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Tuesday, April 21
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers excel in Indiana Relays

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Being back at home served the Hoosiers well at this past weekend's Indiana Relays. Many of the athletes conjured up personal bests and there was even a couple who met NCAA regional-qualifying standards.



The Indiana Daily Student

Versyp returns to alma mater

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Sharon Versyp, IU fans hardly knew you. Almost a year to date since she took the job, Versyp resigned Friday as the head coach of the IU women's basketball team to take the head coaching job at her alma mater, Purdue.

The Indiana Daily Student

Vaden to follow coach

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The Mike Davis dominoes continue to fall more than a month after he announced his resignation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trustees raise admissions, tuition

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The IU board of trustees approved several changes in University policy Friday that will affect admissions standards and tuition. At their April meeting at IU-Southeast in New Albany, the trustees voted in favor of increasing tuition and implementing a set of admissions standards meant to attract better-qualified and prepared students to IU. Tuition for nonresident undergraduate students will increase by 4.9 percent.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Witty' religious studies instructor retires

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Religious studies professor Mary Jo Weaver has not always been a popular figure. Because of her criticism of the Roman Catholic church's positions on the role of women, abortion and birth control, religious leaders have refused to speak with her. Some of those angry with Weaver threatened to kill her. Others turned to throwing garbage at her. But her colleagues' treatment of her starkly contrasted that of her detractors Friday afternoon.


The Indiana Daily Student

HAIL-FUL HANDFUL

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Michael Wells holds hail that he collected Friday afternoon on Seventh Street outside Ernie Pyle Hall. Bloomington received a tornado warning at 4 p.m., followed by a few minutes of golfball sized hail.


The Indiana Daily Student

No martyrdom for you!

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There are few things as consistently entertaining as the Zacharias Moussaoui terrorism trial. Not even on the Food Network.


The Indiana Daily Student

Council to discuss gender identity issue for municipal code

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An ordinance amending the Bloomington Municipal Code to recognize gender identity was introduced at Wednesday's Common Council meeting. The ordinance, co-sponsored by Council President Chris Sturbaum and Councilman David Sabbagh, would add gender identity to the list of classes protected from discriminatory practices. The list currently includes race, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, sexual orientation and disability.


The Indiana Daily Student

Making history

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Government officials are investigating "wardrobe malfunctions" that happened during India Fashion week. School officials are dilly-dallying with meal allowances in Zambia. And mountaintop removal is happening in West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee.


The Indiana Daily Student

State police to receive pay increase

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Indiana State Police troopers will get a pay raise ranging from 20 percent for beginning recruits to 1.75 percent for top level positions, Gov. Mitch Daniels announced Friday during a graduation ceremony for 36 new members of the force.


The Indiana Daily Student

A noble Nobel?

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From now until May, the Wells Library is hosting an exhibit on the Nobel Peace Prize and its recipients. Organized by IU's Center for the Study of Global Change and the United Nations (along with the Library), the project examines the prize's history and significance by profiling selected winners, such as Woodrow Wilson and International Atomic Energy Agency Chief Mohamed ElBaradei.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomingtoid

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From 1847 to 1860, Bloomington had only one law enforcement officer, called the town marshal. The town marshal was an elected official, just like the mayor and the board of trustees. The first to ever be elected town marshal was David B. Judah. By 1860, a group of designated men -- night watchers -- began patrolling the city when the town marshal went off duty. No record exists that indicates how the night watchers were appointed, but this system of town marshal and night watchers served Bloomington until the mid-1890s.


The Indiana Daily Student

High court rules against school fees

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In a case challenged by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that public schools may not impose academic fees on K-12 students anymore. During the 2002-2003 school year, the Evansville-Vanderburgh School Corporation mandated a $20 fee for each of its students in an attempt to balance its budget -- a budget which had incurred a $2.3 million deficit in 2002.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hail fails to slow easter hunt

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Charging through the saturated, spring grasses of Bryan Park, a stampede of 350 adults reclaimed their childhood in this year's Bloomington Egg Scramble. This now eight-year-old tradition is a far cry from those egg hunts of youth. "This is my first (egg hunt)," said Bloomington resident Joe Blaylock. "The one when I was 7 doesn't count. I didn't find anything; my mother found something and gave it to me."




The Indiana Daily Student

Wright Quad launches health food campaign

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After returning from spring break, students dining in the Wright Food Court were offered a healthy alternative to the usual cafeteria choices as Residential Programs and Services launched its new Eat Wright concept.


The Indiana Daily Student

College Mentors run to collect funds for kids

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After two days of violent weather, Mother Nature relented Sunday afternoon with sunny and temperate conditions for participants in College Mentors for Kids' 5K Run/Walk, as they grabbed their jogging gear to raise money for kids in need. Regardless of whether it was the weather or available late registration, the group's "Race for Higher Education" saw an increased turnout from 2005's inaugural race, with close to 160 students helping bring in about $1,000 for the program.