Pettersen wins 4th tour victory of the year
Suzann Pettersen was prepared for another challenging round in the cold and wind. The Norwegian star ended up holding yet another trophy Sunday without even hitting a shot.
Suzann Pettersen was prepared for another challenging round in the cold and wind. The Norwegian star ended up holding yet another trophy Sunday without even hitting a shot.
Don’t blame Chad Pennington solely for this one. He had a lot of help. Kenny Watson ran for 130 yards and three touchdowns in the best performance of his career, and the Cincinnati Bengals turned the New York Jets’ second-half meltdown into a 38-31 victory Sunday. Hardly a drive went by without a major gaffe by two of the NFL’s most disappointing teams.
BROWNSTOWN, Ind. – Statements to police made by a teenager accused of killing one man and wounding another in a series of highway sniper shootings cannot be admitted as evidence in the teen’s upcoming trial, a judge has ruled.
The offense scored 31 points against a team that was giving up an average of 12. The defense held Penn State to three field goals instead of three touchdowns on goal-line stands. Junior wide receiver James Hardy became IU’s all-time leader in touchdown receptions with 31, adding two on Saturday. But the biggest number of the game for the Hoosiers was four – as in four second half turnovers.
Remember the New York Yankees blowing the ALCS in 2004? Or how about Chris Webber in the closing seconds of the 1993 NCAA Championship game? Greg Norman’s notable Sunday meltdowns on the golf course? All of the above have had something slip through their hands. The same could be said for the Hoosiers on Saturday. In prime position to beat Penn State for the first time in history, the Hoosiers fumbled – four times, actually – their chances away and lost to the Nittany Lions, 36-31.
GARY – Police will ask prosecutors to charge the driver of a car that crashed in September, killing two young men whose bodies were found hours later by the father of one of the victims.
FORT WAYNE – An elementary school where students spend half the day speaking Spanish has been invited to join a unique program sponsored by Spain’s government.
Two prominent broadcast journalists will visit the School of Journalism this week. “NBC News” correspondent Bob Dotson and ESPN “First Take” host Dana Jacobson will visit a visual storytelling class today before holding separate lectures.
The popularity of iPods and other brands of MP3 players might be the cause for an increase in violent crime, according to a report issued by the Urban Institute. The report’s authors found that a time period when Apple sold nearly 90 million iPods correlated with the first national crime rate spike in 12 years.
Steve Raymer set out to capture two centuries worth of photos all over the world, but only had four years to do it. The associate professor of journalism traveled the world in search of people of Indian origin living away from their homeland for his new book, “Images of a Journey: India in Diaspora,” published by the IU Press.
U.S. and Iraqi forces, backed by Polish army helicopters, swept through Shiite militia strongholds south of Baghdad Saturday, rounding up dozens of militants and killing two.
MALIBU, Calif. – A wildfire driven by powerful Santa Ana wind threatened a university and forced the evacuation of hundreds of homes in the Malibu Hills on Sunday
With silver buckets of incense burning behind the stage and an elaborate introduction, Bob Dylan took the stage at Assembly Hall on Friday night with his band members – all of whom were dressed in black, with Dylan looking like he was straight from an old Western movie.
Have you ever been far away from a loved one? Have you ever missed someone so much that you think about them every minute of the day? Lately, this is how I have been feeling about the backs of my eyelids. Sometimes it’s school, sometimes it’s work and sometimes it’s even hanging out with friends that does it, but suffice it to say that I have been missing out on way too much sleep lately to go on functioning like a semi-normal human being. And judging by the lines at Starbucks this week and the number of Rockstar cans I’ve seen lying around campus, I’m not alone.
Halloween proper might not be until the middle of next week, but we all know that it’s this weekend that really matters. (It’s a bit difficult to party on a Wednesday. Not that you shouldn’t try – this is IU, after all.) Thus, you should start working on your costume immediately, if you haven’t already. Undoubtedly, some of you topical types are going to want to dress up like the candidates for the 2008 presidential election.
About 20 individuals chose to spend their afternoon at the City of Bloomington Democratic-candidates forum hosted by the IU College Democrats.
IU is no stranger to change, Michael McRobbie said as he officially became IU’s 18th president Thursday. “Indiana University’s history is a story of change in response to the demands of the time,” McRobbie said to a crowd of about 1,800.
No. 16 Hoosiers earn draw against Ohio State.
The controversy in Jena, La., has thrown discrimination back into the limelight of U.S. debate after six black high school students were charged under obviously racist pretenses for attempted murder. With a Capitol Hill hearing, thousands of words of commentary in Internet forums and Facebook activists appearing in droves, the Jena Six have lit a racially charged fuse that has not been seen since the O.J. Simpson murder trial of 1994.
Hundreds of students and Bloomington community members lined up along sidewalks from Third Street all the way to the Sample Gates to see Friday’s Homecoming parade, led by IU President Michael McRobbie and his wife, Laurie Burns McRobbie.