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Wednesday, May 20
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers win 9th straight regular season title

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COLUMBUS, Ohio -- John Michael Hayden came through for the fourth straight time for No. 8 IU men's soccer team (11-3-1 overall, 5-1 Big Ten) as he scored the game-winning goal in the Hoosiers' 1-0 win against Ohio State (7-5-2 Overall, 3-1 Big Ten) yesterday at Jessie Owens Memorial Stadium.



The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

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Elections forum discusses issues The Department of Political Science will be holding a forum titled "The Presidential Elections: A Domestic Perspective" from 7 to 8:30 p.m tonight in Woodburn Hall, Room 101. A second forum, titled "The Presidential Elections: A Global Perspective" will be held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Jordan Hall, Room A100


The Indiana Daily Student

Hillel cans for charity

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Children from local neighborhoods and IU students will team up this week to gather canned food through "Halloween for the Hungry," a program sponsored by the Helene G. Simon Hillel Center. The drive will benefit two Bloomington charities: Middle Way House and The Rise.

The Indiana Daily Student

Kiva Café undergoes changes in menu

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It is a cozy, quaint place in the Indiana Memorial Union that few students are aware of. It is Kiva Café, an alternative eatery that offers students variation from the Market and Burger King.


The Indiana Daily Student

Teter trick-or-treat excites local children

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The Teter Student Government and Resident Assistant Progam hosted the sixth trick-or -treat for local kids at Teter Quad on Sunday evening. Freshman Amy Garrison, representative from the student government and freshman Aaron Bork, representative from the residential assistant program, headed the event.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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State says gas company did not follow procedure EVANSVILLE -- State investigators said Vectren violated state and federal regulations before a house explosion that killed two women.


The Indiana Daily Student

Powell spurns North Korean bid

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TOKYO -- Calling it a matter of urgency, Secretary of State Colin Powell said Sunday North Korea should resume participation in nuclear disarmament talks and set aside its concerns about new "hostile acts" by the United States against the communist government. Speaking at a news conference, Powell also gave assurances that President Bush seeks a peaceful solution to the long-running impasse over North Korea's nuclear weapons programs.


The Indiana Daily Student

America's unjust war

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Last Wednesday another "battle" was "won" by Indiana law enforcement in the "War on Drugs." In Marion, various agencies including the Grant County Sheriff's Department, Marion Police Department and the Drug Enforcement Agency seized 5,500 pounds of marijuana worth almost $11 million, according to the Marion Chronicle-Tribune.


The Indiana Daily Student

President Bush signs new $136 billion tax-cut bill

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WASHINGTON -- President George W. Bush showered $136 billion in new tax breaks on businesses, farmers and other groups Friday, quietly signing the most sweeping rewrite of corporate tax law in nearly two decades. Announcing the action without fanfare aboard Air Force One, the White House said the new law is good for America's workers because it will help create jobs here at home.


The Indiana Daily Student

50 Iraqi soldiers killed

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- In one of their boldest and most brutal attacks yet, insurgents waylaid three minibuses carrying U.S.-trained Iraqi soldiers heading home on leave and massacred about 50 of them -- many of them shot in the head execution-style, officials said Sunday. A claim of responsibility posted on an Islamist Web site attributed the attack to followers of Jordanian-born terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.


The Indiana Daily Student

Series of earthquakes takes out power in Japan

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OJIYA, Japan -- Tens of thousands of Japanese huddled in emergency shelters Sunday after a series of earthquakes in northern Japan flattened homes, toppled bridges and derailed trains, killing at least 18 people and reportedly injuring some 1,500 others. A 6.8-magnitude quake rocked the largely rural Niigata prefecture Saturday evening, rattling buildings as far away as the Japanese capital. Several strong quakes followed through the night, and aftershocks continued to jolt the area Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

What really matters

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I'll come right out and admit it: I am a hardcore political junkie. I have been following the presidential campaign of the two candidates since the summer of 2003. I watched last summer on C-SPAN when Vermont Governor Howard Dean announced he was running for the presidency. I watched the debates between the Democratic candidates.


The Indiana Daily Student

Romantic film wins award

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INDIANAPOLIS -- "Love's Brother," a romantic drama directed by Jan Sardi, won the $50,000 grand prize at the Heartland Film Festival. Sardi and actor Adam Garcia accepted the prize during a gala Saturday night at Conseco Fieldhouse. The festival honors filmmakers who create movies that portray positive, life-affirming messages.


The Indiana Daily Student

Results of voting impact all

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In response to Grace Low's letter regarding why she won't vote this year: You are absolutely right. Neither of the candidates is perfect. However, until the fictional president Andrew Shepherd decides to run, we will never have a perfect candidate.


The Indiana Daily Student

A comedy with little humor

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People of all ages, from 50 years old to the very young, lined the lobby of the Wells-Metz Theatre a half-hour before admission to see the sold out performance of "Bat Boy: the Musical." Yet, if they were waiting for a comedy, that was not what they got.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indian art to be sold in Chicago

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CHICAGO -- The Field Museum wants to sell 31 American Indian portraits and paintings of Western scenes by 19th-century artist and adventurer George Catlin to raise millions of dollars for its anthropology collection. The effort is being criticized by some who fear Chicago will be robbed of a scientific and cultural treasure.


The Indiana Daily Student

Candy and censorship

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A school district in Puyallup, Wash., is planning on abolishing Halloween costumes because the holiday celebrations distract students, because they waste classroom time, because some students can't afford to buy costumes, and lastly, because stereotypical costumes may be offensive to real witches.


The Indiana Daily Student

E-mail scams target students

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A dire warning about the possibility of a security breach in a Citibank checking account screams for action in a student's e-mail account. After reading the contents in the official-looking e-mail, he is directed to a Web site that looks exactly like an official bank site, down to the domain name.


The Indiana Daily Student

New hardware to increase mail quota

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IU is installing new e-mail hardware this winter that will replace the aging Shakespeare system and provide increased reliability for students. The new system costs $1.7 million and includes the addition of a backup server that will help prevent another lengthy outage like the one that crippled Ariel users for five days last week.