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Tuesday, July 14
The Indiana Daily Student

Longform



The Indiana Daily Student

Money, narcotics stolen from K-mart

The Bloomington Police Department is still investigating an armed robbery that occurred at about 9 p.m. Tuesday at the Kmart Pharmacy, 3175 W. Third St.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fleeing man shot, killed by police

OSCEOLA, Ind. – An autopsy found that a gunshot wound to the chest killed an Osceola man who authorities say died while trying to flee an off-duty police officer.


Construction crews continue work at the intersection of 17th Street and North Fee Lane Tuesday afternoon. As campus move in ramps up, construction workers are looking for ways to accommodate the sharp increase in campus automobile traffic.

City, IU partner for smooth construction near campus

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The intersection of 17th Street and Fee Lane is just one area in Bloomington that has been a headache for drivers during the summer months. The city of Bloomington and IU have worked together to fix the area in time for the fall semester. These major upgrades were seen by the state of Indiana as necessary to the improvement of the busy road.

The Indiana Daily Student

Keep the park

In the Monday, Aug. 4 edition of the IDS, guest columnist Ellis Latham-Brown lamented that People’s Park is still not family-friendly, although he is very pleased that the rest of Kirkwood has been “cleaned up.” He mentions that “most of the seedy establishments that once lined this street – The Den, for example – have been replaced by posh boutiques and upper-scale eateries.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Presidents should and can have private lives

Traditional imagery depicts universities as institutions throwing open the floodgates of knowledge for their students. But after a photo from his July Fourth boating excursion surfaced, it seems Iowa Central Community College President Robert Paxton is more practiced at filling young people with beer than with learning. In the contentious photo, Paxton appears to be holding the tap on a keg of beer open directly above a young woman’s mouth. Lucky for his career, the only Iowa Central Community College student aboard the boat was his own son, who only attended the school the year before. Moreover, an Iowa Central trustee has come forward to agree with Paxton’s argument that because the party took place outside campus and working hours, it is strictly a private matter.



The Indiana Daily Student



The Indiana Daily Student

Closing Pandora’s Box

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Online radio giant Pandora.com has recently announced that it will likely go out of business. For any subscriber, this is unfortunate news. And for those who haven’t heard of it yet, Pandora is an online radio station. However, unlike what you would hear over FM or even satellite radio, Pandora is able to tailor its playlist to each user. Each song and artist has hundreds of musical attributes (such as “subtle use of vocals.”) So if you hear a song you like, or if you have a favorite artist, you can ask Pandora to play songs with similar attributes – all for free.


The Indiana Daily Student

Defending Hillary

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Before the start of the brutal Democratic primary earlier this year, I would hardly have called myself a Hillary Clinton supporter. Like many liberals, I found her political positions to be extremely self-serving, and her vote for the Iraqi invasion was unforgivable. So, it seems like a strange turn of events that I would offer a defense for the New York senator today.


The Indiana Daily Student

Museum recruits tour guides

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Navigating a three-story museum might seem like a daunting task but, the IU Art Museum’s new training program will give students the opportunity to become docents, or volunteer tour guide, and direct people through the mazes of art.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bush’s fallacy

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Twenty-three months. That’s a long time. Twenty-three months ago I was embarking on my college career, preparing to trade in the comforts of my spacious home for a 10-by-10 square with bunk beds and a gothic roommate. Twenty-three months ago people everywhere were awestruck to learn that Pluto is not a planet after all and that “my very elegant mother just served us nine pizzas” would never again have the same connotation for fourth graders. Twenty-three months is also the amount of time that George W. Bush’s approval rating has been less than 40 percent.



The Indiana Daily Student

Sidetracked

In this week's Sidetracked, three WEEKEND reviews cuss and discuss the week's hottest tracks.


Blanket of darkness

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Dark stories do make for good dramatic twists, but to make a blanket shift to dark movies would ignore what makes most of these stories worth watching, and what made “The Dark Knight” the success it was. The best we can hope for is that Hollywood will realize this so it can worry less about making perfect movies and more about making the right ones.


Meet Glen Campbell. Seriously, meet him, he's pretty cool.

Covering the (future) classics

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Country legend Glen Campbell has returned after a long hiatus and released Meet Glen Campbell. On the album, the country crooner covers songs from artists ranging from Green Day and the Foo Fighters to Tom Petty and U2. The heartfelt “Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life)” and “Times Like These” are standouts.


Earth to dreadful haircuts, come in, come in.

Out of this world awful

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... Earth to the Dandy Warhols ... is a poorly conceived, terribly executed album that has none of the heart, soul or fun of the band’s previous work. The album seems to wrestle with its drug rock roots in an ill-informed attempt to sound like My Bloody Valentine.


Pop quiz: Spot which of these characters is a Terminator.

Cyborg crazy

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For a weekly television series based on five hours of film (the show thankfully ignores “T3”), “Chronicles” is a refreshing, honest addition to the “Terminator” mythos. In the first season the show covers a lot of ground, including stopping Skynet, Terminators with non-killing missions, and how John deals with his destiny.


Like most of us, Denis Leary is still ticked at Kevin Spacey for "Superman Returns."

No recount needed here

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This being a crucial election year, movies like “Recount” strike a little closer to home than the average political fare, if only because there always looms the threat of such an electoral disaster happening again. Roach, Strong and an engaging cast manage to nail the prime characteristics of both sides (Republicans: ruthless, logical, calculating; and Democrats: determined, intellectual, fragile), to suggest that even in the most tempestuous of political climates, there’s still hope for our Constitution to prevail.