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Wednesday, Jan. 14
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


Zach Hexum and Ryan Cabrera performed for several sorority  sisters of Sigma Delta Tau Sunday evening at the Sigma Delta Tau sorority house. The also performed at Delta Delta Delta and Alpha Epsilon Phi the same evening.

Singer Ryan Cabrera jams at three sororities Sunday

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The dining room of Sigma Delta Tau became a concert venue Sunday night when singer Ryan Cabrera performed for the sorority. It was his last stop of the day after performing for other sororities, including Alpha Epsilon Phi and Delta Delta Delta.“I am so excited; I cannot believe it,” said sophomore SDT sister Michelle Ezrachie before Cabrera entered the room. “We’ve been listening to his music since last Sunday when we found out.” Cabrera said the performances were to promote his show Monday night at The Bluebird. He said singing for sororities is reminiscent of how he marketed himself five years ago when his first album came out.


As seen from last years perfomance, IU Ballet Theater will be showcasing new edgy choreography at the Buskirk Chumley Theater Wednesday evening.

Ballet ‘On the Edge’ features student choreography

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Every song that junior ballet major Ben Delony listens to, he choreographs in his head.Delony and fellow junior ballet major Daniel Morales were selected to be the only student choreographers in the upcoming IU Ballet Theater production of “On the Edge,” which will be presented Wednesday at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.The name “On the Edge” stems from the location of the Buskirk-Chumley Theater in relation to the IU campus and is representative of the new, original choreography and music being performed, Chair of the IU Ballet Department Michel Vernon said.



Capt. Bruce Meyer of Minneapolis holds a Arizona Cardinals flag outside the cockpit window as the team arrives at the Tampa International Airport for Super Bowl XLIII NFL football game  Monday in Tampa, Fla.

Super arrivals: Cardinals and Steelers in Tampa

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TAMPA, Fla.  — The pilot of their airplane stuck a team flag out the cockpit window as the Arizona Cardinals landed in a place few could have imagined. Ever.A team whose fans haven't touched ground since the start of a stunning postseason run in early January, arrived in the Super Bowl city Monday. With many players videotaping the proceedings — the walk across the tarmac, the bus ride to the team hotel, the first onslaught of media — it was clear that just being here meant something to a franchise long considered an NFL doormat.



The Indiana Daily Student

Don’t punish the victors

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Winning must not really be everything.That’s what we learned two weeks ago when two Texas high school girl’s basketball teams squared off in a game that ended with the Covenant School topping Dallas Academy 100-0.


The Indiana Daily Student

Green car rules give auto industry a new challenge

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama wants automakers to make greener cars at a time when General Motors and Chrysler are hanging by the thread of a massive government loan and auto sales have plummeted to their lowest levels in more than two decades.Obama’s plans could bring smaller cars, more hybrids and advanced fuel-saving technologies to showrooms, but car shoppers will probably pay more up front because the new rules are expected to cost the hamstrung industry billions of dollars.


The Indiana Daily Student

Big firms increase layoffs

WASHINGTON – The recession is killing jobs at an alarming pace, with tens of thousands of new layoffs announced Monday by some of the biggest names in American business – Pfizer, Caterpillar and Home Depot. More pink slips, pay freezes and other hits are expected to slam workers in the months ahead as companies desperately look for ways to survive.


The Indiana Daily Student

Stepfather became part of recruit’s success

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Michael Morgan has always been there for his stepson Maurice Creek. They bonded through basketball early on, whether it was Morgan doing drills with Creek out on “the hill,” watching him play at the elementary school or pitting him against older kids at the local rec center. “If it weren’t for him working me out, I wouldn’t be here right now,” Creek said in a phone interview last week.


Hangers hang empty at Steve and Barry's retailer store on Kirkwood Avenue Monday morning. This shop, along with other Steve and Barry's continue to liquidate their merchandise due to the recent bankruptcy of the Steve and Barry's Corporation.

T.I.S. to replace Steve & Barry’s

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Even in a recession, space on Kirkwood is highly sought-after. The Indiana Shop – a play on T.I.S. – will open in March or April, T.I.S. president Tim Tichenor said.


The White Mountain Ice Creamery once stood near the corner of Kirkwood Ave. and Dunn.

Ice cream extinction

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Jiffy Treet. White Mountain Ice Creamery. Ben & Jerry’s. Maggie Moo’s. Cold Stone Creamery. Ritter’s Frozen Custard. In 2001, all of these were ice cream stores near IU’s campus. By 2006, most were extinct or had moved away from downtown. Until last week, many feared that the Chocolate Moose, 401 S. Walnut St., could suffer the same fate. While the Moose has been spared, high rent downtown and parking issues have plagued ice cream stores trying to survive long winter months. Some, including Cold Stone Creamery and Jiffy Treet, have moved into the College Mall or other areas, while others, including White Mountain Ice Creamery and Ben & Jerry’s, have been gone for years.







The Indiana Daily Student

Baffled by smoking ban

Having just transferred from a small liberal arts college where smoking was a favorite pastime of a majority of the students, I was shocked to discover that IU is attempting to become a tobacco-free campus. Being new here, however, I have to ask: What exactly are the reasons for this ban? Cigarette butts littering the ground? The health and well-being of students who choose not to smoke? If indeed these are at the heart of the issue, then my response is this: preposterous!


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana legislature opts out of transparency

Transparency in government is a fundamental element of a healthy democracy. It is of the utmost importance that democratic citizens hold their government responsible, which requires knowing what their government is up to. President Barack Obama has taken decisive and encouraging steps toward transparency. He has issued some of the tightest restrictions of any administration on lobbyists, including banning anyone who leaves his administration from lobbying the executive branch for the rest of his presidency. This is a step up from Bush’s yearlong ban. He instructed federal agencies to err on the side of openness when it comes to releasing records. Moreover, he reversed Bush’s executive order that provided veto power over which executive archives are made public to past presidents, vice presidents and their heirs.


The Indiana Daily Student

The great runaround

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Lately I have found myself in a difficult runaround. When I am not going on dates I dream up this romantic notion of how wonderful dating is, and then the second I get asked out, I remember that it isn’t always no-strings-attached wonderful. The same thing with relationships. Even though I think that something more long-term could be fun, when I’m single I always forget about the fights and the compromises that come as part of the package. I mean, even among us relationship lovers, who hasn’t found themselves three months into a perfectly good relationship only to discover that what you are really itching for is a little more excitement and a few random dates?