Freitag signs No. 1 class for 2005
Mike Freitag has not missed a step in his first season since taking over for former IU men's soccer coach Jerry Yeagley.
Mike Freitag has not missed a step in his first season since taking over for former IU men's soccer coach Jerry Yeagley.
I woke up yesterday morning, walked outside my front door and headed for the news stand. My jaw dropped as the headline screamed at me: "Perry to leave IU basketball." D.P. gone?
DENVER -- Aiming to prevent another brawl between players and fans, the NBA issued standard security guidelines for all its arenas Thursday, including a ban on alcohol sales during the fourth quarter.
Dick Enberg will be visiting IU to sign copies of his new book at 10:30 a.m. Feb. 26. The event will be held at the Virgil E. DeVault Alumni Center, 1000 E. 17th St. The event is free and open to all willing to come. He will give a brief address before beginning the signing of his book, "Dick Enberg: Oh My!"
With five games left in the regular season, IU needs everything to go their way to dance with 63 other teams in March. Heading north for Sunday's game against Michigan, the Hoosiers will look to their seven-game winning streak against the Wolverines as inspiration to begin a stretch they need to stay above .500 for a shot at post-season play.
Stepping into the Tudor Room restaurant on the third floor of the Indiana Memorial Union feels like stepping into a country club. The high ceilings, big open windows and delicate artwork make it easy to forget that the restaurant is located on IU's campus. But don't be fooled. The Tudor Room is rich in IU tradition. The high ceilings are adorned with flags that represent different schools of the University.
SAN DIEGO -- For a guy who wasn't expected to do much last season, Drew Brees sure got a nice raise. The San Diego Chargers used their franchise tag Thursday on Brees and will offer him a one-year contract at just more than $8 million. The quarterback made $1.56 million in base pay last season, when he led the Chargers out of the NFL's basement to the AFC West title at 12-4. The Chargers needed to put the tag on Brees, the NFL's Comeback Player of the Year, to keep him from leaving as an unrestricted free agent.
As Web sites like eBay and Froogle supplant shopping malls, a new market for online purchasing is surging. The expansive Internet use by students, coupled with students' tendencies to regularly eat delivery, has invited a new online dining business to IU.
Some of you readers haven't even gotten to this sentence, due to the markedly obvious title of this column. Some of you have read to here, but you read wondering what kind of liberal propaganda I'm about to pour onto this page.
The annual IU-Purdue match-up always has a lot at stake -- but the stakes are even higher this year. For the third consecutive year, the Hoosiers will "Pack the Hall" in order break the school's attendance record and raise money for breast cancer research 2 p.m. Sunday at Assembly Hall.
The roster of potential replacements for School of Journalism Dean Trevor Brown has been narrowed to two. The journalism dean search committee voted to send the names of Bradley Hamm and Christine Martin to IU-Bloomington Interim Chancellor Ken Gros Louis Feb. 11.
About a dozen people gathered at Read's Community leadership and Development Center area Thursday evening to discuss a sensitive subject -- racism.
NEW ORLEANS -- Humorist Dave Barry's daughter, Sophie, has figured out what her dad does for a living. "Of late, she's decided I'm silly, and that's my job -- I'm silly and people laugh," Barry said. True enough. But he can't read his column collections to the youngster. About to turn 5, she's still too young to understand such topics as terrorism, a wrestler's cleavage and the Democratic National Convention.
LONDON -- Flamboyant Welsh designer Julien Macdonald's autumn/winter offerings were the highlight of the first day of London fashion shows, revealing a collection featuring fur and crystals. But the dress that stole Macdonald's show had already had its first outing on the British Academy Film Awards red carpet the previous evening.
One index finger, one hand, one arm, one rib cage, one leg and one trainer have been broken, punctured or killed in separate incidents of exotic wildlife attacks in Indiana.
INDIANAPOLIS -- Federal prosecutors have charged an Algerian man with falsely claiming that he knew about an al-Qaida plot to bomb five U.S. cities in an attempt to avoid deportation.
Picture it: Gary, Ind., 1991. A cute, big-headed seven-year-old Mexican boy sits on the maroon carpet of the living room in his blue pajamas, red cape wrapped around his neck. He's watching "The Geraldo Rivera Show" with his older siblings on the 30-inch wood-paneled television and dreaming of being on it some day (TV, not Geraldo).
MURE, Japan -- Inside a sprawling ring built of rough hewn rocks, American sculptor Isamu Noguchi once said he "conversed with stones." Called the "Circle," the dirt yard in the southern Japanese village of Mure served as one of Noguchi's main workshops from the late 1960s. It's now part of the Isamu Noguchi Garden Museum that was opened to the public in 1999. From the towering, granite trapezoid "Energy Void" to dozens of unfinished works, the museum's 150 sculptures offer a snapshot of Noguchi's art during a period from the late 1960s until his death in 1988 when he made many of his masterpieces. Although its collection can't compare to the Noguchi Museum in Long Island City, N.Y., the Mure site attracts Noguchi fans, modern-art buffs and adventurous tourists alike. It's also fascinating for anyone who wants to see Noguchi's works-in-progress, which bear the stamp if not the signature of the artist.
To Aristotle, the only division among people that mattered was between the Greeks and the non-Greeks. Not all that much has changed at IU 2,400 years later, except instead of referring to non-Greeks as "barbarians" (though it sounds nice), we call them GDIs: God-damned independents.
WASHINGTON -- Chafing over racy broadcasts like Janet Jackson's infamous "wardrobe malfunction" at the 2004 Super Bowl, the House overwhelmingly passed a bill Wednesday authorizing unprecedented fines for indecency.