Bloomington Fest 2002
Bloomington may be dead right now as students continue to move in and get their dorms and apartments in order, but that's all about to change. Tonight Bloomington will come alive.
Bloomington may be dead right now as students continue to move in and get their dorms and apartments in order, but that's all about to change. Tonight Bloomington will come alive.
The smell of beer, liquor and cigarettes, the blurred vision and the sight of flashing blue and red lights through the window is a scene all too familiar to many college students. It's the scene of cops busting a party. The Princeton Review may have given IU its new national reputation as the No. 1 party school, but that doesn't mean students can party all year long and not worry about getting busted.
This summer for an IU sports fan was more about questions than answers and worries than affirmations. Does the football team have a shot to beat William and Mary Aug. 31? Why haven't we gotten any big-time men's basketball recruits? What is the Sears Directors' Cup? What goes with cream and crimson? Football head coach Gerry DiNardo has both done and said interesting things over the summer. He vowed to go to every high school in the state and to introduce himself to the state's coaches upon his hiring and made it to about half of them before recruiting rules forced him off the road. He will visit the second half next offseason.
IU was ranked the number one party school in the United States last week, based on what administrators said was an unscientific survey conducted by the Princeton Review in its annual Best 345 Colleges, released Aug. 20. This ranking was determined by individual questions about the school's social scene, in which students responded that IU had an abundance of beer, hard liquor, marijuana and a large greek presence. All IU surveys were submitted online -- the method the administration preferred in cooperating with the Review.
It's that time of year again. Parents are packing up the U-hauls, and students are scurrying to jam everything they can into minivans and the trunks of their cars. While most new students are moving in for fall classes today, those who experienced Intensive Freshman Seminars are already settled in.
Early figures from the Office of International Services show that Sept. 11 appears to have had no detrimental effect on the enrollment of international students at IU. In fact, Lynn Schoch, associate director of the OIS, expects the number of new foreign students to increase this fall.
The freshman experience of meeting the potluck roommate, decorating the new dorm room, smoking the paranoia-free cigarette and making the trip to a food court to seek the refreshment of a Dunkin' Donut Coolata will all be on delay today when students and families swarm onto campus for freshman move-in. Even wrong turns will be made at a tenth of a mile per hour due to road construction on Highway 37, a road well-traveled by IU students.
President Bush confronted Saudi Arabia's top diplomat Tuesday over Iraq and other issues chilling relations between the uneasy allies, calling Saddam Hussein "a menace to the world." In an hour-long session with Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan, Bush expressed exasperation with the kingdom for failing to meet its commitment to provide financial assistance to the new government in Afghanistan.
Every year new students travel to IU to go through an orientation of the campus, college life and the community of Bloomington. "Any new students need help getting used to campus, even the ones from Bloomington," said Richard McKaig, dean of students. Students come not only from Indiana and across the country, but also from around the world. International students made up more than 10 percent of student population last spring, according to the Office of Registrar's Web site.
CHICAGO -- Whether it's the picturesque views of San Francisco or the powerful story of New York, the United States is confident it has a winner. San Francisco and New York beat out Houston and Washington, D.C., on Tuesday when a U.S. Olympic Committee task force chose two finalists to be the American candidate for the 2012 Summer Olympics.
So far, so good for new women's soccer coach Mick Lyon. The Hoosiers tied Valparaiso in their first action of the year last Wednesday and defeated IU-Purdue University Fort Wayne 6-1 Saturday. Although both games were exhibitions, they provided Lyon some insight into the make-up of a team buoyed by a new coaching staff and featuring eight freshman players.
Marat Safin runs the gamut of emotions. Anybody who saw Safin beat Nicolas Kiefer in a fifth-set tiebreaker at the U.S. Open saw it all Tuesday.
Sophomore makes waves on US team Softball adds 2 coaches to staff Miller questionable for World Championships
NEW YORK -- While baseball negotiators intensified their meetings in hopes of completing a deal, teams began pushing back travel plans to prepare for a possible strike Friday. The Chicago White Sox called off their Thursday charter to Detroit and said they would travel Friday only if there isn't a walkout. Boston rescheduled its charter to Cleveland for Friday, too, but St. Louis will travel Thursday for the following day's game at the Chicago Cubs, which would be the first game affected by a strike.
After being tabbed No. 1 in two different preseason college soccer rankings, the IU men's soccer team traveled to the Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne Soccer Showcase in Fort Wayne last weekend to take on Kentucky and Virginia in a pair of exhibition games. IU was ranked No. 1 by both the College Soccer News and the National Soccer Coaches' Association of America in their rankings released earlier this month.
After months of research and surveys by the Athletic Department, the university unveiled IU's new colors and logos last spring. Monday, the new uniforms for IU's athletic teams with the new looks were unveiled at a Varsity Club event held in Indianapolis. The athletic department has gone back to the old cream and crimson and the block IU symbol. Athletic Director Michael McNeely said the new logo was the most recognizable icon by fans of IU and its athletics.
IU football fans may have grown accustomed to watching Antwaan Randle El hurdle, juke and shuffle as the most prolific quarterback in IU history. But along with new uniforms, fans will get a new style of quarterback starting Saturday when senior Tommy Jones lines up under center. The stand-up pocket passer was named IU's starting quarterback for the Hoosiers opener Saturday against William & Mary.
It might be enjoyable to spend the day sleeping in your room, but you will eventually need to visit this place called class. After all, it's why you're here, right? Regardless of your answer, I would like to share with you some of my class tips; a "Tao of Higher Education" if you will. This column is aimed toward the rookie students, but I'm sure a few of us seasoned veterans could use a refresher.
A 35-foot-wide bulge in an ancient wall has revived a dispute over Jerusalem's most hotly contested holy site.
Cape Canaveral, Fla. -- 'N Sync singer Lance Bass won the endorsement of NASA and other space agencies Tuesday in his bid to fly to the international space station this fall.