Make the rich pay
President Bush had better consider banning men in tights because if he pushes for a budget that takes from the needy and gives to the rich, he might wake up one morning to find Robin Hood getting medieval on his ass.
President Bush had better consider banning men in tights because if he pushes for a budget that takes from the needy and gives to the rich, he might wake up one morning to find Robin Hood getting medieval on his ass.
Antarctica seems but a dream to most people, a snowy mirage that's a world away. For four Israelis and four Palestinians, Antarctica was a trying terrain where the dream of peace in the Middle East could begin. Monday night, two members of this group of eight travelers, the "Breaking the Ice" team, spoke to IU students and community members about their expedition to prove that Israelis and Palestinians could work together.
Surprise! Heroin addiction is due not to heroin use but to today's outrageous heroin prices.
Depending on where you stand, Wal-Mart is either the devil or the best thing ever to happen to consumers in the retail business.
In one week, IU students can log on and cast their ballots for next year's IUSA leaders. We expect a clean election with results that will accurately reflect student votes.
INDIANAPOLIS -- A man charged in the gruesome slayings of his mother and grandparents said Monday he deserves the death penalty but believes his sister should be spared for her alleged role in the plot.
In the Monroe County community, nearly 14,000 neighbors have difficulties paying for food, according to last year's United Way Community Services of Monroe County's annual report.
INDIANAPOLIS -- IU Life Sciences may have found the Band Aid of the future. In light of a $1 million donation from the U.S. Department of Defense in January, the Indiana Center for Rehabilitation Sciences & Engineering Research is able to focus more time and money toward the development of a new product that may help future injured solders to heal faster.
Friday night rolls around and you are at the local movie theater with a friend watching the latest horror movie. On screen is the image of a slaughtered victim lying on the ground, brains oozing from her head in a pool of blood. Glancing over at your friend, you see her nervously bouncing her knee up and down. Her palms are sweaty. Her mouth gapes open.
Most of the IU women's track and field team traveled to Fayetteville, Ark. to compete in the Tyson Invitational, but one Hoosier athlete did not. Junior distance runner Jessica Gall left her teammates behind to pursue a shot at earning an automatic NCAA indoor qualifying time. Gall entered the 5,000-meter run at the Husky Classic held at the University of Washington.
For 10 hours more than 3,000 IU students and Bloomington residents tested their poker skills while playing Texas hold 'em, challenged gravity while rock climbing, tangled themselves together during Twister and enjoyed the night during Recreational Sport's 29th annual Spirit of Sport. Proceeds from the event benefitted Special Olympics Indiana. The all-nighter was held Friday from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. at the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
Senior Brian Dolasinski struts around campus with a permanent smile fixed on his face. He has a bounce to his walk, and if you look at him close enough, you can see tiny hearts circling around his head.
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Clergy-backed Shiites and independence-minded Kurds swept to victory in Iraq's landmark elections, propelling to power the groups that suffered most under Saddam Hussein and forcing Sunni Arabs to the margins for the first time in modern history, according to final results released Sunday.
Facing opposition from state colleges and state legislators, a proposed bill that would impose a cap on public university tuition every two years is likely to fail again this year, the bill's author said.
Three years ago, Scott Bryson and Mandy Sarasien kissed at midnight in the Rose Well House, a nearly 100-year-old stone gazebo on the northeast corner of Dunn's Woods. The two, who are now seniors, were becoming a part of a long-time campus tradition wherein a female student is not officially a "co-ed" until she has done so.
Until this weekend the Hoosiers had never beaten California. They had never beaten Hawaii. They had never beaten two top ten opponents in the same day. Never, that is, until this weekend at the Stanford Invitational in Palo Alto, Calif.
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- Dee Brown says it's time for the naysayers to shut up. A player on a 25-0 team can do that. "Everybody's waiting for us to lose, saying they think we're not the best team in the country," Brown said after his two late 3-pointers iced top-ranked Illinois' 70-59 win over No. 20 Wisconsin and preserved the nation's longest major-college winning streak. "Watch TV, they'll show you, they'll tell you. The No. 1 team? It's not us."
With home wins over Wake Forest and Butler University this weekend, IU's women's tennis team propelled IU coach Lin Loring to the 650 career win mark, pushing him closer to one of the more famous coaches in IU history -- Bob Knight.
Sophomore Earl Banfy is the typical IU student. He walks to class every day from Read Center, stresses out about his homework and even attends the occasional party on the weekends. And like any typical IU student, Banfy is completely oblivious to something that is a staple of Bloomington or any other college town -- IU's own radio station, WIUS AM 1570.
A single voice, excited and with a hint of an accent, resounded loudly in a classroom. The voice got louder as the discussion progressed, a relaxed brow became furrowed and hands were thrown into the air for added emphasis. Edward Carmines, a professor of political science, was teaching the class about criticisms of psychological interpretations of President Woodrow Wilson, and his voice showed his captivation.