HPER school offers outdoor recreation class
Today is the last day to sign up for the Conservation and Outdoor Recreation Education program, but a few spots will remain until Nov. 17.
Today is the last day to sign up for the Conservation and Outdoor Recreation Education program, but a few spots will remain until Nov. 17.
In his State of the University address, IU President Myles Brand announced a new multidisciplinary science building as IU's first "capital priority," estimated to cost $60 million. This comes on the heels of approval for the new Kelley School of Business Corporate and Graduate Center, which will cost $30 million.
Columbia City, Ind., has always prided itself on its Christmas decorations. Each year of my young life, I was shunted off to the Whitley County Courthouse on Christmas Eve to sit on Santa's lap and receive a bag of oranges and a bag of haystacks (those vanilla creamy things covered in chocolate). The line would be long because everyone did the same thing.
Recently I had the privilege of spending the evening with the fine, upstanding inmates of the Tippecanoe County Jail. Was I there on business, possibly for a story, you might ask? With a hearty laugh I respond no, I was not there merely to chat with the good people of Cell Block Seven.
The Listening Tour officially began last week with a discussion including members of the newly formed IU Campus Greens. As a growing national political party and one with a strong campus and community presence, IU Greens wanted to see their party's beliefs and concerns addressed in the IDS opinion pages.
Screaming "Fall down and praise" into microphones, Sides of the North, a Christian hard rock band from Ohio, was the first to play at the Tau Music Fest at Whip-Poor-Will Lake near Martinsville this weekend.
"Who let the dogs out? Woof, woof, woof, woof." -- Baha Men, "Who Let the Dogs Out?" Who let the dogs out? Who wrote this stupid song? Why do the radio and television stations play it? Why does anyone like it? Why does this song get voted onto TRL? Why am I tempted to whack my television with a baseball bat whenever that video comes on?
The Limestone Grille, 2920 E. Covenanter Drive is a hidden Bloomington treasure. Nestled behind the Kroger store on College Mall Road, most people never see this establishment and don't realize it even exists. But our meal was delightful from beginning to end, and this American grille quickly took its place as one of our favorite restaurants.
Total cacophony. That's the best way to describe the beginning of the Marching Hundred's Homecoming show rehearsal. The band's 290 members, crowded into a barely big enough room at the Creative Arts Center, chattered away while they tuned their instruments and looked over the music they'd just received for Saturday's halftime show. But the noise died down as director David C. Woodley approached the center of the room to make his announcements. People shushed their friends, and one girl snapped, "Shut up!"
Forty minutes of last Friday was spent with a stack of 100 questions on pink attendance sheets and Brian Dodge's intrepid Human Sexuality class. Too little time, too many questions, but it was the first time I'd been given written questions by a class, and it suited the 40 minutes just fine. I brought the questions home with me, and thought I'd answer a few:
Vice President Al Gore has proposed several new ways to keep guns out of the hands of criminals, while maintaining the rights of law-abiding citizens to own guns.
Four score and several years ago, our forefathers did a bunch of stuff that created a more perfect union, or something like that. But, albeit unbeknownst to them, they also set the wheels in motion for what could be our nation's greatest crisis since the XYZ Affair: the 2000 presidential election. (Sorry, I promise not to make anymore obscure historical references.)
With the election less than a month away, Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore are firing shots in the battle for better education which have national and local ramifications. In last week's presidential debate, both candidates emphasized improving American schools and attacked many issues surrounding the improvement of education. They each agreed on the need for teacher accountability, better testing performance, localized control of schools and overall improved quality of schools.
With just over a month until Election Day, the first in a long series of public forums for candidates kicked off last night at Monroe County Public Library.
America's third largest political party is switching into high gear for November's elections. The Libertarian party is supporting 113 candidates in Indiana and more than 1,400 nationwide. Libertarian Jim Billingsley, a Monroe County resident, said he wants people to know that a vote for Libertarians is not a vote wasted.
Responsibilities of a coroner: 1) investigate all deaths that are a result of violence, casualty, suspicious circumstances or when they occur suddenly to someone in good health; 2) identify the decedent, establish time of death, cause of death and manner of death; 3) file a report on the findings with the coroner's office, and in some counties with the clerk's office.
With elections less than a month away, Texas Gov. George W. Bush has overtaken Vice President Al Gore in multiple opinion polls since last week's presidential debates. A Gallup Poll, conducted Thursday to Saturday, is the most recent organization to report a Bush lead, at 49-41 percent in Bush's favor.
With Americans able to conduct bank transactions, order airline tickets and shop for almost anything online, it might seem logical to many to cast votes from a personal computer instead of going to the polls.
Add one cup of virtual water to one cup of virtual dirt, mix in a few political enthusiasts, and the result is a large political mudslinging fest splashed across the Internet.
'Civility' was the key word this time around as presidential nominees George W. Bush and Al Gore turned in the sighs and angry expressions for a more subdued form of discussion. The debate docused primarily on issues that have had less media exposure than others during the campaign.