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Wednesday, April 22
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Peace Action Coalition protests war in Iraq at Sodrel's Bloomington office office

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In stifling summer heat, more than two dozen people marched south on Walnut Street, June 21. The crowd, literally of all ages -- from children just barely of school age, to the elderly being guided by friends -- formed an unlikely parade of signs and banners, all of them calling for one goal: the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana Honda plant brings 2,000 jobs to hard-hit state

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GREENSBURG, Ind. -- Honda Motor Co. will build an auto assembly plant near the city as part of a $1.18 billion global expansion, ending a five-state scramble and bringing jobs to a state hit hard by manufacturing losses. The $550 million factory will employ 2,000 workers and eventually produce 200,000 vehicles annually, officials said at a news conference Wednesday. The Japanese automaker announced in May that it planned to build its sixth North American plant in the Midwest, but did not say where. Officials from Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin promoted sites in their states.


The Indiana Daily Student

Adopted home of Superman flying high with new blockbuster comic book film

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METROPOLIS, Ill. -- Passing through southern Illinois on their way to Nashville, Diana Brown and her son Colin saw the signs pointing the way to this town's Superman Square and its colorful bronze statue of the Man of Steel. Thanks to the media buildup ahead of Wednesday's opening of "Superman Returns," Clark Kent's alter ego was already on Brown's mind. So last week, mother and son got off the highway and visited this Mayberry-meets-Disney town on the Ohio River.


The Indiana Daily Student

Festival jazz orchestra showcases Indiana musicians this Friday

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Indiana jazz musicians are coming together to perform what will be the first performance of the Jazz Festival Orchestra directed by composer and IU jazz icon David Baker. The orchestra will perform pieces composed by graduates of the Jacobs School of Music's jazz program and other Indiana jazz artists. "It really becomes an Indiana celebration in that all the compositions are by Indiana people, not necessarily Indiana University," Baker said. "Basically the thematic concept is that it's Indiana."

The Indiana Daily Student

'War Love' Part I

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When will humanity realize that a war is never won? As if we are missing pages from our American history books, a significant portion of the U.S. Congress and the Bush Administration believe "victory" is within reach in Iraq. Just look at the recent formation of a "new" Iraqi government, and the video-game-esque assassination of that one guy named Abu-something or another.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local community theatre produces flowing productions

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For the Monroe County Civic Theatre turning complex pieces of literature into productions staged in unorthodox spaces is half the battle. Making it work smoothly is the other half. And most of the time it isn't done easily. The upcoming performance of Alice's Adventures is Wonderland is no exception. The play opens July 1 in a venue many would not expect to house a theatre performance, The Irish Lion, located at 212 W. Kirkwood Avenue.


The Indiana Daily Student

Take due care with trees and power lines

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While electric utilities pursue their tree trimming initiatives at this time of the year, the recent storm damage in some parts of Indiana serves as a reminder of why these efforts are important.


The Indiana Daily Student

Africa more than source of danger

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In a column titled "Africa matters" (June 26th), Mark Weinberg argues that Americans need to know more about Africa. I wholeheartedly agree! Weinberg chooses to enumerate threats that the continent poses to the United States, as a "breeding ground for terrorists," for example, or as a source of immigrants "already storming the borders of Europe" and "carrying a variety of deadly diseases." The article engages in negative stereotyping, which has a long history in U.S. media.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Sexual preference' not preferred wording

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I am thankful to David A. Nosko for the thorough reporting of the recent event that focused on communities of faith and how they might better welcome and include GLBT people in their midst ("Community debates church's role in gay life, marriage," IDS June 26, 2006). At the same time, I was disappointed at some of the language choices Mr. Nosko used to report the story. On Page 1, he explains how participants learned to welcome GLBT Hoosiers "regardless of their God-given gender or sexual preferences" (my emphasis), and, on Page 9, we hear how a speaker told participants that GLBT Christians "are often afraid to admit their sexual orientation and sexual preferences to other(s)" (my emphasis). First, when GLBT people come out, we acknowledge our sexual orientation.


The Indiana Daily Student

States can keep newspapers from certain inmates

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WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that Pennsylvania officials did not violate the free-speech rights of troublesome inmates by keeping secular newspapers and magazines away from them. Justices, by a 6-3 vote, said the state could use newspapers as incentives to get inmates in a high-security unit to behave themselves.


The Indiana Daily Student

Storms sweep Northeast, thousands evacuated, 10 thought dead

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ALLENTOWN, Pa. -- The storm that drenched the nation's capital swept into the Northeast on Wednesday, forcing thousands of people from their homes, including more than 2,200 who fled from a rising Maryland lake. A section of interstate highway was washed out in New York state and least 10 deaths were blamed on the stormy weather. Three people were missing. After days of heavy rain and floods, the sun was shining in Washington, D.C. as the storm moved into New York and New England, but rivers were still rising in Virginia. Highways across the region were blocked by flooding and washouts.


The Indiana Daily Student

Israelis pressure Palestinians in effort to win soldier back

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RAFAH, Gaza Strip -- Israel turned up the pressure on Palestinian militants to release a captive soldier Wednesday, sending its warplanes to bomb a Hamas training camp after knocking out electricity and water supplies for most of the 1.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip. The Hamas-led Palestinian government called for a prisoner swap with Israel, saying the Gaza offensive would not secure the soldier's release. Hamas-affiliated militants holding the hostage previously made that demand, but this was the first time the government did.


The Indiana Daily Student

Several versions of phishing e-mail sent

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During the last week hundreds of thousands of fraudulent phishing e-mails have been sent out targeting IU Credit Union members, said the credit union's Vice President of Management Information Systems Mark Weigle. Several versions of the e-mail have been sent out -- even to non-credit union members -- that attempts to lead the user to click on a link that sends them to a fake Web site. While the site appears to look legitimate, it is actually a "fake" site set up by someone attempting to steal personal information.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trustee election to be decided Friday

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The board of trustees' open seat will be filled shortly from one of seven candidates vying for incumbent trustee Cora Breckenridge's seat. The voting is in the hands of the 481,000 IU alumni who received their ballots in May. Votes tallied on Friday afternoon will provide quick turn around, with the new trustee term beginning the next day. Determining the winner will be difficult before votes are counted because there are no exit polls and only a small portion of ballots are typically returned. Last year less than 32,000 valid votes were cast.


The Indiana Daily Student

Forced fondling incident reported

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The IU Police Department is investigating a claim that a 37-year-old woman was fondled inappropriately by an unknown man Monday afternoon near Bryan Woods, Lt. Jerry Minger said, reading from the police report. According to the report, the victim said the man came up from behind her in the south, when he touched her inappropriately and kept on running. The victim then screamed and the man turned around before walking slowly away, the report read.


The Indiana Daily Student

Nine African languages taught in intensive sessions

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Students from around the country are spending the second half of their summer learning an African language at IU. Nine African languages -- Bambara (Bamana), Igbo, Kiswahili (Swahili), Somali, Twi (Akan), Wolof, Xhosa, Yoruba and Zulu (Isizulu) -- are being taught during the national Summer Cooperative African Language Institute, currently being held at IU through Aug. 4.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former Delta Zeta house to be demolished

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This summer, yet another old Greek house will be removed from campus. The former Delta Zeta sorority house, standing at 809 E. Seventh St., is set to be demolished before the fall semester begins. Unlike the situation surrounding the razing of the former Kappa Sigma house on Third Street, Bloomington's Historic Preservation Commission is pleased with the future for the former DZ site. During the next year, construction will begin on a new $3 million building for the Hutton Honors College.


The Indiana Daily Student

No love for the Bundys

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"Married… with Children," arguably the flagship show of the Fox network until its cancellation in 1997, has just released its fifth season on DVD. And that, friends, is a lot of television to sit through.


The Indiana Daily Student

Original version of horror classic

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Horror movies featuring creepy children are not exactly uncommon, we have "The Bad Seed," "Children of The Damned," "The Exorcist," "Children of the Corn" and Dakota Fanning Playing "Hide and Seek" with Robert DeNiro, to name a few.