Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Thursday, June 25
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Retro nights come to Axis Nightclub

·

Retro Night at Axis Nightclub in Bloomington has been a big hit for more than five years. The idea started with deejay Pam Thrash's Retro Lunch Hour on local radio station B97 in 1999. Thrash, was approached by Dave Kubiak, owner of Bluebird and Axis nightclubs, to recreate Retro Lunch Hour in front of a live audience at Axis. Kubiak and Thrash haven't looked back since. "I really never expected it to be this popular for this long," Thrash said. "I figured when I started Retro Lunch Hour and then Retro Dance Night in 1999 that it would go strong for about a year and then I'd need to come up with another lunch-hour idea. I had no idea how successful it would become and how long it would last; it's still going strong."


The Indiana Daily Student

Southern Indiana theater to reopen after fire

·

WASHINGTON, Ind. -- A theater standing since 1881 was expected to reopen in a little more than two weeks after an electrical fire damaged sections of it. The Sept. 18 electrical fire was mostly contained in the attic of the 124-year-old Indiana Theatre, although there was some smoke and water damage, and firefighters had to cut a hole in the roof to access the fire.


The Indiana Daily Student

Illinois professor turns molecules into artwork

·

URBANA, Ill. -- Emad Tajkhorshid's wife probably wouldn't let him pick the paint for the living room; he admits he's bad with colors. But that didn't stop organizers of an art exhibit in New York from inquiring about visual handiwork by Tajkhorshid and his colleagues at the University of Illinois' Beckman Institute.


The Indiana Daily Student

Matt Nathanson performs for IU students at Alumni Hall

·

A man with stiff hair, held in place by what seems to be pounds of styling gel, sits at a table with a blank sheet of paper and a black permanent marker scratching his eyebrow. He's scheduled to take the stage in 15 minutes, and the task of putting 18 songs on paper seems insurmountable. "I have to go to a computer to see what I've been playing," singer/songwriter Matt Nathanson said.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU avoids student fees for file sharing

·

This week, Yahoo! closed a deal with Stanford University to provide free legal music access to students. More universities than ever are signing contracts with music download companies, according to an article in The Chronicle of Higher Education. But, these agreements have not been met with overwhelming support of students. And that lack of student support is exactly why Deputy Information Technology Policy Officer Merri Beth Lavagnino said IU does not offer this service to students.


The Indiana Daily Student

ACLU analysis finds 21 homicides among deaths of U.S. prisoners overseas

·

WASHINGTON -- At least 21 detainees who died while being held in U.S. custody in Iraq and Afghanistan were killed, many during or after interrogations, according to an analysis of Defense Department data by the American Civil Liberties Union. The analysis, released Monday, looked at 44 deaths described in records obtained by the ACLU. Of those, the group characterized 21 as homicides and said at least eight resulted from abusive techniques by military or intelligence officers, such as strangulation or "blunt force injuries," as noted in the autopsy reports.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fast, then feast

·

While many students are enjoying fine dining in the dining halls this October, Muslim students throughout Bloomington attended a Fast-a-thon to break yesterday's fast in the holy month of Ramadan. The Fast-a-thon, which took place in the Greenleaf Dining Hall in Forest Quad, was sponsored by the Muslim Student Union and raised more than $1,000 to give to Bloomington Community Kitchen. The goals of the MSU were to make the IU community more aware of Ramadan and to give charity to the community, MSU vice president and senior Shahaab Uddin said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bush says he won't release all Miers records

·

WASHINGTON -- President Bush said Monday he will not release any records of his conversations with Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers that could threaten the confidentiality of the advice presidents receive from their lawyers. And a Democratic senator called on the beleaguered nominee to give the Senate her income tax records. Both Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee are demanding more documents about Miers, including from her work at Bush's counsel.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rosa Parks, civil rights icon, dies at 92

·

DETROIT -- Rosa Lee Parks, whose refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man sparked the modern Civil Rights Movement, died Monday. She was 92. Parks died at her home of natural causes, said Karen Morgan, a spokeswoman for U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich. Parks was 42 when she committed an act of defiance in 1955 that was to change the course of American history and earn her the title "mother of the civil rights movement."


The Indiana Daily Student

Spending doubles for football ad blitz

·

"Coach Hep wants you," and the IU Athletics Department has nearly doubled its football marketing budget to make sure he gets what he wants. The athletics department spent about $300,000 on football marketing this year by introducing a new campaign, up from between $150,000 to $200,000 in 2004, said Chad Giddens, athletics marketing director. The new marketing scheme includes billboard, TV, radio and newspaper advertisements throughout the state.


The Indiana Daily Student

The commissioner's new clothes

·

It isn't often that a commissioner of a professional sports league makes a profound impact on my life. Sure there have been moments where I've drifted to sleep pondering the policies of Bud Selig, but the true master only emerges once in awhile. Ending the All-Star game in a tie? Brilliant. The work he did relaxing the steroid penalties? The work of a genius.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU inducts 2nd most Hall of Famers

·

Current radio broadcaster for IU football and basketball Don Fischer called Friday evening's Hall of Fame banquet "the best night Indiana University puts on athletically." The IU Varsity Club sponsored the IU Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame banquet Friday night as seven former standout athletes and coaches were recognized for their achievements in athletics. The seven 2005 inductees make it the second largest class of inductees since the Hall of Fame's establishment in 1982. Softball coach Gayle Blevins, football standout Gene "Pat" Gedman, tennis player Deborah Edelman Kane, former men's tennis coach Dale Lewis, former men's golfer Shaun Micheel, men's swimmer Fred Schmidt and former soccer player and football kicker Pete Stoyanovich will now have their pictures hanging on a wall next to other former IU legends such as Branch McCracken, Mark Spitz and Isaiah Thomas.


The Indiana Daily Student

Meet the IU 'Ex' factor

·

IU field hockey goalkeeper Haley Exner's numbers speak for themselves. She's recorded 88 saves this season, leads Big Ten goalies with a 1.60 goals against average, boasts a .823 save percentage and has won a handful of awards, including three Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week awards -- a Hoosier record. But the most important record the San Diego native has set this season is the 13 wins she's notched in her first year as a starter for the No. 8 Hoosiers.



The Indiana Daily Student

Auditorium brings arts to University

·

When the IU Auditorium was officially dedicated in 1941, it stood in large part because then-president Herman B Wells wanted to provide IU students and faculty with an avenue to the arts. More than 60 years later, the facility has fulfilled Wells' wish, offering space for students to develop their artistic skills as well as providing a venue that has attracted all sorts of acts, speakers and performers, ranging from top Broadway plays to Mikhael Gorbachev to Jerry Seinfeld.


The Indiana Daily Student

Woman cited after giving tarot card readings

·

IU Police Department officers cited Tracy Lange Friday afternoon on preliminary charges of driving on a suspended license after she allegedly stole a wallet from the Gamma Phi Beta sorority, said IUPD Lt. Jerry Minger. Members of the sorority reported a blue leather wallet stolen after Lange, 34, a resident of 909 Eminence Way, said she "entered the house through the cafeteria doors (and) went through the house asking to perform tarot card readings," according to the IUPD report. No sorority members asked her to go through the house, and she was there uninvited, according to the report.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU spelunkers work to clean up Buckner's Cave

·

There exists an underworld where IU students go to explore the darker corners of the state -- a system of caves that runs through much of southern Indiana and surrounding states, including Kentucky and Tennessee.


The Indiana Daily Student

State testing site of tainted sludge

·

MEDORA, Ind. -- State environmental officials are testing soil and water in a southern Indiana town where some residents fear that tainted sludge dumped decades ago by a metal-plating company could be damaging their health. The investigation focuses on whether sludge containing potentially harmful hexavalent chromium was left behind on a farm from which it was supposed to have been removed long ago.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senator wants to criminalize protests at military funerals

·

INDIANAPOLIS -- A state senator angered by a recent protest at an Indiana soldier's funeral wants to make disorderly conduct a felony offense if it occurs at military funerals. Sen. Brent Steele, R-Bedford, said he would propose legislation in response to an anti-gay group's protest at the Aug. 28 funeral for Army Staff Sgt. Jeremy Doyle, an Indianapolis native killed in Iraq.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington woman educates African youth

·

Ann Marie Thomson sees untapped potential everywhere in Africa's war-torn Congo, where she grew up. It's teeming in the Congo River, which could provide enough energy to power the whole continent, as well as in the country's people, most of whom can't receive the educational training they strongly desire, Thomson said.