Folklore Conference looks to push student boundaries
Throughout a student's undergraduate academic career, professors often attempt to mold students into a cookie cutter of due dates, paper lengths and approved vocabularies.
Throughout a student's undergraduate academic career, professors often attempt to mold students into a cookie cutter of due dates, paper lengths and approved vocabularies.
Everyone has had it happen: You sit in class trying to grasp a concept, yet for some reason it simply will not click. Maybe the professor's intelligence level prevents him or her from explaining it well, or maybe the subject matter is so difficult that it is too much to take in all at once.
So despite all the upsets, despite all the madness and after all has been said and done, the nation's undisputed top two teams will meet tonight with the national championship on the line. Tonight's title bout portrays the classic contrast of style versus substance, glamour versus grit and all the other cliché sports jargon you can think of.
Sophomore Ravi J. Patel, the driver of the van that struck a concrete light pole in the Assembly Hall parking lot Thursday night, was arrested for resisting law enforcement, operating a vehicle while intoxicated resulting in serious injury, reckless driving, criminal recklessness, illegal consumption of alcohol and reckless possession of paraphernalia, according to the IU Police Department.
ST. LOUIS -- It's been 30 years since the top two teams in The Associated Press poll met in college basketball's national championship game. No matter what happens Monday night when top-ranked Illinois faces North Carolina, it won't affect the sport the way the last 1-2 title match-up did. No. 1 UCLA beat Kentucky 92-85 that night in San Diego to give John Wooden his 10th national championship in his final game.
If the first two series events are any indication of what is to come on Little 500 race day, fans could be in for quite a ride come April 16. Alpha Tau Omega rider junior Hans Arnesen picked up where he left off from his record-setting day in the Individual Time Trials as he won Saturday's Miss-N-Out competition.
Boy drowns after friends dare him to jump into lake EVANSVILLE, Ind. -- A 14-year-old boy who jumped into a chilly lake on a dare apparently drowned after he re-entered the water to retrieve his wallet, police said.
I sit in the quarters once reserved for Egyptian officers who came to Al Sahra, the Iraqi Air Force College, to give instruction on their various tactics, techniques and procedures. The base currently bears an American name (which I am unable to disclose) and houses several thousand troops like me.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- British playwright Sonja Linden has spent her career bringing horrific subjects to the stage. She dramatized a prison bathing strike and set another play in a concentration camp. Now, the 1994 massacre in Rwanda is the subject of her latest work.
Bloomington's theater artists have given the community a great deal of original work this season. This burgeoning of new, local work made the Bloomington Playwrights Project "Alone in the Light" all the more exciting and gratifying. The event featured eleven monologues written and performed by BPP ensemble members, who were literally 'alone in the light' of the BPP's Lora Shiner Studio.
The name "Charlie Chaplin" can conjure up images of his so-called "Tramp" character, who is light-hearted and fun. Many people have probably seen some of his classic films that made him a star: "The Kid," "Modern Times" and "City Lights," to name a few.
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan is not pleased with his organization, and it is easy to see why. Member states make empty pledges of aid, Annan's own son is at the center of the U.N. oil-for-food scandal, and Libya, of all countries, oversees the U.N. human rights division. Thus, Annan has decided to clean house.
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Lawmakers broke days of rancorous stalemate Sunday and reached out to Iraq's Sunni Muslim minority for their parliament speaker, cutting through ethnic and sectarian barriers that have held up selection of a new government for more than two months since the country's first free elections in 50 years.
VATICAN CITY -- Pope John Paul II, a dynamic preacher who traveled the world, battled communism and proclaimed his moral code, set an example of how to live life. In his later years, crushed by sickness that slowed his vigorous gait and silenced his powerful voice, he became an example of how to suffer and how to die.
INDIANAPOLIS -- The federal agency that oversees the nation's time zones has given Indiana permission to move the state to daylight-saving time in June if state lawmakers still debating the proposal approve the switch.
TERRE HAUTE -- A Holocaust museum gutted by a November 2003 arson fire reopened Sunday in an expanded space that includes displays of books and photos charred by the still-unsolved arson. About 500 people attended Sunday afternoon's reopening of the new museum. The 3,700-square-foot building's entrance is flanked by six slender windows that resemble candles and represent the estimated 6 million Jews who perished in the Holocaust.
Every year about this time, IU students think about their next semester in Bloomington. Apartments, greek housing and on-campus residences are usually the normal locations students choose. While those opportunities are convenient for many students, the idea of owning a home has grown for those not interested in typical housing options.
Congressman Mike Sodrel visited Bloomington Friday to share his vision of America's future during an open town-hall style meeting Friday. City residents, students and guests packed the Bloomington Township fire station to hear Sodrel, R-Ind., discuss national preservation, the Iraq war, tax cuts and the environment. Most of the questions, however, concerned Social Security reform.
When I was a kid, I was warned of the dangers of role-playing games. According to Web sites and a lot of parents, a lifetime playing Dungeons and Dragons was a life that lead to drug use, Satanism and eventual suicide via Satanic drug use. Of course, I never took any of this seriously, because I knew that people couldn't be so easily swayed by some twenty-sided dice.
The third-longest reigning pope in history, John Paul II, will be remembered not for the length of his papacy or for his final moments in the public eye, but for his willingness to reach beyond the realm of religion and into the world of the political.