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Tuesday, June 9
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Sex and tech

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How many of you reading this sentence are listening to an iPod? I thought so. Here’s a little advice. Pull the plugs out of your ears, turn to the person sitting next to you and start talking about anything. Movies, books, your professor’s comb over … literally anything. The technology bug that is infecting the world is quite pronounced on campus. Students long ago stopped communicating with each other prior to class or on sidewalks. This is old news, and, quite frankly, students are probably tired of hearing about it.


The Indiana Daily Student

Academy of love

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This is going to sound really boring for a moment – but it’s about professors and sex, so stay with me. On Friday, The Chronicle of Higher Education posted a blurb about the latest round in an argument between professor Paul Abramson of UCLA and conservative writer/intellectual Dinesh D’Souza. Abramson is coming out with a new book called “Romance in the Ivory Tower: The Rights and Liberty of Conscience” which, among other things, will argue that state university rules banning romance between professors and students violate the Ninth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution (the Ninth Amendment being: “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people”). D’Souza expressed skepticism about this – and, most recently, Abramson has told D’Souza that he needs to wait until the book comes out before he can criticize it.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mysteries of Beethoven’s death studied

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VIENNA, Austria – Did someone kill Beethoven? A Viennese pathologist claims the composer’s physician did – inadvertently overdosing him with lead in a case of a cure gone wrong.


Travel Trip Folk Art Museum

Folk art museum rejuvenated in Va.

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WILLIAMSBURG, Va. – Colonial Williamsburg is more than costumed interpreters in tricorn hats making speeches about revolution or craftsmen demonstrating silversmithing and other trades.

The Indiana Daily Student

Bulletin Board

Editor’s note: There are many school groups and local organizations that hold auditions and call-outs throughout the year. We will be posting audition information as we receive it. Make sure to check out tomorrow’s ArtsExtra for advice on how to excel in a theater audition.


The Indiana Daily Student

Living with men

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I just cleaned my new roommate’s whiskers from our bathroom sink. I knew somewhere deep inside he had made some sort of mess in the bathroom, either because I’m an Operating Thetan level III (that’s an obscure Scientology joke implying I’m telepathic), or someone just told me he did.


Courtesy Photo

David Baker to perform tomorrow at Bear’s Place

The Jazz Fables Concert Series will be featuring the sounds of Distinguished Professor of Music David Baker tomorrow night at Bear’s Place. The event, which celebrates the 18th Anniversary of the concert series, will feature Baker playing cello on his own compositions and arrangements, along with other jazz faculty and alumni from the jazz studies program.


The Indiana Daily Student

‘Don’t panic.’

Don’t panic. When you left your homework on the school bus back in grade school, this adage seemed always to be appropriate advice. Well, that little bit of counsel may have sufficed to keep you calm during a minor third-grade crisis, but it is all but impossible to heed such advice during major disasters, such as the Virginia Tech massacre April 16.



The Indiana Daily Student

Nationwide ‘Toy Story’ gone wrong

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The toy recall sweeping the nation has left Bloomington citizens concerned for the safety of their children. “We have had a lot of parents and teachers come in and ask if we carry the contaminated items,” said Cheryl Wells, store manager of Bloomington’s Banana Junction. “I tell them that we don’t carry any Mattel items and our products imported from China all meet the international standards set by the government.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Regular in-state flights to Indy might resume

SOUTH BEND – Plans are in the works for an airline to start making regular direct flights to Indianapolis from South Bend and Evansville, officials said. The South Bend Airport Authority on Thursday gave preliminary approval to the proposal by Massachusetts-based Cape Air to offer daily flights on Cessna planes that could carry up to nine passengers on an hour-long route.


Taiwan-Acer-Gateway

Taiwan's Acer plans to acquire Gateway for $710 million

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TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) - Acer Inc., the world's fourth-largest computer vendor by unit sales, plans to acquire U.S. computer maker Gateway Inc. for $710 million, the Taiwanese company said Monday. Acer is offering to buy Gateway for $1.90 per share in a deal expected to complete by December, pending regulatory approvals in Taiwan and the U.S., Acer said in a statement.


OBESITY RANKINGS

Report finds Indiana among 10 fattest states

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INDIANAPOLIS - Indiana remains one of the nation’s fattest states, weighing in at ninth worst in a new national report which found that nearly 27 percent of Hoosier adults are obese. Monday’s report by the Trust for America’s Health put Indiana’s percentage of obese adults at 26.8 percent – up from 26.2 percent last year and 25.2 percent in 2005.


The Indiana Daily Student

Comcast, Big Ten Network gridlocked

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So much for making nice. After weeks of negotiations, the Big Ten Network officially announced last Thursday that it will not come to an agreement with the cable provider Comcast in time for the network’s Thursday launch. As a result of this decision, viewers who subscribe to Comcast or Insight, which will become Comcast, will miss out on the network’s opening telecasts, including the IU versus Indiana State game this Saturday.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Not-So-Dream Team

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What happened to the good old days? Like back in 1992, when Jeffrey Dahmer pleaded guilty to murder and when Jay Leno took over for Johnny Carson. OK, I won’t lie. I don’t really remember those events. I was only five years old. But there is one thing I do remember from that year: the “Dream Team.”.


IDS File Photo
Bloomington students, residents and guests browse  through recycled literature at the Monroe County library book sale on Jan. 11, 2005.

Library benefit cuts are ‘symptom, not the problem’

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Monroe County Public Library is cutting employee health benefits to save money, but not everyone is convinced this measure is strictly financially motivated. Trustee Randy Paul sees the benefit cuts as a ‘symptom, not the problem.’



Vick Plea Football

Judge accepts Vick’s guilty plea

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Looking somber and speaking “from the heart,” Michael Vick apologized Monday for “using bad judgment and making bad decisions” and vowed to redeem himself after pleading guilty to a federal dogfighting charge.