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Tuesday, April 21
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Woods wins again

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AUGUSTA, Ga. -- One by one, the best golfers in the world stepped aside. It was Sunday at the Masters and Tiger Woods was in the lead. "After the front nine, I knew it was all over for me," U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen said. He wasn't alone. Woods won his third green jacket by proving he was far more daunting than a toughened up, redesigned Augusta National. He seized control with an early burst of birdies and watched his rivals crash in a desperate and reckless attempt to catch him. The result was another march into history, with Woods becoming only the third player to win back-to-back titles.


The Indiana Daily Student

Morgan Deputy dies

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MARTINSVILLE -- It long looked like Dan Starnes would make it. But the 46-year-old Morgan County Sheriff's Deputy succumbed Tuesday to complications from a wild shootout at close range in mid-June. An untreatable bacterial infection caused Starnes' condition to deteriorate, and his family decided to take him off life support. After a 27-day struggle, Starnes died in the intensive care unit at the Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis at 8:14 a.m. Flags hung at half-mast throughout Martinsville Tuesday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Glimpse into 'Garage' is pleasant, touching

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Welcome to "Stanton's Garage." It's old and dingy and hasn't been kept up since its owner fled the country to escape the police. But the people are nice and friendly, if you can get a word in edgewise.


The Indiana Daily Student

An evening of corndogs, stuffed frogs and bumper cars

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Where else do people opt for a corndog dinner with a lemonade shake-up and an elephant ear on the side? It's the same place where young and old anxiously wait to hop on their favorite rides. Four carnival tickets to make their stomachs flip, three to make their hearts jump and four more to make their heads spin.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU student killed in one-car accident

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A 19-year-old IU student was killed in a one-car accident Thursday evening. Sophomore Meaghan Buis was on her way to work in Eminence, Ind. when she lost control of her car on a rural road in northwest Morgan County. She was pronounced dead on the scene. Morgan County Sheriff's Sgt. Robert Brown said Buis was on her way to work when her car drifted across the center line. Police said she may have over-corrected the vehicle and lost control at that point. Her vehicle flipped over in a ditch and landed on the roof, Brown said. The force of the accident threw her partially out of the vehicle.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Game

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Davis to be honored at annual luncheon Sophomore Jeffries withdraws from Team USA Volleyball adds local standout Cameron to speak at South Bend luncheon series


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers tie for 4th place at Northern Invitational

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After having their first tournament canceled following the terrorist attacks on the United States, the women's golf team finally had their chance to compete. They tied for fourth place in the Northern Invitational in Champaign, Ill., with an 898 cumulative score.


The Indiana Daily Student

Guiding Principles

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In her first months in her new Bryan Hall office, Sharon Brehm has stood with the IU community and watched the shape of the world change. Wednesday, as she was formally installed as the new Bloomington chancellor, Brehm said the Sept. 11 attacks, though life-altering, have not changed the University's principles of education, but reaffirmed them.


The Indiana Daily Student

Blue cheese: Moldy oldy but goody

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"Mold" and "delicious" are rarely used in the same sentence. In an age of anti-bacterial obsession, blue cheese is the delightful exception. Hardcore blue cheese afficionados think that Swiss, Cheddar and Jack cheeses are for wimps -- if the cheese cannot be smelled from ten feet away, forget it.


The Indiana Daily Student

This column has no point

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We are starving here in Paris, my friend and I. We have not left our flat all day, in catastrophic fear that, if we do, we will embark on a disastrous spree of spending money we don't have. What we do have is this: a carton of Lucky Strikes, a jar of instant coffee, and a galaxy of Karma to burn. He is stone broke and I am skidding turbulently in that same direction. It is only a matter of time before I too am side-swiped with poverty. Cover your eyes children, the collision is bound to make priests wince with contempt and spur parents into rowdy protest as they pound on the doors of decency.




The Indiana Daily Student

Farewell to the 'Yanks'

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So it's finally arrived. I'm almost done here, and it's become a time for reflection. I've began to realize the inevitable, I have to go home soon. I've found myself in a bizarre situation. I'm excited about the prospect of going home to all of my friends and family but at the same time I've experienced so much here and made so many great friends that I'm reluctant to leave it all behind.


The Indiana Daily Student

War of future is virtual

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The nature of how our military engages in war is changing, Michael Ignatieff convincingly argues in his book "Virtual War: Kosovo and Beyond" (Metropolitan Books: New York, 2000, $23). For all the talk we hear about investing in new technology and weapons by military brass and the Bush Administration, the 78-day NATO bombing campaign waged against Slobodan Milosevic's Yugoslavia during the Clinton years showed just how questionable such seemingly victorious action can be.


The Indiana Daily Student

New theaters welcome addition

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Five rows of bleacher-like seats, upholstered with red material comprise the seating of tiny T300 theatre, which senior Sara Bancroft, production manager of "Much Ado About Nothing," described as a "black box."


The Indiana Daily Student

Cyclists prepare for time trials

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Qualifications are finished and Little 500 weekend is 23 days away, but that doesn't mean the pre-race competition is on hold. Men's and women's individual time trials, one of the three spring series events, will be contested from 4 to 9:45 p.m. Wednesday at Bill Armstrong Stadium. "I think the series events are cool," Sigma Alpha Epsilon junior Dan Burns said. "They are something that gets people enthusiastic about the race and build spirit."


The Indiana Daily Student

Don't subsidize abortion

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This time of year in Bloomington has lately been the resuscitator for that much avoided, contorted abortion debate. For the last couple of years, the Bloomington city council members have voted to give the local chapter of Planned Parenthood a tax subsidy through their Social Services fund. The money, usually a couple thousand dollars a year, goes to an organization that performs abortions every Thursday and has already received over $8,000 in Bloomington tax money. This isn't just about a subsidy.


The Indiana Daily Student

Beginning a life of opportunity

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Charleston Sanders, a masters student, recently said, "The best job in the world is doing something you love and being able to pay the bills doing it. I want to make a difference in people's lives, and music will be one of the avenues through which I can make that difference."



The Indiana Daily Student

Scrimmage begins season

The men's and women's swimming teams have their season openers this weekend with a scrimmage today and a meet with Evansville Saturday. Both events are at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatics Center, with the scrimmage starting at 3 p.m. today and the meet beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday. The men's team holds a 2-0 overall advantage against the Aces while the women defeated Evansville 186-108 in last year's opener. The women's squad is returning 15 letter winners while the men have 12 returning.