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Friday, April 10
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Farmers and actors collide on ‘Drawer Boy’ stage

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Young versus old, rural versus urban, farm life versus ... theater life? The story of the city misfit figuring out farm life is retold with a new twist that explores the power of storytelling in Cardinal Stage Company’s production of “The Drawer Boy.”



Buskirk Chumley

Farmers and actors collide in ‘Drawer Boy’

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The play opens Friday and runs through March 7, with performances at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Sunday, along with 2 p.m. shows each Saturday and Sunday, at the John Waldron Arts Center. The show is part of ArtsWeek 2010.



The Indiana Daily Student

Pro-lifers co-opt race

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“Every 4 days in American more black children are killed through abortion than the KKK killed in 144 years.”  This is a base-energizing, factually misleading, hardly original and grammatically challenging tidbit given front-page billing on the Georgia Right to Life’s Web site.


The Indiana Daily Student

Courting on campus

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If a journalist from the New York Times came to Bloomington and asked me how I felt about the men on IU’s campus, I would have to plead the Fifth.




The Indiana Daily Student

HPER professor selected as Fellow

Professor of Recreation, Park and Tourism Studies, Barbara Hawkins, was selected as Fellow of the Association for Gerontology in Higher Education.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bio-diverse?

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2010 is International Biodiversity Year for advocacy and education, but for IU professor Vicky Meretsky, every year is biodiversity year. “We hope this will give us an opportunity to reach out, an opportunity for educating,” Meretsky said. “The people who work in conservation can only do so much without expanding the number of people involved.”


The Indiana Daily Student

Missionaries freed by Haitian judge back in US

MIAMI — Eight American missionaries were back on U.S. soil Thursday but still faced possible child kidnapping charges in Haiti for trying to take 33 children out of the earthquake-ravaged country. The group’s leader, Laura Silsby, and her former nanny, Charisa Coulter, remained in a Port-au-Prince jail because a judge said questions still remained about their plans to set up an orphanage in the Dominican Republic.


The Indiana Daily Student

NJ bridge searchers: Baby’s survival odds are slim

NEWARK, N.J. — Officials searching for a baby believed to have been thrown off a bridge by her father acknowledge her chances of survival are slim by now. Teams with boats, dogs and helicopters have found no sign of 3-month-old Zara Malani-lin Abdur in their third day of searching under a river bridge on the Garden State Parkway.


The Indiana Daily Student

NY questions health claims of some 9/11 responders

NEW YORK — Lawyers defending New York City against thousands of lawsuits filed by Sept. 11 emergency responders say many of the claims are baseless and have asked a judge to dismiss some of the first cases headed toward trial.


Snygg Arts Week

Snygg’s laugh still resonates through ArtsWeek

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Fran Snygg had a laugh that rippled through every corridor she walked down. It was childlike, the kind of uproariously whimsical sound that would inspire laughter from others. The outgoing New York dancer, choreographer and artist never met a stranger. But Fran died at 53 in 1996 of diabetic complications. Today marks the beginning of the 26th-annual ArtsWeek, a project Fran pioneered and directed during the final 10 years of her life as a tribute to the diverse artistic culture in Bloomington.


Celebrate YourBody week panel discussion

Panel: Students should celebrate their body size

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This week students are urged to celebrate their bodies — no matter what the shape or size. To emphasize this message a panel discussion took place Wednesday night at the Student Recreational Sports Center auditorium focusing on body image and eating disorders.


Haiti Dinner

Students dine, donate to Haiti

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Student volunteers manned the food tables a little before 5 p.m. as the Haiti Benefit Dinner was about to begin in the Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center Grand Hall. They stood at the vegetarian table, the non-vegetarian table and the dessert table amid the pre-start panic. “Where’s the bread?” someone yelled.


The Indiana Daily Student

Shalom Center denied funds

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The City Council approved a grant Wednesday giving $133,000 to community organizations. However, the grant leaves out funding for the Shalom Community Center’s Hunger Relief Project.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tell me your turn-off

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Pussies. From their claws and fangs to their mysterious prowl, I hate cats. Who knew this fear would follow me to college?