Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Thursday, April 30
The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA


Georgia Perry

Poet, you know it

·

In the first round of the poetry slam, Indianapolis resident Tasha Jones brought the house down with the performance of her first poem. The poem was so intimidating that the next man competing forfeited his time and a chance to win $100. “Man, I am not a poet,” he muttered before wandering off the stage, looking like a toddler lost at the supermarket.


The Indiana Daily Student

Late run leads to Hoosier victory

·

The IU men’s basketball needed something to go its way during Wednesday night’s game against Minnesota. Shots fell and rebounds bounced their way, but the Hoosiers clung to a small lead that they could not increase.


The Indiana Daily Student

Oncourse and sex machines

·

Pimples, tumors and testicle sweat: These are now the only attributes that distinguish human beings from robots. Our imperfections.


Courtesy Photo

Student presents play about coping with heroin addiction

·

Garlia Jones never got to say goodbye to a close friend who died of a heroin overdose last year. Jones, finishing her master’s degree in African American and African Diaspora Studies, is the writer and director of the play “Against the Grain,” which debuts at 8 p.m. today at the John Waldron Arts Center, 122 S. Walnut St. “When he died, the best thing for me to do was to write,” said Jones, who wrote the play for her master’s thesis production.


The Indiana Daily Student

Event to promote Asian culture

·

The Asian American Association is putting a spin on MTV’s “Diary” TV series this Friday at its annual fashion show. The IU show, titled “The Diary of an Asian American,” will feature several types of dancing and runway modeling from different Asian organizations on campus.


The Indiana Daily Student

Energy efficiency would save IU money

·

The Feb. 14 piece “Money talks” was a particularly important one as students should be aware of how budget spending has the potential to greatly affect their experience at IU. While the author correctly raised the possibility of directing funding toward sustainability, the author’s arguments against it were unsound.



The Indiana Daily Student

STAND against genocide in Darfur

·

Is our state helping to fund the ongoing genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan? Indiana is one of almost 20 states considering legislation that would require removal of money from companies that operate in Sudan and are complicit in the genocide. This presents an exciting new angle from which to pursue advocacy on behalf of Darfur.



Rom--com a bit off--key

·

I went into this movie with high hopes. Since both stars had a good run in romantic comedies, I thought the combination of the two would play well together, but I was very wrong because they both lacked chemistry. Through the whole movie, everything felt very predictable and formulaic. There was the sudden-realization-they-like-each-other-after-working-together scene, the fight scene that drives them apart and makes them question their feelings and the fight-gets-worse-will-they-make-up scene that was immediately followed by the typical guy-redeems-himself-and-wins-the-girl scene.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU's own Oscar winners

·

Sunday night, several students will be relaxing in front of the television at 8 p.m. watching the 79th annual Academy Awards. A few might even dream of being on the red carpet, either because of their own accomplishments or because of their aspirations to date one of Hollywood's hottest. While these people might just fantasize, some IU students have turned their red carpet dreams into reality later in life, and others got to their five minutes of fame standing in as extras in an Oscar-winning film shot on campus.


The Indiana Daily Student

New city Web site tracks environmental statistics

·

More than two-thirds of Bloomington workers commute to work alone everyday, according to the 2000 Census. 10 percent of workers walk and 10 percent carpool. Two percent ride bicycles to work and, believe it or not, that’s up 19 percent since 1990.



The Indiana Daily Student

IU photographer defines sexual slang in new dictionary

·

CEOs, Grammy winners and Pulitzer Prize recipients rank among the most prominent figures to ever walk IU’s hallowed halls. Now, graduate student Jordan Tate is paving his own path of distinction by adding a new title to the list: dictionary writer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Back on track

·

Um, if I could just write in this space, “IU will beat Minnesota,” that would be lovely. But see, I have more space to fill than that.


Stephen Crane

Author speaks about political power of hip-hop music

·

Hip-hop expert Bakari Kitwana challenged IU students to use the music that’s part of their everyday lives as a means to change the political atmosphere of the nation during his speech Tuesday at the IU Auditorium. “You can’t really have a political movement without a political infrastructure,” Kitwana said. “The hip-hop movement has created a national infrastructure – young activists that understand the power are tapping into it to make a political change.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Illinois basketball player charged with felonies in recent crash

·

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – Illinois basketball player Jamar Smith – charged Tuesday with drunk driving and leaving the scene of an accident – apparently believed a teammate in the car had died, authorities said. Smith, 19, was driving a 1996 Lexus shortly after 11 p.m. on Feb. 12 when it struck a tree in heavy snow. He then drove the car a little over a mile to the apartment complex where he lived in the small town of Savoy.



The Indiana Daily Student

Bill approved by state Senate committee would privatize lottery

·

Enticed by the notion of landing more cash to develop life sciences, IU officials supported Tuesday’s Senate committee approval of the controversial Hoosier lottery privatization bill. The bill, which squeaked through the Indiana Senate Tax and Fiscal committee with a 7-5 vote of approval, calls for a corporate takeover of the state-run lottery, which is another public sector