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Wednesday, June 10
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Sodrel concedes congressional loss before hometown crowd

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JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind. -- Early cheers turned to tears late Tuesday night at the Republican headquarters in Jeffersonville, Ind., as U.S. Congressman Mike Sodrel conceded to Democratic challenger Baron Hill. As the polls closed and preliminary numbers came in favoring Sodrel, spirits in the crowd were high. Sodrel walked around the downtown square of his hometown sharing hugs and smiles with the hundreds of locals who came out in his support. Silently showing his authority to return to Washington, Sodrel wore a denim shirt bearing the official U.S. House of Representatives embroidery.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dems force out 3 Indiana GOP congressmen

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Democrats ousted Republican incumbents Tuesday in Indiana's 2nd, 7th and 8th Congressional Districts, giving the party three of the 15 seats it needed to take control of the U.S. House of Representatives.


The Indiana Daily Student

Siam House renovations will add more tables in restaurant

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Although the Siam House is undergoing external renovations, residents can rest assured that Indiana's oldest Thai restaurant is keeping its traditional Thai food and atmosphere as it has been for the past 17 years. Siam House, 430 E. Fourth St., has been undergoing renovations that are expected to be finished by the end of the month and will allow the restaurant to fit in five or six more tables.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hip-hop artist wants Midwest rap scene to get recognized

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Hip-hop music doesn't exactly grow in cornfields. Consequently, the entire Midwest has picked up a reputation for its lack of successful hip-hop artists. As Vibe magazine Editor Alan Light puts it in his new book on the history of hip-hop: "The last place anybody expected to hear rap music blowing up was the Midwest." But it seems as though Bloomington might be on the brink of becoming home to an oasis in the Midwest hip-hop desert.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bosma concedes that Democrats take control of Indiana House

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Indiana House Democrats knocked off at least four Republican incumbents and regained control of the chamber, something both parties considered their top priority this election. Republicans went into the election with a 52-48 majority, but House Speaker Brian Bosma conceded late Tuesday that his party will now trail by at least 51-49. Democrats had narrowly controlled the chamber for eight consecutive years before Republicans gained the gavel in 2004.


The Indiana Daily Student

Voters 'wary' of machines but still feel duty to vote

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Voters might have felt a duty to vote Tuesday, but not all of them felt confident their votes were counted accurately in the electronic machines used on Election Day in Monroe County. The Monroe County Courthouse, one of 19 Election Day poll locations in Bloomington, had drawn about 250 voters by 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. Many voters leaving the polls at the courthouse said they felt it was their civic duty to vote but admitted they didn't feel 100 percent confident in the electronic system.


The Indiana Daily Student

Voter fraud allegations investigated

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onded to allegations that a Democratic Monroe County employee was found illegally holding overseas absentee ballots Tuesday. Initial reports from The Associated Press stated that the FBI was conducting an investigation into the matter. County clerk Jim Fielder and Jack Schmit, a Republican Monroe County Election Board member, both said the FBI began an investigation, but Indiana State Police First Sgt. Dave Bursten said the FBI was never involved. Wendy Osbourne, spokeswoman for the Indianapolis office of the FBI, said she could not confirm or deny whether any investigations were being conducted. The FBI has jurisdiction over voter fraud allegations, she said.


The Indiana Daily Student

GOP faces some losses in Senate

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WASHINGTON -- Resurgent Democrats grabbed Republican Senate seats in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Rhode Island Tuesday in midterm elections shaped by an unpopular war in Iraq and scandal at home.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dems win governorships in Mass., Ohio, New York

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Democrats scored a string of victories in governors' races Tuesday, taking back Massachusetts, Ohio and New York from the GOP, holding a vulnerable seat in Michigan and fighting hard to unseat Republicans in Minnesota and Maryland.


The Indiana Daily Student

Voters elect to ban same-sex marriage in 3 states, 5 pending

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Amendments to ban gay marriage won approval Tuesday in three states, including Wisconsin, where gay-rights activists had nursed hopes of engineering the first defeat of such a ban. Nationwide, a total of 205 measures were on the ballots in 37 states -- ranging from routine bond issues to a riveting contest in South Dakota, where voters chose whether to uphold or reject a toughest-in-the-nation law that would ban virtually all abortions.


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: 12 a.m. results

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As of midnight, Monroe County's election results were as follows, with 31 out of 96 Monroe County precincts tallied (32 percent):


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: 11 p.m. results

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As of 11 p.m., Monroe County's election results were as follows, with 28 out of 96 Monroe County precincts tallied (29 percent):


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: Hill, Ellsworth, Donnelly give Democrats key wins in Congress

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Baron Hill squeaked past Rep. Mike Sodrel in southern Indiana's 9th District. Meanwhile, Democrats ousted Republican incumbents Tuesday in Indiana's 2nd and 8th Congressional Districts as well, giving the party three of the 15 seats it needs to take control of the U.S. House. Joe Donnelly topped Rep. Chris Chocola in northern Indiana's 2nd District, and Brad Ellsworth swept past Republican Rep. John Hostettler in southern Indiana's 8th District.


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: 10 p.m. results

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As of 10 p.m., Monroe County's election results were as follows, with 18 out of 96 Monroe County precincts tallied (19 percent):


The Indiana Daily Student

Online Only: Jesus isn't a ninja

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As I was hustling down 10th Street last week, late as usual, I was accosted by a smarmy grin poking a piece of paper at me. "Hey man," the smarmy grin said. "Want a free ticket to a concert next week?" Eager to make haste, I accepted the proffered piece of paper and plunged on to my late appointment. As I bustled along, I examined my "ticket," only to discover that it was the very same uninformative and ubiquitous advertisement I'd already seen about a million times in the previous days, inviting me to an ambiguous event called "AFTERdark." Par for this course, the "ticket" listed the program's name, date, time, location and little else: no description, campus affiliation or sponsoring student group could be found. Apparently cat-killing curiosity was the intended enticement.


The Indiana Daily Student

For Freitag and gang, 1 goal to go

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One goal. It sounds rather cliche, but no phrase better summarizes the IU men's soccer team at this point in the season. The team has already reclaimed the Big Ten regular season championship and the conference tournament title, two feathers that never made it in their cap last year. They brought home the hardware, despite losing six of 11 starters from a year ago and being the lowest-scoring team in the 34-year history of the program. If that doesn't typify how dominant IU soccer has been over the years, I don't know what does.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers dealt 1st loss of season

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The IU men's hockey team split games last weekend, tallying its first loss of the season. The Hoosiers lost their first game Friday but won the second game Saturday against Lindenwood University, currently ranked No. 7 in Division I. The split put the Hoosiers at 5-1-2 on the season.


The Indiana Daily Student

Goldwater standard?

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No matter how Tuesday's election went, it's safe to say that conservative voters were influenced by the "religious right," and liberal voters were driven to represent everything that conservatives are not. But what's ironic and tragic about the religious right's position in Republican politics is that it's so far away from the views of the founding father of modern conservatism, Barry Goldwater.