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Monday, April 6
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Assembly Hall touts new scoreboard

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Come basketball season, the Hoosier nation will see a very different Assembly Hall for the first time in the venue's history. Midway through this summer, the stadium -- built in 1970 -- began its journey into the 21st century when construction of a state-of-the-art, $1.9 million scoreboard-video board started.


The Indiana Daily Student

Overton recounts putt of a lifetime

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A whole summer of work seemed to be crashing down as former IU golfer Jeff Overton stood on the fourth tee in the final pairing of the Walker Cup. Welsh golfer Nigel Edwards had stormed out of the gate to take the first three holes from Overton. Spotting three holes to a three-time Walker Cup verteran, 15 years his senior, put Overton in a seeminly inescapable corner.


The Indiana Daily Student

Founders' footprints

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A line from William Wordsworth gives expression to a sentiment that runs deep in American conservatism: "What we have loved others will love, but we must teach them how." Enlarging the "social realm" has always been perceived as an important task for mature individuals and good citizens. The notion of imbuing the young with sound principles and high standards dates at least to ancient Greece. But not only was it embraced by Plato and Aristotle, there were others, most noteworthy among them being America's Founding Fathers.


The Indiana Daily Student

The love of potatoes

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Everyone knows those three little words. They can change your life forever. They can fill a heart with joy or send chills down the spine. Don't fight them anymore.

The Indiana Daily Student

Heeding civic duty

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Hurricane Katrina has caused flooding in the South, but the true flood affecting cities and towns across the United States is that of students descending on college towns this week. When the presence of students alters the demographics of a city to such an extent as seen in Bloomington, it is impossible to discount their contributions to the economy. Equally important is the role of the University in preparing its students for their responsibilities as residents of Bloomington and as global citizens.


The Indiana Daily Student

Complying with Constitution Day

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What's the Sixth Amendment? Too difficult? How about the Fourth? Regardless of whether or not remnants from high school history class can help us regurgitate every amendment in the U.S. Constitution, we must recognize the greater need and calling to understand and abide by the single most influential document in America. More than a matter of "Jeopardy!" trivia, it's an issue of pride and patriotism in an evolving, distinctly unique American identity. The Constitution is the bedrock of American life. The freedoms guaranteed in it explicitly, implicitly, unintentionally and intentionally shape our every action.


The Indiana Daily Student

Anti-racist group to hold call-out

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A new student group, White Anti-Racist Allies, will host a call-out meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight at the Latino Cultural Center to increase awareness of race issues and help promote the agenda of various cultural groups at IU. Diversity Educator of the Office of Diversity Education Eric Love said he's thrilled WARA is forming on campus. "People of color are often in the forefront for battling justice," he said. "It's not a people-of-color issue, it's a societal issue. We really do need more white people involved in the move for social justice."



The Indiana Daily Student

Urinal screens attack assault

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The use of bathroom paraphernalia is an odd way of making a point. So when a campus organization ordered nearly 600 urinal screens displaying anti-rape messages, the production factory thought it was a prank. "We had to show proof that we were university-affiliated," said Carol McCord, assistant dean in the Office of Women's Affairs.



The Indiana Daily Student

Orange County casino site remains concern

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FRENCH LICK, Ind. -- Beyond the reach of cell phone towers and the tangle of heavy traffic, Orange County clings to a rustic splendor that decades ago lured the wealthy with promises of natural spring baths and gambling.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington billionaire acts as lynchpin of casino

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Orange County, Ind., hasn't hung all its hopes for prosperity on historical riches -- there's a modern billionaire to consider, too. William A. Cook, one of Indiana's richest men, has taken the lead on efforts to restore two historic hotels and build a casino in French Lick, Ind., that many hope will bring a return of economic fortune to one of the state's most unemployed counties.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sudoku puzzle here to stay

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SAN FRANCISCO -- Sudoku are deceptively simple-looking puzzles that require no math, spelling or language skills. Unlike crosswords, they don't require an extensive knowledge of trivia. They're logic, pure and simple. They're also addictive. Sudoku books -- pages and pages of grids with nothing more than numbers in boxes -- are selling so well they're quickly filling lists of best sellers.



The Indiana Daily Student

India, Pakistan to release prisoners next month

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NEW DELHI -- India and Pakistan agreed Tuesday to release hundreds of fishermen and other civilians in each other's jails -- a goodwill measure that comes as part of a peace process between the two countries. Both sides also agreed to provide better consular access to prisoners, notify each other of arrests and join forces to stamp out terrorism, according to a joint statement. The announcements came after two-day talks between home secretaries from both sides.


The Indiana Daily Student

U.S. poverty rate increases 12.7 percent

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WASHINGTON -- Even with a robust economy that was adding jobs last year, the number of Americans who fell into poverty rose to 37 million -- up 1.1 million from 2003 -- according to Census Bureau figures released Tuesday. It marks the fourth straight increase in the government's annual poverty measure.


The Indiana Daily Student

Zimbabwe approves constitutional overhaul

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HARARE, Zimbabwe -- Dancing and cheering, lawmakers approved sweeping constitutional changes Tuesday that prominent lawyers have called the greatest challenge yet to Zimbabwean civil liberties. Ruling party representatives erupted into celebration after Parliament voted 103-29 to endorse the constitutional overhaul that sharply restricts private property rights and allows the government to deny passports to its critics. The 22-clause Constitutional Amendment Bill now goes to President Robert Mugabe to sign into law.


The Indiana Daily Student

General Motors recalling 800,000 pickups, SUVs

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WASHINGTON -- General Motors Corp. said Tuesday it was recalling about 800,000 sport utility vehicles and pickup trucks in Illinois and 13 other states because corrosion was affecting the antilock brake system, leading to more than 200 low--speed crashes. GM, the world's largest automaker, said the recall involved the 1999--2002 model years of the Chevrolet Avalanche, Chevrolet Silverado, Chevrolet Tahoe, GMC Sierra, GMC Yukon and GMC Yukon XL.



The Indiana Daily Student

The Audubon book: an IU fixture

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With upwards of 400,000 books, 130,000 works of sheet music and seven million manuscripts, workers at the Lilly Library must rotate the large number of rare publications they display. John James Audubon's "Birds of America," however, remains in the foyer year-round.