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Wednesday, June 17
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Club team transfer makes splash before Iowa series

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IU returns home for a three-game, in-conference series Friday afternoon at Sembower Field with a new face in the bullpen. Alex Zerman, an IU junior who began the 2010 season playing for the University’s club baseball team, joined the Hoosiers officially Monday before making his first appearance on the mound in Tuesday’s contest at Valparaiso.



The Indiana Daily Student

IU sends 5 table tennis members to nationals

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Five Club Table Tennis players qualified for the 2010 College Table Tennis National Championship that took place last weekend after building off their success in the Association of College Unions International Regional Tournament in February.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD ready for Little 500

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As the 60th annual Little 500 approaches, the IU Police Department will be in full force.  Officers stress that although they will prioritize law enforcement of criminal activity, they will not be more lenient in making arrests.


The Indiana Daily Student

Quirky prom to rock Bluebird

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Boxcar Books and Community Center will present the sixth annual Rock ‘n’ Roll Prom 2010: A Space Oddity at 9 p.m. Saturday at the Bluebird Nightclub.



The Indiana Daily Student

Hispanics not alone: DREAM IU focuses on undocumented Asians

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The DREAM IU student group wants everyone on campus to know Hispanics aren’t the only ones dealing with issues related to undocumented citizenship. The group will partner with several organizations, to facilitate a discussion called “The Neglected Dreamers” on the struggles Asians face.


The Indiana Daily Student

Love rekindles in ‘A Little Night Music’

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Desiree Armfeldt said she loves loving men but does not mind losing lovers, either. Such affairs are common for the lead character in the Department of Theatre and Drama’s final production of the season, “A Little Night Music.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Officials tout proposed military site expansion

A proposed land exchange announced Thursday would facilitate a $105 million expansion at the Indiana National Guard’s Camp Atterbury, increasing soldier-training capacity by the thousands and bringing hundreds of jobs to the state, officials said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Protestors defend judge

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Spain’s central criminal court, the Audiencia Nacional, began hearings in the case against justice Baltasar Garzón Real yesterday. Right-wing groups, led by Manos Limpias (“clean hands”), had filed suits against the judge after he tried to open inquiries against crimes committed by Francisco Franco and members of the Falange party during and after the Spanish Civil War. The crimes included executions, mass graves, forced labor and sudden disappearances.


The Indiana Daily Student

Backers defend crackdown on illegal immigrants

Supporters of the nation’s toughest crackdown on illegal immigration, on the verge of approval in the Arizona Legislature, said the state law is necessary to help stamp out crime and keep citizens and law enforcement officers safe. The measure would make it a crime to be in the country illegally and require local police officers to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are here illegally.


The Indiana Daily Student

Aid arrives after cyclone kills 121

Aid workers distributed rice, dried fruit, water and tarpaulins Thursday to victims of a ferocious cyclone that killed at least 121 people in India and demolished ten of thousands of mud huts.



The Indiana Daily Student

Forever young

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The Lucky Charms box houses the only sugary food in my kitchen.


The Indiana Daily Student

Some way to ‘take a stand’

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I’ve always been a huge supporter of taking a stand, of speaking out against the status quo, of not being afraid to speak your own mind.


Justice Stevens

Bye bye to the bow tie guy

WE SAY President Obama should fill Justice Stevens’ unique void on the Court wisely.


The Indiana Daily Student

Settlers-vs.-Indians board game rankles tribes

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — “King Philip’s War” is a board game based on a bloody and violent clash of the same name between colonists and Indian tribes in 17th-century New England. The game’s designer says he hopes to educate children and others about a war that cost thousands of lives but receives scant attention in history books. But some Native Americans want the game blocked from release, saying it trivializes the conflict and insensitively perpetuates a stereotype of Indian tribes as warlike savages.


McKaig

McKaig returns to honor student groups

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The Student Activities Office awarded six different awards Wednesday that highlighted student groups that have focused their efforts on diversity, inter-organization collaboration, leadership development, and community engagement.