Illinois tabbed as conference's elite
Former high school teammates Deron Williams of Illinois and Bracey Wright of IU have careers progressing in remarkably similar fashions. The pair are both juniors and both starting guards in the Big Ten.
Former high school teammates Deron Williams of Illinois and Bracey Wright of IU have careers progressing in remarkably similar fashions. The pair are both juniors and both starting guards in the Big Ten.
INDIANAPOLIS -- After a season that saw the women's Big Ten place six teams into the NCAA tournament, and Minnesota into the championship game, the conference is looking to repeat the results. It is hoping the ultimate reward will be a trip to the Final Four in the heart of Big Ten country -- Indianapolis.
Two seasons ago, Marco Killingsworth and Lewis Monroe were starters at Auburn University. Monroe ran the show at the point, and Killingsworth was in his first year of leading the Southeastern conference in field goal percentage from his power forward position.
When they walk around campus, heads turn. Girls come up to talk to them at the bars. They've been to a Final Four and to Maui. And they're not even on scholarship.
SAN FRANCISCO -- A 21st-century gold rush is on in California after voters approved $3 billion for human embryonic stem cell research. At least one out-of-state biotech company is already making plans to move to California. Stem cell start-up businesses are expected to emerge. And universities are hoping to recruit some of the field's brightest minds to take part in the biggest state-run research project in U.S. history.
NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq -- U.S. forces punched into the center of Fallujah on Tuesday, overwhelming bands of guerrillas in the street with heavy barrages of fire and searching house to house in a powerful advance on the second day of a major offensive to retake the insurgent stronghold.
ABUJA, Nigeria -- Sudan's government and rebel representatives signed accords Tuesday meant to end hostilities and guarantee aid groups access to 1.6 million people uprooted by conflict in Sudan's bloodied western region of Darfur.
The Nov. 2 election painted the country red and blue. Some believe other shades are disappearing fast. Most people now seem to be looking hard at the Republican Party, the issues within it and how they affect the decisions it makes.
While the majority of football fans around the country were tuning in to the Colts-Vikings Monday Night Football matchup, senior Todd Bunton and the rest of Da Bears were getting ready for their quarterfinal game of the intramural flag football playoffs. The success of Da Bears is among the many interesting storylines surrounding the flag football tournament.
The IU ice hockey team played host to a two-game inter-conference series last weekend at Frank Southern Ice Arena, welcoming Ferris State University to town. A notoriously dirty and physical team, the Bulldogs came into the Frank looking to impose their will on the Hoosiers with their size advantage. After thrashing Illinois by a total of 14-2 in Bloomington last weekend, the top priority around the IU locker room was maintaining the team's perfect record at home.
In a scene reminiscent of the recent remake of "Dawn of the Dead," hundreds of people poured into College Mall late Monday night to satiate an incredible hunger. But unlike the zombies in that movie who were after brains, these "zombies" only craved a freshly shrink-wrapped copy of the Microsoft Xbox game "HALO 2."
A few weeks ago, I went squirrel hunting with my friend Jesse. I've talked about him and his family in this column before. You'll probably remember him best for that time we took a pee in his family cornfield. His family owns a prime stretch of woodlands loaded with 10 times the squirrels of Dunn Meadow. It's about 30 minutes west of Evansville, and that's where we went one Saturday morning.
Well, looks like we've got another four years of Dick in the White House. As I had tragically predicted, Sponge Bob Bush Pants has once again taken the title of President of the United States. While the news roused Bush voters, causing them to jump for joy in their overalls and wife-beaters; Kerry fans, like me, were left with no other options to curb our depression but developing a life-threatening addiction or moving to Canada. Since I am not a big fan of hockey, bears or Celine Dion, I decided to go with the former.
You're either "with us," or you're the other 49 percent of the population. That's what this election proved. For Democrats, the Red Sea of states did not part, the South opened its floodgates, and there was no exodus from Bush's religious right-wing agenda.
A study conducted by a University of California at Los Angeles law professor suggests affirmative action harms black students more than it helps them, as it pushes them to confront curriculum they are not prepared to face. The author of this study -- Richard H. Sander -- looked at 27,000 students who entered law school in 1991 and found a gap between the performance of white and black students.
The Baron did not want a funeral, so before he died, he gave his body away. ***** After the living exit the room and close the door secured with a keypad lock, the eight operating tables start to resemble eight coffins. Metal lids are placed on top of each table and remain closed during the living's absence from the room. The lids mask the sights of what lies below, but a hint of the smell always survives. The stink oozes through the cracks and sours the air just enough to remind the living of their place every time they open the door from the other side.
Hoosier football players are graduating just short of the national average, according to the 2004 NCAA Graduation Rates Report.
More than 3,000 people packed the IU Auditorium Sunday night to hear the alternative rock band Incubus play live songs from both its newest album and older albums. The IU Auditorium was filled with students wanting to hear their favorite songs, and with surprise covers of R. Kelly and Prince by lead singer Brandon Boyd. Students came from as far as Ball State and Purdue universities to hear the popular band.
A "flash" in the chemistry building Monday resulted in the hospitalization of Michael Ingleson, a post-doctoral student, for second degree burns. The flash caused heavy blistering on the skin of the part of Ingleson's arms that was not covered by his gloves and short sleeve shirt, according to IU Police Department reports.
With thousands of U.S. and Iraqi troops assaulting the Iraqi insurgent hotspot of Fallujah, few people at IU have the same perspective as junior Brian Nordhoff. Nordhoff served in south-central Iraq as a corporal in the Detachment Communications Company of the Headquarters Battalion of the Fourth Marine Division. He said Fallujah had a reputation of being a dangerous city.