Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Friday, June 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Former Enron accountant indicted

·

HOUSTON -- A former Enron Corp. accountant described as "a principal architect" of a scheme to mislead government regulators and investors turned himself in Thursday, and pleaded innocent to federal fraud charges related to the energy giant's 2001 collapse.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mars rover stops sending data

·

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA's Spirit rover stopped transmitting data from Mars for more than 24 hours, mission managers said Thursday, calling it an "extremely serious anomaly." NASA received its last significant data from Spirit early Wednesday -- its 19th day on Mars. Since then, it has sent either random, meaningless radio noise or simple beeps acknowledging it has received commands from Earth, said Firouz Naderi, manager of the Mars exploration program at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The last such beep was received Thursday morning, Naderi said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Academy prepares for frenzy

·

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - 5:38:30 a.m. -- That's the moment Hollywood hype turns hyperactive. It's the precise time Tuesday morning when the 76th annual Academy Award nominations will be announced to the world, creating a frenzy among all who make movies, make money from movies or make time to see movies.


The Indiana Daily Student

A look at the punk scene

·

"AfroPunk," a documentary that investigates the two worlds of race, identity and the punk rocker, will be shown tonight at Boxcar Books, 310 A S. Washington. It interviews and explores the lives of four people who have committed themselves to the punk rock way of life. It embarks upon issues such as loneliness, exile, interracial dating and black power.

The Indiana Daily Student

Local high schools perform tonight

·

Bloomington High School North and South will combine their dramatic talents this weekend to perform Jean Giradoux's classic play, "The Madwoman of Chaillot." The students will perform at 8 p.m. Friday, Jan. 23, Saturday, Jan. 24 and Sunday, Jan. 25 at The John Waldron Arts Center at 122 S. Walnut St. In "The Madwoman of Chaillot," corporate evil invades majestic Paris as prospectors plot to tear up its legendary streets for oil and wealth.


The Indiana Daily Student

Don't say that word

·

One of my friends came up to me one day and said, you should write a column on metrosexuals. I thought to myself, "I am a fashion columnist, I think the Kinsey Institute should tackle that one." Obviously, I didn't know what a metrosexual was. Then he explained, you know the show "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy?" If one of those guys was straight that would be a metrosexual.


The Indiana Daily Student

Music school robbed again

·

After a string of thefts last semester, the IU School of Music was struck yet again over the holiday weekend. A lockbox containing cash and checks from the "Nutcracker" musical proceeds was stolen from room 308 in the Musical Arts Center during the Martin Luther King Jr. weekend. The lockbox contained more than $1,000 in cash and checks from the ballet, IU School of Music faculty member Doricha Sales said. IU Police Department Lt. Jerry Minger said the date of the theft is unknown because it was not noticed until after the holiday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iran's election crisis worsens with resignations

·

TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran's worst political crisis in years deepened Wednesday, with the government saying most of its ministers and vice presidents have submitted resignations to protest the barring of thousands of would-be candidates from upcoming elections. Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi warned unless the candidates are reinstated, "the country will face many problems, both at home and abroad."


The Indiana Daily Student

Union Board seeks Little 500 concert

·

The Union Board is currently in the planning stages for booking a concert for Little 500 week this year. Last year, there was no concert. Instead, the Board scheduled alternate programming in the form of Hoosier Idol and the Little 5 Step-Down.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU filling key posts at all levels

·

It's not even spring yet, and IU is already cleaning the house. The resignation of the Kelley School of Business Dean Dan Dalton Tuesday has brought the total number of open academic and administrative leadership positions to seven. Other positions currently being filled are the director of faculties, director of the Kinsey Institute, dean of the School of Journalism and new leaders for the Indiana Memorial Union, IU Auditorium and Indiana University Press. "We have changes all the time," said IU Board of Trustees President Fred Eichhorn. "We just have to make sure that those who come in to replace those who leave are highly qualified and continue to positively influence the University."


The Indiana Daily Student

IU reacts to State of the Union address

·

President Bush gave his annual State of the Union address Tuesday -- a day after Iowa's Democratic caucuses, and a week before New Hampshire's primaries. The address was widely watched by students and faculty at IU who responded in different ways to the address. "He's (Bush) putting the best face on things," said IU Associate Professor of Economics Willard Witte, regarding Bush's comments on the recovering American economy. "In talking about how the economy is doing, he proposed quite a number of programs without being very specific about how he was going to pay for them."


The Indiana Daily Student

The wide world of sports

·

Challenged like never before, freshman Susanna Ernst found herself in an entirely different environment when she moved to Bloomington from Austria to compete for the women's swimming team. Among her fellow swimmers, she was no longer the top competitor in her field. Ernst, a two-time Austrian national champion in the 200-meter backstroke, calls the difference in competitive levels "incomparable." "Our nationals are like a small regional meet here," Ernst said. "There are not many swimmers compared to America, so (the level of competition) is much higher."


The Indiana Daily Student

Women faculty underrepresented in sciences

·

When Marlies Gerber came to IU in 1982 as an assistant professor, there was only one other woman in the mathematics department. Now, 22 years later, not much has changed. The proportion of women in the department is still small -- out of 48 faculty members, only three are women. Gerber's situation mirrors a recent study led by Dr. Donna Nelson, a chemistry professor at the University of Oklahoma.


The Indiana Daily Student

Amish reality TV show planned

·

GOSHEN, Ind. -- Television isn't much of a reality for many Amish people, much less a form called "reality TV." "I don't know what that is," said Eli M. Miller, an Amish bishop.




White, black and blues

·

Sweat stung my eyes as I stood at Albert King's grave. The summer heat in Edmondson, Ark., was starting to take its toll on me. After criss-crossing Paradise Gardens Cemetery for nearly an hour in the stifling Delta humidity, my face and brain were baking. I needed something to drink.


Kramer's 'Cooler' more on the mediocre side

·

They are the ruthless ones, the ones that revel in their own inspired grotesqueness. They are the ones that actually have a pair and aren't afraid to slap you in the face with them. They are the ones whispered in cryptic corners between your co-workers, the ones about dead babies and airplanes plunging into towers. They are jokes with a wicked sense of humor. Dark comedy is a carefully crafted witches' brew that, when served correctly, has the ability to strip us down to the nasty little demons we all harbor inside, self-righteous objections coming from the peeled lips of a curdling smile.


And you thought a weekend at LT's was tough?

·

NFL Street is a 7-on-7 arcade-style experience that celebrates laterals, hard hits and some strategy in order to create high-adrenaline match-ups featuring your favorite NFL stars on beaches and backyards. All seven players play both offense and defense, which adds a lot of strategy to a surprisingly deep game.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Pool' shallow as movie and DVD

·

Swimming Pool is supposed to be a psychological thriller, but it plays out like a third- or fourth-rate Hitchcock knock-off. It's frustratingly shallow, surprisingly conceited and gratuitously un-erotic, contrary to what it'd have you believe with Ludivine Sagnier sprawled out in a skimpy bikini on the DVD's cover.