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Saturday, June 27
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington man helps save dying languages

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As a young teenager, Indrek Park learned to play bagpipes in Estonia, a country less than half the size of Indiana with one-fifth its population. Now 34 and an IU graduate student, Park is still playing. Last week, he played his Estonian bagpipes for a sixth-grade class at Bloomington's University Elementary School because the students were studying the region in Europe where Estonia lies. The students giggled as Park finished his tunes with a loud honk from the pipes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Avian flu threat highest in Asia, expected to spread

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LONDON -- Bird flu can be expected to spread to other countries, but the biggest threat of it mutating into a human virus that could kill millions across the world remains in Asia, the World Health Organization said Monday. Tests on birds from Romania confirmed the arrival of bird flu in Europe on Saturday, two days after it was verified on Europe's doorstep in the Asian part of Turkey.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cyclist in critical condition

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An IU student injured in a motorcycle crash Sunday evening has been airlifted to Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis where he is in critical condition, according to IU Police Department reports.


The Indiana Daily Student

Marshall, Neal were IU pioneers

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When Marcellus Neal died in a hit-and-run crash in 1939, his Chicago Tribune obituary was only 32 words long, beginning with his name, his age and his race. He was "colored," it reads in its first line. Though Neal's obituary demonstrates he might have died at a time when a black man's death did not justify attention, he lived a life that challenged such racial inequalities and ultimately changed them. Neal became the first black student to graduate from IU when he received a degree in mathematics in 1895.

The Indiana Daily Student

Timmy Foundation focuses on charity

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The members of the IU Timmy Foundation get together every other Tuesday night to talk about new opportunities to help out their community and the world around them. The foundation's goal is to educate children about health issues and provide health care to those in need of medical attention. The group relies heavily on volunteers and is made up of about 250 students at the IU chapter alone. The foundation is also prominent on many other campuses around the United States.


The Indiana Daily Student

High court rejects $280B tobacco suit

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WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court refused Monday to let the government sue tobacco companies for $280 billion, a major victory for cigarette makers. A federal judge presided over a nine-month trial and has not yet decided whether tobacco companies are guilty of wrongdoing. The fight at the high court was over the amount of money the companies would have to pay if the judge rules that they violated a federal anti-racketeering law known as RICO by misleading the public about the dangers of smoking.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU hazardous materials secured

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An ABC News investigation revealed that the 25 colleges with nuclear reactors across the country severely lack security. Because of the report, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is investigating five universities, including the University of Wisconsin, Ohio State University and Purdue University.



The Indiana Daily Student

Murder rate hits 40-year low; all major crime rates down

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WASHINGTON -- The nation's murder rate declined last year for the first time in four years, dropping to the lowest level in 40 years. Experts said local rather than national trends were mostly responsible. The rates for all seven major crimes were down and the overall violent crime rate reached a 30-year low, according to the FBI's annual compilation of crimes reported to the police.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around Business

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SAN JOSE, Calif. -- After revolutionizing the way people listen to music with the popular iPod, Apple Computer Inc. is trying to do the same with video. The company introduced a new iPod Oct. 12 that is capable of playing everything from TV shows to music videos.


The Indiana Daily Student

Help and genocide

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In many matters of foreign policy, students in the United States have little or no opportunity for input. Rarer still are the moments when IU students have the ability to change the course of world events. This is one of those few moments.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trends: tracking, predicting and capitalizing

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Editor's note: This is the fifth column in a six-column series giving advice to beginning entrepreneurs. For more information about Weisburd, the co-founder of Indy Tickets Express LLC and the vice president of the Young Entrepreneurs Association, visit www.DavidWeisburd.com.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lazy laundry

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After experiencing the accidental shrunken sweater or white shirt turned pink from a mixing of reds and whites, to some student laundry becomes more of a fear than the chore it usually is. For students who don't know how, don't have time to or just don't want to do laundry at all, local businesses such as Winslow One-Stop Laundromat, Campus Laundry East and Bumble Bee Laundry & Cie have moved from the traditional laundromat setup to one requiring less work from customers. Rather than just providing washers and dryers, these laundry services actually wash, dry and fold the clothes for customers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Down in flamers

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The stars are melting. The stripes are turning black. America is on fire. On Wednesday, the Indiana Daily Student ran an article concerning two 17 year olds who stole and burned a gay pride flag. Apparently, they each had a big bowl of stupid for breakfast that morning, washed down with an even bigger glass of plucky. Only foolhardy hoodlums are naïve enough to think that flamers can be eradicated with fire. The flag that the minors burned was quite large, roughly 3 feet by 5 feet. Their ignorance, however, had even larger dimensions.


The Indiana Daily Student

A plea for manliness

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In the aftermath of Big Man on Campus, it is intriguing to go back a half century, before Frank Sinatra became the man's man par excellence. When manliness was a concept that still resonated, Humphrey Bogart was the paragon to which American boys would aspire.


The Indiana Daily Student

We card for Nyquil?

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Thanks to a new Indiana law, Nyquil has joined alcohol, pornography, cigarettes and R-rated movies on the list of items that require identification. In July, Indiana passed a law that restricts access to cold medicines containing ingredients that can contribute to the making of Indiana's newest problem drug: methamphetamine. Head to your local Village Pantry or grocery store looking for deliverance from your nighttime coughing, sniffing, sneezing and that notorious "I can't go to sleep but God I want to" feeling, and you will discover relief has red tape. Your name, telephone number and address are required to purchase all cold medicines containing ephedrine or pseudoephedrine. This would seem like a very small price to pay to stem drug use, if the new laws made any sense.


The Indiana Daily Student

Class features Tibetan religious songs, texts

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In a quiet part of Bloomington, set far back from Snoddy Road, is the Tibetan Cultural Center. Though the location is almost hidden and one could easily miss the turn, the surrounding land and exotic architecture make the setting quite peaceful.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local troupe offers free puppet theater

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A little boy almost 3 years old eagerly claps as he sits on top of a book his mother just checked out of the library. His light-up shoes beam flashes of red in the dark theater as he kicks his feet together in excitement. Saturday, the Puck Players Public Theatre puppet troupe performed "The Little Red Hen" and "Chicken Little" free of charge to a large audience at the Monroe County Public Library.


The Indiana Daily Student

Men's Basketball: 11,000 provide Hoosiers with hysteria

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It takes brains to skip an entire grade, but it took sophomore guard A.J. Ratliff to jump one. Ratliff, who shared Friday's Hoosier Hysteria slam dunk crown with senior forward Marco Killingsworth, first wowed spectators by leaping over sophomore guard Adam Ahlfeld for a one-handed throw-down.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the Game

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Auburn proves too much for young Hoosier swimmers The Auburn Tigers proved to be too hot for the Hoosiers' swimming and diving team to handle as the team displayed their dominance with a 165-124 win over IU Friday in Auburn, Ala. The Hoosiers' opposition showed that a sizeable amount of talent has carried over from last year's squad, which finished as the NCAA runner-up.