Rowers look forward to Head of Elk regatta
Many coaches will tell their teams to approach each race like it's the most important race of the season. For crew, this weekend's Head of the Elk regatta is the most important race of the season.
Many coaches will tell their teams to approach each race like it's the most important race of the season. For crew, this weekend's Head of the Elk regatta is the most important race of the season.
Sunday's game marks the final time Wendy Graves, Chrissy Heubi, Jena Kluska and Kendal Willis will step onto the soccer field as Indiana Hoosiers. Each senior has stated their disappointment in this year's season because of their losing record and failure to reach the Big Ten tournament, but no one has been disappointed in their time as a Hoosier.
The women's soccer team finishes up the 2000 season at home against cross-state rival Kentucky Sunday afternoon.
It's crunch time for both the men's and women's cross country teams while in Madison, Wis., and this weekend's Big Ten Championship could make or break either team. Although this will be the smallest number of teams the Hoosiers have competed against in more than a month, the teams they do encounter will be nationally-ranked. The No. 24 men's team dreams of only the best -- first place. IU has not won a Big Ten championship since 1980, but this year's Hoosiers are confident they have what it takes.
Rush hour on campus does not exclusively consist of bumper to bumper traffic. There are plenty of motorcycles, bikes and pedestrians thrown into the confusion that occurs at about 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
A bloody man lies on the bathroom floor. The word "Redrum" is scribbled on the mirror. Thrill seekers step back and scream. But the tour guide tells them to keep going and leads them further into darkness.
The standing-room only crowd filling the Law School's Moot Court Room last night was both insistent and impatient. As students and faculty packed the small auditorium, whispers of anticipation hummed through the air. But as Kumble R. Subbaswamy, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, stepped up to the podium, the dull hum of conversation immediately ceased.
Members of the community will gather Sunday to conduct a search for missing student and Bloomington resident Jill Behrman. People interested in participating can meet on the west side of Memorial Stadium between noon and 1 p.m.
The department of communication and culture, along with City Lights, is sponsoring a Japanese film festival this weekend. The two day film marathon will begin at 1 p.m. Saturday and will continue until 11 p.m. Sunday.
Think of homelessness. The images conjured are of the down-and-out, those who have fallen on hard times. It's not something one associates with symphony orchestras.
Indiana hasn't cast one vote for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1964, when Lyndon B. Johnson became president. But, every four years, thousands of Indiana residents vote for democratic candidates.
Professor of Music Don Freund will give a recital at 7 p.m. Saturday in Auer Hall. The free recital will consist of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, and is open to the public. A lecture on Bach's music will be given by Freund at 2 p.m. Sunday in Sweeney Hall.
The current Bloomington incarnation of Federico Garcia Lorca's final play, "The House of Bernarda Alba," will come to a close this weekend at the John Waldron Arts Center Auditorium.
THE Ray Charles is performing here, tonight? Yep, You've got the right one baby, uh-huh. The legendary blues-jazz-rock-soul superstar is playing to an almost sold-out crowd at 8 p.m. today at the IU Auditorium.
President Bill Clinton signed a bill Monday that is considered one of the toughest laws against drunken driving yet, but in actuality, it does nothing more than punish social drinkers. The new law requires states to implement a 0.08 percent blood alcohol content standard as the legal level for drunken driving by 2004. States that fail to impose that standard would begin losing millions of dollars a year in federal highway funds.
The Palestinian protests during the past three weeks are not a spontaneous reaction to provocation by former Israeli minister of defense Ariel Sharon's visit to Haram al-Sharif in East Jerusalem or "incitement" by Yasser Arafat. Rather, they are a rebellion against 52 years of oppression and 33 years of military occupation.
After 2000 years of being in exile, a people -- ripped and nearly extinct by the most evil of powers -- finally found peace in a land they could call their own. Not only their own, but open to all whowished to feel free. All they desired was acceptance as a nation, race, creed, ethnic group and religion. The area in 1947 known as Palestine provided a tangible place for that hope.
I have an audio tape by Jeong Chae-Joon and Pak Eun-Ok, a Korean husband-and-wife singing duo. They remind me of Ian and Sylvia, if anyone else out there remembers them. The music is spare but gorgeous, and the voices blend exquisitely, although I know too little Korean to understand more than a word here and there.
The music force that is the Elephant Six Collective (E6) has been awfully quiet lately. Throughout the country, lovers of the quirky, retro-pop that is the specialty of the E6 collective have been going into withdrawal. They have been begging for the powerful punch of Beatles, Beach Boy and Zombies-influenced pop to get them through the long, cold weather. They need the quirky lyrics surrounded by the warm glow of the '60s and '70s. Elf Power's The Winter is Coming is just that fix.
They were different. They were innovative, intelligent and active. But, most of all, they were different. Zach de la Rocha announced his split from Rage Against the Machine last Wednesday, to the extreme disappointment of fans. Zach said he was frustrated with the group's "decision-making process" which interfered with RATM's political and artistic desires.