Hoosiers bury Purdue in two straight
After scoring just one goal in the first period Friday, the Hoosier hockey team bounced back, netting 23 goals in the next five periods and crushing Purdue 12-1 both Friday and Saturday night.
After scoring just one goal in the first period Friday, the Hoosier hockey team bounced back, netting 23 goals in the next five periods and crushing Purdue 12-1 both Friday and Saturday night.
STATE COLLEGE, Penn. -- The IU women's basketball team has been in this position twice before: win a big weekend game and earn a spot among the nation's top 25.
STATE COLLEGE, Penn. -- IU racked up its best second half of basketball Sunday against Penn State. Fifty-two points and a sizzling 69 percent from the field both set season records for 20 minutes of Hoosier basketball.
A week-long vacation ended in tragedy for an IU student's boyfriend in Tampa, Fla., early Sunday. Michael Hepner was found floating unconscious two miles off the coast by a U.S. Coast Guard rescue helicopter, Tampa police spokesman Joe Durkin told The Associated Press. Hepner, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was airlifted to Tampa General Hospital, where he was pronounced dead around 6:45 a.m.
The Indianapolis Star has agreed to a request from IU to move a lawsuit against the University to Monroe County. The case, originally filed by the Star in Marion County, seeks access to documents in former coach Bob Knight's personnel file and other records compiled during IU's investigation into the conduct of the coach.
Pat Siddons, alumnus and former IDS publisher, is one of four Hoosier journalists who will be inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame on April 7. Siddons retired in 1989 after 10 years as IDS publisher and was chosen as national college newspaper adviser of the year in 1983.
At the bottom of McNutt Community Educator Melissa Lounsberry's e-mail is Dante's quote, "The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who, in times of great moral crisis, remain neutral."
Kappa Alpha Psi, one of America's first African-American fraternities, celebrated its 90th anniversary this weekend. Members of IU's Alpha chapter attended a rededication in Indianapolis Saturday. IU's chapter was the first in a fraternity that now has hundreds of chapters internationally.
Driving in Monroe County will soon cost a bit more.
According to the Constitution, a census must be taken every 10 years to determine how the 435 seats in the U.S. Congress are divied up. Remaining fairly stable in population, Indiana hasn't had fewer than 10 congressional seats since the 1840s.
Last Thursday, the Federal Communications Committee gave the green light to the merger of AOL and Time Warner -- with a couple of exceptions. These conditions are tailored to provide open access to competitors on AOL Time Warner's distribution channels. The imposed regulations left both consumer groups and the new company's executives satisfied. Gene Kimmelman, co-director of the Washington Office of Consumers Union told The New York Times, "the combined actions of the FCC and the FTC have transformed a merger that threatened competition into one that could actually expand consumers' choices for high-speed Internet and interactive TV services."
In mid-December, Congress curtailed the Federal Communication Commission's initiative to create a system of low-powered FM stations to diversify the airwaves.
Martin Luther King Jr., a leader in the civil rights movement, sparked celebration at the School of Music Friday. In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the celebration displayed a history of music through spirituals and protest songs of the civil rights movement. The emotionally charged performance was presented by the IU School of Music in conjunction with the African American Arts Institute. The program consisted of a diverse collection of songs that exemplified the broad range of music encompassed by the African-American tradition. James Mumford, director of the African-American Choral Ensemble, said he was proud to be part of an honorable cause. "There is no better way to pay tribute to Dr. King," Mumford said. "Music is a universal language and transcends all boundaries."
In the afternoon of Dec. 17, I was at Memorial Stadium to participate in the graduation ceremony. Many memories of my last several years at IU passed through my head, but there was one question I continuously asked of myself during the ceremony: What brought me here? Automatically, I started to find the answer for the question. Finally, I realized the many blessings I have received from many warm-hearted persons I have known since I enrolled at IU in fall of 1997. Yes, I am a blessed man that I can finish this program without any critical difficulties.
Extra! Extra! Read all about it! IDS front page dominated by sports coverage once again! Disturbing trend carries over into second semester!
I am a white male, and to make matters worse for me, despite a shocking lack of evidence for a man my age, I am straight. Being a straight white male isn't easy these days. Time was, we were the scourge of mankind, we could repress and pillage at a whim. Now, I'm lucky if I can kick a puppy without ending up in court.
I'm waging a war with Washington. I grew up under the cloud of smog produced by the steel mills in Northwest Indiana. My lungs conformed to the industrial aura, and I grew to love the local ghost stories, back roads and blizzards. I could navigate Chicago without a map by the age of 12 and came to appreciate Carl Sandburg's Chicago poetry.
If Gov. Frank O'Bannon's Jan. 8 budget proposal passes through Indiana's state legislature, funds given to Indiana's public colleges will be frozen. This is unfortunate for students, faculty and administrators alike. The obvious negative consequences of freezing spending, including large tuition increases and cost cutting, will hurt the University as a whole. In addition, this sends a clear message to Indiana's institutions of higher education -- a message that they are not at the top of the state's priority list.
"Silence gives consent." These were the words of James Cameron, a survivor of a 1930 racial lynching in Marion, Ind. Cameron spoke Thursday to an auditorium filled with IU students and faculty in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt served the United States as president for three terms, leading the country out of the Great Depression, implementing the New Deal and providing a source of strength and stability for Americans during World War II.