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Sunday, June 21
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Female folk duo play at Boxcar Books

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Pamela Means and Sarah Grain will play a free show at 7 p.m. tonight at Boxcar Books, located at 310A S. Washington St. Means is a Boston-based Indie folk artist who writes political folk music and has actually worn a hole into her guitar. According to the biography on her Web site, she recently received the honor of being nominated as an Outstanding Contemporary Folk Artist at the Boston Music Awards.


The Indiana Daily Student

Robert Randolph plays at IU

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When Robert Randolph and The Family Band take the stage tonight at the IU Auditorium, audiences should get ready to shake their hips, said band member Marcus Randolph. The last few years have sent the group through funk, R&B and more, landing Robert Randolph on Rolling Stone's list of The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. Their latest album, "Colorblind," is geared more toward audience participation, comprised of 11 distinct songs, rather than the instrumental songs they've gravitated towards in previous albums.



The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: 9 p.m. results

As of 9 p.m., Monroe County's election results were as follows, with 16 out of 96 Monroe County precincts tallied (17 percent).


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: Lugar cruises on way to winning 6th term

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Voting sites had not even closed in parts of Indiana before U.S. Sen. Richard Lugar took the stage Tuesday evening at the state Republican headquarters to wrap up the easiest of his string of easy re-election campaigns. Lugar, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, cruised to victory for a sixth straight term without a Democratic foe. The crowd at the GOP headquarters welcomed the senator with applause and held up Lugar 2006 signs. Gov. Mitch Daniels, a former Lugar aide and campaign manager, wore a Lugar campaign button from 1976, when he was first elected to the Senate after a 1974 loss to Democrat Birch Bayh. Lugar thanked voters for the opportunity to represent them. "This is a celebration tonight for Indiana," Lugar said.



The Indiana Daily Student

Orange County Ca$hes in

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Before the new French Lick Springs Resort Casino opened Friday, residents of Orange County and the town of French Lick, Ind., were already anticipating ways to spend the tax revenue the new casino will bring, while others were voicing their concerns about the changes taking place in the small city as a result of the casino's opening. The casino, located about an hour south of Bloomington, is the 11th in the state and the last one allowed under state law. It was jointly developed and constructed beginning in August 2005 by Bloomington-based Cook Group and the Indianapolis-based real estate company Lauth Group, according to a Cook Group press release on the company's Web site. The $382 million project included the casino, renovations of the town's two historic hotels and the construction of golf courses and retail shops.



The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE: Early voting hours extended

The Monroe County Elections Board has extended early voting for Saturday by two hours. Registered voters can vote from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. Saturday at the Justice Building, 301 N. College Avenue, Monroe County elections supervisor Jessica White said.


The Indiana Daily Student

UPDATE:Early voting problems in at least 2 Indiana counties

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Officials from two Indiana counties said early problems with electronic voting machines had been fixed Tuesday as residents cast ballots to decide three of the nation's most closely watched congressional races and determine what party controls the Indiana House.



The Indiana Daily Student

Pelosi, Bush make last-minute stump stops

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WASHINGTON -- With House control at stake, President Bush campaigned Sunday in endangered Republican districts across GOP-friendly middle America. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, hoping to become the first woman speaker, stumped for Democratic challengers in the left-leaning Northeast.




The Indiana Daily Student

System of a down

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Webmail has done it again. This time a glitch in its new spam filter sent many legitimate e-mails into users' spam folders, where e-mails are promptly deleted after five days.