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Tuesday, May 19
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers look to make it 3 straight against Miami

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The IU field hockey team is batting .500 in the first four games of its seven-game road trip. The Hoosiers continue traversing the Midwest with hopes of beginning the week with a win against Miami University (Ohio).


The Indiana Daily Student

All Big-Ten guard out for year

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The hopes of making the NCAA tournament for the Hoosier women's basketball team hit a major roadblock when senior guard/forward Jenny DeMuth tore her anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee and subsequently ended her 2004-05 season.


The Indiana Daily Student

There's a new 'Mr. October' around now

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Reggie Jackson defined the word "clutch" with his postseason performances for the New York Yankees. Jackson amassed 10 home runs in five World Series championships and hit nearly .360 during his tenure with the Athletics, Yankees and Angels. Because of his accomplishments, Jackson was given the nickname "Mr. October," which was only fitting given the amazing things he did.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ethnomusicology chair receives first Laura Boulton Professorship

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Ruth Stone, chair of the IU-Bloomington Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology and director of the Ethnomusicology Institute, has been named the first Laura Boulton Professor by Kumble Subbaswamy, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. "I'm very pleased to have this honor," said Stone, who was notified of the professorship in a letter from Subbaswamy. "This professorship honors her and her very energetic, independent and adventurous spirit."


The Indiana Daily Student

Particles

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Bloomington Parks and Recreation holds annual skull workshop Real animal skull remains will be examined in detail during Bloomington Parks and Recreation's program demonstrating how animals' skeletal adaptations are key to their survival.


The Indiana Daily Student

Panel discusses influence of religion in upcoming elections

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Religion and politics converged as four clergy members from different religious backgrounds, met to discus the November election's hot topics. The debate focused on key election issues such as abortion, same-sex marriage, the president's faith-based initiatives and religion's role in deciding the necessity of war.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD looks into peeping

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A possible peeping incident was reported at around 4 p.m. Friday by a female resident of Wright Quad. She reported the incident to an IU Police Department officer at 10:50 p.m. in the Wright Center Lounge, according to IUPD reports. The woman reported to the officer that she was taking a shower inside Wright when an individual entered the shower room and attempted to stick his head under the door of her shower stall.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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Fire damages restaurant in Fort Wayne FORT WAYNE -- Fire swept through a century-old downtown building on Monday, heavily damaging a longtime restaurant.


The Indiana Daily Student

Squirrels feel at home on Bloomington campus

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IU is home to more than a campus community of Hoosiers; squirrels inhabit the University landscape and use many of the same campus resources humans do. Around the University ecosystem, hundreds of gray and red squirrels live, work and frolic amongst the busy foot shuffle of human travel and machine screams of structure renovation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Congressional votes impact policy

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The presidential election may be getting all the press this year, but Nov. 2 also brings voters important local elections. "Generally, both the general public and students don't pay much attention to Congressional elections," said Edward Carmines, a political science professor. "The presidential and even gubernatorial elections receive much more attention."


The Indiana Daily Student

inside the mind of a Techno-maniac

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Larry Yaeger is a high-tech hero. He built the voice for Koko the gorilla, appeared in "Terminator 2," worked as a scientific consultant and graphic artist in Hollywood, built one of the best-known artificial life simulations (PolyWorld, a computational ecosystem) and has done pioneering work on artificial intelligence. He also spearheaded computational fluid dynamic flow studies over space shuttles and submarines in the beginning of his career.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington fighting domestic violence

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October isn't only filled with colors of orange and black. Many people are wearing a different color this month as they pin on purple ribbons to represent Domestic Violence Awareness Month. According to the National Coalition against Domestic Violence's Web site, DVAM first arose in October 1987. It evolved from the Day of Unity, which is celebrated on the first Monday of October.


The Indiana Daily Student

Football field to honor fallen soldier

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WARSAW, Ind. -- A youth football field has been dedicated in memory of a Marine who was the first person from Indiana killed in combat during the war in Iraq. More than 150 people attended the dedication Sunday of the David Fribley Football Field at Richardson-DuBois Park.



The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

Honor military volunteers I am an IU student. I am a veteran of the U.S. Army. And I find that for someone who is ostensibly in college to further their horizons, like Kehla West, to slander and malign volunteer service is disgusting ("Operation human shield," Oct. 14). Instead of stomping on the service of those of this generation who choose to volunteer, maybe she should be evaluating the reasons why so many people of our day and age instead complain about the free ride they are receiving.


The Indiana Daily Student

Running away from school

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This is your brain. This is your brain under stress: BOOM! SQUISH! That's right, now it's all over the walls and your roommate's stepping in it. Stress just plain sucks! You know what I'm talking about. Like trying to finish a paper but being short on information and feeling like you want to smash your head into the computer. That's stress. And we, as college students, are the main victims. Whoever said being a student is easy should be shot. We just have to learn to cope, and I've found that running away from your problems is the best way. Stick with me on this.


The Indiana Daily Student

This isn't about politics

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Some of you might be wondering, with the election fast approaching, if I'm completely oblivious to the existence of one of the closest presidential races of our lifetime. I haven't mentioned it once in a single column. I haven't presented arguments as to why Kerry's voting record shouldn't matter, nor have I presented arguments as to why Bush's handling of Sept. 11 alone should win him the election. Why?


The Indiana Daily Student

Cheap shots at Republicans

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I saw a Bush-Cheney bumper sticker while I was at the Kelley School of Business yesterday and I wanted to puke. Under this administration, record surpluses have turned into record deficits, Social Security hasn't been talked about since 2000, Iraq is in ferment, gas prices are climbing and will continue to according to OPEC's recent statements and U.S. credibility abroad is about as low as when the U.S.S.R. invaded Afghanistan during the Carter administration.


The Indiana Daily Student

The tribulation of tickets

We paid for six tickets -- and then came the good news. We're getting 12 tickets instead. For the past three years, the package has been advertised as 12 tickets, but because of demand, we've been given six tickets and half of our money back. The problem is that, this year, everyone unexpectedly has to take the whole package.