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Saturday, June 27
The Indiana Daily Student

The Indiana Daily Student

Young Hoosiers learn the violin

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FRENCH LICK, Ind. -- The sound of violins can now be heard at a southern Indiana elementary school as three third-graders have started learning to play the instrument as part of a new school program. The school district sought grants from two companies and bought three violins at $400 each to start the program at Springs Valley Elementary School, district superintendent Roger Fisher said.


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Foci blends video, dance, music elements in one

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Nestled intimately in the dimly lit room, the dozen or so audience members laughed together and traded professional experiences at Windfall Dancers' production of "Foci" Friday. According to the press release, "Foci" is designed to explore the tension between multiple perceptions of the present.


The Indiana Daily Student

Three comics shake up the market

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Comedian Steve Medley appeared at the Market in the Indiana Memorial Union Friday as part of a night of comedy sponsored by Comedy Caravan. Medley, along with two other comics, performed jokes and skits in front of a full audience. The show included Scott Dunn, who has been on "The Man Show" and was featured on Bob and Tom's latest CD, and Randy Madsen, whose sense of humor caused the only outburst in the night's events. Each performer presented material for about 30 minutes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana represented in new hip-hop movement

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Dr. Dre, 50 Cent and Eminem all have something in common -- and its not that they are all part of the same record label. They are all from big cities with tremendous exposure. Though Los Angeles, Detroit and New York are known for producing hip-hop's latest and best talent, the Midwest region is just beginning to gain exposure from artists such as Nelly, Kanye West and Twista.



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'Tonight Show' legend to perform at IU

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Jazz legend Doc Severinsen of "The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson" fame will perform with his big band at 8 p.m. tonight at the IU Auditorium. For 30 years, from 1962 to 1992, Severinsen participated in "The Tonight Show" band, first as a lead trumpeter and later as musical director for the show. However, Severinsen's musical career started much early. Born in 1927 in the small town of Arlington, Ore., Severinsen began to take an interest in music after watching his father, Carl Severinsen.


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Around The Arts

The Bloomington Playwrights Project will hold auditions for its Dark Alley Series production of "Sex/Death II" from 6 to 9 p.m. today and Friday, March 5 at the Bloomington Playwrights Project in the Lora Shiner Studio on 314 S. Washington St. No monologue necessary. Contact co-producer Gilana Alpert at (812) 336-4396 or email galpert@indiana.edu for more information.


The Indiana Daily Student

Middle East debates over reality TV

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BEIRUT, Lebanon -- Reality TV has burst upon the Arab world, drawing huge audiences but firing up conservative outrage over the spectacle of young men and women flirting, hugging and dancing under one roof.Young people from Iraq and Syria to Egypt, Kuwait and Yemen love these variations on "Big Brother" and "American Idol." Some religious scholars and politicians say they're sacrilegious.Things got so heated this week that Saudi-owned MBC TV bowed to pressure from Islamic fundamentalists and the Bahrain Information Ministry and said it will suspend "Al-Rayes," its version of "Big Brother," less than two weeks into the show.


The Indiana Daily Student

The model standard in American life

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Two British supermodels, Twiggy (1960) and Kate Moss (1990), strutted down the runway at five-foot-five and five-foot-seven, weighing less than 100 pounds each. The standard of fashionably thin was set. The standard was to be tall and very slender, with legs up to one's chin.



The Indiana Daily Student

Designers present collections in Paris

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PARIS -- Stars were in John Galliano's eyes for his Wednesday show of luxury, ready--to--wear fashions for Christian Dior-- but they were the Hollywood variety of ages past.



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Former IU students help put Indiana on film map

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In the spirit of the Cannes and Sundance Film Festivals, Indianapolis is starting a new tradition this weekend with its first annual International Film Festival. The film festival runs Friday through Sunday at the United Artists Circle Centre Theatre at Circle Centre Mall, located at 49 W. Maryland St. in Indianapolis, and will show a wide variety of short and feature films from 13 different nations.


The Indiana Daily Student

Artistic Option

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Before junior Zach Patton registered for his first year at IU, he had never taken any type of art class. In fact, as a freshman, Patton intended to major in biochemistry and cognitive science. Then, during the summer after his freshman year, Patton took a photography course at IU. Not only did this decision inspire him to become a photography major, but it also changed his life and the way he sees the world, he said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Poets express viewpoints, share work

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Memorial Union Gallery to read and listen to short works of personal creativity. The poetry slam began with a Union Board representative offering free coffee and cookies and opening the microphone to all in attendance, asking those interested to sign up on the clipboard. She then introduced the first poet on the list. He began with a poem he titled "Dandelions." With his left hand in his pocket and his notebook in his right, he began to speak in metaphors and asked the question, "Can you really own love in the way you can own a cliché?" He read a few more poems, adding in side notes such as, "That's a word I made up." He then left the small wooden platform, disguised as a stage, open for the next poet to be introduced.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dancers incorporate many artistic elements

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In an attempt to draw digitally dazed audiences back to the theater, local artists created "Foci," an experiment in time, space and forms of expression. Videographer and musician Rob Dietz set up cameras to film the dancers from different angles, which will run simultaneously with the live dancing at the performance at 8 p.m.


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'Dr. Seuss' widow celebrates centennial

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SAN DIEGO -- Near the end of his life, Theodor "Dr. Seuss" Geisel sat down with his wife, Audrey, to speak of the past and of things to come. "'I've had a wonderful life,'" Audrey Stone Geisel recalled him saying. "'I've done what I had to do. I lived where I wished to live. I had love. I had everything.' "'But,' he said, 'now my work will be turned over to you. And you will have to deal with those consequences.' "And oh-ho," said the 82-year-old heiress of the Seuss world, "has that been true!"


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Amy M. Spindler, NY Times style editor and IU grad, dies

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NEW YORK -- Indiana native Amy M. Spindler, the style editor for The New York Times Magazine who became known for her pointed criticism of the fashion industry, has died. She was 40. Spindler died Friday from a brain tumor at her home in Manhattan, according to her husband, Roberto Benabib.


The Indiana Daily Student

The little things in life

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Two months ago, I arrived in Madrid without a clue of what the city would be like. Two months later, I'm still here after a rollercoaster ride of adjustment. While it's not a Third World country, Spain definitely differs from the States.