Student turns pastime into club
Senior Mike Hernandez has been playing racquetball since he was 8 years old. So when he came to IU and saw there was no racquetball club, he decided to start one.
Senior Mike Hernandez has been playing racquetball since he was 8 years old. So when he came to IU and saw there was no racquetball club, he decided to start one.
Christina Boward knew the cost of having her husband travel back and forth from Virginia to Bloomington each week would be high. But she said the opportunity it provided wasn't one her family could pass up.
Senior Katie Carlson became the first known golfer in IU women's golf history to record a hole-in-one yesterday at the Shootout at the Legends to pace the Hoosiers to a tie for eleventh place. Carlson recorded a 77-81-81 (239) for the Hoosiers. A 4-iron was the club of choice for the Livonia, Mich., native on the 164 yard, par-3 seventh hole.
Last week, State Sen. Patricia Miller, R-Indianapolis, proposed a bill to ban gays and single people from using medical technology to have children. Her rationale for the motion was to harmonize state reproductive laws with state adoption laws. She figured if gays and singles aren't allowed to adopt kids, why should they be allowed to have their own? Happily, this idiotic bill was withdrawn so quickly you would have received whiplash had you tried to read it, but it does open up a line of questions. Why aren't gays and singles allowed to adopt kids?
The IU men's golf team wrapped up its fall season yesterday by tying for fifth at the Xavier Invitational in Loveland, Ohio. Austin Peay State University defeated Xavier in a two-team playoff to take home the title, while Louisville finished one stroke back in third place. Wisconsin finished fourth while Nebraska joined IU in the fifth spot of the 19-team field.
Imagine you have a choice: ethernet cord or television cable cord. One has to go. If you chose a high-speed Internet connection over cable TV, welcome to the growing number of college students who are leaving the couch for the computer chair. Because of a combination of poor programming -- note the reality television phenomenon -- and college students' busy schedules, TV ratings in the college-age demographic are on the decline. Internet use, on the other hand, is way up. IU students who still spend hours in front of the television should note the trend and turn off the boob tube.
It took a last-minute goal by junior forward Lydia Schrott, but the No. 7 IU women's field hockey team was able to pull out a 3-2 win against No. 13 Louisville Tuesday afternoon. The victory extended the Hoosiers' record-high winning streak to nine games and improved IU's home record to a perfect 7-0.
The other day I was thinking about life and I realized how strange it is that every experience I've had plays such a big part in my day-to-day actions. I'd like to make a leap now. I'm going to assume that we're all just the product of our lives. You might disagree with me, but the way I see it, that means one of two things. Either you're right and we're all more different than I thought, or I'm right and you just refuse to admit it to yourself.
"Take Back the Night," an annual event, serves to raise awareness and provide a large public venue for those who oppose violence against women. It offers a forum to share ideas, learn and be among other activists and survivors. This year the event saw more than 200 students and community members unite to take a stand. The night included a vigil, speeches and ultimately a march to raise awareness. By all accounts, it was an overwhelming success and will hopefully lead to some important changes on campus and in Bloomington. But where were the boys?
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- The artist sculpted his big metal T-Rex from old train parts and gave it railroad spikes for teeth. He used scrap metal to build the giant ants and the crocodile on display in his studio behind a train station.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- The Swedish Academy said it would announce the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday as members of the prestigious institution traded blows over last year's winner, Austrian feminist writer Elfriede Jelinek.
When senior Rakshay Dhariwal first heard an earthquake hit Saturday in South Asia, he didn't know if his family in New Delhi was safe. "I was very afraid," Dhariwal said. "I ran and checked the Internet." Once he saw New Delhi was not hard-hit by the quake, he stopped worrying and his family called to let him know they were safe. Dhariwal's family owns a plantation in northern India that was affected by the tremors. Some of the plantation workers were hospitalized and houses were damaged.
While students pay thousands of dollars every semester to attend IU, most do not have the opportunity to get together with the president of the University for a one-on-one chat about how they would like to see their dollars spent. But students interested in expressing their opinions about University-related issues, such as the fate of the mandatory athletics fee or the possible increase in admissions standards, already have an often-untapped resource at their disposal: the IU Student Association Congress.
In the swelter of a mid-August morning heat, a New Orleans teacher entered his high school classroom, only to observe that the door was off its hinges, the air-conditioning unit was a hunk of unusable metal, the solitary window was fused in an open position, and in place of what should have been walls, two temporary partitions stood with gaps in between them.
Thirty men trailed the group of about 175 women as they marched through the Sample Gates and down Kirkwood Avenue for the annual "Take Back the Night" Monday evening. But these men weren't late, they weren't stragglers, but instead they were literally standing behind the women and supporting them in their protest against sexual assault and domestic violence against women.
It feels like the first day of school. The air is filled with optimistic tension, as the women and one man sit in a circle and smile awkwardly at each other, waiting.
When Chi Omega turned 50 years old in 1972, the sorority celebrated the milestone by building gates at the entrance to fraternity/sorority row on North Jordan Avenue. Dedicated during Homecoming week, the limestone gates feature wrought iron Chi Omega seals and bronze identifying plates. When the planning for the gates began, the Chi Omega committee wanted them to be placed where the Sample Gates are now. That space, however, had already been promised and would not be built until 1987.
The No. 7 IU field hockey team welcomes No. 13 University of Louisville in a rare weekday afternoon battle between two of the nation's top field hockey programs today. The 11-1 Hoosiers have won eight games in a row, most recently defeating Northwestern Saturday. The 10-4 Cardinals are recovering from a tough loss to No. 1 Wake Forest.
HOUSTON -- Shaun Dean made two big catches from his spot in the stands during the record-setting, 18-inning Game 4 between the Atlanta Braves and Houston Astros.
Pet owners who hate to leave their animals in kennels while out of town now have an alternative to caging their loved ones -- in-home pet sitting. Ann Wesley said she found Bloomington to be the most attractive place she and her colleagues, Diane Stuercke and Lori Bauden, could start their business. "People here care about their pets and the community quickly showed it could support our business," Wesley said in an e-mail.