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Wednesday, June 24
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: IU falls to Michigan State, 66-58

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For the 13th straight time, the IU men’s basketball lost at the Breslin Center in East Lansing, Mich. This time however, the Hoosiers went into halftime leading by 10, only to surrender 46 second-half points to Michigan State en route to a 66-58 defeat Saturday night.


The Indiana Daily Student

Petition calls for unisex bathrooms

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When Mary Gray discovered that the new Communication and Culture, Human Biology, Medical Sciences restroom facilities plan would not include gender-neutral restrooms, she decided to find out if anything could be done to remedy the situation.



The Indiana Daily Student

Man or miniskirt

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I'm not suggesting I should ever dispense fashion advice – clearly I have none to offer (especially on a campus already up to its visible panty line with Uggs).


The Indiana Daily Student

My scrotum isn't dirty

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Some librarians and teachers are on a crusade this week to ban an award-winning children’s book from their shelves. The 2007 Newbery Medal recipient (the most prestigious award for children’s literature) “The Higher Power of Lucky,” by Susan Patron, is under attack because of one word: “scrotum.”



The Indiana Daily Student

Junior sprinter readies IU for Big Ten meet

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For the men’s track and field team to win the Big Ten indoor championships this weekend, it will need more than talent and a home facility advantage. It will need leadership and motivation. Thankfully the team has been getting these two things in heavy doses all year from not only their coaches, but junior sprinter Doug Dayhoff.



The Indiana Daily Student

Around the World

Britain will withdraw around 1,600 troops from Iraq in the coming months and aims to further cut its 7,100-strong contingent by late summer if Iraqi forces can secure the country’s south, Prime Minister Tony Blair said Wednesday.


The other spy movie

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In recent years there has been a slew of espionage thrillers. From "The Bourne Identity" to "The Departed," America has had a piqued interest in spy movies in recent history. Along comes "Breach," a cat-and-mouse thriller based on the true story of "the worst spy in American history." Since it's a true story, you know the spy will ultimately be caught as well as knowing the general gist, which restricts the movie from being an astonishing film. However, with Billy Ray at the helm in only his second directorial effort, "Breach" is a well-focused and well-depicted story of one of the most malevolent men in U.S. history and his unlikely demise.



Karly Tearney

IDS turns 140

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Some years ago, Indiana Daily Student editors started scrawling a message on the drawer of Ernie Pyle’s desk on their last night in the newsroom. “Remember freedom also means responsibility,” wrote summer 1996 editor in chief Reid Cox. One editor in chief left her mark in red felt-tip: “To the dream, nightmare, & reality known as the IDS. Love always, Marijke Rowland, EIC spring ’97.” The desk used by the World War II reporter during his time at the IDS has been a fixture in the newsroom for almost a century of the paper’s 140-year history. Ernie Pyle’s old rolltop is just one example of the long and colorful tradition of this newspaper.


Get back with the Police already

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There are many sides to Sting. There's the proto-punk Sting of The Police. There's the tough guy Sting who played in "Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels." There's the solo pop Sting of recent. And now we have Renaissance Sting. Sting jumps in the time machine and takes the works of 17th-century composer John Dowland and puts a new spin on them. Songs from the Labyrinth is Elizabethan music for the 21st century.


The Indiana Daily Student

Class combines outdoor adventure with classroom instruction

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For the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, as well as its Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Studies, this academic year represents a milestone: 60 years since its establishment at IU. Since its founding in 1946, the school has offered classes, programs and organizations that allow students to live by its motto that a “sound body provides for a sound mind.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Cigarette break

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With presidential hopeful Barack Obama’s new pledge to quit smoking plastering headlines, he has more than his political career on the line.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tibbs, Hess opinion failures amusing

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The recent column by Mr. Hess on the subject of gay adoption (“Fathers and mothers,” Feb. 1) wasn’t half as interesting as the responses. That’s either a reflection of an ill-considered approach to a nuanced topic or a simply a cry for better opinion writing. In the case of the column in question, I’d chose the latter.


The Indiana Daily Student

Company gives chance to fake your own horrific death

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CHARLESTON, Ill. – What’s your favorite scary movie? For roommates Derek Clem and Scott Aigner, the answer was written in the fake blood and man-made intestines staining their clothes – their movie. Clem and Aigner, both Eastern Illinois University graduate students, received the chance to star in their own personally designed horror-slasher scene, making fake death a reality at Eastern’s Tarble Arts Center in Charleston.


The Indiana Daily Student

African Languages Club to host daylong festival with food, music, dance

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After only one semester, the IU African Languages Club boasts 71 members. Students and faculty members holding an interest in African languages responded enthusiastically to the formation of the club, which on Feb. 27 will hold its first event, the Africana Festival. The Africana Festival – a daylong festival featuring dancing, music and food from Africa at the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center, 275 N. Jordan Ave. – will be held Tuesday, Feb. 27.


The Monroe County Historical Center Museum exhibit features tons of cinematic artifacts from the silent era to modern times. Photo by Ronni Moore

Monroe County boasts its Hollywood connections

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The Oscars might feature movie stars who seem to live in a distant world, but Bloomington and Monroe County have so many connections to Hollywood that a local history museum decided to feature them in an exhibit.