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Tuesday, July 14
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

IDS Presents: Chancellor Ken Gros Louis

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University Chancellor Ken Gros Louis, a native of Wilton, N.H., received his undergraduate degree and masters from Columbia University and his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in 1964. He has been at IU for 43 years. In 2006, he became the first University-wide chancellor since Herman B Wells died in 2000.



The Indiana Daily Student

Gates: Troop buildup 'not the last chance'

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WASHINGTON -- Defense Secretary Robert Gates held out hope Tuesday that U.S. forces might be able to start leaving Iraq before the end of the year, if daunting conditions including subdued violence and political reconciliation are met.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man assaults woman after she runs red light

Bloomington Police are still looking for a man who assaulted a woman after she ran a red light at the intersection of Third Street and Pete Ellis Drive Monday night said BPD Detective Sgt. Jeff Canada.

The Indiana Daily Student

2nd man charged in murders of South Bend homeless men

SOUTH BEND -- A second man charged with murder in the deaths of four homeless men, over what police describe as a dispute over scrap metal, was transferred Tuesday to the St. Joseph County Jail. Randy Lee Reeder, 50, is scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday on four counts of murder. He was transferred to the St. Joseph County Jail after appearing before a Michigan judge on Monday to waive extradition. He was being held without bond.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cancer society volunteers urge $1 rise in cigarette tax

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Nearly 300 volunteers for the American Cancer Society lobbied lawmakers Tuesday, urging them to pass a $1 increase in the state cigarette tax. "With 300 of us in the snow, the bad weather and the cold, it shows our dedication and our strength," said Brenda Davis, who came to Indianapolis from Mitchell. "We mean business."


The Indiana Daily Student

County workers again find paycheck errors

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Monroe County will likely pay about $30,000 for assistance from an outside accounting firm, following errors in employee paychecks for the third consecutive pay period. The mistakes were discovered Friday, after a software glitch in the county's computer systems overrode some human calculations, causing some government employees to receive incorrect paychecks, said Iris Kiesling, president of the Monroe County Commissioners.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUAM Noon Talk series continues Thursday with graphic artist

The IU Art Museum will feature a gallery talk by James Reidhaar from 12:15 to 1 p.m. tomorrow. Reidhaar, who is an associate professor of graphic art, will give a talk about work from his "Then and Now: Eternal Subjects, Eternal Processes," collection. Wednesday, Feb. 14, the Noon Talk series will present "A Machine for Seeing," featuring speaker Tim Kennedy, a painting, drawing and design lecturer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local band RLYL brings life, unique sound to IMU Gallery

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On Feb. 1, the smell of Starbucks coffee flowed through the air while the sound of Bloomington indie band Red Leather Yellow Leather awakened the empty ghost town known as the Indiana Memorial Union. The performance was part of a concert series called NOISE, which is held every Thursday in the IMU Gallery.


The Indiana Daily Student

Singer brings her love of opera from China to the U.S.

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IU soprano Jing Zhang got her big break by singing in a public restroom. Zhang, 21 years old at the time, was in a restroom warming her voice up for a Metropolitan Opera master class at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music after realizing the practice rooms were closed.



The Indiana Daily Student

Online Only: Meal-point mania

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So freshmen, I hear that 75 percent of your meal points are now rolling over to next year. Don't think I'm not thrilled for you, because I am. But allow me to tell you a tale from a time when this was not the system.


The Indiana Daily Student

YouTube in the U.K.

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OXFORD, England -- Missing Thanksgiving was tough for American students studying abroad last term. But for many, the feeling of loss last November pales in comparison to the excruciating absence of the Super Bowl and its infamous advertisements last Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Death by exposure?

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As you've probably heard already, Time magazine's pick for its 2006 "Person of the Year" was "You" (as in "all of us"). Inspired by the rise of YouTube, Wikipedia and MySpace, Time celebrated the Internet's empowerment of the average person: the fact that we -- acting as our own movie studio, our own record label, our own newspaper, our own publicist -- have provided the content that has made the Web the most powerful tool of our time.


The Indiana Daily Student

Vacuum your cat

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I experienced a phenomenon recently when I was visiting home. I was up in my room doing whatever it is I do (probably playing with matches or reading Judy Blume). Suddenly I heard my mother's voice calling from downstairs. She uttered those words that no one ever expects to hear.


The Indiana Daily Student

Just plain trashy

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Have you ever read the packaging instructions on something you just bought and thought, "Well, duh! That's obvious"? A Web site that documents stupid instructions (available at www.geocities.com/be_alternative/stupid_instructions.html) mentions, for instance, a Superman costume that came with this warning: "Wearing of this garment does not enable you to fly."



The Indiana Daily Student

Can't pick against them

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Have we all recovered from that whirlwind of a game Wednesday night? Well, if you haven't, hope that your Hoosiers have. Because the last time they came off a big victory, against Connecticut, they played their worst game of the season two days later at Illinois. So, will the same thing happen to this squad Saturday against Iowa?


The Indiana Daily Student

Something we aren't hearing around here

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Usually, when a new coach steps into a program his first year and achieves a considerable amount of success, there are at least some detractors. These critics most often use the same line: "Well, sure Coach B is doing great, but he's doing it with all of Coach A's recruits. Let's see what he does with his own guys in a few years." From what I've garnered, nobody has said that line around Hoosier Nation this season with first-year coach Kelvin Sampson at the helm for IU. There are myriad reasons for this. Below I've listed them. If you aren't already bored with this column, read on. I dare you.


The Indiana Daily Student

House of the rising son

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John Elway is clutch. Joe Montana is cool. Troy Aikman is collected. Terry Bradshaw is bald, and Peyton Manning is -- well, what exactly is he? The Colts quarterback has been hailed for years as this generation's greatest quarterback, but he's already 30 years old in his ninth season with the Indianapolis Colts and is just now making his first trip to the Super Bowl.