Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Tuesday, May 12
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Team looks to end season right

·

The Hoosiers will travel to Howey-in-the-Hills, Fla., to take part in their second ever Mission Inn Classic, which will conclude the fall portion of their schedule. The first half of the year has already produced more titles than all of last year. The Hoosiers have competed in three tournaments so far and have a first, second and third place finish to show for their efforts. Junior Karen Dennison has captured two individual titles, and was the runner-up in the other.


The Indiana Daily Student

Destination: Post-season

·

The IU women's soccer team went to Iowa and Illinois this weekend looking for two wins and to solidify their place in the Big Ten tournament. They can look at the weekend as the "glass being half full."


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers open season, sweep Dayton Fliers

·

The IU hockey team started the season with a pair of victories this weekend, defeating the University of Dayton Flyers 8-1 Friday and 6-0 Saturday. The Hoosiers struck first Friday when junior forward Frank Harrison backhanded a shot under the stick of Dayton goalie Doug Majkrzak.


The Indiana Daily Student

On the sidelines

·

Angels even World Series against Giants Rowing competes in pair of regattas Harriers compete in Pre-Nats

The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers' scrimmage a success

·

For the second week in a row, the IU men's basketball team opened its practice to the public. Not long after the end of the IU football team's loss to Iowa did the fans make the short trek from Memorial Stadium to Assembly Hall to enjoy a sports fan's dream day: A football game followed by an open scrimmage by the NCAA runners-up.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU claims regular season Big Ten title

·

The last time IU played at Ohio State, the Buckeyes prematurely ended the Hoosiers' pursuit of a Big Ten Tournament Championship. This time, IU erased the bitter taste of defeat, and earned the number one seed in this year's conference tournament with a 4-2 victory.


The Indiana Daily Student

Inconsistent offense hurts strategy

·

If you were to look at the offensive numbers from Saturday's game, IU would appear to be the team that came out on top. But the inability to capitalize in the red zone hurt the Hoosiers as they fell 24-8 to No. 15 Iowa (7-1, 4-0 Big Ten).


The Indiana Daily Student

Red zone is dead zone for IU

·

It looked like they could do it again. After spotting No. 15 Iowa a 17-0 first quarter lead, the IU offense moved the ball inside the Hawkeye 20-yard line six times in an attempt to pull out a comeback for the ages. But the six trips into the red zone turned into just three points as IU (3-4, 1-2 Big Ten) dropped its Homecoming game 24-8 to the Hawkeyes (7-1, 3-0 Big Ten).


The Indiana Daily Student

Robin Williams visits US troops

·

BAGRAM, Afghanistan -- Robin Williams bounds into a bombed-out airplane hangar, his arms wide, his body cocked as if about to catapult into the crowd. It ain't Carnegie Hall, but no matter. Williams is ready to entertain. "Good morning, Afghanistan!" he bellows, and the crowd of soldiers at Bagram Air Base erupts into cheers. Some clamber on top of shipping pallets, craning for a better view of the comedian. "I had a lovely military flight, thank you," Williams says. "I love spiraling in — nothing like that to make your colon go, 'Fire in the hole!'"


The Indiana Daily Student

'The Ring' claims box office victory

·

LOS ANGELES -- Death-by-videotape brought box-office life to "The Ring," a horror flick that scared up $15 million to debut as the weekend's No. 1 movie. Starring Naomi Watts as a reporter investigating a video whose viewers die horribly a week after watching it, "The Ring" knocked off "Red Dragon," which had been the top film for two straight weekends. "Red Dragon" fell to third place with $8.8 million during the weekend, while "Sweet Home Alabama" remained the No. 2 film with $9.6 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Columbine movie gets mixed reviews

DENVER -- Some parents of children killed in the Columbine massacre praised a new documentary about the killings, saying it contributes to the fight for tighter gun control. Others said the film exploits tragedy. "Bowling for Columbine," shown Saturday at the Starz Denver International Film Festival, uses the slayings as a launching point to examine violence and gun culture in America. "It was difficult at times to watch," said Tom Mauser, who has campaigned for stronger gun laws since his son Daniel was killed in the 1999 school attack. "I realize that some will say, 'Maybe these films shouldn't be shown.' I say no. To not take on the subject of gun violence is to ignore it, and we've done that for too long," he said during a panel discussion.


The Indiana Daily Student

Details from Bali blasts revealed

·

JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Authorities are making progress in the investigation of a bombing in Bali that killed nearly 200 people, with investigators now concluding that three, not two, explosives were used in the attack, police said Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Prisoners released after election

·

CAIRO, Egypt -- With a U.S. invasion looming, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein reached out to his people Sunday issuing a decree meant to empty his jails of everyone from pickpockets to political prisoners.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sniper pattern puzzles police

·

WASHINGTON -- There is almost certainly a pattern in the Washington-area sniper shootings. Finding it is the devilish detail. More than two weeks of frantic investigation and even more harried speculation have kicked up a storm of leads, theories, odd facts and false twists -- a mountain of meaninglessness that may contain telling information if it ever gets sorted out.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana continues to see highest bankruptcy filing rates

MUNSTER, Ind. -- Northern Indiana residents have been filing bankruptcies at a faster rate than last year -- when the area had the highest Chapter 7 bankruptcy rate in the country. The most recent records from federal courts show that those living in the Northern District of Indiana, which covers roughly the state's northern one-third, filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection at a rate of 6.7 per 1,000 residents during the 12 months ending in June. The court district covering the rest of the state was second with a figure of 6.6 compared with a national median of 3.8, The Times reported in a story Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Countries differ on nonprofit tax policy

FORT WAYNE -- Counties across Indiana are following different policies in exempting religious and nonprofit organizations from property taxes; a practice that could be costing local governments thousands of dollars a year, a newspaper reports. Although churches and charities are largely tax-exempt, state law provides an exemption for only the first 15 acres of property owned by the organizations. What has emerged is a system in which one group is taxed while a similar group in another county is not, The Journal Gazette reported in a story Sunday. For instance, the Christian Care Retirement Community -- a nonprofit organization sponsored by two Apostolic churches -- uses about 29 acres in Bluffton for an extensive retirement community.


The Indiana Daily Student

Whooping cranes guided through state

MARTINSVILLE -- A flock of whooping cranes being guided by an ultralight plane on a migratory flight to Florida is expected to pass through central Indiana this week. This is the second year of the guided 1,200-mile migration for the endangered birds from their summer habitat in Wisconsin. Five ultralights are leading the birds on this year's trip south, up from the five birds that flew north in April. A flock of 16 birds left Wisconsin's Necedah National Wildlife Refuge on Oct. 13, but five of them had already dropped out when they began just their third day of flying since then because of bad weather.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sewage plants dump chemicals

More than a third of Indiana's water-treatment plants illegally dumped toxic chemicals into waterways during a three-year period, according to a new nationwide study by an environmental group. The report by the Public Interest Research Group examined pollution from 1999-2001 and focused on permits for "high hazard chemicals" -- pollutants known or suspected to cause cancer and reproductive and developmental disorders. Among those toxins were mercury, cyanide and phosphorus. The study found that the bulk of the state's pollution discharges come from northwest Indiana's sewage-treatment plants. It ranked Indiana among the nation's 10 worst violators of water-pollution laws.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bye-bye Brand, bye-bye hypocrisy

·

I was born to IU alums in 1981, the same year the men's basketball team won the NCAA championship. My earliest memories are of being dressed in IU T-shirts and diapers. IU's 1992 run to the Final Four remains one of my most vivid childhood memories. So I wasn't thrilled when IU President Myles Brand fired Bobby Knight. But I will be the first to admit that some of Knight's coaching methods were, um, unorthodox. And I avidly supported Mike Davis' team from the beginning, because IU basketball is about a team, not a coach.


The Indiana Daily Student

Protect online free speech

·

Over and above the right to free speech is the right to anonymity. We are free to say what we want, and in order to protect ourselves from harassment and persecution, we are free to say it without anyone knowing who we are. Anonymity played an important role in the founding of our country. James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay published the Federalist Papers under pseudonyms, as did Thomas Paine with Common Sense. The Supreme Court has consistently ruled in favor of anonymity. But our right to online anonymity has recently come under attack in the form of CyberSLAPP legal suits.