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Monday, June 22
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts



The Indiana Daily Student

Author to headline 'Writers in Rhythm'

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IU's master of fine arts creative writing program will hold its first annual "Writers in Rhythm: Poetry & Prose at the Waldron" event at 8 p.m. Friday. The four-evening series, hosted by the John Waldron Arts Center, is designed to bring interactive and diverse writers to Bloomington for an audience of students and community members, according to a press release. The event is free and open to the public.


The Indiana Daily Student

Richa Sharma - Cox Scholar

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Many IU students hail from the Midwest—Indiana, Illinois, Ohio or Michigan. There are also many students from across the United States. Some may consider a California native to have "come a long way's to college." Many IU students also enjoy the luxury of having their parents help out—if not pay completely—for tuition. But few IU students can say they both come from a long way's and be totally responsible for putting themselves through college.


The Indiana Daily Student

Beyonce soars on latest pop fiesta album

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It must have been a daunting task for Beyoncé and her producers to choose the first single for her new album, "B'day." All pop records need that upbeat first single to drive album sales, and in "B'day"'s case, any of 10 tracks would have been sufficient. They're that good. If Columbia Records is smart they'll milk the album for all it's worth, releasing single after single after single.

The Indiana Daily Student

Mutilated memory

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Every so often an event comes around that elicits a particularly shameful response from the general public. Every so often an event comes around that elicits a particularly stupid response from the general public.



The Indiana Daily Student

Haute in here

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Haute couture is high fashion design. It's known for being expensive and impractical for day-to-day wear.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hep 'resting comfortably'

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IU football coach Terry Hoeppner, who underwent surgery Wednesday for a possible tumor on the right side of his brain, was recovering Wednesday night after a successful procedure, the athletics department said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Voting machines questioned

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Democracy is at risk in the state of Indiana, according to Verify the Vote Indiana. The newly formed group cited inaccuracies in the electronic voting system currently being used in Monroe County at a public meeting Wednesday night at the Monroe County Public Library.


The Indiana Daily Student

myface?

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IU senior Jesse Masur has two crucial, simple uses for Facebook: damage control and late-night memory recovery. "I check it about once a day, but usually it's just to see if I need to delete inappropriate comments from my wall," he said. "Also, I can piece together long nights out with other peoples' tagged photos of myself."


The Indiana Daily Student

Bluebird cancels show amid protests

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After facing harsh criticism from community members and two IU civil rights groups, the Bluebird has canceled tonight's performance by a controversial Jamaican artist.



The Indiana Daily Student

SLIS ranked No. 1 for scholarly productivity

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IU's School of Library and Information Science has recently been named the nation's top library and information studies program in terms of faculty and program productivity for the second time in a row.


The Indiana Daily Student

Search committee meets for the first time

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The Presidential Search Committee met for the first time Wednesday on the IU Purdue University-Indianapolis campus. The profiles of potential candidates were discussed and Shelly W. Storbeck, the committee's consultant from Edward W. Kelley and Partners, outlined the search criteria, said Trustee Sue Talbot, who is chairing the committee.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alumnus tries to take over Internet social networking

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Look out, Facebook. Ryan Alovis plans to take over the Internet networking market. With the relaunch of his Web site, www.dirtymascot.com, a week and a half to two weeks away, the IU alumnus hopes to give college students a different way to network online.



Not worth running to the store for

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Audioslave and Jadakiss should cut one massive, tepid album together. They'd have plenty of common ground: both talents reel in critical acclaim for obvious skill, yet neither artist has dropped discs to match that skill. The Rage Against The Machine-meets-Soundgarden mash-up wails on both vocals and guitars, but none of the new tracks on Revelations raises my pulse.


Not Idle, nor Wild, just a let down

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With "Idlewild," popular hip-hop duo Outkast try to reimagine old school gangster films and classic Hollywood musicals by injecting their modern rap style. It's an ambitious task. When it works, it works extremely well, but it often strains to connect the dots from element to element.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Tube

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YouTube.com features videos of all kinds, from the oddly funny: President Bush drunk and an unbelievable robot dance, to released entertainment like Daily Show clips, The O.K. Go treadmill dance, and anything you can imagine. The only thing you won't be able to find is porn or a video of Steve Irwin's death, though there are a lot of fakes. The free Web site doesn't require a password or fee to peruse the overwhelming amounts of videos. And contrary to Senator Ted Steven's statement, it is not run through a series of tubes. Though there is a hilarious techno remix with a video mocking the Senator's assessment that he "got an internet" through a "series of tubes."


Epic fights can't 'protect' butchered plot

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When "Ong-Bak" was released last year, it signaled a new era of martial arts by introducing Muay Thai force of nature Tony Jaa. With Jackie Chan now in his 50s and Jet Li done with kung-fu epics, Jaa has taken up the torch -- but with a mess like "The Protector," he may very well fall flat on his face. Where "Ong-Bak" was about one man's quest to recover a stolen Buddha head, "Protector" is the same quest but for an elephant. Jaa plays Kham, the son of a village elder, raised to cherish the precious pachyderms as a symbol of ancient Thai culture. When two elephants are stolen by thugs from Australia, Kham journeys to the land down under to save the noble beasts while demolishing the crime syndicate responsible for his troubles.