lion. Adapted from Mary Shelley's classic novel, the script of "Frankenstein" is a close adaptation of the literary work. The play closely follows the novel's plotline, veering from the book only in instances where director and playwright Russell McGeesaid he feels the casting and dramatic action need a jolt.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rocky Horror comes to Bloomington

·

Halloween arrived early and hundreds lost their "virginity" Saturday night at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater's screening of the 1970s cult classic "The Rocky Horror Picture Show." Not having appeared on the big screen in Bloomington in many years, the film's return offered patrons the chance to don their costumes for Halloween while also honoring the traditions of "Rocky Horror" screenings. The event also was a fund-raiser for event sponsor Cardinal Stage Company, a new Bloomington theater group. The group will make its stage debut in January with four performances of Thornton Wilder's classic play, "Our Town," also to be performed at the Buskirk-Chumley. Randy White, a Bloomington resident originally from Canada, acts as the producing artistic director of the company. Having successfully launched a professional theater group in Canada 15 years ago that still continues today, White wants exactly that in Bloomington.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trustees might raise tuition rates

·

Faced with budget problems, IU is likely to consider raising tuition higher than last year's increase, trustees said Tuesday. Increased costs and a shortfall in state funding have already left the University short of money for maintenance and repairs. Trustees said raising tuition would be a viable option to solve the budget problem.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana will soon become 48th state to adopt DST

·

The times are not a-changin' in Indiana. In the future, Oct. 30, 2005, might be remembered in the state's history as the day the time anomaly ended. Sunday officially marks the end of Hoosier resistance to the observance of daylight-saving time, as states in the Eastern Time zone will move their clocks back an hour, thus aligning themselves with Indiana. When 47 states move their clocks ahead in April, Indiana will join the DST world and "spring ahead" with the rest of the country.



The Indiana Daily Student

Committee to create food chain list today

·

The Golden Arches have one last chance to don Read Center. Although Residential Programs and Services will not pursue a new contract with McDonald's at this time, the food chain might still have an opportunity to keep its spot on campus.