Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Wednesday, July 15
The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA


The Indiana Daily Student

Local project gives new life to old bikes

·

Grease fills the small room in Harmony Elementary School. Fifteen bikes sit in plain sight -- some of them ready to go, some not. Used seats are piled in the corner, and, across the room, tires sit neatly aligned. Standing in the center of the room with grease-covered hands, repairman Sasha Land inspects one of the bikes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Transfer to don Hoosier jersey

·

After not being able to score against the Hoosiers earlier in the season, sophomore midfielder Kara Bryan will now try to score for the Hoosiers in the 2001 season. Bryan transferred to IU after spending two seasons with Butler. Bryan transferred after the fall semester and is attending classes in Bloomington. She plans to sign a scholarship to play for coach Joe Kelley's Hoosiers Wednesday, the first day of the signing period.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senior lets game speak for itself

·

If you want to find a quiet leader who lets his game speak for itself, look no farther than senior Mike Pinger. With IU's men's club volleyball team resting at the top of the standings in the Midwest (7-0), Pinger, a co-captain, is the one player who can remember just a few years ago, when the team was winless.


The Indiana Daily Student

NHL set to begin second half of season

·

Sunday's NHL All-Star Game bore more resemblance to a game of NHL '93 for the Sega Genesis than a real game, as the North American team dropped the World squad by a 14-12 tally. Fun and games aside, though, the players are ready to get back on the ice for the real action as they push to make it to the Stanley Cup Playoffs in April. And while things will shape up as the season moves on, it must be noted that the first half provided a number of surprises, and also allowed us to see who the top contenders for the Cup will be.

The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

Center on Congress receives grant for Internet program The Center on Congress has received a two-year, $200,000 grant from the Henry Luce Foundation. The money will go toward improving public understanding of the U.S. Congress through a new interactive, Web-based program.


The Indiana Daily Student

Employees honored for saving life

The American Heart Association honored two campus employees Tuesday for their work in saving a student's life last semester.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA elections commissioner: SCUM ticket ineligible to run

·

The race to win control of the IU Student Association became one ticket smaller this week after an IUSA declaration. The elections commissioner declared the Students Concerned with University Matters (SCUM) ticket ineligible Monday. The group has decided to remain involved in the election under the auspices of the Optimistic New Energy (ONE) ticket. IUSA declared SCUM ineligible because a congressional candidate was needed to complete the ticket, according to an e-mail sent by the IUSA elections commissioner.


The Indiana Daily Student

Symphony orchestra to perform at MAC

·

Going into a symphony orchestra performance, one wouldn't normally expect music that can be described as "weird," "grotesque" or "unusual." But when the IU Symphony Orchestra takes the stage at 8 p.m. today at the Musical Arts Center, the music will be just that, at least according to the people who will be playing it.


The Indiana Daily Student

House votes to lower legal blood-alcohol level

·

After a decade, it appears likely that Indiana will lower its legal drinking limit. Monday, the house overwhelmingly voted -- 89-6 -- to bring the legal blood-alcohol level down from .10 to .08. Under the bill, no further evidence of impairment would be required for a drunk driving conviction. "We're not going after the social drinkers or even the heavy drinkers," said state Rep. Peggy Welch, D-Bloomington, who sponsored the legislation. "But you should not be driving, if you're impaired. At 0.08, you're impaired."


The Indiana Daily Student

Medicinal useful enough to be legalized

·

My dad is a psychiatrist. He is 54 years old. And he believes in the legalization of marijuana. If you saw him, you'd never believe it. He sports the gray-turning-white beard, and every time I do anything, he is quick to remind me why, psychologically, I must have done it. But the man, a lifelong Presbyterian and elder, believes marijuana should be legal. He doesn't smoke it, but he sure doesn't knock it.


The Indiana Daily Student

Marriage doesn't define my relationship

·

The gay drug of choice isn't Ecstasy, it's equality, and lots of it. This choice has been confirmed in the last couple of years with the battle over marriage rights. I missed my mailing from Queer headquarters, lost somewhere among the HH Gregg advertisements and the weekly offer of platinum credit cards. The one that said, "We must be married! Now!"


The Indiana Daily Student

A return to the simpler days

·

Sitting there in the barber's chair, I couldn't help but notice the gray hair on the apron that was draped over my shoulders. OK, so the gray hair wasn't actually there, at least not yet. But as I looked at myself in the mirror across from the red vinyl chair I was relaxing in, I couldn't help but imagine what I will look like as an old man and wonder, how many haircuts do I have left?


The Indiana Daily Student

Special Olympians

·

Sounds of flailing and gasping awoke Ron McGovern, 59, in the dead of the night 15 years ago. Waking his wife Diana, 57, he rushed to the room next door to find their 22-year-old son Billy in the throes of a major seizure. Billy's head was twisted to the side and pounded against his pillow. His muscles convulsed as he lay unconscious on the upper deck of the bunk bed he shared with his younger brother, Steve. Billy, 37, and Steve, 35, suffer from the fragile X syndrome, a condition that leaves them both mildly mentally handicapped. Epilepsy also plagues their lives. Despite their disabilities, Billy and Steve live their lives to the fullest, whether at home, at work or in the Special Olympics arena.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Arts

Kilroy's bachelor auction to raise money for RileyKilroy's Sports Bar, 319 N. Walnut St., will sponsor a bachelor auction tonight to raise money for Riley Children's Hospital in Indianapolis. Bachelors will include former soccer player and alumnus Dennis Fadeski, Interfraternity Council President senior Ben Schmidt and B97 General Manager Arthur Angotti Jr. The preliminary round begins at 8 p.m., and bidding will begin at 9. Cover charge is $1.


The Indiana Daily Student

Religious aid inappropriate

President George W. Bush has only been in office for two weeks and already has created a stir. His latest plan, a faith-based initiative that would support many religious philanthropy groups, has turned Democratic and Republican heads. Distributing federal funds to religious groups is inappropriate and begins to blur the lines separating church and state.


The Indiana Daily Student

Middle East nations discuss terms for peace

·

They have been fighting for more than 50 years. Since Israel gained independence in 1948, the Middle East has been a region of turmoil, each side hoping for peace. "It's a tough neighborhood," said Mark Regev, a counselor at the Israeli Embassy in Washington. Israel made peace with Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994 after years of war. To the north, in the lush Galilee bordered by Israel and Lebanon, fighting continues.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alumna authors book, teaches belly dancing

·

Belly dancing gave IU grad Donna Carlton a new career. "I was working at a desk job, and I was really unhappy," Carlton said. " So a friend got me interested in Middle Eastern dance." Carlton now teaches a Middle Eastern dance class at the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation building and has written a book called "Looking for Little Egypt."


The Indiana Daily Student

School of Music honors late professor

·

The School of Music paid tribute to the late Walter Cassel, a singer and music professor for 20 years, Sunday in Auer Hall. Musicians from IU and Cassel's former students from across the country joined in remembering the legend. Although he was best known as a musical actor, he was also a photographer and an award-winning athlete.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chocolate confections

·

My grumpy, cynical side longs to dismiss Valentine's Day as the Madison Avenue-produced frenzy of fluff I know it to be. But the strength of my testy convictions is curiously and invariably out-muscled each Feb. 14 by my softer, squishier side. After all, how could a winter's day dedicated to the sanctioned consumption of chocolate be all bad?