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Saturday, May 9
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD


The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA, city warn residents to keep noise levels down

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Loud music booming vibrations throughout the rooms of a house morning might produce a well-attended party in the wee hours of the morning. But those same vibrations might draw a fine. The IU Student Association collaborated with six neighborhoods surrounding IU's campus and passed out 5,000 doorknob hangers last night in an effort to educate the community about Bloomington's "Quiet Nights" initiative.



The Indiana Daily Student

UITS might cut forwarding feature from e-mail

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IU might stop allowing students to forward their Webmail accounts to other services such as Gmail and AOL if spam problems persist. When IU users forward their University mail to a different account, spam is also forwarded. The forwarding becomes a problem because larger e-mail providers view IU as the spam's origin, thus blocklisting, or blocking, IU accounts, said Mark Bruhn, chief IT security and policy officer for University Information Technology Services, via e-mail.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fraternities recruit prospective members

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More than a thousand male IU students began a new chapter of their lives this weekend -- literally. The Interfraternity Council's Men's Recruitment Kickoff commenced Friday evening when representatives from IU's 25 fraternity chapters encircled Dunn Meadow and played host to a record number of potential greek pledges. IFC Vice President of Recruitment and senior Justin Sloan said attendance was up by almost 300 people from last year. Sloan attributed this to amplified advertising efforts.

The Indiana Daily Student

Designers bring back classic looks

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NEW YORK -- Tommy Hilfiger's spring 2006 collection incorporates many of his signatures: seersucker, madras, the American flag, and red, white and blue. But as Hilfiger marked his 20th anniversary in fashion, he said there were many subtle tweaks to his newest designs. For example, the red is softer -- almost pink. The blue is lighter, and the white is more the color of sand.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers dispatched to help in Mississippi

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Hoosiers are blazing the trail for workers aiding devastated residents of southern Mississippi. Registered nurse and state Rep. Peggy Welch, D-Bloomington, is one of many Hoosiers working as a part of Operation Hoosier Relief in and around Biloxi, Miss. The operation is the first group from Indiana with medical personnel, she said in a phone interview, and follows Indiana's immediate emergency response team Task Group One.


The Indiana Daily Student

SPEA faculty provide disaster insight

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Hurricane Katrina left a major U.S. city in ruins, thousands dead and questions on the minds of many. Professors in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs attempted to address those questions Thursday night at an informal teach-in titled, "Hurricane Katrina: The SPEA Perspective."


The Indiana Daily Student

Renowned conductor dies during visit

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Randall Behr, an accomplished conductor who was in town as an IU School of Music guest music director, unexpectedly died in his sleep Thursday afternoon at a Bloomington hotel. Behr, who was in his early 50s, was in Bloomington preparing performers for the season-opening showing of "Così fan tutte," one of his favorite operas, said Maria Levy, executive administrator of IU Opera Theatre program.


The Indiana Daily Student

Riding out the storm: Part 3

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I woke up Wednesday morning relieved the generators had not given out during the previous night and headed back to a small section of the Superdome set aside for mostly elderly people with special needs. The atmosphere in the dome had gotten incredibly tense and the soldiers were walking around with shotguns, which I assumed was an ideal weapon for close quarter combat.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ready to Rock

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The entire week, the IU football team has had a consistent theme -- uncertainty. Early in the week, players and coaches didn't even know if there would be a contest this Saturday. Now that Nicholls State University's visit is official, the Hoosiers face new unknowns; most notably, what they can expect from the disaster-affected Division 1-AA program when the Colonels visit Bloomington at 4 p.m. Saturday. "It's kind of like our first game again, because we haven't really seen what they can do," said sophomore quarterback Blake Powers. "There's no tape from this season to look at, so that's a challenge. Even when we didn't know if they were coming, we maintained focus and prepared ourselves for another game."


The Indiana Daily Student

Destination: Detroit

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BALTIMORE -- The Baltimore Ravens have composed a defensive backfield that's so good, two former Pro Bowl stars can't even crack the starting lineup. "It could be the best secondary ever assembled," declared Deion Sanders, who will be used as nickelback this season despite his 14 years of NFL experience and eight Pro Bowl appearances.


The Indiana Daily Student

Greek house search kicks off

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Dunn Meadow will transform into a sea of testosterone this evening as the greek community commences Men's Recruitment Kickoff Weekend. Male students interested in "going greek" will have the opportunity to explore their options at 5 p.m. at Dunn Meadow. All 25 campus fraternities will be represented, said senior Justin Sloan, Interfraternity Council executive vice president of recruitment.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Goongate' finally settled

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PHILADELPHIA -- The peace treaty was signed Wednesday afternoon near the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The Chaney-Martelli War is over.


The Indiana Daily Student

Federer triumphs to meet Hewitt

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NEW YORK - Roger Federer sure knows how to kill a party. Federer's quiet brilliance tranquilized U.S. Open fans one night after they roared nonstop for Andre Agassi and James Blake. Watching Federer, the defending champion and top seed, roll past Argentine David Nalbandian 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 Thursday night was like watching a rerun of a mediocre movie that has one star, no plot and no drama.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU looks to serve up strong defense in match

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The IU women's volleyball team will travel to the Winthrop Invitational in Rock Hill, S.C. this weekend, where it will face the University of North Florida, Furman University and Winthrop University.


The Indiana Daily Student

Freitag faces familiarity in weekend tournament

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Saint Louis University was IU head soccer coach Mike Freitag's team growing up in the gateway to the West. His father Charles would take Mike to all of the Billikens home soccer games. The current Hoosier coach would often go back to his neighborhood playground and imitate the players on Harry Keough's legendary teams -- winners of five NCAA titles.


The Indiana Daily Student

No more rockin' at 'The Rock'

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An article appeared in the Indiana Daily Student Wednesday that discussed a new tailgating strategy the University will implement starting with Saturday's game versus Nicholls State.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the State

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BLOOMFIELD, Ind. -- A pilot kicked his way out of a twin-engine plane as it burned following a crash shortly after takeoff from the Shawnee Field Airport in southern Indiana's Greene County. Sten Walls, 60, of Bloomfield, suffered severe burns over 80 percent of his body in the Wednesday afternoon fire, state police said. He was taken by helicopter to Wishard Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis, where he was listed in critical condition yesterday in the burn unit.


The Indiana Daily Student

Creating Culture

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INDIANA - Game Week: "Hoosier Fridays." Local businesses have created incentives for fans showing their "true colors" of cream and crimson.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ivy Tech grows as state's official community college

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Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana began a statewide marketing campaign Sept. 1 to alert people of the changes the school is undergoing. John Whikehart, chancellor of the Bloomington Ivy Tech campus, said the school recently changed its name from Ivy Tech State College to Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana after Senate Bill 296, formally recognized Ivy Tech as the state's official community college system, July 1. "This name change is symbolic of the transformation the school has been making in the past years," Whikehart said. "The school is now formally recognized by the state as a community college."