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Friday, Jan. 23
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

IU students empower girls through sports

Girls Inc. of Monroe County offers empowerment-based programs for girls ages 5-18, fighting gender inequity through inspiring girls to live up to their full potential. Our sports leagues (basketball, volleyball, dance) are one of the ways that we help girls to build the confidence and skills they need to grow into strong and healthy young women.


The Indiana Daily Student

Odds stacked against Hoosiers

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According to vegasinsider.com, a sports gambling information Web site, the IU men’s basketball team’s odds of winning a national title this year stand at 300-1  – same as seldom-feared small school Siena and a long way from highly regarded in-state rival Purdue, whose odds are 20-1.


The Indiana Daily Student

Love your dog: Don’t keep it chained

Have you ever thought about the life of a dog on a chain or in a pen? Actually, they don’t have a life! The only thing they can do all day is sit in dirt surrounded by their feces. They usually get absolutely no exercise, no medical attention, no baths or nail trims, no shade in the summer, no straw in their dog house in the winter (sometimes no dog house) and most importantly, no love! Their water is usually frozen or tipped over by their short, heavy chain. They get the same food every day. Sometimes in the winter they stand, lifting one foot then another, because the ground is too cold to lie down on. Many suffer frostbite.

The Indiana Daily Student

9/11 Truth group is incorrectly portrayed

Thanks for covering David Ray Griffin’s presentation on 9/11 at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater on Labor Day evening. Unfortunately, your article contained several serious misrepresentations. The worst is the statement that “Griffin contended that no difference exists between evil and patriotism as patriotism means working for one’s own country at the expense of others.”  Griffin’s actual claim was that it’s possible to commit great evil while acting on patriotic motives. In particular, if those responsible for the events of 9/11 include persons within the U.S. government, they could well have been acting on patriotic motives. However, that would not justify their actions or make them good.


IU wide receiver Mitchell Evans, right, makes a catch in practice on Tuesday at the football practice field. Evans, a sophomore, has played at the quarterback and safety positions before moving to wide receiver.

IU’s Mitch of all trades

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Unlike some members of the IU football team, Mitchell Evans is not an outspoken personality. He just plays the game –  wherever that may be. For the last two years, Evans has essentially played the role of utility man for the Hoosiers, the man who can do just near anything when it comes to football. “He is such a good athlete, you can move him around anywhere on the field wherever your team needs him,” senior wide receiver Andrew Means said. And move him is just what the Hoosiers have done.


The Indiana Daily Student

Monetary incentives could encourage performance

It’s a tried and true tenet of the business world: Give employees a share in the benefits, and they will work harder. Ah, the magic of incentives. Despite its success in the private sector, such a system of rewards has made education bigwigs wary – that is until recently. Kent State University recently announced that – in effort to improve its status, retention rate and number of alumni donations – it will start paying cash bonuses to faculty members who help the university exceed its goals. The plan is simple: Give educators a share in the spoils that their efforts bring to campus.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not so super

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Last year was just too good. In fact, it really spoiled me. In August 2007, I inaugurated my college career, starting fresh with new academics, extracurricular pursuits and socialization. Don’t get me wrong, this fall has proven to be anything but a downer. I’ve loved my classes and I couldn’t be happier seeing old friends again while meeting new people.


The Indiana Daily Student

Time well spent (let’s go to Canada)

While I was jumping through hoops for one of my 50 college applications as a senior in high school, I was asked how I was going to spend my time in college. I hadn’t come up with an answer by the time the essay was due, so I went to the sole source of all things right and true in the universe – the Internet – and searched “how to write a college essay.” I was never happy with it, but here I am at IU.


The Indiana Daily Student

No laughing matter

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Watching the Republican National Convention last week was a little like entering the twilight zone. For one, there was almost no mention of President Bush during the proceedings – he actually had to suffer the indignity of an appearance through remote feed. And after all he’s done for them. It also warmed my heart that the party of Rush Limbaugh had suddenly discovered sexism.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gallery presents new Artist of the Month series

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Proud is a word that hardly describes how Wandering Turtle Art Gallery & Gifts store manager Rachel DiGregorio feels about the gallery’s new Independent Artist of the Month series, which is devoted to promoting artists who are not signed with major record companies. Digregorio calls the project her “baby.”


The Indiana Daily Student

I kissed a trend, and I liked it

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This past summer, one could not escape the incessant wails of Katy Perry, whose hit single “I Kissed a Girl” sparked an emergence of cherry ChapStick and homoeroticism for heterosexual girls being cool. Now that autumn is upon us, we have recovered from the single and are wiser with newer, better musical choices. Yet despite the song’s short amount of time in the spotlight, one must realize the song’s historical moment in the larger cultural context and ask, is Katy Perry capable of artistic merit?



The Indiana Daily Student

Teen mothers are all the rage

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The Spears family has done it again. They have topped themselves on the ridiculous scale, and this time, Britney didn’t even have anything to do with it.



The Indiana Daily Student

Gallery presents new Artist of the Month series

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Proud is a word that hardly describes how Wandering Turtle Art Gallery & Gifts store manager Rachel DiGregorio feels about the gallery’s new Independent Artist of the Month series, which is devoted to promoting artists who are not signed with major record companies. Digregorio calls the project her “baby.”



Use proper etiquette at MAC shows

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Braving those haughty, classical concerts can be intimidating, but what if your first time happens to be on a date? Don’t fret. Let these tips make your night impressive, and squash those hoity-toity, preconceived notions.


Michelle Obama, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks during a round table discussion with working women focusing on the economy on Wednesday in Fishers, Ind.


The Indiana Daily Student

Candidates for County Council hold discussion

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Three Monroe County Council democratic candidates addressed voters about environmental issues Wednesday night. Incumbent Warren Henegar, Geoff McKim and Julie Thomas talked for about 45 minutes about issues such as alternative transportation, Lake Monroe conservation and creating a green economy at Karst Farm Park.