The mind is strong but the body weakens
I've written this column long enough to have milestones, though they weren't intentionally placed. They are column titles or particular statements that anchor a place and time in my thoughts.
I've written this column long enough to have milestones, though they weren't intentionally placed. They are column titles or particular statements that anchor a place and time in my thoughts.
It was around mile six of the Martin Luther King Jr. Torch Relay that I dropped the torch. That's right, I dropped and broke the thing. There I was, in the middle of Newport, R.I., running with a Coleman flashlight (which was supposed to represent a torch), honoring one of America's greatest civil rights leaders.
He's anything but apologetic. Florida Gov. Jeb Bush just vetoed a $100,000 voter-education measure in Florida without blinking. Surprising, huh? He could have played the prince. What's a hundred grand after all? Mere pelican scraps. Whose idea was this "voter-education measure"? Plenty of politicians are painting themselves as seekers of a just electoral process, especially after toilet-papering it a month ago.
Tonight, the second episode of the FOX television show "Temptation Island" will air. Last week's episode drew 16 million viewers, most of them between the ages of 11 and 18. "Temptation Island" has an interesting premise. Four couples come to a deserted island and go out on dates with beautiful strangers to prove their relationships are strong. For the winners, those who make it through without cheating, money is to be had. For the losers, a trip home alone. But is this the type of show we should be watching?
The Martin Luther King Jr. holiday Monday meant many Bloomington businesses were closed and IU students didn't have to wake up early to attend classes. But for many, the holiday wasn't just a day in a long weekend. Instead, it was a time to put King's words into action. Since 1998, the IU and Bloomington communities have joined forces to create a weekend of service. Thousands of people participated in the weekend, "A Day On … Not A Day Off." Volunteers went to the 50 participating agencies and work sites to donate their time. This year, more than 400 people volunteered, said Darrell Ann Stone, associate director of student activities.
Junior John Burrello's jaw will be wired shut for the next six weeks. His best friend since elementary school, junior Graham Goy, opened his eyes Monday morning at Bloomington Hospital for the first time since Friday. He remains in critical condition in a coma, according to the hospital.
Paul Schoonmaker, a retired senior citizen, celebrated Martin Luther King Jr. Day by volunteering for a food drive for the needy. He collected more than 400 pounds of food.
Interim head coach Mike Davis said his guards need to step up their play, a sentiment shared by starting guard Dane Fife.
A young boy leans forward with a hand on his chin as he listens to a student read a story in the lobby of the Monroe County Public Library. More than 80 IU students held the attention of the children at the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Read-Out at the library's children's department Monday. A heightened interest in volunteerism and help from the Volunteer Students Bureau brought more students than last year to such activities, program supervisors said.
The women's track and field team won nine of 15 events, but tied with Michigan 81-81 Saturday in Ann Arbor. The Hoosiers trailed the Wolverines 78-76 heading into the final event, the 4x400-meter relay. IU edged Michigan by one second to tally five points to the Wolverines' three.
In a day of upsets and personal records, the men's indoor track team came away with a nail-biting 85-77 victory Saturday against rival Michigan in the Hoosiers' season opener at Ann Arbor.
The women's swimming and diving team remained undefeated with a 154-89 win over Ohio State Saturday in Columbus.
A loss is a hard pill to swallow. Especially when the loss is to a team you could have beaten.
A small, one-engine plane crashed outside Martinsville late Friday night, ending the lives of an IU junior and an Indianapolis man. The wreckage of the Cessna 172 was found on a heavily wooded hill northeast of the city, said a Morgan County Sheriff's Department spokesman.
After scoring just one goal in the first period Friday, the Hoosier hockey team bounced back, netting 23 goals in the next five periods and crushing Purdue 12-1 both Friday and Saturday night.
STATE COLLEGE, Penn. -- The IU women's basketball team has been in this position twice before: win a big weekend game and earn a spot among the nation's top 25.
STATE COLLEGE, Penn. -- IU racked up its best second half of basketball Sunday against Penn State. Fifty-two points and a sizzling 69 percent from the field both set season records for 20 minutes of Hoosier basketball.
A week-long vacation ended in tragedy for an IU student's boyfriend in Tampa, Fla., early Sunday. Michael Hepner was found floating unconscious two miles off the coast by a U.S. Coast Guard rescue helicopter, Tampa police spokesman Joe Durkin told The Associated Press. Hepner, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was airlifted to Tampa General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead around 6:45 a.m.
The Indianapolis Star has agreed to a request from IU to move a lawsuit against the University to Monroe County. The case, originally filed by the Star in Marion County, seeks access to documents in former coach Bob Knight's personnel file and other records compiled during IU's investigation into the conduct of the coach.
Pat Siddons, alumnus and former IDS publisher, is one of four Hoosier journalists who will be inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame on April 7. Siddons retired in 1989 after 10 years as IDS publisher and was chosen as national college newspaper adviser of the year in 1983.