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Tuesday, Jan. 6
The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA


The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA collaborates, exchanges ideas with other Big 10 schools at conference

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Different ways to hold elections and take tests are among the issues IU Student Association President Luke Fields and Vice President Dan Sloat explored at the Association of Big 10 Students conference last weekend, hosted at the University of Illinois. “It was a great opportunity to collaborate with all Big 10 schools,” Fields said.The conference was a brainstorming system in which student leaders discussed similar issues each school faced and how they should deal with these issues, Fields and Sloat said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Genre fiction shines in new literary magazine

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Great fiction doesn’t have to mean the classics.At least that’s the theory behind “Tales from the Edge,” a new campus literary magazine dedicated to genre fiction written by students. The goal of the magazine, currently accepting submissions for both genre fiction and cover art, is to provide the campus with an opportunity to see how engaging and intelligent genre fiction can be.


Then IU junior Ian Eldridge shoots hoops May 30, 2007 at the Ora L. Wildermuth Gymnasium of the School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. Eldridge came to the court to shoot several times a week.

Students play favorites with University gyms at either the HPER, SRSC

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Although IU provides students with two similar workout facilities, senior Natalie Rutigliano has her favorite.“HPER has a laid-back feel to it,” Rutigliano said. “The SRSC looks like a workout video.” Both recreational facilities offer similar exercise equipment, but students rarely rotate their time between the two. Many students who work out at the School of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation instead of the Student Recreational Sports Center say the atmosphere and the programs influence their decision.


The Indiana Daily Student

Renovations begin on revamping old IU theater building

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After three weeks of classes in the Lee Norvelle Theatre and Drama Center, students and faculty will have to find a new place to meet. The Theatre and Drama Center is undergoing renovations starting this semester that will last well into next year. “It is incredibly old; the walls are falling apart and the floors are warped,” said Serena Eduljee, a voice student with a class in the theater building. Jonathan Michaelsen, chair and producer of the Department of Theatre and Drama, said the department needed to move the classes out of the building for safety. Most of the staff and the classes ended up in the Theatre Annex located at 306 N. Union St.

The Indiana Daily Student

RPS removes peanut butter from shelves after recall

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Residential Programs and Services and other campus businesses have suspended the sale of peanut butter as a precaution following a national salmonella outbreak and the national recall of more than 100 peanut butter products. Contaminated peanut butter products have contributed to the death of six people nationwide and have sickened at least 486 people nationwide.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sugar cream gets support as Indiana’s pie

The Indiana Senate has sweetened its day by adopting a resolution that seeks to designate the sugar cream pie as the official state pie.




The Indiana Daily Student

County texting ban aims to decrease number of distracted drivers

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A new ban aiming to decrease the number of distracted motorists could soon land drivers in Monroe County who text while behind the wheel with a fine. The Monroe County commissioners approved a ban on the sending, composing or reading of e-mails and text messages and surfing the Internet while driving. The ordinance was passed in December and went into effect Jan. 1.



The Indiana Daily Student

‘Benjamin Button’ leads Oscar nods

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.– One is a grand, sweeping epic, a dazzling technical achievement starring THE A-Lister of all A-Listers.The other is a gritty tale, partly told in subtitled Hindi, with a tiny budget and no known stars that almost didn’t make it to theaters.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sisters discuss century full of experiences

A story of two unmarried sisters who lived together for 90 years comes to life tonight at the John Waldron Arts Center Auditorium in the Cardinal Stage Company’s production of “Having Our Say,” a stage adaptation of the memoirs of the same name of Sadie and Bessie Delany.Based on their best-selling book, the show tells of the high and low points of the Delany sisters’ long lives.


The Indiana Daily Student

Brothers trash stage in ‘True West’

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A couple of real-life brothers shocked audiences by trashing the stage in their performance of “True West” at the John Waldron Arts Center.Brett and Gabe Gloden played Austin and Lee, two brothers who are fighting over a potential movie deal for one of their screenplays. Austin is a 30-year-old writer who lives with his wife and kids and has a more traditional life, while Lee is a 40-year-old hobo who wanders the desert making a living gambling and stealing.


The Indiana Daily Student

China and the green revolution

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To say that China is the biggest polluter in the world is true, but it is also a gross misconstruing of reality. According to a recent report from The Climate Group, an independent international non-profit organization, China’s energy efficiency levels are actually commendable considering the tremendous modernization it has undergone. However, based on China’s estimated emissions and current status as the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter, many conclude that China compromises the environment to focus on economic growth. Many also cite China’s ratification of the Kyoto Protocol as a sleight of hand in its commitment to sustainability.


The Indiana Daily Student

Passive aggression

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Last week, frozen students shivered impatiently at a bus stop near the Wells Library. When the top of a bus was spotted making its way down the slippery streets, the uncomfortable soon-to-be passengers fell all over each other as they scurried to the bus’s doors. The bus, already filled to capacity, opened its doors and the driver shrugged apologetically. “I have room for one more person,” he explained. “But everyone has to be behind the yellow line.” As one lucky student hopped on the bus, a girl came flying down the steps in front of the library.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tackling the medical issue

President Barack Obama has a full plate. As the new leader of the free world, there are many tasks calling for his attention. But one of his first orders of business must be the cancelation of a new federal abortion rule. Last Thursday, seven states brought suit against the federal government, challenging a new rule that allows health care workers to refuse to perform abortions or offer other medical services because of religious or moral objections. The states claim the federal rule, issued at the 11th hour by the Bush administration, will limit their current regulations that protect women’s access to birth control, including emergency contraception following rape. This law is yet another example of the legislative ideology that flowed from the Bush administration.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hanks’ hypocrisy

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Forrest Gump? Classic. Woody? A childhood icon for many of us. Chuck Noland? Almost as great of a character as Wilson was. Tom Hanks? An idiot. Last Wednesday, Mr. Hanks made a bold yet ridiculous proclamation proving this correct. He declared those members of the Mormon Church who support California’s Proposition 8 banning gay marriage to be “un-American.”



Murder By Death to play hometown show

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Bloomington’s beloved export, Murder By Death, will perform to a hometown crowd as the band rolls into the Bluebird on Jan. 27, touting a special 21-song set.


The Indiana Daily Student

Noble effort

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Andrew Bird’s instrumentation is a harmony of the obscure, ranging from violin and guitar to whistling and fiddles. It’s the kind of music that is hard to define, but more often than not, his songs leave the listener with an impression of intelligence. Bird’s lyrics might as well be another instrument altogether, touching on historical and literary matters with the kind of lexicon pulled straight from a graduate thesis.