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Monday, June 15
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Yay for Turkey Day

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You know what's so great about Thanksgiving? Everything. Think about it, a holiday (+50 points) where you get together with family and friends (+/- 5 points, depending on the circumstances), eat a ton of food (+20 points) and feel all sentimental about what you're thankful for (+20 points). You don't have to agree with my point system, but anyway you slice it, Thanksgiving leaves you wanting seconds.


The Indiana Daily Student

Privatizing our public university

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IU's state funding has decreased over the years, forcing the University to rely more and more on private sources of funding. Only 21.2 percent of revenue for this year came from state or public funding, compared to 47 percent in 1975. Interim IU-Bloomington Chancellor Ken Gros Louis said a higher proportion of IU's revenue is coming from tuition, private funding and research grants. While this trend is not ideal, moving toward increased private funding seems inevitable for higher education.



The Indiana Daily Student

Student faces 2 counts of battery

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IU student Jeffery Catron was arrested early Tuesday morning after the IU Police Department responded to a call of an assault in Briscoe Quad.


The Indiana Daily Student

Herbert: Open to the public?

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The administration of IU is in the midst of a tumultuous time. IU faculty members voted Monday night to have the IU board of trustees consider reviewing the presidency of IU leader Adam Herbert.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gros Louis to evaluate School of Informatics

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IU-Bloomington Interim Chancellor Ken Gros Louis and committee will soon evaluate the School of Informatics and its effects on the IU-Bloomington campus, as ordered by President Adam Herbert as part of the effort to maintain the momentum of the position of IUB chancellor.




The Indiana Daily Student

International Week shows IU's diversity

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A worldwide celebration dedicated to the appreciation of international education and exchange takes center stage at IU this week. International Education Week, sponsored by the U.S. departments of Education and State, aims to cultivate understanding of education across borders.


The Indiana Daily Student

Concert to help ill student with bills

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Ashley Lee has not been outside for nearly seven weeks. She has missed the coming of autumn, and she has nearly missed her first semester at college. Lee, an IU freshman who was diagnosed with meningococcal meningitis in late September, is now turning to her community for help in paying medical expenses.


The Indiana Daily Student

Faculty to consider splitting positions

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IU-Bloomington faculty members will raise questions about the structure of IU's leadership, particularly the role of the IUB chancellor, at a mass faculty meeting today. One of five resolutions to be discussed argues that a Bloomington chancellor, who is also the University-wide senior vice president for academic affairs, might not be able to focus exclusively on Bloomington's best interests. Though the resolution does not explicitly ask for a separation of the two jobs, it suggests to the IU board of trustees that faculty are concerned.


The Indiana Daily Student

All grown up

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Hanson, a band of brothers that reached the height of fame before they could drive, have reinvented their image, with legions of loyal fans who have backed them since the beginning. The band documented its recent experiences in the music business and discussed them with fans Monday at Alumni Hall. For coverage of the day's events, see page 10. Check Wednesday's IDS for coverage of the concert which ended late Monday night.


The Indiana Daily Student

Vaccination teams in Pakistan warn of shortage of funds

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MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan -- A tear rolled down the cheek of 5-year-old Syed Junaid Shah Monday as doctors from UNICEF and the Pakistani Health Ministry vaccinated him against tetanus and measles. The boy is one of the 1.2 million children in Pakistan's quake zone that doctors hope to immunize in the next two to three weeks, but organizers say they have only received about half the $8 million needed for the program. Without the money, "we will not be able to complete the whole activity, which means large numbers of vulnerable children will remain unprotected," UNICEF project manager Edward Hoekstra told The Associated Press.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alito boasts anti-abortion work in White House

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WASHINGTON -- Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito boasted about his work arguing that "the Constitution does not protect a right to an abortion" while trying to become a deputy assistant attorney general in the Reagan administration, according to documents released Monday. Alito, a federal appellate judge nominated by President Bush to the nation's highest court, was a young lawyer working for the solicitor general's office in 1985 when he applied for the position under Attorney General Edwin Meese.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kansas school board approves science standards casting doubt on evolution

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TOPEKA, Kan. -- Risking the kind of nationwide ridicule it faced six years ago, the Kansas Board of Education approved new public-school science standards Nov. 8 that cast doubt on the theory of evolution. The 6-4 vote was a victory for "intelligent design" advocates who helped draft the standards. Intelligent design holds that the universe is so complex that it must have been created by a higher power.



The Indiana Daily Student

Bright Eyes gives illuminating performance

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Conor Oberst didn't know what he was in for -- and neither did the patrons of the Bright Eyes concert Sunday night. Oberst said he had played in Bloomington before but never expected it to "look like this," as his previous experiences entailed much smaller gigs. The IU Auditorium was a rowdy house as the 25-year-old singer/songwriter took the stage Sunday evening. Originally from Nebraska, Oberst wrote many songs for other bands and toyed with a few acoustic recordings of his own before becoming the lead singer of the up-and-coming band Bright Eyes, which drew a nearly packed auditorium Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hanson bridges gap between musicians and fans

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Screams of anticipation could be heard from Whittenberger Auditorium Monday afternoon. Newly independent band Hanson visited campus for a screening of its documentary, "Strong Enough to Break," and later held a concert in Alumni Hall.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bears linemen fight; Miller breaks jaw

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LAKE FOREST, Ill. -- Bears center Olin Kreutz will not be suspended by Chicago coach Lovie Smith for breaking teammate Fred Miller's jaw in a fight last week. The players admitted Monday they had the fight. Smith, obviously unhappy he wasn't told the truth about what happened until late last week, said he won't suspend the players but will discipline them. He wouldn't be specific, but fines are expected. Miller needed surgery last week after initially saying he hurt his jaw in a fall at his home last Monday.