Men's soccer takes on top teams at Butler Classic
The men's soccer team took more than 84 minutes to score a goal against unranked IU-Purdue University at Indianapolis Wednesday night at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
The men's soccer team took more than 84 minutes to score a goal against unranked IU-Purdue University at Indianapolis Wednesday night at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
Fullbacks are often the players on a football team who are suppose to do the dirty work. Whether it's clearing the way for the tailback or throwing a block to protect a quarterback, fullbacks often do things that don't find their way onto the stat sheet.
Try driving down the 45/46 Bypass between 17th and Third Streets just about any time of day other than 3 a.m. Chances are you'll get nowhere fast. Since IU students have returned to campus, cars clog this main artery, inching along at a snail's pace. Bicyclists and pedestrians take their lives into their own hands. This road desperately needs to be expanded, and if the project causes inconvenience while the construction is taking place, that is the price of progress.
Alright. I'll be the one. I'll be the moron who tells the truth. Bobby Knight is not a general. He is a criminal. Anyone who wraps their fingers around someone else's throat deserves that label.
Bloomington will make it easier for people with disabilities to be involved with recreation activities, educate people about noise disturbances, help the arts thrive and provide health care to employees ' all without a tax increase.
A couple of years ago, I wrote a column for the IDS in which I satirically applied Religious Right, anti-gay rhetoric to the greek system. I criticized it as a "deviant, so-called alternative lifestyle" and warned against a "Hellenic curriculum" for elementary schools which would attempt to recruit "our children". At the end, I explicitly labeled it as "satire." In reply, I got one threatening anonymous phone call and one letter to the editor from a sorority woman cluelessly dissecting my essay point by point, as though it could have been meant seriously.
President Brand should reinstate Coach Knight, but if he refuses to do so, he should at the very least organize a proper and official send-off for him.
It was disheartening and embarrassing to see the 6 p.m. news Sunday. The entire state of Indiana, not to mention the nation, saw thousands of IU students threatening Kent Harvey with "Wanted: Dead" signs and screaming angrily at media crews. These people represented to the world the whole of IU that night, and that representation was one of ignorance and hatred.
The students and boosters at IU should be ashamed of themselves. They hang an effigy of the school president; they publish the e-mail address, picture and phone number of the young man who made the dastardly mistake of calling this egomaniac "Knight," with a note that says "Wanted: Dead or Alive." The students riot. Over a basketball coach? Grow up people!
The president of IU must be out of his mind if he thinks I will support IU basketball with the unnecessary firing of Coach Knight. This was neither the time or place for this type of sanction.
Communication and culture undergraduates, graduates and professors filled Ashton Center-Mottier, the department's new building, Wednesday afternoon for its 2000 welcome reception. The reception was held to start the new academic year and inform students about what the major has to offer.
A white limousine pulled up to the house and Playboy playmate Tiffany Taylor, Miss November 1998, walked in. She smiled shyly as fraternity members greeted her.
IU basketball secretary Mary Ann Davis said last night she is not filing a grievance against Jeanette Hartgraves, a secretary in the athletic department. In an interview with the IDS Wednesday, former coach Bob Knight said his secretaries were filing a grievance, but it was later clarified that Knight was talking about an event in the past. The IDS regrets this error.
Christopher Simpson, vice president for public affairs and government relations, said he has been receiving harassing phone calls and e-mails since former coach Bob Knight was fired. Simpson is the spokesperson for the University. "Mr. Simpson is one of the visible people," IU Trustee Dean Hertzler said. "He's the one who everybody sees and people associate him with the decision." Knight was fired as head coach of the basketball team Sunday for violating the University's "zero-tolerance" policy. Knight said Simpson was one of the major contributors in the decision to fire him.
Rarely has a director achieved what Francis Ford Coppola did in 1974 - the direction of two powerful, acclaimed pictures in one year. His "The Godfather: Part II" received the Best Picture Oscar, while "The Conversation," which might just be a better film, won the coveted Palme d'Or at Cannes and showed the film world that Coppola knew about more than just mafiosos.
Fort Wayne auteur Neil LaBute's new film "Nurse Betty" has the most original and ingenious premise since last year's "Being John Malkovich." A modern-day "Wizard of Oz" meets "Don Quixote," "Betty" is an outrageous story in which the borderline between fantasy and reality ceases to exist, as the heroine's sheltered world faces the confrontation between romantic illusions and violent reality. The film itself is as sweet and funny as it is unnerving.