Minor grease fire at Read Center McDonald's causes dorm evacuation
A minor grease fire Thursday at the Read Center McDonald's caused more than $20,000 in damages and the evacuation of most of the dorm.
A minor grease fire Thursday at the Read Center McDonald's caused more than $20,000 in damages and the evacuation of most of the dorm.
There are a number of things that can set people's tempers blaring here at IU. Some people get behind the wheel of car and begin displaying obscene cases of road rage. Perfectly understandable at times, especially here in Bloomington -- like when certain people can't get their Ugg(ly)-boot-encased lead feet to function properly while simultaneously driving, attempting to see over their sunglasses and talking to their best friends on their cell phones about how they hope that frat boy they slept with last week didn't give them herpes. It's quite normal to experience some road rage in such conditions, as long as you don't go around shooting people in Bryan Park over it or something.
Amid ongoing disputes between Bloomington Hospital and the Anthem/WellPoint insurance company, IU-Bloomington employees learned Wednesday they will not be insured at the hospital beginning Jan. 1.
Dainty tutus wrapped around tiny waists, faded pink pointe shoes nearly black on the toes and bodies lithe from years of practice will all be a part of an IU tradition this weekend, now in its 48th year.
A minor grease fire at the Read McDonald's late Thursday morning resulted in minor damage but caused of all Read Center to evacuate, said Bloomington Fire Department Battalion Chief Mark Webb. The fire started in the fryer, but the exact cause is undetermined at this time, said Fire Prevention Officer Todd Easton. Damage was limited to the fryer, said McDonnald's owner Roland Long, but he suspects it will cost at least $20,000 to replace it, in addition to the cost of replacing the ductwork which was also damaged in the fire. Assistant Manager Melanie Scott said she was working at the fryer when the fire started. "Smoke started billowing out and we opened the doors and saw flames and got everybody out," she said. Scott wasn't too concerned about the damage, saying no one was worried or scared from the situation.
Though University policy prevented IU attorneys from giving doctoral student Chris Soghoian legal representation during a recent FBI investigation, Soghoian has voiced his discontent for the school's lack of support.
Mark Winstead, manager of the Wright Place food court, gathered a few of his employees last week and suggested they update their resumes. This is in the wake of further chatter among trustees that the privatization of current in-house operations could ease the University's financial burdens. Already up for private bidding are the IU Motor Pool and the IU Bookstore, and trustees said it was likely dining services would follow in the spring. Despite objections by some staff members who fear they will join the ranks of America's unemployed following a private takeover, the University's interest in outsourcing is among a rising trend. Mitzi Shrum, an employee within the Wright Place food court, is worried about losing her job if IU eventually opens dining services to private bidders.
WASHINGTON -- A record 7 million people -- or one in every 32 American adults -- were behind bars, on probation or on parole by the end of last year, according to the Justice Department. Of those, 2,193,798 were in prison or jail, an increase of 2.7 percent over the previous year. Even though data show more prison releases, the report said, admissions still exceed releases. More than 4.1 million people were on probation and 784,208 were on parole at the end of 2005. Men still far outnumber women in prisons and jails, but the female population is growing faster. Over the past year, the population of females in state or federal prison increased 2.6 percent while the number of male inmates rose 1.9 percent. By year's end, 7 percent of all inmates were women. "Today's figures fail to capture incarceration's impact on the thousands of children left behind by mothers in prison," Marc Mauer, the executive director of the Sentencing Project, a Washington-based group supporting criminal justice reform, said in a statement. "Misguided policies that create harsher sentences for nonviolent drug offenses are disproportionately responsible for the increasing rates of women in prisons and jails." From 1995 until 2003, inmates in federal prisons for drug offenses have accounted for 49 percent of total prison population growth.
Although Kwanzaa doesn't officially begin until Dec. 26, more than 200 IU students and faculty, as well as members of the Bloomington community, gathered together for the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center's annual Pre-Kwanzaa Celebration Wednesday night. "Tonight was excellent, and we are very pleased with the turnout," said Oyibo Afoaku, director of the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center. "This event was very important because IU is a big campus, but a program like Kwanzaa, which is so positive, brings everyone together." The celebration began with a libation, the traditional African send-off that blesses the event and gets people excited to be there, she said. Following the libation, audience members joined in with the singing of the Black National Anthem. With musical accompaniment, three different vocal ensembles took the stage to perform soulful renditions of Christian songs throughout the night. Despite the nature of these performances, Kwanzaa is not a religious event. "Kwanzaa is a time for ingathering and for our people to bond together," said keynote speaker Rev. Patricia Efiom, an IU graduate and Bloomington resident. "Kwanzaa is not a religious holiday but a cultural one, an opportunity for us to gather and remember who we are and honor and celebrate one another." In her speech, Efiom identified the meaning of Kwanzaa and its importance for African-Americans today. She also talked about Maulana Karenga, the creator of Kwanzaa, who spoke at last year's Pre-Kwanzaa Celebration. "One thing that happened with slavery is that we were ripped apart from our homeland and each other," she said. "The split and divide has never been completely corrected, but Karenga in the '60s recognized this. His attempt with Kwanzaa was to bring us together again."
Just in time for holiday shopping, IU faculty and students will have the opportunity to buy gifts with a good conscience. Students in Free Enterprise is hosting a fair trade benefit sale from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. today in the Georgian Room of the Indiana Memorial Union. The sale will feature unique crafts and handmade gifts created by artisans from around the world. All merchandise will be provided by Global Gifts, a fair trade store in Indianapolis. Fair trade is the equal partnership with Third World countries to better the lives of artisans, producers and workers. All of the items made follow the fair trade standards of paying workers fair wages while using environmentally friendly methods. The fair trade sale is fair to its customers, too. Neither students nor Bloomington residents will need to break the bank to shop at the campus sale. Gifts for the whole family include clothing from India, handcrafted jewelry, home decor and holiday decorations. Everything falls between $1 and $200, said Mary Embry, an apparel merchandising faculty member and advisor to SIFE.
The IU Student Building's iconic clock tower hasn't chimed for weeks due to water damage, IU Physical Plant officials said. "Apparently, it has had some water that has dripped into its electronics," said Bruce Williams, service center manager at the physical plant, the University's maintenance department. The ringing bells of the clock tower, which was completed in 1906 and renovated in the early-1990s, are electronically automated. Hank Hewetson, the physical plant's assistant vice president for facility operations, said plant workers must inspect the problem more closely before he will know when the bells' chiming can be fixed.
IU graduate Lisa Conmy found she was spending as much time tracking celebrities as her husband was tracking his fantasy sports teams and decided to do something about it. She got fellow Kelley School of Business graduate Trina Henney on board and created a Web site for a celebrity fantasy league in which fantasy owners pick celebrities and compete in a league of their own. The site, girlsintheknowinc.com launched Sept. 1 and has already been successful, garnering 1,000 members. Each team owner becomes a talent agent with an 18-person agency comprised of three male and female movie stars, TV stars and singers. An entry fee of $20 gets players a 10-week session in a private agency with friends or a public one with randomly assigned groups. In the agency, players compete to put together a stable of the hottest celebrities to earn more points than all members of the network. Teams with the most points across the site are awarded "Top Divas" and will have the chance to win prizes like an iPod. CEO Conmy and CFO Henney both graduated from the business school just a year apart, but they didn't meet until an alumni event in San Francisco. They are lawyers, but they use the business skills they acquired at IU to run the site in their spare time. "I think we both work together because the business school taught us how to work together and solve problems," Conmy said.
Students need to take action on matters of their personal health and must hold themselves accountable for their choices, acting U.S. Surgeon General Rear Admiral Kenneth P. Moritsugu said Wednesday while speaking at IU. The country's highest-ranking medical official spoke to a crowd of about 400 students, faculty and community members in the Whittenberger Auditorium in the Indiana Memorial Union as a part of the 60th anniversary of the IU School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation.
The Bloomington Area Arts Council will host a Downtown Gallery Walk from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday. The event, which is free and open to the public, will bring together more than 60 artists from five surrounding counties to display their work at nine galleries located in and around downtown Bloomington. The Monroe County Historical Society is collaborating in this event. Managing Director Jill Lesh said it has been a common goal of the historical society to work more with the Bloomington Area Arts Council since both groups share a common goal of educating and involving the public in Bloomington art and history.
Bohemians had the Left Bank. Andy Warhol had the Factory. Bloomington has the Art Hospital. When you step into the Hospital, you walk on the same floor scuffed from techno dance parties and metal-head moshing. Look to your left, and you might think you're stepping back three decades to your crazy aunt's time-warped attic -- complete with old Coke machines, street signs and fake fruit in a bowl. While at first glance, it might look like a strewn mess, everything in that room could potentially have its own role in an artistic masterpiece. The Hospital, 1021 S. Walnut St., is a diversely functional facility for Bloomington artists to find solace within each of their methods of work. Founded in June, it is Bloomington's latest addition to the creative community.
The Grammy-winning Orpheus Chamber Orchestra will perform at 8 p.m. Dec. 3 at the IU Auditorium. The orchestra will also present a seminar on its copyrighted and highly acclaimed "Orpheus Process" at 11 a.m. Dec. 4 in the foyer of the IU Auditorium. The Orpheus Chamber Orchestra began 34 years ago and has been playing at New York's Carnegie Hall for 26 seasons. It has collaborated with many famous artists including Isaac Stern, Yo-Yo Ma and Dawn Upshaw. Orpheus is unique because the group does not have a conductor; the members of the orchestra share and rotate leadership roles. This is known as the "Orpheus Process." Business schools at Harvard, Columbia and Yale, as well as corporations including Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, have incorporated the group's philosophy on self-government into their own business outlooks.
Bloomington-born author Meg Cabot has the Monroe County Public Library to thank for her love of literature. Cabot, who is best known for the famed "Princess Diaries" series, spent much of her childhood in the young adults' section, soaking up books by fellow authors Judy Blume and Jane Austen, according to a press release for Cabot's most recent book. Cabot's latest novel, "Size 14 Is Not Fat Either," was released Tuesday as the second book in her "Pink Mystery" series. "Size 14" chronicles the daily conundrums faced by Heather Wells, heroine of the previous Pink Mystery novel, "Size 12 Is Not Fat." Wells is a former teen pop sensation with a penchant for cracking the occasional murder case.
Many condoms will be unwrapped and used this week, but the ones used in the Indiana Memorial Union Solarium Friday will have a unique fate. They will be displayed as works of art for IU's first "Latexhibition." Latexhibition is a display of artwork created with condoms and other latex barrier devices. Latexhibition will be held on World Aids Day "as part of a community wide effort to educate and reflect on the HIV/AIDS epidemic," according to a press release. The idea of Latexhibition began as a project for human sexuality students at San Francisco State University, where IU graduate student Chris Fisher received his master's in human sexuality studies. "The biggest barrier to using condoms and other latex devices is often because of a sense being uncomfortable touching and talking about them," Fisher said.
Cathi Norton views art as a healing activity. From painting to dancing to writing, she said she values using the artistic world to help those in need. This weekend, that goal will be extended to the community as she co-sponsors the first Art of Mental Health celebration. The event, which includes art exhibits, workshops and a concert, began with a simple idea. Weekly painting classes are held at the Center for Behavioral Health, said Norton, the community relations specialist at the center. These classes allow clients to express themselves artistically while having access to clinicians to discuss the feelings behind their artwork, she said. An annual event came from these classes, in which the public is invited to judge client work, with the winners being featured on note cards sold to the public.
When Tom Cruise jumped on Oprah Winfrey's couch professing his love for Katie Holmes in May 2005, the nation deemed him insane. However, playwright and IU graduate student Paul Shoulberg used Cruise's antics to perfect the finishing touches of his play, "Reel." The IU Department of Theatre and Drama will open the world premiere of "Reel" at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Wells-Metz Theatre. After working on the set of an independent film as an undergraduate at the University of Kansas, Shoulberg knew he wanted to tell a story on stage about what happens off camera. "Watching Tom Cruise on Oprah, (I realized) these people are absolutely crazy. They're psychopaths," Shoulberg said of celebrities. "These people are really disturbed."