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Wednesday, July 8
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


Senior running back Marcus Thigpen walks off the field following Indiana's 37-34 loss to Central Michigan on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.  Thigpen ran for 109 yards and two touchdowns.

6th loss comes in close contest with Chippewas

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Completely outmatched through the air, the IU football team could not stop Central Michigan’s backup quarterback Brian Brunner in a 37-34 loss to the visiting Chippewas. Brunner threw for 485 yards and four touchdowns in the non-conference victory on Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The loss was IU’s sixth of the season, dropping its record to 3-6. “We don’t feel very good,” sophomore quarterback Ben Chappell said of his team’s emotion following the game. “They played good, but we just didn’t play well enough to win.” Brunner’s 485 yards are the third-most IU has let up all time. “He did a tremendous job,” IU coach Bill Lynch said in his post-game press conference. “He is a fifth-year senior and has been in a program that has won a lot of football games. They certainly play with a lot of confidence.” To counteract Brunner’s success, the Hoosiers amped up their pass rush at the beginning of the second half.And it worked. Brunner was sacked five of his seven total times in the final half. But Brunner and the Chippewas also adjusted and found receivers left one-on-one in man coverage as Hoosier linebackers blitzed.


The Indiana Daily Student

A new campaign calls for new rules

Barack Obama’s fundraising prowess has been well documented this election season, as has been the large extent to which his funding has come from small donors. The average campaign contribution for Obama is $86, according to the campaign. Of course, with such an influx of cash – and the obvious disadvantage at which it has put his opponent – there are bound to be accusations of impropriety. For example, John McCain’s campaign manager Rick Davis recently implied there could be either illegal donors, illegal types of donations, or people contributing more than the legal limit. There’s little proof to either support or deny these accusations, though, mostly because the Obama campaign hasn’t released information on donors who contributed less than $200. In fact, campaigns are not legally obligated to release the identity of these small donors. According to Slate magazine, it would be possible, and not too hard, to be able to compile a database of donors that could be released. They know this because they did it – not with Obama’s actual donors, obviously, but with an invented list. The laws that govern campaign finance, like much else in the bureaucracy of government, are outdated.


The Indiana Daily Student

Congressional non-endorsement is a joke

First and foremost, let me compliment so many young liberals on campus who are representing “their” values like freedom of speech, equality and tolerance with so much class. It strikes me as so funny that the people who preach about how these principles have been trampled under the current administration are the same people who curse at or spit on students such as myself who wear My Man Mitch and McCain/Palin apparel. Maybe practicing what you preach would be a better way to convert some of us.


The Indiana Daily Student

Who me, vote?

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Tuesday. What a boring, insignificant day of the week. It’s a necessary evil that inevitably stands between Monday and Wednesday. Beyond that, it has absolutely no relevance at all. This Tuesday in particular should be nothing short of blah. On its own, Nov. 4 signifies nothing other than Halloween being over and Thanksgiving still a couple of weeks away. How appropriate, then, that Nov. 4 happens to be Election Day. Nope, nothing exciting here. The guy with the big ears is getting kicked out of office, one way or another. So why vote?

The Indiana Daily Student

Realistic expectations

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Tuesday, it’s over. The votes will be counted. A new president will be elected. And while half the country rejoices, the other will pout. But have faith. Regardless of who wins, everything will be all right. There’s so much that’s put into a presidential race. Donors give their money. Volunteers give their time. And the candidates give all of themselves – their ideas, their personalities, their families, their pasts –  to be praised by their parties, mocked by their opponents and scrutinized by the media.


The Indiana Daily Student

The cure for nyctophobia

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Nyctophobia is fear of the dark. It’s a rational fear. Darkness is frightening. It’s akin to blindness. There is no telling what lies ahead without light to illuminate the way.    In our technologically savvy society, however, we have the luxury of flipping a simple switch on a wall to replace the darkness with light. Car headlights were invented to assist drivers’ night vision and prevent accidents. Some might even find themselves resorting to dependence on the blue glow from their cell phones to light their way in the dark.


The Indiana Daily Student

Joe is everybody

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Republican presidential nominee John McCain says each of us is Joe the Plumber. Apparently every citizen of the United States of America is a white, middle class male with a small business that earns more than $250,000 a year. Well that is news to me. Last I checked I was a female college student making no money. It makes me wonder: Who is this man everyone has found a common thread with?


Senior kicker Austin Starr sits on the bench with a towel draped over his head before the start of the game against Central Michigan at on Saturday on Memorial Stadium. Starr missed his only field goal attempt in the 37-34 loss to the Chippewas.

Brunner's 485 yards takes Chippewas past Hoosiers 37-34

Completely outmatched through the air, the IU football team’s defense couldn’t stop Central Michigan’s backup quarterback Brian Brunner as he threw for 485 yards and four touchdowns. Brunner led his Chippewas to a 37-34 non-conference victory against the Hoosiers on Saturday at Memorial Stadium.


Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., greets supporters at a rally at the Nationwide Arena on Friday in Columbus, Ohio.

McCain to be in Indianapolis on Monday

Republican presidential candidate John McCain will be making his first Indiana stop since July 1 on Monday, just a day before the election.McCain will make the stop at the International Arrivals Ramp at the Indianapolis Airport. The stop comes as part of the Road to Victory Rally.



Zombies lurch down Walnut and Seventh streets Friday night in anticipation for Halloween. The parade drew about 100, many dressed in full zombie attire. The parade was cut short after police intercepted the crowd.

Night of the living undead

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Kirkwood Avenue and Walnut Street are hubs of nightlife entertainment for college students, but this Thursday the streets entertained a different crowd: the undead.


Celebrity status of candidates might affect votes

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Rock star. War hero. Small town beauty queen. Through YouTube, Facebook and “Saturday Night Live,” pop culture stereotypes of Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain and Gov. Sarah Palin are permeating this year’s election.


Michael McRobbie

McRobbie travels to Asia to work with Korean Universities

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IU President Michael McRobbie leaves today for a trip to South Korea and China. McRobbie, along with several IU faculty and staff members, will spend six days in Korea and two days in China, where they will attend a conference on the globalization of education, according to a press release.



The Indiana Daily Student

On the outside looking in

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As senior Andrew Sharp drags his brown sneakers back and forth to clear leaves and seeds off the sidewalk, the cynicism in his voice is matched only by his frustration. “We used to do it every week last year,” he says, dropping to his knees and drawing a “D” with orange jumbo chalk.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU organizations meet Sunday for Campus Cleanup

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The Civic Leadership Development organization of the Kelley School of Business is holding its annual Campus Cleanup from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. This is the first year the event is being held in the fall the week before Parents Weekend in an effort to beautify the IU campus.


The Indiana Daily Student

Student democrats battle Election Day blues

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The entertainment for Friday's early voting march will be a political satire about Barack Obama by freshman Ben Bizuneh, a stand-up comedian who recently won open-mic night at Funny Bone for his “Obamedy” act.


The Indiana Daily Student

Retired psychology professor dies Wed.

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Retired psychology professor Dorothy Saltzman died in her sleep Wednesday at a nursing home in Evansville, according to Alexander Funeral Homes.



The Indiana Daily Student

IU to host GLBT conference in February

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In February, between 1,500 and 1,800 students from throughout the Midwest will flood campus for one weekend when the University hosts the 17th annual Midwest Bisexual, Lesbian, Gay, Transgender, Ally College Conference.