Sexpert
I enjoy performing cunnilingus on my girlfriend but I tend to salivate too much, which curtails her enjoyment. She says it's too "messy." Any thoughts on how I can overcome this problem?
I enjoy performing cunnilingus on my girlfriend but I tend to salivate too much, which curtails her enjoyment. She says it's too "messy." Any thoughts on how I can overcome this problem?
WASHINGTON -- Today, U.S. District Court Judge Donald M. Middlebrooks will hear a case on an injunction request from Texas Gov. George W. Bush to halt the handcount underway in Florida that Vice President Al Gore requested.
Senior Laura Hammer was counting on the $800 promised to her by StudentU.com, an academic Web site that offers class notes to about 150 colleges nationwide and money for those who provide the site with notes.
Faculty from several departments in the College of Arts and Sciences are collaborating to help bring a new, broad-based major in what they hope will better involve students in the global community.
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- They sprinted in their muddy long-sleeved jerseys and shorts, raising their arms to question referees and to excite their teammates.
It took an entire season, but the women's cross country team finally ran the race they knew they were capable of running.
The volleyball team made a strong showing this weekend, hoping to gain a bid for the NCAA tournament by beating Northwestern in three games and taking No. 4 Wisconsin to four games. The Hoosiers defeated the Wildcats 15-12, 15-6, 15-7 Saturday night after losing to the Badgers 11-15, 15-11, 1-15, 8-15 Friday.
Once again, the men's soccer team made history this weekend. But not the way they wanted to. In a season that has had its share of ups and downs, Friday's 1-0 loss at the hands (or feet) of Ohio State in the second round of the Big Ten tournament was the team's most upsetting result to date. After the game, the Hoosiers seemed to be in a state of shock. Part of it was because it was their first loss in more than five years against a conference opponent. And part of it might have been because the Buckeyes were celebrating as if they had won the National Championship.
It seemed like a harmless penalty -- something that wouldn't hurt the Hoosiers in the big picture. But it would start the downward spiral that would ultimately lead to the Hoosiers' 43-22 loss to Wisconsin Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
For 29 minutes, the football team prevented Wisconsin from tearing apart its vulnerable defense. But during the last minute of the first half, the Badgers scored and the Hoosiers never recovered.
Two years ago, Purdue cut down the nets as the nation\'s top team. It's easy to forget that -- in part, because of all of the changes in West Lafayette.
New women's basketball coach Kathi Bennett spent her early birthdays in musty, humid gymnasiums across scenic Wisconsin.
Coach Kathi Bennett's stingy defense showed some signs of arriving Friday as IU forced 32 turnovers in overpowering Finnish traveling team, Tapiolan Honka, 87-39.
Junior forward Kirk Haston called it the "Noblesville bounce" that sealed the game. Freshman forward/center George Leach said he was praying as the ball hit the rim. And junior guard Dane Fife called it "the Big Red roll."
Who knew Florida would become the epicenter of this country's biggest election nightmare? Things like this are only supposed to happen in corruption-filled dens of iniquity such as Chicago, where dead people have been known to vote.
We all want this to be over. With the question of who will be the next president of the United States hanging in the balance for almost a full week now, the American people are understandably sick and tired of hearing about unclear ballots and the "fuzzy math" used to count votes in Florida. Some will claim the candidate who loses the Florida recount should concede defeat, instead of miring the nation in ballot and voting technicalities that could end up in court and drag on for months.
Three hundred twenty-seven people might well decide who will succeed President Bill Clinton as commander-in-chief of the United States. That's the number of students on just a few floors of a dorm on this campus. That's the number of people in one Y103, Introduction to American Politics, lecture. That's far fewer than the number of college students the IU College Democrats registered to vote this semester.
Our nation held an election Tuesday. The results showed Texas Gov. George W. Bush was the winner. An unofficial recount total in Florida seems to confirm it.
The election is now a week in the past, and this nation is still waiting for the results. Texas Gov. George W. Bush, Vice President Al Gore and indeed the entire nation are watching Florida as county officials count and recount ballot after ballot.
Associate Professor of Religious Studies David Haberman addressed about 75 people Thursday night in his lecture "River Goddesses and Indian Environmentalism."