Illinois folk legend to play at Auditorium
For nearly 40 years, legendary folk/rock artist John Prine has been touring and releasing music. On Saturday, he will take the stage at the IU Auditorium.
For nearly 40 years, legendary folk/rock artist John Prine has been touring and releasing music. On Saturday, he will take the stage at the IU Auditorium.
Locally based indie-rock band Gentleman Caller plans to unleash on fans a new, full-length album Friday at The Cinemat, 123 S. Walnut St.
Imagine what it would be like if a professor assigned a 10-page paper and said it was due by the end of the day. Imagine being unable to procrastinate. Now imagine the Bloomington Playwrights Project’s “PlayOffs”: Playwrights are given just one day to write an entire play. What’s more, the actors must memorize the lines in an even shorter time. The directors must work feverishly to get everything before the just-born play takes the stage – that night.
Fresh from the airport, the Polish theater group Theater of the Eighth Day hurried into the Polish Studies Center to escape the cold November rain. Stepping into the center’s living room, the group looked around and declared it to be a “little piece of Poland.”
Music professor Glenn Gass will host a screening and discussion of the documentary “Young@Heart – The Art of Aging” at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Whittenberger Auditorium.
Safety investigators said more than a half million pounds of construction materials had been piled on the Interstate 35W bridge directly above steel plates on the day they failed, causing the Minneapolis bridge to collapse.
Prosecutors filed a murder charge Thursday against the man accused of imprisoning his daughter for 24 years and fathering her seven children, saying one of the youngsters who died in infancy might have survived if brought to a doctor.
Sarah Palin called on fellow Republican governors to keep the new president and his strengthened Democratic majority in check on issues from taxes to health care as she signaled she’ll take a leadership role in a party searching for a new standard-bearer.
North Korea’s powerful military announced Wednesday it will shut the country’s border with the South on Dec. 1 – a marked escalation of threats against Seoul’s new conservative government at a time of heightened tension on the peninsula.
An IU student was arrested Thursday morning and faces preliminary charges of attempted burglary.
One of the Greater Bloomington Chamber of Commerce’s top priorities is to support substantial funding for the Indiana Innovation Alliance.
I could not help but feel a sense of deja vu as I read Indira Dammu’s Thursday column about President Bush. While the embattled president has been a soft target for years now, his successful campaign in 2000 has several resemblances to the 2008 Barack Obama victory. He promised to bring a new way of doing things to the White House, which is similar to Obama’s message of change. He promised a diplomatic foreign policy approach, which would include absolutely no nation-building. Specifically, he planned to use a policy of containment to keep Saddam Hussein and Iraq in check, a plan that then-Sen. Obama agreed with wholeheartedly. He had a vision of “compassionate conservatism,” which referred to responsibly using government funds to support charity organizations. Bush also promised to raise the Earned Income Tax Credit, which was similar to Obama’s middle and lower class tax cuts. Bush was forced to deal with Sept. 11, Hurricane Katrina and the current financial mess.
To all of the people who want to see Bill Lynch fired, I have one thing to say: Shut up, already! After reading Monday’s front page story on how most fans want to see Coach Lynch canned, I felt I needed to stand up for him. I will agree that our Hoosiers have had a truly awful season. We all had sky-high expectations going into it. However, there are many problems with the idea of firing Lynch. First, he is under contract for the next three years. Second, the recruiting class he has coming in for next season is supposedly really good. If we fire Lynch, these players leave. Third, I find it hard to believe that people who do not show up for games and just get wasted tailgating in the fields have an opinion on what should be done with our coach.
Don’t read the news. That might sound strange coming from a columnist, but I’m going to say it because not reading the news might make you a better person. We live in the age of information overload. You can find out what hundreds of friends who aren’t really your friends are doing tonight on Facebook. You can find out what Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is on Wikipedia. You can argue who is a better voice actor for Sonic the Hedgehog on YouTube. But it’s not just the Internet that lets you twiddle away your time with trite nonsense. All media is generally useless: including the news. The responsibility of the “informed citizen” is a farce. Think about some of the top items of the presidential campaign: Joe the Plumber, Sarah Palin’s winks, hope and change and Bill Ayers.
One half of the students at the University of Cambridge have plagiarized, according to the results of a recent survey by Varsity, the university’s student paper. The university and the survey defined plagiarism as “handing in someone else’s essay; copying and pasting from the Internet; copying statistics, code or field-work; making up statistics, code or field-work; handing in previously submitted work; using someone else’s ideas without acknowledgement; buying an essay, or having an essay edited by Oxbridge Essays.” The survey only attracted 1,014 respondents, about 5 percent of the university’s entire student body. Although the results might not establish causation, students of certain subjects – like law, anthropology and archaeology – tend to plagiarize more. Despite the overwhelming and disappointing number of students who plagiarize, 80 percent of students believe the University does enough to combat academic dishonesty. The Cambridge Web site claims that the University’s “(academic) examiners are experts in their field and are therefore extremely likely to spot work that has been copied from another source or not referenced appropriately.” It appears some of these “examiners” have been duped.
Women on this campus are so committed to looking identical that they will endure all kinds of winter weather in those thin, black spandex pants. People like to complain about the hideousness of Ugg boots, but Ugg boots don’t bother me nearly as much as the black tights that get tucked into them. I am of the opinion that if it’s cold enough to be wearing boots, it’s cold enough that you should be wearing pants thicker than a dryer sheet. So why do women wear them? “Because they’re so comfortable!” This is the untrue, defensive cry of women all over America who starve and suck themselves into whatever ridiculous trend they think will turn them into a walking sex symbol. It’s like the time my friend bought a pair of Crocs a few summers ago when they became popular (not that this exactly turned her into a walking sex symbol). When we all made fun of her for it, she insisted that she only wore them because they were so convenient to wear in water. This seemed legitimate, because who doesn’t like to wear shoes in the water to keep the bottoms of their feet dry? But her argument became void the following winter when she purchased a new pair of Crocs lined with fake fur.
I voted for Barack Obama. But even if you are a Republican or didn’t support Obama, there are still a number of reasons to be excited and optimistic for the future. First of all, the youth vote in this election was extremely important, and I think as college students this was exciting. It was uplifting and uniting to have so much fervor on college campuses and among friends and peers. I felt something like patriotism after Obama’s election occurred, and it is sad to say, but I have never experienced this feeling as strongly as I did on this night. It was wonderful to see so many young people advocating for their candidates, passionate for the issues, educating themselves and voting. Hopefully this excitement that our age group has carries on for the rest of the year. Secondly, it is truly amazing that Obama is the first black man to be president in America. According to an article in USA Today, white supremacist groups are actually on the rise , but the fact that over half of Americans wanted a black man over a white one says a lot about where we are as a country.
Around my left wrist you will see a black metal bracelet that reads: Adrian Orosco, 2005 KIA, Iraq. Adrian was a good friend as well as a good soldier. He and I were stationed together in an infantry platoon in California before being deployed to Iraq in 2005. I returned home. Adrian did not. Even though it’s been almost three years since an improvised explosive devise took his life, I can still remember that day as if it were yesterday. The bracelet I wear is one of millions honoring the life of a fallen soldier. These bracelets are a reminder to us of what some have sacrificed. Thousands of families all across the United States have had to bear the brunt of this war. Some have had their brothers, sisters, fathers or even mothers board a cargo plane bound for Iraq or Afghanistan. Watching a loved one get sent overseas is not an easy task to bear. An 18-year-old recent high school graduate, a father leaving for his third deployment, a mother having a 10-month tour extended into a 14-month tour as a result of “stop-loss”; these stories are real and most often unfeasible to bear. Families like Adrian’s and countless others have had to bear the ultimate burden of having their loved one taken away from them.
40% Steve gives students a chance to hear their favorite popular rock songs live.
Senior Lizzie Millis has been skating since she was four years old and has been skating competitively since she was seven years old. Even though Millis had a lot of skating experience, the vice president of IU’s intercollegiate skating team had never competed in synchronized skating prior to coming to IU. “In synchronized skating, you need to have a different mind-set,” Millis said. “It was difficult for me to rely on people. I am not a huge team sports person. If someone is doing something wrong, you can’t control it ... you have to get along with people. You don’t want to nag.”