How the World Cup works
Silly Americans. Your country is participating in one of the world's biggest sporting events, and the vast majority of you could care less. Well, wake up.
Silly Americans. Your country is participating in one of the world's biggest sporting events, and the vast majority of you could care less. Well, wake up.
Though men's basketball coach Mike Davis has said finding a former Hoosier to fill his staff would be ideal, Davis drew his latest assistant coach from California. New assistant coach Ben McDonald, an Nike basketball camp director, offers NBA experience Davis couldn't pass up. "He has NBA experience with us that I want because I want to recruit NBA-type players, so my whole staff has NBA experience, so that's one of the reasons," Davis said. "He's a good guy and a really good individual workout guy."
We've all seen the numbers. Northwest Airlines to cut 10,000 jobs; United Airlines to cut 20,000; Boeing to lay off 100,000. In the wake of the tragic terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., the airline industry is reeling. The three-day grounding of commercial flights by the Federal Aviation Administration, coupled with a newly acquired national apprehension of boarding a plane, has hit the airline industry hard.
Since Mike Krzyzewski took over in Durham, N.C., in 1980, Duke has been nearly untouchable. In the last five seasons, Duke has lost 18 games and has never lost more than five games in one season. Only twice since 1984 has Duke finished the season unranked.
Many adventurers have thought about traveling across the country. But how many have considered trying it with a bicycle? Just ask the deCycle's bike team how it's done. On Saturday, the group of 72 riders left for a three-week, 1,400-mile bicycle journey from Bloomington to New England.
You can please some of the people all of the time with chili-lime spiked spareribs, and all of the people some of the time with a decent dose of chocolate, but you can please all of the people, all of the time, with a hearty helping of homemade mashed potatoes. Consider mashed potatoes a winter anchor, your most faithful standby for any meal -- elegant, down home, and everything in between. They are easier to make than you may have imagined, too -- just boil, mash and eat. Perfecting mashed potatoes is another (and highly subjective) story. Some cooks insist on a perfectly smooth mash; others will fight to the quick for a few lumps of texture. Some swear that heated milk is the only way to go; still others vow that it is buttermilk or bust.
The Bouncing Souls never desired nine-to-five office jobs. Good times and music went hand in hand, and that meant too much for them to trade in their instruments for suits and ties or their BMXs for laptops.
Alumnus Chad Millman tracked a couple of professional bettors and a bookmaker -- all living in Las Vegas -- as their fortunes rose and fell with each game during the 1999-2000 college basketball season. Excerpts of Millman's book "The Odds," which went on sale March 20, appear in today's IDS.
With every Fourth of July holiday, the use of illegal fireworks always comes to the forefront. If people celebrate with their own backyard fireworks display and they could ignore the law.
"Cheticamp, a French-Acadian village of three thousand souls, is situated on the northwest shore of Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia." Thus begins Anselm Cormier's essay about life in Atlantic Canada that appears in The Dances Down Home, a collection of jigs and reels by Anselm's brother, violinist Joe Cormier.
After eating at some of Bloomington's finest hamburger establishments, picking the best burger was daunting. In the end, it had to be done, and my choice for best burger in Bloomington goes to the Village Deli, 409 E. Kirkwood Ave.
Another tough weekend for the women's volleyball team leaves the Hoosiers with a 4-12 overall record and a 1-7 record in the conference after hard losses to Michigan State University and University of Michigan. The weekend left the Hoosiers dissatisfied as they search for more victories.
Mike Davis wondered if he was walking out of Assembly Hall for the last time as IU's men's basketball coach following IU's victory over Minnesota Feb. 28. But he was there again Wednesday when IU President Myles Brand removed the interim label from Davis' title and announced Davis' four-year contract worth at least $400,000 per year. "For the next four years, I plan on taking this basketball program to the next level," Davis said. "I look forward to bringing a lot of great players here and having a lot of great memories." Brand called Wednesday a "very important day in the history of IU basketball."
A bill that would allow criminals who commit a crime against a pregnant woman to be charged separately for violence against a fetus gained approval by a House subcommittee last week.
NEW YORK -- Notorious mob boss John Gotti will be interred in a Roman Catholic cemetery alongside his son, but his family was denied permission to hold a funeral Mass for the convicted killer. Gotti, responsible for at least five murders during his bloody reign atop the Gambino crime family, will not receive a Mass of Christian burial, the Rev. Andrew Vaccari, chancellor of the Diocese of Brooklyn, said Wednesday.
The stone building at 122 S. Walnut St. was once Bloomington City Hall. Until 1985, it housed the police department. And 10 years ago it was redeveloped to fulfill a new purpose: bringing the arts to Bloomington. Through all the residents, the building's face has changed little. It is unlike any other place in Bloomington. The two theaters and three galleries in the John Waldron Arts Center give local artists and performers a place to show their work.