No lingering illness, Federer is in grand form at Australian Open
Sick and tired of talk about his stomach bug, Roger Federer wanted to show he was in Grand Slam form.
Sick and tired of talk about his stomach bug, Roger Federer wanted to show he was in Grand Slam form.
Students of the Master of Fine Arts art program displayed their artwork to a crowd of more than 300 students, professors and art connoisseurs Friday in a show at the School of Fine Arts Gallery. Mediums ranged from oil paintings to graphic design to ceramics.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. is already feeling the pressure, and the season hasn’t even started. As his winless streak nears two years, NASCAR’s most popular driver knows he must produce in his new Hendrick Motorsports ride.
The first rule of IU’s Brazilian Jiu Jitsu club has nothing to do with the club’s secrecy. Rather, it focuses on brotherhood and camaraderie.
As the Hapkido Self Defense Club gathers for their its meeting to practice new techniques and deepen internal memorization, P.O.D. blares loudly through the stereo, pumping up the club’s members.
Most of the time, players and coaches don’t like talking about moral victories.
When the Indianapolis Colts fueled my desire to take up base-jumping Sunday, I needed to try to find my happy place again.
Concerns about Barry Bonds’ personal trainer should have been reported by the San Francisco Giants to Major League Baseball, commissioner Bud Selig told Congress on Tuesday during a hearing about the sport’s steroids era.
Currently, there are 20 locations around campus that accept meal points, but none of them are in the Indiana Memorial Union.
As winter break came to a close, IU’s eight residence halls filled with students. Freshman Jordan Harmon, who lives in Wright Quadrangle, said he has mixed feelings about being back.
Supporters of a third-party presidential bid by New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg launched a 50-state petition drive Tuesday, seeking to “draft” the billionaire who is edging closer to entering the race while continuing to deny he is a candidate.
City officials have joined forces to waive the adoption fee for Monroe County residents who have lost a pet in a fire. The City of Bloomington Fire Department and Animal Care and Control Division announced the program last week.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday that Iraq’s national reconciliation has moved along “quite remarkably,” citing a new law that lets thousands of former members of Saddam Hussein’s Baath party reclaim government jobs or pensions.
During January, which is National Blood Donor Month, sophomore Andrew Ng will recall some of those memories when he gives blood for the sixth time.
A Indiana Department of Local Government Finance press release that the department will hold property assessors accountable for errors in property value assessments. It stated that 23 counties have assessors who failed to provide the department with accurate data required by law for tax purposes.
Pakistan’s government urged opposition leaders Tuesday to refrain from holding rallies ahead of next month’s elections, citing an escalating terrorist threat.
Two Bloomington houses were burglarized Monday night in unrelated incidents, Bloomington Police Department Capt. Joe Qualters said, reading from police reports.
In the fall 2006, the American people decided they were tired of the direction their nation was headed and shifted their faith from the ruling Republican Party to the Democrats, voting to replace many Republican members of Congress and giving the Democratic Party majorities in both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
If you’ve watched more than five seconds of TV this month, you’ve seen advertisements against the Big Ten Network. These advertisements paint the network, a group with exclusive rights to Big Ten games, as a selfish conglomerate trying to stiff the average fan. Comcast and the network are currently locked in negotiations – Comcast wants the network to be a subscription service, but the network wants to be included in general programming.
Primary season is one filled with uncertainty. Are you a Democrat, Republican or Independent? After you decide to identify with a party, you must wade through the voting records and media spin on the candidates of that party to decide who will receive your precious vote.