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Wednesday, June 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Universities must be responsible for classroom learning

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In response to your editorial “Error: Education shutdown” (March 20): There seems to be a question of responsibility. Who is responsible for the education of the student? The student, or the institution providing it? Clearly, college students should be able to make their own decisions that will affect their future careers, but at the same time, public education institutions like IU should be active in ensuring that the tuition paid is money well spent. Although undergraduates are adults, rules and structure are still put in place to better provide their education as well as to guide them to success through graduation and their career paths that follow. Unfortunately, undergraduates cannot be entirely relied upon to make decisions, such as not coming to class (both physically and mentally), that can have long-term consequences. With respect to laptops in the classroom, not only are they a distraction to the individual, they are a distraction to the other classmates. Here, it is the university’s responsibility to create an environment of learning for all who want it. Therefore, eliminating a distraction is a necessary action. Some students, and instructors, may legitimately find laptops beneficial for some courses. However, most students bring in laptops for the same reason they bring in newspapers – the course is not engaging. This once more emphasizes the responsibility of the university to provide an adequate education to the student. If students feel they can multi-task in the classroom, then the instructor is being inefficient. This doesn’t imply that classes have to be like circuses or “Sesame Street” to hold attention spans of 4-year-olds. However, considering that most college courses meet two and half hours a week for 16 weeks, each class period should be so rich with information that the thought of bringing an outside distraction would be viewed as pointless. IU, as well as other public education institutions, should take more responsibility for their role in the education of their students. Students, on the other hand, should do a better job of prioritizing between education and MySpace. Robert Ridlon Associate instructor


The Indiana Daily Student

LIVE FROM THE BEEHIVE

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It can be really confusing for the average IU student to understand the vast complexities of indie kids today. Why do they listen to all sorts of music not found in the mainstream? How do they fit in those pants? Here's five easy steps to make yourself indie. 5 - Move out of your house and into your bike.


Silver is golden

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In the last stanza of "Watch The Tapes," the seventh track from LCD Soundsystem's Sound Of Silver, James Murphy sings: "Hey, the rock writer told me to tell you/ 'though you're great and you're brave/ you still lack that which makes you a star.'" Judging by Silver's quality, the rock writer is going to have to eat his words. Even better than LCD Soundsystem's terrific 2005 debut, this album is, to my ears, the first unambiguous album of the year contender -- and this in what's proving to be a very strong year for indie rock.


Before you bite down on your next Oreo, follow our step-by-step demonstration of how this practical joke is executed. If you’re not careful, you could end up like this guy.

April Fools' Or how we lost our friends in one day.

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Pam and Jim from "The Office" make pulling pranks on your co-workers look hilarious. We tried to pull some of our own in-office pranks, but there wasn't a lot of laughter. Pranking is hard. If you want everyone to hate you, April Fools' Day is the holiday for you. One of our pranks ended in tears. It was two minutes of excitement followed by hours of guilt and regret eating away at the pits of our stomachs. Trust us, it hurt to exhale. We learned one important lesson on our quest for the perfect prank: Fake deaths are not as funny as you'd think.


6 "Rocky's?" Hang it up

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When "Rocky Balboa" first hit theaters, everyone expected disaster and couldn't believe when the film earned positive response both critically and publicly. So I have to ask … am I watching the same movie? "Rocky Balboa" is no where near as terrible as it should've been, but … meh.


The Indiana Daily Student

5 groups in contention for grant

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Five lucky philanthropic organizations will find out today if they have been awarded a new grant offered by the IU Student Foundation. The Metz Grant offers a share of $25,000 to five registered philanthropic organizations on campus. However, the purpose of the new grant is the actual application process.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chris O'Riley presents eclectic lineup

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With his soft-spoken voice, pianist Christopher O’Riley asked the audience members at the IU Auditorium Tuesday night about their interest in his performance. He asked whether they came for his renditions of the modern popular music of Radiohead, or his arrangements of pieces from the 20th century classical composer Dmitri Shostakovich. Most of the younger audience was there for Radiohead, with the exception of music students who were there for both. The older audience was there for his renditions of Shostakovich pieces or knew him from his show on National Public Radio, “From the Top.”



The Indiana Daily Student

Trick your friends into baldness & pregnancy

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Mark Twain once said, "The first of April is the day we remember what we are the other 364 days of the year." The number of possible April Fools' Day pranks is an endless permutation of creativity, malice and good-natured ribbing. Some pranks are slight inconveniences, like ordering a Whopper at McDonald's or placing a pea underneath a mattress to see if someone can feel it. And some pranks are just a bad idea, especially if they're illegal. IU Police Department Capt. Jerry Minger said that he couldn't remember a prank taken to the point where the police had to get involved, but that doesn't mean the law is any less lenient. "The laws are in place on April Fools' Day as much as any other time of the year," he said.




Adam Sandler and Don Cheadle are laughing, but you'll cry at this tearjerker.

Let the tears 'Reign'

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"Reign Over Me" is one of the first movies Hollywood has produced detailing the emotional destruction the 9/11 attacks brought upon everyday people. Charlie Fineman (Adam Sandler) is a 9/11 widower who lost his wife and three daughters to the attacks and Alan Johnson (Don Cheadle) is a successful dentist who was Charlie's roommate in college. Charlie lives in a protected fantasy world in which his family never existed and Alan is trying to get Charlie to face his demons and remember.


The Indiana Daily Student

Steffey family hires lawyer in aftermath of student’s death

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Parents of the deceased Purdue freshman Wade Steffey announced Wednesday that they will seek legal assistance from an Indianapolis law firm. This could be the first indication that the family might seek legal action in response to the death of their son.



The Indiana Daily Student

Cartoon gives untrue image of apartments

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“Adding insult to injury.” That’s my reaction to Erich Reinhard’s March 19 cartoon about the apartment building scheduled for demolition to make way for an optometry school building. Yes, it’s true that the old structure has to go, for the greater good of the greater number, blah, blah, blah. But there’s no need to make it look rundown and ready to be condemned; doing that shows ignorance of why anyone would care about saving it. Before the apartment-building boom downtown, there were only three architecturally interesting ones near campus – that one on Third Street, another at the corner of Second and Fess, and a third near the intersection of 10th and Indiana. The rest of them – for example, the ones immediately south of the optometry building – looked like the 20-unit motels you used to see all over the country off U.S. and state highways in the pre-interstate era. Boring! I understand that editorial cartoons are often caricatures, but a caricature, like the ones of President Bush’s ears, ought to exaggerate a feature that actually exists. So, if anyone thinks that apartment building looks anything like the cartoon, go take a second look. Then, if you still think it does, don’t wait till the new optometry building replaces it – you need your eyes examined right now! Betty Rose Nagle Elm Heights Neighborhood resident


The Indiana Daily Student

Swimmer breaks world record

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IU senior swimmer Leila Vaziri set a world-record time in the 50-meter backstroke Wednesday at the FINA World Championships in Melbourne, Australia.


Courtesy Photo

Student reports rape, abduction by 2 men in car

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More than a month after the incident, a 19-year-old IU student reported to the IU Police Department that she was raped twice by two unknown men. The victim, a white female, told Detective Sgt. Leslie Slone Monday that she was abducted on Thursday, Feb. 22, at 10:30 p.m., from the corner of 10th Street and Sunrise Avenue, said IUPD Capt. Jerry Minger in a press release.


The Indiana Daily Student

Obama is new voice in political arena

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In response to “Kids these days,” March 23: Chicago community organizer, president of the Harvard Law Review, civil-rights lawyer, teacher of constitutional law, eight very successful years in the Illinois state Senate, United States senator, husband and father. I hope Indira Dammu will forgive us College Democrats for seeing and believing in a new kind of candidate. I’ve heard the “Republican-lite” charge many times – and it always makes me laugh. Walk into a College Democrats meeting and you’ll find a group of people whose politics differ greatly, but who share the same foundation, who share the same values. A belief that government can do good, can be a positive force, that too much privatization can cause a profit-first, people-second mentality – a group that’s fundamentally pro-choice, yet determined to make it “safe, legal and rare,” and that still believes in public education, job training and the value of the American worker. College Democrats want change – we want to do more than talk. It’s not Republican of us to work with the other side – it’s called compromise and it’s how things get done. It’s odd to me that Ms. Dammu would call us “Republican-lite” and then attack us for supporting Obama, who happens to stand to the left of Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Bill Richardson, Joe Biden and my early favorite, Tom Vilsack. Obama spoke out against the war – before everyone else thought to do so. He’s brought the rhetoric of personal responsibility back to the Democratic Party. He’s a new voice, free from the restraints of the old guard. Free from so much that made politics so ugly. We will continue our work to elect a Democratic president in 2008. We will make a difference. We know what we stand for. Do you? Emma Cullen 2006 IU College Democrats president


The Indiana Daily Student

Focusing on their fortes

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The sound of opera fills the hallways of the Simon Music Center as students lug awkwardly shaped cases while weaving through crowds. They rush from rehearsals to classes, then to more rehearsals, all in the effort to perfect their craft. The students of the IU Jacobs School of Music are passionate about their work and spend countless hours studying and rehearsing. Sophomore Sarah Taylor, a voice major, said she has encountered a wide range of stereotypes. “People don’t know a lot about us,” Taylor says. “People think that we don’t go out, or that we are nerdy or dorky, or that we don’t have other interests.” There are more than 1,600 music students at IU, yet many students outside the Jacobs school know little about their daily lives. Though the following three students come from different backgrounds, they all share the same level of commitment to their art.