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Monday, May 4
The Indiana Daily Student

The Indiana Daily Student

'Dr. Seuss' widow celebrates centennial

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SAN DIEGO -- Near the end of his life, Theodor "Dr. Seuss" Geisel sat down with his wife, Audrey, to speak of the past and of things to come. "'I've had a wonderful life,'" Audrey Stone Geisel recalled him saying. "'I've done what I had to do. I lived where I wished to live. I had love. I had everything.' "'But,' he said, 'now my work will be turned over to you. And you will have to deal with those consequences.' "And oh-ho," said the 82-year-old heiress of the Seuss world, "has that been true!"


The Indiana Daily Student

Amy M. Spindler, NY Times style editor and IU grad, dies

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NEW YORK -- Indiana native Amy M. Spindler, the style editor for The New York Times Magazine who became known for her pointed criticism of the fashion industry, has died. She was 40. Spindler died Friday from a brain tumor at her home in Manhattan, according to her husband, Roberto Benabib.


The Indiana Daily Student

The little things in life

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Two months ago, I arrived in Madrid without a clue of what the city would be like. Two months later, I'm still here after a rollercoaster ride of adjustment. While it's not a Third World country, Spain definitely differs from the States.


The Indiana Daily Student

Students sing with soul in IU choirs

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Students who loved to sing before college need not give up their passions for vocal performance. IU's choral department offers a variety of opportunities for both music and non-music majors to display their talents. The choral department allows students from all majors to participate in its auditions each semester.

The Indiana Daily Student

Complex roles sweep Oscars

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LOS ANGELES -- Tim Robbins won the supporting actor Academy Award Sunday for his performance as an emotionally crippled murder suspect in "Mystic River," and Renee Zellweger took supporting actress as a hardy Confederate survivor in "Cold Mountain." Sofia Coppola won best original screenplay for her dazzling work on "Lost in Translation."


The Indiana Daily Student

FASA brings artist to IU

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The Fine Arts Student Association welcomes visiting artist John Jacobsmeyer to campus this weekend. Jacobsmeyer is the second artist in a three part series in which professional artists come to IU to educate and encourage aspiring artists. FASA is an organization open to studio-art students that works to create opportunities beyond the classroom.


The Indiana Daily Student

Talents shine through poetry, music

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Established and aspiring poets will take the stage to express their feelings through their works at Union Board's Poetry Slam from 9 to 11 p.m. tonight. "Poetry Slam gives students the time to read their thoughts through words and music that they might not get the chance to do," said Mary Hansell, co-director of Celebrate the Arts, a Union Board committee in charge of the event. "It is a time for them to share their work and others to enjoy it." The Poetry Slam will take place in the IMUG Cafe, which is in the south lounge of the Indiana Memorial Union. The event is free and coffee and cookies will be served for all to enjoy while waiting to perform or just relaxing and listening to the works of others. The room has a coffee house atmosphere and is often used as a place where students come to study between classes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Arts

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La Casa hosts Puerto Rican night La Casa Latino Cultural Center will present a night of Puerto Rican food, music and culture. There will be a showing of "Puerto Ricans," a video documentray centered around Puerto Rican culture and everyday life. Authentic Puerto Rican food and Puerto Rican salsa music will be a part of the night's festivities. The event will take place from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight at La Casa, located at 715 E. Seventh St. For more information contact 855--0174 or smercado@indiana.edu.


The Indiana Daily Student

The golden age of Hollywood

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The movie begins. A monotone, cheesy theme with too many violins and not enough tempo plays, while an archaic cursive title fades onto the screen. The movie is called something like "In a Lonely Place" or "Strangers on a Train." Because the credits are at the beginning of the movie, it takes too long for the action to start. And when it does, the characters talk unnaturally and nasally -- primitive recording equipment and years of deterioration and copying take their toll. Plus, there is no color!


The Indiana Daily Student

Wartime love story crosses borders

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The sixth longest-running show in Broadway history, "Miss Saigon," will be playing at the IU Auditorium throughout this week. Written by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schonberg, who composed "Les Miserables," "Miss Saigon" is one of the few theatrical musicals that tells a story in a modern setting -- in this case, the Vietnam War. It gives a perspective of the war and the life of the soldiers not often seen in America.


The Indiana Daily Student

Shakespeare opens at Buskirk-Chumley

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The Acting Company, an award-winning acting troupe, will present Shakespeare's "Richard III" at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater, 114 E. Kirkwood Ave. The Acting Company's appearance is part of "Shakespeare in American Communities," the largest tour of Shakespeare in American history, according to www.shakespeareinamericancommunities.org.


The Indiana Daily Student

Costumes, floats take over Brazil

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RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil -- Hundreds of shirtless men wheeled massive floats Sunday in the direction of the Sambadrome, the site of this year's Carnival showdown between Brazil's top samba groups.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fashions created by non-majors

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The first annual Coquette Fashion Show presented by the Union Board is underway. The show is a collaboration of Union Board, People magazine and IU students. It will allow non-fashion majors to showcase their creativity through the art of design.


The Indiana Daily Student

MovingSounds

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Students, families and friends packed the IU Auditorium Friday and Saturday night to watch more than 3,000 students sing, dance and compete in the 72nd annual IU Sing -- themed "Big City Beat."


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Art Museum restores American modernist piece

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In March 2003, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded the IU Art Museum with a $30,000 grant for the conservation of Stuart Davis' "Swing Landscape." Work began on the painting last July and is expected to be completed this spring.


The Indiana Daily Student

Play sheds light on women's plight

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In Juarez, Mexico, a town just south of the border to the U.S., 300 women have been murdered and/or raped during the past 10 years. Many of these women are still missing. More frightening is the fact that not one of these murder cases has resulted in a single conviction.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Sing performers to belt out 'Big City Beat'

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The final countdown for IU Sing has begun. There is less than a day left for song practices, dance rehearsals and skit run-throughs before all of the students' hard work goes on stage in the Big City Beat-themed event, beginning at 7 p.m. tonight at the IU Auditorium.


The Indiana Daily Student

A lesson about new beginnings

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Washington Irving served as ambassador to Spain, and during some of his diplomatic work he stayed in the Alhambra. In later books, such as "Tales of the Alhambra" and "Spanish Tales," he wrote about creakings and clankings he heard in supposedly locked and sealed-off rooms there. Horace Walpole, son of the first prime minister of England, considered access to ruins so important that he had some artificial ruins constructed and placed on his estate.


The Indiana Daily Student

Oscar campaigning frenzy continues

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LOS ANGELES -- Academy Awards overseers were hoping for a kinder, gentler buildup to the Oscars. So far, their wish has been granted, with none of the shady campaigning that has sullied recent Hollywood awards seasons. The race to take home a little gold guy has been as strenuous as ever, though, with stars and filmmakers glad-handing like politicians and Hollywood trade papers awash in glossy ads plugging Oscar contenders.


The Indiana Daily Student

Comedy troupe strives for variety

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The Bloomington Playwrights Project comedy show "IU's All Sorts of Trouble for the Boy in the Bubble" will perform its last show before Spring break Saturday night. The project's sketch comedy series theme is "Straight Up Funny" said Eric Jenkins, coordinator of the program, and will feature satire on current pop culture issues. The "Boy in the Bubble" comedy troupe features IU students as performers and writers. They have been working and performing together every few weeks for over four years. Their sketch comedy features a menagerie of farce, satire, physical comedy, shock and improvisation.