Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Saturday, July 11
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

President wrong to ignore issue of CO2 emissions

When President George W. Bush decided last week to stop pushing for limits on carbon dioxide emissions, he not only broke his campaign pledge not to do so -- he also took steps to stop a program that would have protected the environment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team heads toward Atlanta

·

With an estimated 6,000 fans filling the east stands of Assembly Hall, IU held its final practice in Bloomington Wednesday afternoon before departing for Atlanta for the Final Four. The Hoosiers finished their practice session in front of the crowd, then addressed the Hoosier faithful, many of whom waived signs reading "GO IU" and "WE LIKE MIKE."


The Indiana Daily Student

Build a better relationship

·

As lawsuits about the Open Door Laws and the confidentiality of Bob Knight's personnel records wend their way through the courts and the University addresses a shortage of state funds, the IDS's responsibility to serve as a watchdog of government operations took center stage over the last few weeks. There have been several breaking stories and critical editorials this summer concerning the actions of the University and its officials, culminating in a guest column by William Stephan, the Vice President of Public Affairs and Government Relations (July 15, "Brand misrepresented").


The Indiana Daily Student

Armed men kill students

·

Armed men stormed a university hall in Nigeria, and opened fire on engineering students taking examinations, killing at least 15 people, witnesses and police said Wednesday.

The Indiana Daily Student

My final thoughts

·

As the sun shines down on IU and campus comes alive, it is, ironically, time for many students to begin an exodus from campus. But, before I pack up my bags to return to good ol' Valparaiso, there are a few loose ends that need to be tied up.


The Indiana Daily Student

U.S. troops inside border

·

The United States has a "modest number" of troops inside Afghanistan, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld said Tuesday in the Pentagon's clearest acknowledgment yet of the American ground presence in the anti-terror war. The troops are doing liaison work with anti-Taliban fighters and helping with resupply for those groups, as well as pinpointing targets for U.S. bombers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Big-city cabaret comes to town

·

Tonight the Bloomington Playwrights Project invites the audience to take part in one-of-a-kind experience that will explore the detours of life through song. Washington D.C. performer Colin James' original one man cabaret "Detour Ahead" will be held tonight and tomorrow at the BPP at 8 p.m.


The Indiana Daily Student

Society overlooking true heroes

·

Too many people we call heroes don't deserve that title. Worse, too many people who deserve to be recognized as heroes, are not. For example, athletes (and some coaches), are THE heroes at IU, hands down. Yet a typical athletic hero simply excels at a sport, in the narrow sense of the term. And that's not enough. A hero should be more than a great athlete.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bin Laden denies attack involvement

·

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect behind last week's airborne strikes on the United States, issued a statement Sunday denying that he was involved.


The Indiana Daily Student

Returning riders take top women's spots

·

Kappa Alpha Theta senior Krissy Johnson can't seem to beat Alpha Delta Pi senior Emily Derkasch. In last year's women's Little 500 individual time trials, Derkasch topped Johnson by .03 seconds to finish fifth. In this year's time trials Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium, Derkasch beat out Johnson by .48 seconds to capture the top spot.


The Indiana Daily Student

Vitale isn't vital

·

I don't know how you can fill out your NCAA Tournament brackets. Like all college basketball fans, I was all geared up on Selection Sunday for all the stuff by which a season is ultimately decided -- pairings, locations, game times and seedings. Finally, all the vital info is disseminated to the world, I turned to ESPN for some reaction and then something happened, and I could no longer fill out my bracket sheet.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

·

Wrong time for criticism GAP should be allowed to come to campus Images burning in our minds


The Indiana Daily Student

Women's team splits games with 1 win, 1 loss out west

·

The women's basketball team escaped from the weekend's talent-rich Stanford Invitational with a victory and a loss. After falling to No. 9 Stanford 87-72 Friday night in Palo Alto, Calif., the Hoosiers knocked off Western Kentucky 85-70 in the consolation game. Stanford claimed the tournament title over UC Santa Barbara 87-64.



The Indiana Daily Student

Policy not made known

·

Thanks to a new University policy, religion and IU can now peacefully coexist. Too bad many students didn't know about the new religious observation requirements. IU recently implemented a policy requiring students to turn in a form to professors to document that they will miss class for a religious holiday.


The Indiana Daily Student

This Jacko is not wacko

·

Phil Jackson doesn't need your sympathy. He's among the highest paid coaches in the National Basketball Association at over $7 million per season, and most are predicting his Los Angeles Lakers to beat the Sacramento Kings in the NBA Finals, er, Western Conference Finals.



The Indiana Daily Student

Off-the-field expectations

·

Athletes are public figures. They travel across the country with the IU emblem across their clothing. They are broadcast nationally to thousands of people across America. They are role models to kids in the community, and looked up to by many on this campus. This is especially true for the IU football team. No matter what the score, IU students have not stopped screaming their lungs out on game day or painting their chests red and white.


The Indiana Daily Student

Eight killed by airstrike in Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraq said Monday that eight civilians were killed in a weekend airstrike by U.S. and British warplanes on southern Iraq. The Pentagon gave no word of casualties. The official Iraqi News Agency said three others were wounded in the strike Sunday night in the al-Salhiya area of Wasit province, 100 miles south of Baghdad. The U.S. Central Command in Florida has said its planes attacked two or more surface-to-air missile sites Sunday in southern Iraq in response to Iraqi threats against American and British aircraft patrolling no-fly zones over Iraq.


The Indiana Daily Student

Little 500 teams bring abundance of different strategies

·

Every spring for the past 51 years, many students have experienced the thrills and spills of Little 500 racing. Although the crowd only sees the sprints to the finish and bone-crunching crashes, much more exists behind the scenes of the race touted as the "World's Greatest College Weekend." Strategy plays just as important role in the outcome of the race as speed and precision exchanges.