Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Wednesday, May 20
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Giving up ghetto

·

I'm giving up ghetto in the New Year. It's possible that in my junior high days I might have used the term to describe the knock-off Coach purses and silver, Puffy-inspired coats I lusted after. But back then, ghetto was somehow "fabulous" -- ghetto fabulous, to be exact.


The Indiana Daily Student

Coroner: death was accidental

·

The Monroe County coroner has ruled the death of a 47-year-old Bedford man who died after being held in the Monroe County jail as accidental.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU splits weekend games

·

Junior guard Jenny DeMuth and sophomore guard Cyndi Valentin have been the keys to IU's success throughout the entire year, and Sunday's game against North Carolina State was no exception. DeMuth and Valentin finished the game with 45 points, 11 rebounds, five assists and three steals.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fans brave snow and cold to cheer on team

·

Every other year, thousands of football fans invade Bloomington from Columbus, Ohio, to watch their Ohio State Buckeyes battle IU on the football field. This weekend the cars were headed in the other direction as Hoosier fans journeyed to Columbus to watch IU compete in a different brand of football -- that of the international variety.



The Indiana Daily Student

Defense allows IU to hold on for win

·

Last weekend, IU lost a 14-point lead with seven minutes left, due in part to Missouri's tough defense down the stretch. Saturday it was IU's defense that helped the Hoosiers pull out a 62-50 win against Butler at Assembly Hall.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hail to the Champions!

·

Neither rain nor sleet nor snow nor jet lag could stop the 2003 IU men's soccer team. No one could stop the players on the field either -- the Hoosiers are National Champions, finishing an improbable run with a 2-1 victory over the St. John's Red Storm.




The Indiana Daily Student

Brehm tenure nearly up

·

Beginning Jan. 1, IU-Bloomington Chancellor Sharon Brehm will step down from her position to make way for former IUB Chancellor Ken Gros Louis to serve as her interim replacement.


The Indiana Daily Student

Campus copes with stress during finals

·

With finals lurking just around the corner, students are looking to fend off breakdowns any way they can. Exercise and relaxation are common methods for releasing stress, but others employ less conventional means. Stress originates in the mind before affecting the body, so studying and test-taking affect people's stress levels differently, said Dian Krumlauf, a massage therapist at the IU Health and Wellness Education Center. As stress levels rise, the immune system suffers, she said. To stay healthy, Krumlauf said most students visit her in the last few weeks of the semester.


The Indiana Daily Student

THANK YOU COACH YEAGLEY

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- It was Sept. 18, and IU had just lost a heartbreaker to Notre Dame in double overtime, 1-0. The players were dejected, and IU coach Jerry Yeagley said it was a game the Hoosiers should have won. That was IU's last loss of the season. In less then three months, Yeagley crafted a young team into an experienced team destined to send Yeagley out as a champion.


The Indiana Daily Student

Youths collect cell phones for charity

·

The Torch Club, a youth leadership program at the Crestmont Boys and Girls Club, 1108 W. 14th Street, is joining Staples, Inc. this month to collect used cell phones to raise funds for the Sierra Club. Each year Torch Club members choose a national project to help kids get involved with issues facing the world. This year, the group chose recycling. The collection of cell phones began Dec. 1 and will continue through Saturday. "Not only can used cell phones go to a new user," said Justin Jackson, Torch Club staff adviser at Crestmont, "but cell phone parts can be broken down and used for other things which a lot of people do not know."


The Indiana Daily Student

Former, current students to celebrate prof's birthday

·

When renowned pianist Menachem Pressler entered this world, it seemed he was destined to be great. This is partly because the distinguished professor of music shares his birthday with one of the world's greatest composers, Ludwig van Beethoven. Pressler, who began teaching at IU in 1955, will celebrate his 80th birthday a little differently this year. Hundreds of his current and former students will gather together to thank and honor him with a special concert, reflecting on his past teaching experiences. Although his real birthday falls on Tuesday, this commemorative event will take place at 7 p.m. Thursday in Auer Hall at the IU School of Music. It will feature a number of ensemble performances and special guest speakers.



The Indiana Daily Student

Saddam captured in raid

·

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Cornered alone in a cramped hole near one of his sumptuous palaces, a weary, disheveled Saddam Hussein was seized by U.S. troops and displayed on television screens worldwide Sunday, a humiliating fate for one of history's most brutal dictators.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers weather the Red Storm

·

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- For the sixth time in school history, the Hoosiers captured the NCAA National Championship Sunday, capping IU coach Jerry Yeagley's 31-year career.


The Indiana Daily Student

First snowfall keeps students busy before finals

·

Students heaved snowballs in battles between dorms and turned lunch trays into sleds after 3.5 inches of snow blanketed Bloomington's trees, hills and streets for the first time this year early Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Professors discuss historical significance, Bush's 2004 election hopes

·

As the national news media has rushed to make predictions about the effects of Saturday's arrest of Saddam Hussein, IU professors are making speculations of their own concerning the future of America's involvement in Iraq and its effects on the upcoming election in 2004. Stephen Katz, director of undergraduate studies in the Near Eastern Languages and Cultures department, said he thinks the capture will yield mixed results for the United States in Iraq.