Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Thursday, Dec. 25
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosier legends recall stellar season

·

Tonight's NCAA national championship game marks the 25th anniversary of IU's undefeated season. Twenty-five years and teams have passed, but none of them duplicated the feat of that Hooiser squad. A perfect 32-0 season culminated March 29, 1976 with an 86-68 win against Michigan in the national championship game. After trailing by six at halftime, the Hoosiers dominated the second half, outscoring the Wolveriness 57-33.


The Indiana Daily Student

Stephen King's new work bland

·

After a much-publicized accident, Stephen King's future in writing was doubtful. As he chronicled in his memoirs, "On Writing," even the simple act of sitting at a computer was painful. His first novel since the accident, the first draft of "Dreamcatcher" was written using a Warterman cartridge fountain pen.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Bird Germs' inconsistent

·

When one sees a production at the Bloomington Playwright's Project, 308 S. Washington St., it must always be viewed with a grain of salt. Performing in an adequate, although not equitable space, using effective, yet old lighting equipment and an off-center pole, nearly every production is a struggle usually resulting in brilliant work.


The Indiana Daily Student

Boyd has the guts to say what we have been thinking

·

I'm writing in response to James Boyd's brilliant column ("Fighting the evil Parking Operations power," March 28). I have been in class with him before, even seen him in the residence halls when I was still living there. He's not an angry or violent person. Just inventive.


The Indiana Daily Student

Edwards mistaken on scientific ideals

·

Chris Edwards' March 28 column, "Scientists function as part of society," argued that scientists are normal human beings and should not be treated as an authority to be trusted implicitly. This thesis is correct, but his writing displayed an ignorance of science that should be addressed.


The Indiana Daily Student

Csayni needs to see the good in Little 500

·

Poor Matt Csanyi. I could write an angry letter blasting him for trying to characterize Little 500 as a negative, useless tradition ("Little 500: The stupidest IU tradition," March 28). I will instead send my pity to him, for he clearly doesn't get it, and I fear he never will.


The Indiana Daily Student

Csanyi's column belittles efforts of race riders, fans

·

When I first read the title of Matt Csanyi's article ("Little 500: The Stupidest IU Tradition," IDS, March 28), I was offended. After reading the article, I am still offended. Although Csanyi does make some valid points, calling Little 500 "the stupidest IU tradition" is going too far.


The Indiana Daily Student

God's forgiveness not taken for granted

·

I would like to respond to James Boyd's "Officially Condemned to Hell" (IDS March 21) article. God can forgive everything we've done in a blink of an eye. He has the ability to do everything. But those who truly believe in God put Him first always. They strive to serve God, and when they falter, they ask for forgiveness. The goal of Christians is not to live our lives any way we please, and then simply ask to have our sins washed away. Instead, our goal is to strive toward God's will and ask for forgiveness when we falter.


The Indiana Daily Student

Nader's plan to bring Democrats left

·

The Florida presidential election debacle has been so underreported by the media that I feel an uncontrollable urge to talk about it. Don't worry, I won't bore you too much.


The Indiana Daily Student

McCain, Feingold should be praised

A "new world" of campaigning might soon be on its way. The McCain-Feingold campaign reform bill, expected to pass a full Senate vote today, would change the face of political fund raising as we know it.


The Indiana Daily Student

Police arrest alleged forger

At 3:21 p.m. Thursday afternoon, police responded to a call from People's Bank West Branch, 525 Clarrizz Blvd., in response to a tipoff that a man was writing bad checks in the bank. According to police reports, police arrived at the scene and then called a detective into the bank. They took three men into custody for interrogation. Forgery is a Class C felony.


The Indiana Daily Student

Campus departments unite to replace student's stolen computer

·

Freshman Joe Grimme returned from spring break to find his Read Center door unlocked and his computer gone. His Gateway, 19-inch monitor, printer, specialized software and scanner -- $3,620 worth of equipment that helps Grimme, who is legally blind -- had been stolen.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers ready for second race

The crew team might have something going against it this weekend at the Kansas Invite in Lawrence, Kan. Of the six teams that will travel to the contest, only Massachusetts and IU didn't make the trip to Austin, Texas, for the March 16 and 17 Longhorn Invitational. The other four teams at the invitational tournament will be Kansas, Kansas State, Iowa and Tulsa. Instead of trekking to Texas, IU opened its season last weekend with two victories against Louisville, winning both the varsity A race and the novice contest.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team to head outdoors

·

As spring nears, the men's track team begins the exciting change of atmosphere. The indoor season was successful, but most of the Hoosiers are excited to be outdoors again. "I like the outdoor track scene better, because it is an all-around nicer environment, and it seems like the competition is better outdoors," sophomore long jumper Hasaan Reddick said. "Though you have tail wind and head wind at times outdoors, I still like it better."


The Indiana Daily Student

Untested receivers show optimism

·

A glance at last season's statistics shows the 2001 IU football team will lack experienced receivers. Senior Antwaan Randle El, who switched from quarterback to receiver this spring, said otherwise.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team to split for meet, Fla. relays

·

For the second consecutive weekend, the IU women's indoor track team will travel to a non-scored meet. The only difference is that seven athletes trek to compete in the Florida Relays at the University of Florida, while everyone else journeys north to the Purdue Open. After scorching the track at Arizona State last weekend, the seven athletes headed to Gainsville, Fla., plan to improve on their NCAA provisional qualifying marks in seven events against some of the toughest competition in the nation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team travels to challenge state rival

After a brief yet successful stint at home, the women's tennis team travels to West Lafayette to challenge Purdue at 10 a.m. Sunday at the Lafayette Sports Center. IU (10-6, 1-2 Big Ten) brings the momentum of a three-game winning streak to a series that has never been overly competitive. Purdue (3-10, 0-3 Big Ten) has been on the losing side 40 out of the 41 times the Hoosiers and Boilermakers have tangled.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers look to stop Illini streak

·

The Illinois men's tennis team hasn't lost a Big Ten match since April 13, 1997. The site of that loss? Bloomington. The Fighting Illini will return to the IU Tennis Center at noon Saturday for a shot at revenge and a Big Ten record. Since its loss to IU nearly four years ago, Illinois has won 48 consecutive Big Ten matches, just one short of the record 49 set by Michigan from 1971 to 1976. With a win against the Hoosiers Saturday and a win at Purdue Sunday, the Illini, who have won four consecutive Big Ten titles, could capture the new record.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosier team to open spring season against IUPUI Jaguars

The men's soccer team opens its spring season at 7:30 p.m. today at Bill Armstrong Stadium with a match against IU-Purdue University at Indianapolis. The Jaguars are a familiar opponent, and one that gave the Hoosiers trouble the last time the teams met. When IUPUI came to Bill Armstrong Stadium last season, IU needed goals from junior Pat Noonan and senior Ryan Mack in the final five minutes to pull out a 2-0 victory. Noonan and Mack lead the Hoosiers once again this spring.