Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Saturday, July 11
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Artist captures the spirit of fallen soldiers

·

EDMONDS, Wash. -- The images capture tender moments shattered by the brutality of war. Each one is a comfort to those left behind. In Tennessee, a grandmother says good morning to the portrait of her smiling grandson.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fall ballet shows dance's many styles

·

The fall ballet promises to be a night of excitement and entertainment with four varied performances including two world premieres, both created by IU faculty members.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Lord of the Rings' museum exhibit opens

·

INDIANAPOLIS -- A mishmash of hairy feet, pointy ears and gnarled noses is artfully arranged in a display case in a darkened gallery, looking more suited to a mad scientist's lab than a museum. The odd lot of latex body parts is part of "The Lord of the Rings" exhibition, opening Thursday for a three-month run at the Indiana State Museum.


The Indiana Daily Student

·

It'll be held in Alumni Hall in the Indiana Memorial Union but students needn't use their "indoor voices" at Yell Like Hell -- one of the IU Student Alumni Association's five annual University-wide spirit competitions in celebration of Homecoming. Yell like Hell -- at 7:30 tonight -- will feature skits and musical performances by 10 student groups and organizations including IUSAA, Student Athletic Board, IU Student Foundation and the Black Student Union, said SAA Director of Special Events sophomore Phillip Blomeke.


The Indiana Daily Student

Students move to diversify Homecoming

·

Black Student Union President Courtney Williams said she thinks some students in the past had the mentality that "black people just didn't do" Homecoming events like Yell Like Hell and IU Sing. Williams and other BSU members want to change that.


The Indiana Daily Student

Freshman still in critical condition

·

IU officials are breathing a sigh of relief this week as the likelihood of another case of meningitis surfacing dwindles as the days pass, said Dr. Hugh Jessop, director of the IU Health Center. "If you're going to have a second case, that incubation period is usually 10 days," Jessop said. "We are really going to keep our fingers crossed that we get through the week without another case."


The Indiana Daily Student

The Missing Years

·

The history of the IU Homecoming Court can be traced back as far as 1940 with the crowning of the first Homecoming Queen, but in 1968 the tradition was discontinued for a period of ten years when a discriminatory racial scandal unfolded in the laps of University officials.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lobbyist speaks on Africa issues

·

With a five-year, $15 billion Africa AIDS program pledged by President Geroge W. Bush, issues within the continent have been front and center. Melvin Foote, CEO and founder of Constituency for Africa, has been asking, "How do we bring about transformation in Africa?" Foote spoke Wednesday as part of the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center and School of Public and Environmental Affairs Public Policy Lecture series about "Why Africa Should Matter to the U.S.?" CFA unites U.S. organizations to lobby for fostering change in Africa.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU rowing clinic session expands to 3 weeks

·

IU's rowing clinic expanded its session to three weeks this year to better prepare walk-ons and novices for the realities of life in America's oldest intercollegiate sport. "Last year we taught them how to row, but we didn't teach them what rowing was about," head coach Steve Peterson said. "There's a big difference, and we needed more time."


The Indiana Daily Student

While local fare can range from typical to exotic, all some food aficionados want is their desserts

·

From greasy take-out diners to elegant fine dining, Bloomington offers a wide scope of restaurant choices for students with varying budgets. But for those with a well-developed sweet tooth, whose eyes might wander to the back of the menu before even glancing at the appetizers or main courses, dinner is just a precursor to the most important part of the meal: dessert.


The Indiana Daily Student

Noah Bambach returns with 'Squid and Whale'

·

NEW YORK -- It's taken Noah Baumbach 10 years to get back to where he started. The director of "The Squid and the Whale" was considered a wunderkind at 25 when his 1995 debut, "Kicking and Screaming," played at the New York Film Festival. A decade later, the native New Yorker finally returned.


The Indiana Daily Student

New nickel gets a facelift

·

WASHINGTON -- After nearly 100 years of depicting presidents in somber profiles on the nation's coins, the U.S. Mint is trying something different: The new nickel features Thomas Jefferson, facing forward, with the hint of a smile.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

·

Art should not be overlooked In response to Colin Dugdale's column ("Wolfgang snoozefest," Monday), I don't expect everyone to like opera. However it is rude and childish to state that what others like and you do not is "not currently palatable" and has "expired." I might achieve the same conclusions should I attend a concert or performance by a group that appeals to Master Dugdale yet doesn't appeal to my taste. If he was so appalled by people in tuxedos, let him not wander near the penguin exhibit at the zoo for everyone's safety. IU has a marvelous arts community. Students have the opportunity to attend a wide variety of performance and visual arts at a fraction of the costs that professional companies require. That young Master Dugdale noticed that the student performers at the School of Music had "phenomenal pipes" states that he can appreciate the work that an artist does. If it wasn't visually stirring for him, might I suggest that he close his eyes and listen? The beauty just might overwhelm him. College is a time to expand your horizons. The opportunities to do that artistically on this campus are remarkable, even for a large research institution. Let us not discourage people from opening their minds to new art, whatever form they choose. The staff of the School of Music, Department of Theater and Drama and the IU Art Museum work tirelessly to bring the students of this campus to offer them something to which they may never have as ready access in the future. To allow the work of these departments to be so recklessly dismissed is disheartening, and the support of the editorial staff that published such denigration is distressing. I urge the campus community to look beyond the observations of a youth with a bully pulpit and explore for themselves the cultural opportunities that abound on this campus. Most of them have an intermission. David Grindle Production manager, Department of Theater and Drama


The Indiana Daily Student

From chokers to champs

·

On Aug. 1, the Chicago White Sox assumed the role of the rabbit in the fable of the tortoise and the hare. Fifteen games ahead of the Cleveland Indians (the tortoise), most thought they would be the first team to clinch its division. But just as the story goes, the Sox took a nap on a park bench, and let the tortoise make up its 13 1/2 game deficit. People called them chokers, said their luck had run out and they were about to become the first team in MLB history to squander a 15-game division lead this late in the season.



The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers go for All-American title

·

California's state motto, "Eureka" is Greek for "I have found it." Three Hoosiers are attempting to find their games as they travel westward to Pacific Palisades, Calif., to compete in the Riviera/ITA Women's All-American. "All the girls going to the All-American played a lot of matches," said IU head coach Lin Loring, referring to the past weekend's Hoosier Classic. "They played well and should be prepared."


The Indiana Daily Student

Worker dies after being burned in Marion factory

·

Worker dies after being burned in Marion factory MARION -- The owner of a salvage company died a day after he was seriously burned in an explosion at a closed Thomson television picture tube plant. Marvin Tinsley, 48, of Shelbyville, Ind., died Wednesday at the St. Joseph Regional Burn Center in Fort Wayne, where he was taken by helicopter after the Tuesday morning explosion, said hospital spokesman Geoff Thomas. Marion Deputy Fire Chief Brian Cowgill said Tinsley suffered second-degree burns to 75 percent of his body.


The Indiana Daily Student

No love, just loneliness for 'Bicentennial Babies'

·

Who do you judge: The person you think your partner is, or the person he or she wants to become? "Bicentennial Babies," written by Paul Shoulberg and the first Bloomington Playwrights Project production of the 2005-06 Dark Alley Series, raised that question Saturday at the Lora Shiner Studio, even while reminding the audience again and again the play is not a love story. The dramatic action, instead, focused on the