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Tuesday, May 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

IU strays from Big Ten play against Aces

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Coming off of a successful opening weekend of Big Ten play and a day off Monday, the IU softball team is playing with Aces. And they're not playing cards. The Hoosiers will take on in-state rival Evansville Purple Aces today in Bloomington -- their first matchup with a fellow Indiana team this season. IU, off to its best start since 1997, has seen a quick turnaround after playing four games last weekend to open the Big Ten part of its season. The team scored victories against Ohio State and Penn State, whom they had not beaten since the 2004 season. Even with the quick turnaround, IU coach Stacy Phillips said she was not worried about the effects it might have on her team.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers take hot bats into Evansville

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Four games into the Big Ten schedule, the IU baseball team returns to Indiana today, but remains in the midst of an 11-game road trip as it takes on the Evansville Purple Aces at Charles H. Braun Stadium. While even mid-week non-conference games are important for IU coach Tracy Smith's team, they serve a different purpose than the four-game conference series that lies ahead at the end of the week.


The Indiana Daily Student

President throws out 1st pitch

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CINCINNATI -- Perhaps it was the pitching practice he got over the weekend or inspiration from the new baseball bat that outfielder Ken Griffey Jr. gave him. President George W. Bush had lots of oomph in his arm to throw out a strong first pitch for the Cincinnati Reds' home opener. Bush became the first sitting president to throw a ceremonial pitch in Cincinnati as the Reds took on the Chicago Cubs. The ball to catcher Jason LaRue was high and off the plate, but Bush called it "my best pitch, which was kind of a slow ball."


The Indiana Daily Student

The Catcher and the Lie

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Welcome to Opening Day 2006. The sun is out and baseball is on television at 1 p.m. -- giving me yet another excuse to miss class. Forget 2001. This is the year of Barry Bonds. And whether you hate him or really hate him, what Bonds does during every at-bat will shape what kind of a season this will be remembered for. So without further ado ... I present Opening Day 2006.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU group's discovery a link to the past

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An archaeologist based at IU's Stone Age Institute and Center for Research into the Anthropological Foundations of Technology is leading a group of researchers who recently found the nearly complete cranium of an early human ancestor in Gawis, Ethiopia. Sileshi Semaw's group is part of ongoing research in the Gona Paleoanthropological Research Project area, which began in Ethiopia in 1999.



The Indiana Daily Student

City suffers storm damages

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About 3,600 Bloomington residents were still without power Monday afternoon from a storm that swept through Bloomington Sunday night, downing trees and closing roads -- and it might not be finished yet. Duke Energy Indiana spokesperson Angeline Protogere said about 14,000 people in Bloomington and 121,000 Indiana residents experienced power outages from the storm.


The Indiana Daily Student

Destruction reported across state

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WASHINGTON, Ind. -- Jhona King gasped when she saw her storm-damaged house for the first time Monday, its roof dotted with holes and debris scattered on the ground alongside her property. "Lord, it's crazy," the 27-year-old Washington resident said. "I guess I'll repair the roof and keep on going. I'm glad it didn't take my whole house down." Residents throughout much of central and southern Indiana spent Monday assessing the damage from a powerful line of storms that was being blamed for as many as 27 deaths elsewhere in the Midwest.


The Indiana Daily Student

9 U.S. troops killed in western Iraq

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Four American troops were killed by hostile fire, while five others died and three were missing after their truck rolled over in a flash flood this weekend in separate incidents in western Iraq, the military said Monday. In violence targeting Iraqis, a suicide truck bomb exploded Monday near a Shiite mosque in northeastern Baghdad as worshippers were leaving after evening prayers, killing at least 10 people and wounding 30, police said. The U.S. military said it was "using all the resources available" to find the two Marines and a sailor who were missing after Sunday's accident, which occurred near the Asad air base in Anbar, near the Syrian border.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jury: Sept. 11 conspirator is eligible for capital punishment

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ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- A federal jury found al-Qaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui eligible Monday to be executed, deciding that his lies to FBI agents led directly to at least one death in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. "You'll never get my blood, God curse you all," Moussaoui said afterward. He sat in his chair and prayed silently as the verdict was read. The only person to face charges in this country in the nation's worst terrorist assault, Moussaoui now faces a second phase of his sentencing trial to determine if he actually will be put to death. That phase is set to begin Thursday morning.


The Indiana Daily Student

Storms, tornadoes kill at least 27 in Midwest

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NEWBERN, Tenn. -- Thunderstorms packing tornadoes and hail as big as softballs ripped through eight states, killing at least 27 people, injuring scores of others and destroying hundreds of homes in the South and Midwest on Sunday. Tennessee was hit hardest, with tornadoes striking five western counties Sunday and killing 23 people. Most of the deaths were along a 25-mile path stretching from Newbern, about 80 miles northeast of Memphis, to Bradford, officials said. The Highway Patrol sent teams with search dogs to the area Monday to check for survivors in what remained of damaged homes and businesses.



The Indiana Daily Student

Stabbing results in arrest

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Bloomington police arrested Bloomington resident Randy D. Butcher Saturday evening on preliminary charges of aggravated battery and possession of a controlled substance after he allegedly stabbed a man in the stomach. Bloomington Police Department officers met with a 24-year-old man in the Bloomington Hospital emergency room Saturday afternoon who was being treated for stab wounds, said BPD Detective Sgt. David Drake, reading from the police report. The man reported that he had visited a residence on South Rockport Road earlier that day, where he got into an argument with a woman in the apartment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local doughnut shop fills hole in stomach

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For decades, doughnuts have been a staple food for Americans, though often hidden in the shadow of apple pie. Yet these sticky slices of heaven have become big business, as companies like Krispy Kreme and Dunkin' Donuts have seen their revenues surpass $500 million each, for a combined $1.3 billion in 2005, according to the companies' Web sites. Despite the daunting presence of these large companies, small doughnut shops still manage to find their way into the business landscape. With a 40-year history in the Bloomington area, Cresent Donut Shop has maintained its niche in the community, despite increased competition from the larger companies.


The Indiana Daily Student

Informatics program compares Google results in different countries

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Google is not unique to America, but the version Americans use is. The School of Informatics created a program to visually contrast search engines such as Google and Yahoo! and their results in different countries, said Filippo Menczer, associate professor at the School of Informatics. Results might vary because of censorship laws, and the same keywords will not necessarily yield the same results in any two countries. With the program, Chinese search engines can be accessed with American versions simultaneously, and results from both can be displayed on a computer screen. Menczer, along with computer science student Mark Meiss, developed the program, CenSEARCHip.


The Indiana Daily Student

Exhibit in Wells Library features Nobel Peace Prize laureates

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In the east tower of the Herman B Wells Library, 45 free-standing panels celebrate Nobel Peace Prize laureates. The exhibit covers honorees from 1901, beginning with Frederic Passy, to 2005, ending with Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency. The exhibit was put together by IU's Center for the Study of Global Change. Kenneth Steuer, associate director of the center, said each featured laureate has a strong tie to the League of Nations or the United Nations.


The Indiana Daily Student

Freshman finds niche at campus TV station

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Many freshmen find it difficult sifting through all the opportunities available to them once they step foot on campus, but one student took little time finding her niche with television at IU. A freshman, Kaylyn Easton recently was named executive director for IU's television station. She currently works as an office assistant, reporter for the news team and weekly anchor for IU Student Television. She will begin work as the executive director next fall. Easton said on paper her current office assistant position requires between 10 and 12 hours each week. With that and her other responsibilities at the station, she said she spends between 20 and 30 hours per week at the station. "I get to spend hours each day doing what I love," she said. "It's a big passion of mine."


The Indiana Daily Student

Young adults, minorities top cell phone users

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WASHINGTON -- Young adults and minorities are leading a revolution in how Americans use their cell phones. People from age 18 to 29 and minorities are more likely to use their phones as personal computers, digital music players, cameras and more, an AP-AOL-Pew poll found. "We've got everything on my phone," said Mark Madsen, a 24-year-old college student from Chattanooga, Tenn. "I use it mostly for the phone, but I also play video games and use the MP3 player. I pretty much use it all the time."


The Indiana Daily Student

Company plays music promotion game

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In a brown warehouse-like building near the railroad tracks on Allen Street, one would hardly expect to find an eclectic mix of thousands of compact discs and diverse musical instruments from all over the world. But that is exactly what is found in suite 137. That office houses Rock Paper Scissors, a company that publicizes and markets world music and reggae labels in the United States for clients around the world. Dmitri Vietze owns the business and tries to overlap music and culture to help people understand different cultures through the world of music. Rock Paper Scissors serves a niche market in the music industry. The company caters to journalists who are considering coverage of its clients, clients who are looking for publicity success and music fans looking for new and old sounds from around the globe, according to the company's Web site. It is not uncommon for Vietze and his three employees to talk to clients in France, Germany, Spain and India on any given day.