Hoosiers open 4-match home stand
It is said home is where the heart is, and that is where the No. 68 Hoosiers (8-8, 2-2) will be after taking to the road last weekend, pulling an upset of then-No. 51 Penn State.
It is said home is where the heart is, and that is where the No. 68 Hoosiers (8-8, 2-2) will be after taking to the road last weekend, pulling an upset of then-No. 51 Penn State.
Two years ago, Hoosier running back Yamar Washington completed one of the better seasons for a Hoosier freshman back, earning Big Ten All-Freshman honors from The Sporting News.
The Commission On Multicultural Understanding presented six COMU awards in the Mathers Museum Thursday to individuals and groups contributing to multicultural awareness.
The power of the force will soon be with IU, thanks to the approval of a $45 million project for the IU physics department.
Four challengers have emerged to contest Sue Talbot's position on the IU board of trustees. Talbot gained her post in 2001, but her three-year term will end June 30.
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Under sharp questioning, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice insisted Thursday President Bush fully understood the threat of terrorism before Sept. 11, 2001, but no intelligence foretold the deadliest attack ever on American soil.
As of March 15, the number of individuals occupying Indiana's prison facilities numbered 23,000, according to Indiana Department of Corrections statistics.
This weekend, Lazerlite amusement center will be invaded by dozens of dancing fools from all over the state, but they aren't so foolish as to not support a good cause when they see one. Lazerlite, located on East Third Street, will be holding its third "Dance Dance Revolution" marathon Friday and Saturday.
Starting next year, global and international studies will not just be confined to the classroom. Beginning fall semester, the Global Village Living-Learning Center will join Collins and Foster International in combining classroom learning with community living.
Many on the IU campus have heard the rumor that being hit by a bus equals free tuition. Senior Bill Gray, former IU Student Association president, experienced this rare event but will not find out if the rumor is true. Instead, Gray wants something more unique.
As the end of the semester approaches, the IU Library System is beginning to offer two new tools that will help students research more efficiently.
Students concerned about life after graduation asked IU alumni for advice and sharpened their resumé skills during the Student Alumni Career Day Thursday in the Indiana Memorial Union. The Student Alumni Association and the Career Development Center sponsored the event.
Having Tom Arnold and Dan Cortez comment and joke about a film that started as a class project on national television may seem like a dream to some, but it has now become a reality for two IU students.
Herbie Hancock played a crowd-pleasing set at the IU Auditorium Wednesday night that included many of his legendary hits.
The African American Dance Company will have its 30th annual concert this weekend. The dances in the show will tell the history of African Americans, starting from when they were brought over in the slave ships. The show will include Afro-Caribbean dances, jazz, ballet and tap among other dances from the African Diaspora.
The IU Opera Theater will close its 2003-2004 season this weekend with a performance by the English opera "Peter Grimes." The opera, composed by Benjamin Britten, marked a new direction for English opera.
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Phil Mickelson in a green jacket -- even he had a hard time believing it. The final leg in his odyssey to win a major championship came down to an 18-foot putt Sunday, the kind Mickelson had grown weary of watching others make as he stood to the side. This time, the last chance belonged to him, a birdie putt that kept him in suspense to the very end. It rolled toward the cup, swirled around the left edge and dropped in. Mickelson leapt as high as he could and threw both arms in the air, kissed the ball he plucked from the cup and tossed it into a delirious crowd that felt the same way.
Senior Lauren Baker went to Scotty's Brewhouse Thursday night for one reason and one reason alone: "I heard CT and Rachel were going to be (at Scotty's), and I've been dying to meet them."
Beads of sweat dripped down senior Shannon Mickels' head and neck while his fast-flying footwork moved to the beat of the glowing blue and pink arrows below him. With the bass thumping and lights flashing, his eyes intently focus in on the arcade game screen. Twenty of his peers surround him, and he owns the game --
GREENCASTLE, Ind. -- Trevor Brown, dean of the IU School of Journalism, was inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame Saturday at a ceremony in the Walden Inn at the DePauw University campus. Tom Davies, president of the Hall of Fame, said Brown and the other four inductees were admitted because they met the hall's requirements as "Hoosier journalists of the highest distinction."