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Monday, Nov. 25
The Indiana Daily Student


The Indiana Daily Student

IU pole vaulters prepare for home meet at Indiana Relays

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The Harry Gladstein Field House will play host to a fourth consecutive meet this weekend, as IU track-and-field athletes gear up for stiff competition in the Indiana Relays before they travel to Arkansas for the Tyson Invitational.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lady Hoosiers dispel Badgers

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Redemption is sweet. It's been 25 days since the IU women's basketball team celebrated a victory. Playing at Assembly Hall against Wisconsin on Thursday night, the Hoosiers finally put an end to their five-game losing streak in a 83-56 win against the Badgers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Game features stylistic clash

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WHEN THE COLTS HAVE THE BALL Everything starts and revolves around Peyton Manning, the best quarterback of his generation. Surprisingly, Manning has not been outstanding in Indianapolis' run to the AFC championship. But the Bears will count on facing the guy who has torn up the league for most of his career, the one who guided an 80-yard drive to the deciding touchdown in the AFC title game.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU students make trek to Miami

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Like many other times in his life, sophomore Jason Fried is traveling to Miami. But his trip down south this weekend isn't about getting a tan, swimming or visiting relatives. After spending some serious coin, Fried will travel to Miami this Saturday to make a trip to football's mecca: the Super Bowl.



The Indiana Daily Student

Storming to victory

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After IU's 71-66 upset win against No. 2 Wisconsin on Wednesday night, junior guard A.J. Ratliff tried to get to the IU locker room to celebrate the win with his teammates. The routine is familiar; he's done the same thing after IU's 11 other home wins this season, and with little resistance. This night, though, the exit was not so easy. "I'm claustrophobic," Ratliff said. "And some dude in a wig just came up to me and tackled me. It's fun, standing there jumping up and down, but it's also kind of scary at the same time." A few thousand fans, several of them in wigs, stood between Ratliff and the IU locker room Wednesday night, the product of a celebratory court-crash from the Hoosiers' student fans. The fan celebration was the first of its kind this year for IU, and the first since the Hoosiers defeated Illinois 62-60 Jan. 1, 2006. Sampson had similar problems exiting the court after the win, but was helped away from the friendly fray by a group of security guards. "I kind of felt like (San Diego Chargers running back) LaDainian Tomlinson," Sampson said. "I had pretty good blockers. I had a lot of confidence in my offensive line at the end of the game." The crowd might have made the most physical impact on Sampson and his players after the game, but the coach said the 17,283 fans had a major impact throughout the contest. The student crowd -- which has rarely filled the majority of its seats before halftime of any home game this year -- was packed before tip-off. Not only that, but students organized an impromptu "White Out," drenching much of Assembly Hall in white. Those student fans -- in addition to alumni seated all over Assembly Hall -- created a deafening environment for the usually steady Badgers. The Hoosiers are now 12-0 at Assembly Hall this year, with a 19.5 average margin of victory in those wins. IU is one of only four teams in the Big Ten (Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio State) with an undefeated home record.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team hopes for happy homecoming against Badgers

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There's no place like home. At least that's what the IU women's basketball team hopes. After two tough road losses in the last week to Ohio State and Michigan, the Hoosiers return home to Assembly Hall to take on Wisconsin at 7 p.m. Thursday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ratliff pours in 20 in IU upset victory

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A.J. Ratliff walked toward the IU students at the south end of Branch McCracken Court, his arms raised to the rafters. There were 8.6 seconds remaining on the clock, but he cracked a smile anyway.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers focus on stopping Wisconsin star Alando Tucker

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He scored a season-high 32 points against No. 7 Pittsburgh on Dec. 16, 2006. Fifteen days later he dropped 29 on Georgia. Then, last week, he scored 27 against the Iowa Hawkeyes and was named the Co-Big Ten Player of the Week. There are many reasons why the media named Wisconsin's Alando Tucker to the preseason first-team All-Big Ten team and why he's second in the conference in scoring.


The Indiana Daily Student

The legacy of Rex

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It's nearly 2:30 p.m., almost the end of another school day at Bloomington High School South. As the afternoon announcements are wrapping up, the approximately 1,800 students at the school are left with a message. "Remember to pride yourself and the Panthers," the woman giving the announcement says. The high school certainly has something to take pride in this week. One of Bloomington South's former students, Chicago Bears quarterback Rex Grossman, is preparing to lead his team Sunday in Super Bowl XLI.


The Indiana Daily Student

Women's intramural basketball still popular

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During intramural basketball season, the courts at the Wildermuth Intramural Center become jam-packed with sweaty male players shooting free throws, playing man-to-man defense and violently vying for rebounds.


The Indiana Daily Student

Urlacher embraces small town roots

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MIAMI -- Brian Urlacher was so at ease, he slept on the flight to the Super Bowl. And when Sunday arrives, he'll make sure he tunes into his favorite morning fishing show on TV. Just to sort of chill.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sosa has a contract, must make team

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ARLINGTON, Texas -- Sammy Sosa has a contract with the Texas Rangers and a chance to get back to the major leagues. Now the former slugger has to go to spring training and earn a spot on the roster.


The Indiana Daily Student

Foul shots 'key' for Hoosiers

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With all of the hype surrounding any NCAA game -- let alone a game featuring the No. 2 team in the country -- it's easy to overanalyze the mental capacities of the players involved, to wonder if they'll be properly focused.


The Indiana Daily Student

Irish shutout Hoosiers 7-0 in tennis blowout

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The men's tennis team traveled to South Bend on Monday with hopes of a big win, but instead it returned to Bloomington with its first loss of the season. Facing No. 13 Notre Dame, the No. 58 Hoosiers were swept, 7-0, losing each of the nine matches. "I am really, really disappointed," IU coach Ken Hydinger said. "We're better than this, and we didn't go out and fight."


The Indiana Daily Student

Class after Super Bowl? IU students hope not

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What do Martin Luther King Jr. Day and the day after the Super Bowl have in common? Besides falling on the first day of the work week, not much. But freshman Zac Foutz and more than 4,000 other students hope that, like MLK Day, IU students can take the day off after the big game.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro euthanized Monday

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KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. -- Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro was euthanized Monday after complications from his breakdown at last year's Preakness, ending an eight-month ordeal that prompted an outpouring of support across the country. A series of ailments -- including laminitis in the left rear hoof, an abscess in the right rear hoof, as well as new laminitis in both front feet -- proved too much for the gallant colt. The horse was put down at 10:30 a.m. "Certainly, grief is the price we all pay for love," said co-owner Gretchen Jackson at a news conference.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dungy overcomes tragedy to seek his first Super Bowl title

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MIAMI -- After his brother died in an auto accident last September, Reggie Wayne returned to the Indianapolis Colts to find Tony Dungy waiting to console him -- as only a man who has been through his own personal tragedies can do. "I was at the lowest point," Wayne recalled last week. "Just to hear it from someone who has been through it helps you a lot. Coach Dungy is a strong man -- a strong soul. It was huge for me." Dungy's tragedy came 13 months ago -- the suicide of his 18-year-old son James.