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Sunday, June 28
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Terrorist attacks alter lineup of Lotus Festival

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Bloomington's Lotus World Music and Arts Festival, an annual five-day event scheduled to begin Wednesday, will be adversely affected by the transportation problems stemming from the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington Tuesday. The disruption of air travel and general international tension have already led to one band cancellation -- Celtic pop group Kila have announced they will not make the festival. But Executive Director Lee Williams said the show would go on.


The Indiana Daily Student

Still Jumpin'

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Two Bloomington residents, Joshua Silbert and Dylan Wissing, formed a band in 1983, which later evolved into Johnny Socko. They have been enjoying a wild ride ever since.


The Indiana Daily Student

Palestinian suicide bomber kills 19

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A Palestinian detonated nail-studded explosives on a Jerusalem bus crowded with high school students and office workers today, killing himself and 19 passengers in the city's deadliest suicide attack in six years.


The Indiana Daily Student

Reaching beyond

Students strolling through Dunn Meadow next week will find a challenge awaiting them -- they'll be asked to "get disoriented." They'll find veggie burgers, punk rock and sex educators. They'll munch edamame and listen to political commentators and philosophers voice perspectives on a vast array of social issues. And they'll be forced to question their own thinking.

The Indiana Daily Student

Been done before, but still scary

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Sometimes, the scariest movies don't let you see the thing you are afraid of. Typically, our own fear-inducing imaginations scare us a lot more than what's revealed explicitly. Who hasn't been home alone at night and associated every little noise they heard with an intruder in the house? Well, Mark Pellington, director of "Mothman Prophecies," understands this philosophy. Seeing is sometimes not nearly as scary as imagining.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers tee off at Xavier Invitational

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The Hoosiers are in Cincinnati today to tee off in the two-day, 54-hole Xavier Invitational. IU is coming off of a third place finish in last week's Wolverine Invitational as it heads into the week's 19-team tournament. The Hoosiers will be competing against Akron, Ball State, Bowling Green, Cincinnati, Eastern Michigan, Georgetown, Kentucky, Louisville, Marshall, Miami (Ohio), Michigan, Notre Dame, Ohio, Penn State, Western Kentucky, Wisconsin, Wright State and Xavier.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fate of mural on hold

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True to the promise made at the last Black Student Union town hall meeting, the group made its position official last night. During a meeting with students and University officials, the BSU expressed that they want something done about the mural in Woodburn Hall Room 100.


The Indiana Daily Student

Csanyi missed point of Little 500 tradition

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I think the definitive line in Matt Csanyi's column ("Little 500: The stupidest IU tradition", March 28) was, "It didn't work -- I sucked and our team sucked." So you're bitter about Little 500 being heralded as such a great event? I agree, from one perspective, a bunch of frat guys riding around a quarter mile track for two hours sounds pretty pointless to me. But I think you left out a few important details in your story.



The Indiana Daily Student

Gratzi! offers promising Italian cuisine

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The areas surrounding campus offer a variety of foods that can satisfy anyone's appetite. From your typical American food at the bars, sub shops, and cafes to authentic ethnic food including Chinese, Tibetan, Thai, Indian and Mexican, one has enough choices to try something new everyday. A recent addition to these close to campus restaurants and one I have been eager to try is the Italian restaurant Gratzi!


The Indiana Daily Student

Bush passes legislation intended to rebuild

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WASHINGTON -- President George W. Bush signed into law Tuesday a $40 billion package to rebuild after last week's terrorist attacks. He also put his signature to the congressional resolution authorizing him to use military force against those responsible.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rosh Hashana offers Jewish students chance to reflect, celebrate past year

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Tonight, Jewish students across campus will begin celebrating Rosh Hashana. Along with Yom Kippur, Rosh Hashana is one of two High Holidays that comprise the holiest days on the Hebrew calendar. Helene G. Simon Hillel Center Assistant Director Josh Stein explained the significance of Rosh Hashana for the Jewish community.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fox wants reform by year's end

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WASHINGTON -- Mexican President Vicente Fox challenged the United States on Wednesday to strike an agreement on immigration reform by the end of the year. President Bush said "there is no more important relationship" than Mexico's but did not embrace Fox's ambitious deadline. The public challenge surprised U.S. officials who have been trying to lower expectations for a deal on the complex and politically risky issue.



The Indiana Daily Student

Silent Bob speaks at Auditorium

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Kevin Smith, the famed director of films including "Clerks" and "Dogma," spoke to a crowd of more than 3,200 Friday night in the IU Auditorium. The man, also known for his portrayal of Silent Bob in his films, spent close to four hours fielding questions on topics varying from independent filmmaking to which "Star Wars" character he would like to be. Since his 1994 debut "Clerks," Smith and his films have taken on cult status. He has written breakout roles for Ben Affleck, Jason Lee, Joey Lauren Adams and Jason Mewes, and has become a star portraying Silent Bob. His acting and direction are both simple and effective, but his real talent lies in his writing. Whenever anyone talks about his films, the words "witty dialogue" always seem to appear.



The Indiana Daily Student

Property tax bill could affect IU students

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The Indiana General Assembly will face a daunting task when it reconvenes to consider the bill passed last Wednesday in a 19-6 vote by the House Ways and Means Committee. The potential impact of this debate on IU students is great as future funding for higher education is in jeopardy. Beginning June 3, legislators will meet at the statehouse in downtown Indianapolis to mull over possible solutions to Indiana's $1 billion budget deficit, and to discuss a remedy for court-ordered property tax hikes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

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Trustees to hold town meeting with students Little 500 rider call-out meeting today American Red Cross Bloodmobile on campus


The Indiana Daily Student

All aboard the Bloomington Transit

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Allowing students to prepay to ride Bloomington Transit earned the agency recognition as one of the 10 fastest growing transit services in North America in the September/October 2001 issue of Metro Magazine, a national bus and rail transit industry publication.