Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Sunday, May 17
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD


The Indiana Daily Student

Banhart has a whole lotof heart

·

Last spring Bright Eyes' It's Morning, I'm Wide Awake let me have it -- it was that cold bucket of water over the head that opens your eyes long before the sun is up. The Shins and Iron & Wine (both featured on that one soundtrack for that "Garden"-something movie) weren't the only ones making folk music beyond that of those making it 30 years earlier.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Venom' is like poison to your eyes

·

There is a reason that "Venom" is only playing in one theater in the Indianapolis metropolitan area. And I bet you know what that reason is. It's kind of lame. Surprise!


The Indiana Daily Student

Niccol thrives on realism in 'War'

·

"Lord of War" is the newest film by Andrew Niccol ("Gattaca"). It's the story of how Yuri Orlov (Nicholas Cage), a Russian immigrant, rises from poverty in the New York ghetto, Little Odessa, to eventually become one of the biggest arms dealers in the world.


The Indiana Daily Student

Whodunit disguised as a slasher

·

It has been a long time since a good "slasher" flick has graced the screen. It's been almost ten years since the last good one, "Scream," and over twice as long since the classics. And this is assuming you believe any slice-and-dice scary movie could be called "classic" or even "good," because most people do not.

The Indiana Daily Student

Welcome to 'Heaven'

·

In the romantic comedy "Just Like Heaven," ever-affable good-natured Mark Ruffalo moves into a "haunted" apartment in San Francisco. Its view and privately accessible rooftop make the place a mouth-watering find, though one does pause to wonder how he can see all of San Francisco from a third-story walk-up.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers echo accusations of racism in Katrina relief

·

Black leaders from the Rev. Jesse Jackson to rapper Kanye West have accused federal officials of racism and classism for standing aside while Hurricane Katrina claimed the lives of poor black people in flooded areas of the Gulf Coast. Eric Love, IU's director of diversity education, agrees with this characterization.


The Indiana Daily Student

200 to zero in 73 laps

·

American racing fans learned a valuable lesson Sunday during the U.S. Grand Prix at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway: the Formula 1 product is disorganized, uninteresting and a flimflam cloaked as an international spectacle.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cattle-prodding human rights

·

The United States of America is often marketed by government officials and patriotic citizens as a beacon of liberty and justice across the globe. Watchdog human rights organizations like Amnesty International, however, believe the U.S. government and patriotic Americans have a duty to themselves and the world to promote liberty and justice within their own national boundaries.


The Indiana Daily Student

Black, Jewish students forge new partnership, dispel racial barrier

·

Fourteen years after African-Americans and Jewish-Americans skirmished with one another in the Brooklyn, N.Y., streets during the Crown Heights neighborhood riots, black and Jewish IU students united Tuesday night in Woodburn Hall to call out for help in dispelling national racist and bigotry attitudes left over from the 20th Century.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD to look into response at HPER

·

The IU Police Department is conducting dual investigations concerning events of Sunday morning, which involved a fraternity dance at the Indiana Memorial Union, fights outside the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation and firearm use on 14th Street and Indiana Avenue, IUPD Lt. Jerry Minger said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lawyers meet at pub to discuss Court changes

·

Supreme Court Justice Nominee John Roberts has refused to tell the public what he thinks about abortion, which is exactly what makes him a great judge, said IU Law Professor Joseph Hoffman. Hoffman, who, like Roberts is a former clerk for the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist, said he is so in favor of Roberts that he is writing an opinion column to submit to major publications.



The Indiana Daily Student

Tailgate policy won't be enforced

Half an hour into Saturday's football game, while some students moved off the lawns and into the stands, many stayed behind to continue drinking and throwing beanbags. Many did not have tickets, but despite the new athletics department policy, which prohibits those without tickets to tailgate 10 minutes after kickoff, no one was ejected for defiance of the rule. According to IU Police Department records, about eight people were arrested during tailgating activities, mostly for underage drinking or disorderly conduct. Of those people still outside the stadium before halftime, few had negative comments about the police presence. Some didn't notice a presence at all.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bush likely to pick moderate for 2nd opening

·

WASHINGTON -- President Bush's supporters want him to replace retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor with a rock-solid conservative jurist, but Bush's low poll numbers have given liberals hope he'll nominate a moderate to avoid a raucous fight in the Senate.


The Indiana Daily Student

Coverage of shooting incident unfair to detained students

·

My cousin Michael C. Taylor and I were victims ("suspects") of Sunday morning's fiasco with the police. We are the ones the police are pointing guns at. I understand the IDS is trying to do its job, but the photographer that took the pictures was obviously disrespectful.


The Indiana Daily Student

Under scrutiny

·

In 1986, the Reagan administration was considering rounding up all Arabs and Iranians living in the United States and interning them in two military compounds in the South, according to information brought to light by Freedom of Information Act requests. This detention would have been implemented similar to the way the Japanese internment happened during World War II. Clearly, Reagan and his government decided against this course of action.



The Indiana Daily Student

IDS continues to misrepresent IU black community

·

As a member of the IU black community, I would like to express my displeasure with the IDS's ongoing exploitation of the black members of the Indiana community. The latest testament to the IDS's poor journalistic practices is Monday's front-page story, "Police search for shooting suspects", about the gun-firing incident following the dismissal of the Alpha Phi Alpha party (Sept. 19).


The Indiana Daily Student

Bracelet bonanza

·

Lance Armstrong has cancer in his testicles. Looking around campus, this fact is made abundantly clear. It seems the notorious "Livestrong" wristband is now being purchased more often on campus than birth control. But why is it that these bright, banana-colored bands have become so popular? The answer can be summed up in one word: bahhhhhh.


The Indiana Daily Student

"I dedicate this building to ... myself"

·

You might have noticed that the dedication of new buildings on campus has generated a great deal of debate. Many have dissented from IU's policy of auctioning the names of buildings for massive donations. Historically, this has been done to great effect ("Name Game," Indiana Daily Student, Sept. 14).