IUSA
City council approves clearing of sidewalks
The Bloomington City Council passed an ordinance 9-0 Wednesday requiring a clear, straight path of no less than 54 inches on downtown sidewalks.
Hip Hop Congress freestyles its way to national convention
Three IU delegates are preparing to attend the first ever Hip Hop Congress National Conference to be held May 31 through June 2. The IU delegates, chapter president Alex Fruchter, junior, treasurer Adriana Guerro and graduate student Amer Ahmed, will travel to San Jose State University and join delegates from the five other university chapters. The National Convention itinerary includes music workshops, chapter workshops, freestyle screenings and a Congress mixer. The music workshops will discuss issues such as problems in hip hop today and provide ten steps to creating music. The chapter workshops give individual chapters time to meet and develop plans for the coming year and discuss recruiting new members.
Aging like wine
Murray StreetSonic YouthDGC Records Inc.
Knight criticizes IU again
INDIANAPOLIS -- Texas Tech coach Bob Knight once again criticized IU and its administration during a lengthy television interview about his firing from the school and his new job.
Featured restaurant:
The ESPN Zone restaurant in Atlanta has events planned for the Final Four weekend, including a Dick Vitale Sound-Alike Contest and several ESPN Sports Center broadcasts, Marketing Manager for ESPN Zone, Hassy Braggs said. The restaurant also has about 200 TVs (including some in the restrooms), and an interactive sports arena. Customers can shoot half-court shots, shoot pucks in the 30 ft. hockey rink, race in the Daytona Special car tracks, and take part in a boxing match.
'Hippies' fizzles out
Tin soldiers and Nixon's coming / We're finally on our own / This summer I hear the drumming / Four dead in Ohio." What may strike students today most about Kent State University are the lyrics to "Ohio," that folksy cut by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young mourning the four dead students of the May anti-Vietnam demonstration in 1970. It was a time of confusion, long hair, arguments with parents, political do-good activism and love -- or so says the new college-student-geared novel "Hippies." Across the country in 1969-70, 20-somethings were shipping out to Vietnam, protesting the violent war and discovering life. Author Peter Jedick spins back to his time as a student at Kent State to depict the sometimes groovy, sometimes foretelling, school year before hell broke loose at Kent State.
New exhibit explores the abstract
Jared Janovec is interested in the parallels between human portraiture and botanical phenomena. He never had a particular flair for horticulture, but that didn't stop him from using fruits and vegetables as his medium in a School of Fine Arts exhibit that is now showing ceramics, metal works and paintings by last semester's masters of fine arts students. SoFA gallery director Betsy Stirratt said there will be a reception to officially kick off the show on Friday, Jan. 11 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The reception will be open to the public.
Hoosiers to begin road series
After completing a 12-game homestand, the baseball team packs its bags for a weekend trip to Ann Arbor to face the University of Michigan Wolverines in a four-game series.
Divers head south for championship
As most students head home for the summer, three IU divers have been preparing for the FINA/USA Grand Prix Diving Championships which will be held in Coral Springs, Fla. this weekend.
Even Osama needs PR help
Dear Mr. bin Laden, Although Thomas E. Ricks of The Washington Post (Feb. 25) reports that you might still be alive and kicking in the rugged territory between Afghanistan and Pakistan, you seem like a distant memory over here in the states. I wonder if they're still selling Osama voo-doo dolls in Times Square.
Administrator described as 'friendly workaholic'
IU's new chancellor and vice president for academic affairs, Sharon S. Brehm, has been widely described as a "friendly workaholic," with an infinite amount of energy and a commitment to excellence. But really she just likes to read, travel and ride in fast planes. "I adore reading, and I always have like six books going," she said. "The ability to open a book and open a world will never lose its excitement for me."
Retaliation necessary
Missing: 4,763 Confirmed dead: 576 That is 5,313 fellow Americans who will always be a part of America but who will never again walk this great land. A town's worth of fellow citizens who were felled by an act of terrorism. At least 50 of them were soldiers and sailors who swore an oath to defend our country against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Implicit in that oath is the understanding that we, the American people, have a part in this pact. Our part is to not let their deaths go unavenged.
'Hart's War' a losing battle
In Hollywood's post Sept. 11 patriotic fervor, there was a literal invasion of War movies. Luckily, most moviegoers took a pass on "Hart's War," a dangerously flawed film. This Bruce Willis driven tank hits tons of landmines from start to finish.
Hoosiers have flawless weekend
Having just completed a road trip, the women's tennis team wanted to make a statement at the IU Tennis Center Saturday. Mission accomplished. The Hoosiers (10-6, 1-2 Big Ten) ripped through two opponents, defeating Illinois-Chicago in the morning and Butler in the afternoon, both by a flawless 7-0 score.
N. Ireland peace process needs more momentum, Irish leader says
The British and Irish governments must give renewed momentum to the Northern Ireland peace process, Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern said Sunday as he called on all sides to help ease simmering sectarian tensions.
Taken under advisory
Music censorship is nothing new to American culture. In fact, government officials and special interest groups have been trying to censor music since before the 1950s. From Elvis' appearances on the "Ed Sullivan Show" to Marilyn Manson concerts, popular music always seems to make someone mad. With "Parental Advisory: Music Censorship In America," author Eric Nuzum, a pop-culture critic and program director of WKSU-FM at Kent State University, details and follows the evolution of music censorship in America.

