Homeless shelters low on space
While near-zero degree temperatures blasted Bloomington this week, the risk of serious illness among the local homeless has caused concern among local shelter organizers.
While near-zero degree temperatures blasted Bloomington this week, the risk of serious illness among the local homeless has caused concern among local shelter organizers.
The name "Taiwan" would soon replace "China" on the island's stamps, a move likely to anger Beijing, Taiwan's president, Chen Shui-bian, said Thursday. Labels and titles are sensitive issues in both Taiwan and China, which split amid civil war in 1949.
BEIJING -- China has distributed a draft agreement to the countries at international talks seeking to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons programs, a South Korean official said early Friday.
Located around campus, national and local newspapers including USA Today, the New York Times and the Indianapolis Star are available to IU students. However, it remains to be seen how many students take advantage of them.
Almost a year after Hurricane Katrina, 82-year old Herbert Gettridge is still rebuilding his home in the lower 9th Ward, one of the poorest and most deserted areas in New Orleans.
With the smell of freshly cleaned clothes in the air, freshmen Dani Meier and Joshua Garver sit at a table in Teter Quad on Wednesday waiting for their laundry to finish.
For the first time since 2002, the IU women's tennis team is 8-0. But when the Hoosiers travel to Tobacco Road to play Duke on Saturday and North Carolina on Sunday, their spotless record could receive its first blemish. When looking at the latest team rankings from the Intercollegiate Tennis Association, it doesn't take long to find either of IU's upcoming opponents. North Carolina holds the No. 7 slot and Duke is just outside the top 10 at No. 11.
It has been a rough two weeks for the No. 22 IU wrestling team. After losing their first dual meet of the season against Illinois on Jan. 21, the Hoosiers went on to lose their next three meets, the most recent loss coming against North Carolina State last weekend.
The young Hoosier track teams are packing up their shoes, speed suits and toothbrushes as they hit the road for the first time this season. The teams are heading to Fayetteville, Ark., the home of this year's NCAA Indoor Championships and this weekend's Tyson Invitational.
Last year, IU junior swimmer Ben Hesen helped lead the men's swimming and diving team to its first Big Ten title in 21 years. While he believes that experience will help the team at this year's conference tournament, he said he expects that the upperclassmen will find this meet similar to last year's.
You win some and you lose some. Just one week ago, the IU women's basketball team snapped a five-game losing streak against Wisconsin, beating the Badgers 83-56. But last night, the Badgers got their revenge on their home court, taking a 60-53 win against IU.
Round 1 went to Illinois coach Bruce Weber and the Fighting Illini. On Jan. 23, the IU men's basketball team suffered a 51-43 road loss to the Illini, which snapped a five-game winning streak. The Hoosiers shot just 29.4 percent from the 3-point line in the loss and failed to reach the free-throw line in the second half of play. Round 2, the Hoosiers say, won't be so easy for Illinois.
Auto parts maker BorgWarner, Inc. will close its plant in the city, costing 780 people their jobs, the company announced Thursday.
The operator of an unlicensed day care admitted she threw a 4-month-old infant to the floor and violently shook the boy, Fishers police said.
Indiana Senate leaders are pushing for a bill they hope will encourage sixth-grade girls to become vaccinated against a sexually transmitted disease that can cause cervical cancer -- legislation they say is a good balance between parental rights and protecting women's health.
Digital art, as its name implies, is almost entirely computer-generated. It is rising in popularity among artists and is often shown in the SoFA gallery here on campus.
A clown killing a mime is quite possibly the saddest thing in the world. It happened in the first "circus opera" adaptation of "Acic and Galatea" at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The scene began with greetings from a mime, clown, bear, ringmaster and trapeze artist. It was, by all accounts, G.F. Handel's opera "Acis and Galatea" disguised as a traveling, big-top circus. Though not set up in an early 1900s tent, it might as well have been.
When considering all of the media circuses that have paraded around our nation's front pages and news stations recently, there is certainly no shortage of stories so sensationalized that they approach the point of stimulating a gag reflex. The general public has been over-saturated with more than its fair share of ongoing sensational coverage: the Monica Lewinski scandal, the 2000 election, which quickly became the Florida recount, and then led into the "hanging chad" fiasco, a full year of Sept. 11, the continual beating of the dead horse that is the war on terror, Hurricane Katrina -- the list is nearly endless.
It's hard to feel sorry for prisoners. They're not exactly model citizens. Often in jail for serious crimes like murder and rape, communities would rather have wrongdoers locked up behind bars, no matter what the circumstances or the offense.
Not only did America re-engineer modern democracy, we tamed the wild, wild West and harnessed the power of the atom. Although, I guess when you get right down to it, our modern democracy was built on the backs of African slaves. Oh, and then there were those natives exploited and massacred for land rights. You know what, let's just move on and forget about the repercussions of nuclear power for now.