Team effort results in award from Society of Professional Journalists
Staff, faculty and students from the IU School of Journalism are being nationally recognized for their contribution to an award-winning book.
Staff, faculty and students from the IU School of Journalism are being nationally recognized for their contribution to an award-winning book.
Only nine months after WIUX went FM and abandoned our tiny AM signal, a country station in Columbus, WYGB, wanted to expand. Because WYGB was a full-power station, it received our same signal; this process is called encroachment. Now, more and more low-power (LPFM) radio stations nationwide have fallen victim to encroachment. Recently, Prometheus Radio Project, a nonprofit organization fighting for LPFM stations, asked for WIUX's help in the case of fellow station KDRT in Davis, Calif. Like WIUX, a full-power station has threatened KDRT's existence, but it has no way out. KDRT and WIUX have begun grassroots campaigns to combat the The Federal Communications Commission's dismissal of this injustice.
The IU softball team gained a much-needed out-of-conference road win on Wednesday at James N. and Dorothy M. Cooper Softball Stadium in Evansville.
Senior Matthew Brunner refers to himself as the “permanent gay-rights activist on campus.” He has spent the past four years of his undergraduate career educating others about gay rights, and recently he was recognized for his achievements.
I hate leftovers, especially when it comes to music, because B-sides almost never constitute a release. But this is not the case for Boston popsters Guster, whose 2006 effort, Ganging Up On The Sun, proved to be their most accomplished album yet. After a great demand for the album's B-sides, Guster has released a "Satellite" single/EP as a bit of an excuse to release these B-sides. Along with the four B-sides, there is also a remix and two live covers thrown in for good measure.
MEXICO CITY – Miss Mexico is toning down her Miss Universe pageant dress – not because it’s too slinky or low-cut, but because its bullet-studded belt and images of hangings from a 1920s uprising have outraged Mexicans.
It has been a long time coming. Last week, North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper announced he was dropping all charges against former Duke lacrosse players Dave Evans, Colin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann.
ALAMEDA, Calif. – Getting the No. 1 selection in the NFL draft usually means a team hasn’t picked well in previous years. That’s half true with the Oakland Raiders.
Regarding Bright Eyes' latest album, Cassadaga, I believe many fans are going to face a conundrum. On the one hand, the music -- a mix of countrified dust-ups, sing-along stomps, slow-dance torch songs and more -- is an encouraging return to form. A change of pace from the (mostly) monochrome folk of 2005's I'm Wide Awake It's Morning and the bland electronica of its fraternal twin Digital Ash In A Digital Urn. Not only is Cassadaga more interesting to listen to, its melodies stick in your mind long after you've put down the headphones.
Yellowcard is taking time out from putting the finishing touches on their latest album, Paper Walls, to come to IU on Friday. Ryan Key, guitarist and vocalist, said the band has "finally got the sign off" for one of their best friends to design the artwork for their album cover. Key lives four houses down from the friend in Los Angeles, but he said he's not going there until the design is done.
Two projects initiated by members of the Environmental Business Club that will begin by the end of the summer could save the University thousands of dollars.
MARTINSVILLE – From atop the bleachers at Bill Armstrong Stadium, thousands of fans that attend the Little 500 bike races can see how well their teams are performing. But for some race spectators, what the riders are doing is far less important than what they are wearing.
The late 1960s rank among the most tumultuous periods in American history, right up there beside the Revolutionary period, the Civil War era, WWII and our current state. It's in these times that people look for a leader, and Robert Kennedy seemed, to many, like the man for the job in the summer of 1968. It wasn't to be, however, as he was gunned down in an L.A. hotel before he could receive the Democratic presidential nomination. Thirty-eight years later, director Emilio Estevez and a monster cast bring us "Bobby," a peek into the lives of a group of guests and employees at the Ambassador Hotel on the night of Kennedy's assassination.
"Miss Potter" was everything I didn't expect -- including imaginary animals, child-like themes and 1920s settings. But the movie takes an old-fashioned fairy tale, quirks it around a bit and even fits in the traditional chick flick components of love, silliness and heartbreak. It does this all the while telling a historical story and using typical story lines from modern-day movies to tell them in a new way -- which is exactly why it worked. The film tells the story of Beatrix Potter (Renee Zellweger), who wrote "The Tale of Peter Rabbit" and numerous other children's books. Set in London in the early 1900s, Miss Potter is unmarried, 32 and somewhat crazy. She spends her time painting and writing stories and finally lands a publisher in Norman (Ewan McGregor).
Following a task-force review, the IU Student Association has decided to cut Rape Crisis Fund donations given to the Middle Way House by 75 percent. The task force formed in October 2006 in response to a decline in donations to the Rape Crisis Fund.
Anyone else notice the 53rd running of the Little 500 bicycle race is Saturday? Judging by the widespread drunken debauchery we’ve noticed, combined with the thousands of stories in yesterday’s issue of the IDS, we’re guessing the secret is out.
Hip-hop group demeans women, incites violence As you read my opinion consider the following: “A woman is beaten every 15 seconds in this country. One million of them report to hospital emergency rooms. Over 4,000 die every year from the beatings or stabbings, or gunshot wounds.” While I can’t blame any one factor for these statistics, I can ask why would anyone listen to music that encourages violent behavior toward women? If someone called your mother, sister or female friend a “d-suckin’-h,” how would you react? Would you take these comments as acceptable? Why do we tolerate the obviously negative, demeaning and violent speech found in “gangsta” hip-hop music but get upset when Don Imus makes jokes using negative language he’s heard? Why is Alpha Epsilon Pi so willing to overlook the Three 6 Mafia’s atrocious lyrics to sponsor their concert on the IU campus? Why do we justify our listening to music that attacks the very core of what we all strive for – positive love and relationships? Women, where are you in this scenario? Is it “OK” for you and/or your friends to attend a concert where women will be demeaned? In Spike Lee’s movie “School Daze,” the lead character Dap cries out to the college community to “Wake Up!” I think it is time for all of us to wake up to what is going on in music, film and other forms of so-called entertainment, and maybe, just maybe, reject all forms of music that encourage misogyny, self-hatred and violence. While some will continue to support the worst examples of “so-called” art in our culture, I believe that if many of us think about it and talk about it, we won’t want participate in supporting speech or lyrics that demean and hurt others. Kevin Jones Bloomington
Genius is often not appropriately appreciated in its own time.
NEW YORK – So many brides say they want to look like a princess on their wedding day – and now we’re about to find out if they mean really mean it.
For many students, Little 500 week means parties and drinking – a last week of fun before finals. But underage students who plan on going out and living it up this weekend will be faced with more stringent surveillance and might find it even more difficult to “get in with a fake,” said Jim Ballard of Yogi’s Grill & Bar.