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Monday, May 11
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

NIT title boosts Bulldogs to highest ranking

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INDIANAPOLIS -- A few weeks ago, Butler was seen as a team with little bite. A preseason poll picked the Bulldogs to finish sixth in the Horizon League. The Bulldogs' growl is a lot more noticeable after wins over Notre Dame, IU, Tennessee and Gonzaga.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers survive comeback threat from Evansville Thursday night at home

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Despite being down a key player Thursday night, the IU women's basketball team was able to hold off the University of Evansville, winning 83-80 in Assembly Hall. "Today we beat a good team," IU coach Felisha Legette-Jack said. "This team (Evansville) is a fantastic team that has a strong chance to win their conference and be an NCAA team. But we're soldiers too. Our kids never quit."


The Indiana Daily Student

IU travels to Las Vegas for tournament

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The Hoosier wrestling team will compete at the Cliff Keen Las Vegas Collegiate Invitational in Primm, Nev., starting Friday. The CKLV tournament is in its 25th year, and IU is one of 49 teams scheduled to participate in the two-day affair.


The Indiana Daily Student

The face(book) of protest

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A little more than 2 1/2 months ago (on Sept. 11), the IDS editorial board reacted to the outcry against the new Facebook news feed by saying: "Forget about war, helping fight hunger or actually communicating with your friends in person. Facebook is all that really matters, right? If you were to create a Facebook group that dealt with issues such as protecting free speech or keeping the government out of religion, would it have 740,000 members? Not likely. But if a new policy is introduced on Facebook that you don't like, then join the revolution!" But while we reacted to a false revolution, the real one was occurring under our noses.





The Indiana Daily Student

Tea, art served up at IUAM

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If you're into art, music and tea -- or your significant other no longer considers having a beer and sitting on the couch with you a date -- come to the IU Art Museum Friday. The museum will stay open until 7 p.m. for Teahouse Night to celebrate its current exhibition, "Conspiring With Tradition: Contemporary Painting From the Guilin Chinese Painting Academy." The exhibit features a variety of contemporary Chinese art, said Judy Stubbs, Pamela Buell Curator of Asian art.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bluebird offers a taste of 'Sexual Chocolate' Saturday night

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Karl Denson is one of those musicians people have seen without even knowing who he is. He got his break in an uncredited roll as the bandleader and saxophonist in the fictional band "Sexual Chocolate" in the 1988 Eddy Murphy movie "Coming to America." He played as Lenny Kravitz's saxophonist and bandleader throughout the '90s and has played in numerous projects since, garnering acclaim from jazz, rock and jam fans as he fused genres together with whatever his current lineup happened to be.


The Indiana Daily Student

Professor, docent leads 'story time'

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The IU Art Museum staff has found a new way of presenting its permanent collection. For the past few years, the Art Museum has offered a thematic tour of the museum on the first Saturday of each month. The themes are wide in variety, ranging from science to Shakespeare, with each tour providing a new approach to understanding and learning about art.


The Indiana Daily Student

Students showcase Bloomington, 'Off the Map'

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For the 13 students in the Bachelor of Fine Arts photography program, "Off the Map," the ninth installment of the annual Alternative Show, is more than just a chance to showcase pieces they've been working on throughout the semester.



The Indiana Daily Student

Fair Trade Fest offers handmade crafts, charity

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Students purchased and combed through piles of colorful jewelry, holiday decorations and other handmade crafts Thursday in an effort to help support economically-challenged countries. The Fair Trade Festival, held in the Indiana Memorial Union, gave consumers the opportunity to buy works of art shipped from countries around the world and help artisans, mostly women from impoverished regions, make money to support themselves and their families.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU report: No Child Left Behind Act too stringent for special education

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Students in special education programs are being put at a disadvantage by the No Child Left Behind Act, claims a recent IU study conducted by Center for Evaluation and Education Policy and the Indiana Institute on Disability and Community. The Nov. 15 report states that "the act's narrow assessment criteria creates pressure for schools to reverse inclusion efforts," which may negatively affect special education dropout rates.


The Indiana Daily Student

First-ever IU Brand Leadership Conference to take place Friday

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IU's Kelley School of Business is hosting its first annual Brand Leadership Conference Friday. The conference, which is targeted toward first- and second-year MBA students, will feature several successful alumni, said Jonlee Andrews, director of the Center for Brand Leadership and one of the event's co-chairs.


The Indiana Daily Student

WIUX to hold pledge drive to raise funds, spread community awareness about station

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In order to raise needed funds, WIUX, IU's student-run radio station, will hold an in-studio, open-house pledge drive from noon to 10 p.m. Friday. During the 10-hour period, interviews will include local recording artists, IU professors and IU women's soccer coach Mick Lyon. Students and anyone else interested in pledging support to the embattled station are welcome to stop by WIUX's station house at Eighth Street and Woodlawn Avenue or the station's remote broadcast outside Ballantine Hall.



The Indiana Daily Student

Online Only: All the rage

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There are a number of things that can set people's tempers blaring here at IU. Some people get behind the wheel of car and begin displaying obscene cases of road rage. Perfectly understandable at times, especially here in Bloomington -- like when certain people can't get their Ugg(ly)-boot-encased lead feet to function properly while simultaneously driving, attempting to see over their sunglasses and talking to their best friends on their cell phones about how they hope that frat boy they slept with last week didn't give them herpes. It's quite normal to experience some road rage in such conditions, as long as you don't go around shooting people in Bryan Park over it or something.