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Thursday, June 25
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Lober a great choice for mayoral candidacy

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As a resident of Bloomington, I recognize the positive change we need – Jamie Lober for mayor. Jamie is an exceptionally promising candidate who I know will deliver on her promise to “bring energy, integrity and enthusiasm to the mayor’s office” as well as innovative ideas. Jamie has spent countless hours traveling throughout Monroe County to promote her positive vision for all people. She brings lifelong experience in the areas that are most important to constituents, including education, health care and communication. Fluency in Spanish has led Jamie to understand the importance of celebrating culture and building a strong economy for all. Jamie is currently fighting a battle that should have a greater value than any other political campaign – she is fighting for my future and the future of our city. It is vitally important we support Jamie Lober for mayor on May 8. Michael Levine Bloomington


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers blow out Butler in home opener

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In its first home game of the season, the IU baseball team gave its fans plenty to cheer about on a brisk March afternoon. Playing without freshman left fielder Kipp Schutz, who sustained a broken collarbone during Tuesday’s 5-3 loss to Indiana State, the Hoosiers (4-4) evened their record back to .500 with a 6-0 win against in-state rival Butler (3-5), Wednesday.



The Indiana Daily Student

1,000 fans ‘Spoon’-fed at Bluebird

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Spoon’s frizzy, blond-haired front man, Britt Daniel, kept the packed Bluebird crowd on its feet as he dropped to his knees throughout the performance. Wailing away on his guitar like a machine gun, thrusting it against the speaker and breaking into occasional falsetto, he didn’t let a broken guitar strap halt him or the rest of the band from feeding the crowd a night of hard rock.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ken Nunn coverage compares to free advertising

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I was stunned in the Feb. 27 IDS to see a huge half-page article, a second shorter article with a kind of Abraham Lincoln up-by-the-bootstraps vibe, a huge black-and-white picture and a front-page color picture pointing to the articles, all to give us “news” about... an injury lawyer?! You gave him plenty of space to wax on in direct quotations about his similarities to Robin Hood, to David against Goliath, and the “magic” of being so reachable by his clients. I don’t object to Ken Nunn at all, or his ubiquitous advertising in town. I just object to a respectable major university newspaper leaping so willfully over the line to advertising posing as news. I would hope Ken would object just as vehemently.




The Indiana Daily Student

IUB should be primary focus of administrators

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The 18th president of Indiana University and next CEO of Indiana University was announced on March 1... at IUPUI. The 2007 Indiana University Fact Book had a great photo on the cover... of IUPUI. The Indiana University Presidential Search Committee had one graduate student member... from South Bend. Where are the accolades for the Indiana University – Indiana University Bloomington. In case you’ve forgotten, we are the flagship campus. We are the Indiana University Hoosiers. We attract the most alumni support, we have the largest student body, we are the home of Indiana University Big Ten athletics, we generate the most revenue from tuition, we are Indiana University – and we attract the least attention from our own administration. When I came to this institution 3 1/2 years ago, I came to experience the history, the traditions, the pride and the honor of being a Hoosier. What have I seen? I have seen tuition rise, enrollment drop, an increase in student apathy and a hell of a lot of focus placed on satellite campuses. The 2007 Indiana University Fact Book, that piece of literature produced to display all that this great institution has to offer, has a picture of the IUPUI campus on it. Actually, it’s a courtyard with the Indianapolis skyline in the background. Is that really Indiana University? Why doesn’t it have a picture of the Sample Gates or Assembly Hall or The Rock or the Arboretum or the largest student union in the world? If there has been one consistent thing I have heard from our administrators after four years, it has been how beautiful our campus is, that it is arguably the best campus in the nation. Well, I agree. Where is it displayed? How can you expect our campus to be the image of Indiana University and not give us the chance to prove it? I agree it is up to students to motivate themselves, but it is impossible to generate and maintain the pride we once had for this school unless you do your part, administrators. We house your offices, we interact with you daily and we represent you with our work, our successes and our pride. So, President McRobbie, you have hearts to mend back at home, sir. Please don’t rob us of our work, our pride, our tradition, our history and our honor of being the Indiana University Hoosiers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Report points to the dangers with vain practices

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In regards to “Spoiled and proud” (March 2) by Kirk Nathanson: O but Kirk, how can you be special, when I am special? I mean, my new favorite kids song tells me this every day. You might remember it as “Frere Jacques,” and though it has the same tune, it is in the best language on Earth ... the one I speak (because I am special). Its new lyrics are, “I am special, I am special, look at me, look at me, no one else but me is, no one else but me is, I’m the best, I’m the best”. OK, maybe that is not on my iPod, but the new JT is, and I am bringin’ sexy back. All right, enough with that. It makes me sick being that narcissistic. I understand your column and how vanity promotes pointless purchases and $1,000 purses that fit your phone and two clean Kleenexes, but I don’t think that was what professor Jean Twenge was talking about. It is a well-known fact that everybody is at least a little vain, and it does promote capitalism. However, what Twenge was saying was that as a group, we are becoming too vain and it is beginning to have negative effects. One example I can think of is with obese children. If they are told their whole young life that its OK to be obese, then they will grow up thinking that it’s OK and healthy to be obese, and then they will die from health complications. Her report was pointing out how it’s getting worse and that we all just need to take a step back and look at what we are doing. A little vanity improves our self-esteem, which is good. Too much can damage our lives, health and relationships. Now, if you will excuse me, my mirror misses me. Sam Horrell Senior


The Indiana Daily Student

Dangerous union

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Unions in America are not what they used to be. This past Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 241-185 to modify the National Labor Relations Act. The crux of this modification is a measure that would allow employees to bypass a secret ballot election and unionize simply by gathering “check cards” with signatures from a majority of employees.


The Indiana Daily Student

Have you seen my baseball?

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There’s always that one kid. That one outcast who is doing his own thing while the rest of his friends are doing whatever is considered “in” at the time. We all know him. We all love him. But have you ever been him? I have. I’m that one kid who doesn’t really enjoy baseball. I’m that kid who doesn’t tie spring to spring training and summer to the regular season. I’m that kid.


The Indiana Daily Student

The forgotten war

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Last week, a suicide bomber affiliated with the Taliban attacked the Bagram Air Base, a United States military installation in Afghanistan. According to a Taliban spokesman (evidently, the Taliban have spokesmen), the target of the attack was Dick Cheney, who happens to be the vice president of the United States and was visiting the base.



The Indiana Daily Student

Professor says Russia is at ‘crossroads’

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When political scientists talk about Russia, they usually aren’t mentioning it in the same breath as democracy. Instead, they talk about its slow slide into authoritarianism, said Henry Hale, an assistant professor at George Washington University and a former professor at IU.


The Indiana Daily Student

STAND pursuing policy solutions to Darfur issue

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Brian Stewart, in his column “Never say never” (Feb. 27), joked that the fact that there are “scant people left to kill” in Darfur would make “the weak-kneed pacifists in the ‘anti-genocide’ movement very happy.” As a member of STAND (Students Taking Action Now: Darfur) on campus, I would like to assure Stewart that the deaths of 400,000 civilians do not, in fact, make us happy. I am more concerned, however, by the larger implication that the anti-genocide movement is a group of naive do-gooders who do nothing but bemoan atrocities and express hollow solidarity with the victims. Rather, our group and similar groups are sincerely trying to translate our horror over Darfur into pragmatic, policy-based solutions. Mr. Stewart says that he is “unnerved by flippant denunciations without a corresponding call for troops,” but the primary priority of virtually every major Darfur advocacy group is to push for the deployment of U.N. peacekeeping troops. This is admittedly a difficult task politically, but there have been some excellent initiatives to help U.S. citizens effectively use their political and economic influence to work toward this goal. No, we have not “saved Darfur,” but the U.S. government has become more engaged as a direct result of widespread grass-roots action, and this engagement has led to some tangible and positive results on the ground. Finally, I would like to note that Mr. Stewart’s claim that “there are scant people left to kill” is both unbelievably callous and utterly incorrect. In fact, there are about 4 million people in Sudan who are entirely dependent on humanitarian aid. Due to continued violence on the ground and increasing attacks against aid workers themselves, the stability of this aid is in dire jeopardy and so, therefore, are 4 million lives. There are a number of practical measures that can be taken to help save these lives, and STAND is committed to discussing and implementing these measures. If Mr. Stewart has any ideas, he’s welcome to join us at 8 p.m. Thursdays in Ballantine 015. Otherwise, I’d appreciate it if he kept his assertions about our knees to himself. Rebecca Burns Co-president of STAND


The Indiana Daily Student

Committee has tough decisions at top of bracket, too

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INDIANAPOLIS – Gary Walters understands the difficulty in filling those final spots for the NCAA field. This year, however, his selection committee faces a new twist – picking the top seeds. With Florida’s late-season struggles, Wisconsin’s injuries and Kansas’ power ranking, Walters acknowledged Wednesday that putting together the 65-team field this weekend will be far from clear-cut.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the World

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Illinois would see the largest tax increase in its history under Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s plan to provide health care for the uninsured and ramp up state support for education.


The Indiana Daily Student

Girls suspended for saying ‘vagina’ during reading of feminist play

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CROSS RIVER, N.Y. – A public high school has suspended three students who disobeyed officials by saying the word “vagina” during a reading from a well-known feminist play. The honor students, Megan Reback, Elan Stahl and Hannah Levinson, included the word during their reading of “The Vagina Monologues” because “It wasn’t crude and it wasn’t inappropriate and it was very real and very pure,” Reback said. Their defiant stand is being applauded by “Vagina Monologues” author Eve Ensler, who said Tuesday that the school should be celebrating, rather than punishing, the three juniors.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dow must be held accountable for Bhopal

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The column “Defending Dow” by Edward Delp (March 1) against activists protesting Dow Chemical was factually incorrect, irrational and shows a lack of background research. The disaster that occurred 22 years ago is the worst gas leak in history, with over 20,000 dead by conservative estimates and not 3,800 as cited by Mr. Delp. The accident occurred due to poor safety standards at UCIL, which was fully controlled by the U.S.-based Union Carbide, since it was the majority stakeholder. In 1989, Carbide paid $470 million as compensation – that is, $500 for each victim who died or suffered lifelong disabilities from exposure to deadly methyl isocyanate. However, the genetic and neurological effects of the exposure were unknown until a decade after. In 2001, Dow Chemical bought Union Carbide to become the world’s largest chemical company when it was fully aware of Carbide’s liabilities in Bhopal and the U.S. Beyond the unfair compensation, the greater tragedy in Bhopal is the lack of cleanup of the accident site. Numerous studies document the presence of toxins like mercury, lead and other carcinogens in soil and groundwater, which are poisoning hundreds of thousands to this day. The victims are demanding Dow clean up the site, face criminal charges and provide long-term health care and livelihood for the disabled. None of these were covered by the settlement reached in 1989. Indeed, pollution was not even an issue then. These facts, backed by Amnesty, Greenpeace, the BBC and Time magazine, were sufficient for several congressmen and the EU to demand Dow to do its duty. Corporations like Dow thrive on willfully making issues of ethics and social justice complicated through mergers and media campaigns leading to some like Delp to still question the onus of responsibility. Dow is in clear violation of basic human rights – of people who are halfway across the world, but people nonetheless like you and me. Marching on the street may not be everyone’s choice, but when the stakes are as high as the lives of thousands, the voices need to be strident. Finally, raising these issues in this campus provide the vital perspective about corporations like Dow to students, who have the potential to make a difference as responsible global citizens. Giri Krishnan President, Association for India’s Development Editor’s note: As stated in Delp’s column, the number of deaths, 3,800, was cited from the Union Carbide Web site. The column acknowledged that this number is debated.