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Monday, April 6
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

'Black Woodstock' documentary to hold broadcast premiere on PBS

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LOS ANGELES -- On Aug. 20, 1972, seven years after the urban upheaval in Watts, some 112,000 people came together for a daylong concert that would become known as the "Black Woodstock." They filled Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum to hear performances by Isaac Hayes, Albert King, the Staple Singers, Rufus and Carla Thomas, the Bar-Kays, and more.


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Prosecutors drop Kobe Bryant case; Civil action still pending against Lakers star

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EAGLE, Colo. -- The criminal case against Kobe Bryant case collapsed Wednesday as prosecutors said they had no choice but to drop the sexual assault charge because the NBA star's accuser no longer wanted to participate. Bryant, whose trial had been days from opening arguments, responded with an apology to the woman who had accused him and whose civil suit for damages is still pending.


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Mr. Morley blitzkriegs Europe, Part 2

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We traversed the French plains to the center of Bohemian life -- gay Paris. The first thing most people envision when they think of Paris is the Eiffel Tower. Built in 1889, it is still the tallest structure in Paris and was the tallest in the world until the Empire State Building was constructed.

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Freedom as propaganda

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After Rudy Giuliani's speech Tuesday night, a PBS reporter on the convention floor asked a woman from Iowa 's delegation what she found effective about Giuliani's speech. Her first answer was a gloss over the oratorical greatness of the former mayor. Luckily, the reporter pushed deeper and asked what "specifically" did he say that struck her. Smiling and clapping in cadence with each word, she answered "Freedom, freedom, freedom!"


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Arts

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Bluegrass award winner plays at Buskirk-Chumley Bluegrass music's four-time Female Vocalist of the Year Rhonda Vincent will perform 8 p.m. Saturday at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. Vincent began performing with her parents' bluegrass band when she was 3 years old and appeared on their local television show when she was 5 years old. Before she reached her teen years, she had performed with several house bands.


The Indiana Daily Student

Perfecting the most important meal of the day

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Because of the small percentage of restaurants in Bloomington open during the morning hours, a good breakfast in this town is a precious commodity. The Runcible Spoon, a Bloomington staple since 1976 that changed ownership in 2001, gives the most important meal of the day plenty of justice. There is no substitute for co-owner and chef Matt O'Neil's grainy made-from-scratch pancakes, accented with an ever-so-slight hint of cinnamon and topped with pure maple syrup.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU's art administration masters program offers hands-on experience in management to participating students

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Behind the scenes of every great opera, Broadway production or museum exhibit, someone is pulling the right strings to make the event happen. Beyond the costumes, make-up and lights, someone sits calculating ticket sales and strategizing audience development and marketing techniques. Without the arts administrators who work diligently behind the scenes, none of what is seen on a stage or in a gallery could be possible.


The Indiana Daily Student

Guardsmen to train at state base

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The Muscatatuck State Development Center in Jennings County will be a site for national homeland security training and an agricultural research project for Purdue University under a plan released Wednesday. Gov. Joe Kernan announced an agreement earlier this week to use the buildings and land for civilian and military agencies to begin training next summer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chipotle comes to Kirkwood

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The Kirkwood McDonald's was once a place to enjoy a quick meal and to meet friends or family. Then the restaurant closed its doors, boarded up the windows and turned off the lights for good, leaving only the picnic tables in the front.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hot line hot-tips for Indiana kids

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The Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology will kick off another year of its toll-free math and science homework hot line Sunday. At 7 p.m. the hot line, 1-877-ASK-ROSE, will start its 14th year of providing tutoring to Indiana's sixth through 12th graders. Susan Smith, the hot line's founder and director, said as math and science standards in schools increase, the hot line is trying to continues to provide assistance.



The Indiana Daily Student

Rock it, Rap it, Vote or Die

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I will not "Rock the Vote" this year. And you know why? It's because "rocking" the vote is so 1990, and on top of that, I'm more of a hip-hop kind of chick. Sure, I thought -- whatever, I'll just "Rap the Vote" with Alicia Keys and Cornell West instead. But before I could get online to register, I found myself at a dead-end on the information highway. The Web site was down.


The Indiana Daily Student

Conventional problems

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I'm trying -- honestly trying -- to watch the Republican National Convention on television without falling asleep or hanging myself, but I admit it's really difficult. It's not the politics driving me crazy; the Democratic Convention in Boston was equally grueling and annoying, but I didn't watch it on television. I only managed to make it through, I think, because I was there, on the ground with a reporter's notebook. The first week of classes has delegated me to my apartment's sofa for the Grand Old Party's get-down in New York.


The Indiana Daily Student

I want to be Van Wilder

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Monday was my official last first day of school. That's right, in eight months, I will no longer be an IU student. I will be an IU alumna -- and that's scary. I should be happy to graduate and move to the next chapter of my life, but bidding goodbye to IU will probably be the hardest thing I'll ever have to do.


The Indiana Daily Student

Home is where the vote is

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Across America, cities are discouraging or prohibiting students from voting in their university towns. Absentee voting is student voting, they're trying to tell us. But when we spend nine months out of the year in our college town, where do we cast our vote (not to mention hang our hats)?




A 'Hero' for late summer doldrums

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Throw "Rahomon" and "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" into a blender, hit puree and what do you get?: "Hero," the 2002 offering from Chinese filmmaker Zhang Yimou (best known for beautifully-crafted character pieces such as "Raise the Red Lantern," "Shanghai Triad" and "The Road Home").


'Anacondas' a guilty pleasure

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Does "Anacondas" incorporate an intricate plot with stellar acting and dynamic special effects? No, but there are some really big snakes.