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Thursday, May 7
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD


The Indiana Daily Student

Pumpkins, face painting, and ignorance

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I spent Saturday helping out a local garden/pumpkin patch’s Halloween-inspired activities for kids in the community. Other than getting to interact with some cute kids, I didn’t expect this experience to be all that memorable.




The Indiana Daily Student

OUT at Kelley offers advice for GLBT business students

Under the suits and sweaters of the Kelley School of Business, everyone is operating under the same guideline: professionalism. For one subset of students, sexuality plays a role in determining how to be professional in the work environment.












The Indiana Daily Student

Religious organizations open to GLBT community

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Religion and homosexuality: the two have struggled to reconcile for decades, and many gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and questioning students still don’t believe there is a place for them in a spiritual community. But GLBT students at IU are surrounded by spiritual communities that would welcome them openly, said Doug Bauder, coordinator for the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Support Services Office on campus.



The Indiana Daily Student

Donors give money with less disclosure

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During Richard Nixon’s re-election campaign in 1972, “contributors were flying into Washington with satchels of cash." Although his election fell right before a campaign finance law went into effect, more than 30 years later secretive contributions are still prevalent.


Natalie Chanin Lecture

Designer brings sustainability to couture

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The current IU College of Arts and Sciences’ Themester 2010 “sustain•ability: Thriving on a Small Planet” was highlighted with an unlikely partner on Monday — fashion. Natalie Chanin, creator and designer of the couture line Alabama Chanin, gave a lecture in the Whittenberger Auditorium.


The Indiana Daily Student

COLUMN: KFC takes dire derriere measures

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As a new way to advertise the chicken patty “buns” with an arterial blood clot sandwiched in between, KFC began recruiting women on campuses across the nation to wear sweatpants with “Double Down” printed on them.