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Wednesday, July 8
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Russia's new post-Beslan attitude

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What should the world's response to terrorism be? This is an issue that has been debated ever since the Sept. 11 attacks. However, until recently, very few countries around the world understood how the United States felt and why it wanted to pursue terrorists the way it did. The recent attacks against a Russian school has served as a wake-up call not only to Russia but to the rest of the world as well. Terrorists are heartless killers who should be hunted down like the cowards they are, regardless of whose feelings get hurt.


The Indiana Daily Student

Emmy winner to film documentary on BPP

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Although it is celebrating its 25th year of theater magic, the Bloomington Playwrights Project isn't throwing itself a party or buying itself presents. It isn't wearing a pointed birthday hat or eating cake and ice cream. Instead, the BPP will be the subject of a documentary created by two-time Emmy winner Bob Risher.


The Indiana Daily Student

Purdue on the right trax

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Within the next couple of weeks, Purdue students will enjoy a privilege most students in Bloomington are already privy to -- free music downloads. The difference is the downloading in which Purdue students will engage will be legal. Through an agreement with a campus-oriented file-sharing company, Boilermakers will be allowed to download hundreds of thousands of music tracks without giving up a red cent. IU students should be taking notice.


The Indiana Daily Student

Baseball fund-raiser to benefit play group

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While Major League Baseball players have months to prepare for the playoff series, Bloomington Playwrights Project teams get only 24 hours. This weekend the BPP proudly presents its Playoff Series, a baseball-themed fund-raiser. "We needed an idea for a profitable fund-raiser," said Sonja Johnson, BPP development director. "(Our artistic director) had done something similar to this with another group, and it was very successful, so we decided to try it."

The Indiana Daily Student

Students finding flair for personal decorating, style at local stores

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From contemporary clean to classic country, students arrive at their new residences ready to fill the space with personality. For many students, decorating their living space is an opportunity to settle into their surroundings while finding their own personal living style. Empty apartments, houses and dorms become an eclectic mix of flair and comfort.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kruzan unveils student spending study

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With a Bloomington small business as his backdrop, Mayor Mark Kruzan revealed Monday the results of a recently completed survey tracking IU students' local spending and shopping habits. He also announced a new partnership between the campus, the city and the Small Business Development Center to help revitalize downtown. "IU students, particularly those who are new residents in our downtown, represent a market in waiting," Kruzan said during a press conference in front of Bloomington Bagel Company's newest branch on Morton Street.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mindful movements

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Under bright neon lights in the Ora L. Wildermuth Center in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, the T'ai Chi Ch'uan club comes into session. Varying in body types and ages, students cluster together in groups of three or four to practice different levels of T'ai Chi. Brenna Dwyer, president of the T'ai Chi club, leads one of the clusters into their first moving meditation -- a sequence of 64 slow but distinctive movements.


The Indiana Daily Student

Miller Showers Park passes test with flying colors

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Shortly after construction began in April 2002 on Miller-Showers Park, a storm water treatment facility, the designers knew exactly what it was supposed to do, in theory. Two years and some months later, the park, which designers had envisioned to cleanse storm water, has done just that after many storms have dumped rain on Bloomington. The park opened to the public in July.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU needs research facilities

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A new report states IU has an immediate need for research space on the Bloomington campus -- otherwise, it might not reach its full potential as a research institute. At IU-Purdue University Indianapolis, needs are also pressing, and more than one million square feet of new space will be needed within 10 years, according to the report.


The Indiana Daily Student

Swastikas found at Briscoe

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IU Police Department officers were called to investigate drawings of swastikas on the walls of the eighth floor of Briscoe-Gucker Saturday afternoon.


The Indiana Daily Student

Total Tan robber still at large

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After five days of looking for a man who robbed a Total Tan at gunpoint Thursday, authorities have no new leads. Junior Lisa Aigner was working behind the counter of the store, located on 2544 E. Third St., with another co-worker when a man ran into the tanning salon with a cloth over his face demanding money.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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Church struck twice by lightning celebrates 150th year WAYNESBURG, Ind. -- A congregation is celebrating its resilient 150-year history, which includes having to rebuild twice because lightning burned down the church.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cubs, Marlins split crucial doubleheader

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MIAMI -- The Chicago Cubs' 24-hour visit to Miami included a brief stay atop the NL wild-card race. Then they lost their lead because they couldn't beat David Weathers. The journeyman right-hander, making his first start in six years, limited Chicago to two hits and one run in five innings, and the Florida Marlins won 5-2 for a split of their doubleheader Monday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pushing the buttons of education

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Video games, whether you realize it or not, are a big deal. From their humble beginnings at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on an old radar display to today's 3-D modeled masterpieces, video games have become bigger business than both movies and music, worth billions annually. Most of those billions go toward games like Halo or Madden NFL Football, but Clinical Associate Professor Bob Appelman and others in the Instructional Systems Technology division of the School of Education are working to change that.


The Indiana Daily Student

Particles

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$5.5 million awarded to identify important crop and weed genes An estimated $5.5 million, three-year grant was awarded to IU biologist Loren Rieseburg and five colleagues yesterday to be used for the identification of key genes causing lettuce, sunflower, thistle, knapweed and several other crops and weeds in the sunflower family to differ from their wild ancestors. Information gained from this project will be useful to plant breeders, weed fighters and anthropologists interested in the domestication of crops.



The Indiana Daily Student

Cross the street the Spanish Way

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So my pressure has mounted as I have discovered that more than three people actually read this thing. You know when you're sitting in your 10 a.m. lecture and the person sitting next to you reeks of beer, bad B.O. and is in desperate need of a shower? You think to yourself, "Damn, someone had a good night last night!" They probably went out, got belligerent the night before, passed out for a few hours and rolled out of bed in time to get to class. It then gets to a point where you almost want to get up because it is unbearable (Those of you who don't have lecture classes can't partake in this exercise).


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Festival Latino brings live music to Dunn Meadow

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Latin beats drifted across Dunn Meadow's grassy field Saturday as IU's seventh annual Festival Latino showcased free live music, food and cultural activities as part of the celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month. The event was organized not only to provide entertainment, but also to educate the public about cultural diversity.


The Indiana Daily Student

Eva Ayllon performs at Buskirk-Chumley

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As the streets of Bloomington were buzzing with people, music, dancing and artwork this weekend, so were all the concert venues during Lotus Fest. At 8 p.m. Saturday evening a line of fans waiting to see Afro-Peruvian singer Eva Ayllon formed at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers run for cancer research

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After overcoming a life-threatening disease, cancer survivor Marty Myers participated in the fight against cancer by attending the Hoosiers Outrun Cancer fundraiser, hosted by the Bloomington Hospital Olcott Center. "I am here today to show people that cancer is nothing to be ashamed of because many people deal with it," she said.