Hoosiers prepare for 'in-state rivals'
The IU softball team (10-26, 1-7) made critical strides this off-season with their sights centered on making the Big Ten Tournament.
The IU softball team (10-26, 1-7) made critical strides this off-season with their sights centered on making the Big Ten Tournament.
On April 19, the Business Careers in Entertainment Club will be hosting its fourth annual King of the Court Contest.
With an undefeated record, the IU Cricket Club has something to be proud of — even if they are just 1-0.
Golfers looking to find a place to compete can come to the call-out meeting for the Student Golf League at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Kelley School of Business, room 732. The meeting is open to all interested students.
Whether it’s rain or shine, the No. 24 men’s golf team knows how to win.
It’s called the Indiana Invitational, making it appropriate that a team from the state of Indiana would win the tournament. However it wasn’t the Hoosiers that won, but in-state rival Purdue.
The IU baseball team is hoping to settle itself defensively today against Miami (Ohio) after it allowed 18 runs against Illinois on Monday.
Retail gas prices could climb as high as $4 a gallon this summer, but prices at such lofty levels will make many Americans think twice about hitting the road this summer, the Energy Department said Tuesday.
The U.S. general commanding the Iraq war called Tuesday for an open-ended suspension of U.S. troop withdrawals this summer, reflecting concern about a recent flare-up in violence and leaving open the possibility that few, if any, additional troops will be brought home before President Bush leaves office in January.
Dave Matthews. Bill Clinton. Kal Penn. Chelsea Clinton. Jeremy Piven. Sean Astin. All are celebrities of varying levels of fame, and all are surrogates for either Sen. Hillary Clinton or Sen. Barack Obama. And in the past week and a half, all six have made visits to Bloomington.
Last month, Sen. John McCain raised $15 million. Sen. Barack Obama, however, raised more than $40 million. I’ll let that sink in for just a second. That’s $40 million ... in a month.
Something close to my heart is taking place this Friday. Well, two things, actually – I really can’t wait to see Yung Joc in concert at Sigma Alpha Mu. But the other semi-momentous occasion going on in the world is the one-year anniversary of Kurt Vonnegut’s death.
I don’t suppose seeing Bill Clinton should have been that big of a deal. Sure, the guy is an ex-president, but I had seen plenty of other big-name politicians speak, including Sen. Barack Obama. Is an ex-president really as exciting as a future president?
Various children’s advocacy organizations in the United Kingdom are calling for a ban on employers looking at prospective employees’ Facebook pages, citing data protection laws. According to a story in the Daily Mail, studies found that one in five employers check the Internet and social networking sites for information on prospective employees. And for these organizations, that’s just too much.
IU Opera Theater celebrated 60 years of opera performance Friday night at the Musical Arts Center with Jacques Offenbach’s “Les Contes D’Hoffmann.”
It’s almost as if people have this all-known consensus that local bands that play at bars, in general, are bad, and therefore these people feel the need to clarify when they say that said local band is “actually pretty good.”
One IU class is reaching beyond the classroom and giving back to the community. Students taking environmental biology L350 are required to complete 15 hours of service learning by participating in one of three projects. One class project involves teaching Fairview Elementary School students how to garden.
March 17 to 24 marked the first “Big Ten Week” for ORBIS International, the “flying eye hospital” that travels to Third-World countries to provide ophthalmology training and medical assistance to local doctors.
Students had the opportunity to buy books, videos and CDs for a dollar or less Tuesday. The Residential Programs and Services annual libraries’ book and media sale offered videos, CDs, hardback and paperback books to students for cheap outside of the Teter Academic Support Center from noon to 6 p.m. Shawn Wilson, the RPS libraries manager, said the sale helps support RPS libraries.
Racers practicing for the Little 500 won’t be the only ones mounting Schwinn bicycles this week. In addition to the 300 competitors in the Little 500, students and faculty will get the chance to take part in a campus-wide fundraising event to “ride” 7,710 miles for impoverished children in sub-Saharan Africa.