Punter adjusting to new life
IU punter Tyson Beattie has come a long way. 11,720 miles to be exact. The freshman redshirted last season after coming to IU from Attadale, Australia, a place where rugby is a bigger sport than football.
IU punter Tyson Beattie has come a long way. 11,720 miles to be exact. The freshman redshirted last season after coming to IU from Attadale, Australia, a place where rugby is a bigger sport than football.
A quick glance at the IU men's soccer roster will show that young players make up a major part of the team. One youth member is sophomore midfielder Brian Plotkin, who said he is trying to set an example for the youth on the squad.
For the second time in as many weeks, junior Christina Archibald and senior Melissa Brewer earned spots on an All-Tournament team. Archibald ended the TIS/Taylor Invitational with 52 kills and 29 digs, while Brewer led the Hoosiers with 54 kills, nine block assists and six service aces in the three match event. The week prior, both Brewer and Archibald earned All-Tournament selections at the Hurricane Invitational in Coral Gables, Fla., as Archibald pounded out 54 kills and recorded 31 digs, while Brewer added 40 kills and seven block assists in total during the three matches.
The Bloomington Common Council Wednesday night approved a $50.5 million budget for 2004.
Members of the Bloomington Peace Action Coalition gathered Wednesday evening on the Monroe County Courthouse square for their weekly meeting, but with the anniversary of Sept. 11 in mind.
Indiana state Sen. Vi Simpson, D-Ellettsville, spoke to a small audience at the Neal-Marshall Education Center Wednesday, answering questions ranging from why she is the best candidate to how lottery money is being spent.
A Sept. 11 remembrance ceremony organized by the IU Interfaith Association will be held at 8 p.m.
The Minority Achievers Program and Mathematics and Science scholarship has been renamed after two influential black leaders at IU: Dr. Herman C.
A majority minority. It sounds like an oxymoron, but guest lecturer Albert M. Camarillo said he believes it is the future of many American cities.
It was not surprising to see an editorial by Vice President for Student Development and Diversity Charlie Nelms in Tuesday's IDS. What was surprising, however, was the content.
Whose of us in the library and information science field aren't exactly known for being a terribly outrageous lot.
The attacks of Sept.11 were tragic on a scale previously unknown in the United States.
It was the day they canceled football. At least that was comedian/commentator David Cross' opinion of Sept. 11, 2001.
Amy Bloom, a practicing psychotherapist and a Yale University professor, will read selections from her works at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Woodburn Hall, Room 009. She is the author of two short story collections, "A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You" and "Come to Me," and a novel, "Love Invents Us."
NEW YORK -- The only known video footage of both planes hitting the World Trade Center is the subject of a dispute that stopped it from being shown nationally on ABC News Sunday, and may prevent it from surfacing at all.
Part of what makes Bloomington so great is its plethora of dining options. I cannot think of another place that boasts its very own Tibetan, Eritrean and Burmese restaurants.
Bloomington has long been a city known for its cultural diversity and artistic endeavors. Recently, these two traits combined for the creation of WFHB-FM's newest talk radio program "bloomingOUT," a radio program based on Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender issues.
NEW YORK -- Two years after scores of firefighters perished in the World Trade Center, the Fire Department's efforts to prepare for future terrorist attacks have been hobbled by dwindling resources and political battles, fire officials and others say.
WASHINGTON -- President Bush told Congress Wednesday to "untie the hands" of law enforcement officials and arm them with wider legal powers to combat terrorists, saying the groups that struck America two years ago are wounded but still dangerous.
WASHINGTON -- When a man recently stowed away in a cargo plane from New York to Dallas by shipping himself in a wooden crate, it raised questions about transportation security nearly two years after terrorists turned jetliners into missiles.