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Saturday, June 27
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Suhr, yes Suhr

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Errek Suhr was all over the place during IU's 72-63 win over Northwestern last night. Anyone else think it's funny that the smallest player on the Hoosier squad has the biggest heart? Standing only 5-foot-8 and 151 pounds, Suhr showed again last night that size really doesn't matter -- hear that ladies? The junior guard, and Bloomington native, spent the game scrambling all over the court like a 5-year-old on Ritalin -- diving on the floor, driving to the basket and finding his teammates with great passes. What impressed me is how he's never scared or tentative with the ball and he's aggressive on defense no matter who he's guarding.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU holds off scrappy Wildcats

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It was a lineup change that made IU look a little more like its usual self in last night's 72-63 win over Northwestern at Assembly Hall Wednesday night. The No. 21 Hoosiers (13-5, 5-3 Big Ten) got a total of 20 points from both of their leading scorers -- senior forward Marco Killingsworth and sophomore guard Robert Vaden -- but were still able to win, shooting the familiar numbers of 51 percent from the field and 39 percent from 3-point range. After two lackluster performances on the road last week, IU coach Mike Davis made the decision to rework his starting rotation. "We really didn't shake it up," Davis said. "We just played the guys that were going to give us a chance to win the basketball game."


The Indiana Daily Student

A civil media

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Last Thursday, The Beacon, the student newspaper for Florida International University, was confiscated by university officials. The newspaper had released the name of an 18-year-old sexual assault victim while reporting on the trial's opening arguments. The officials were acting to uphold a 1994 Florida law, but that law had been subsequently declared unconstitutional. The officials later apologized, and the papers were soon returned, but by that point, it was too late to distribute them.


The Indiana Daily Student

Toxic car smell

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Everything fun is bad for you. Smoking, drinking, eating sticks of butter -- it's all a health risk. People are always doing research and whining about it. Environmentalists are the worst about nagging. "Don't start forest fires," they say. "Don't steal endangered sea turtle eggs." Can't I have any fun? Since they discovered laughter causes cancer and puppies give everyone typhoid fever, the only things left on the list of safe activities are eating graham crackers and watching reruns of "The Golden Girls."

The Indiana Daily Student

No rest for the good

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"What if there isn't going to be a tomorrow? There wasn't today." So says Bill Murray in "Groundhog Day." Murray is Phil Connors, a snobbish weatherman who travels annually to Punxsutawney, a tiny hamlet in western Pennsylvania, to report on Groundhog Day. But this year is different. Grounded because of a husky blizzard, he awakes the next day only to experience this classic folksy town's Groundhog Day festivities again and again and again ... Phil becomes unbearably frustrated, to hilarious effect. His pessimism is not superficial, which conceals a deeply moral idealist; Phil is a genuine cynic. But he soon gravitates to the view that this unprecedented event is actually a blessing in disguise -- an opportunity to build up his character. This, as they say, is where the plot thickens.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iowa study should open IU's eyes

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A study released by the University of Iowa reported that on its campus, two-thirds of its respondents had been victims of sexual harassment-like behavior in the past 10 years. The kicker? Only about 6 percent reported it. Those surveyed were asked about eight types of behavior which might constitute sexual harassment. Fifty-two percent reported that they had experienced one or more of the eight categories, but when asked explicitly if they had been sexually harassed in the last 10 years at the University of Iowa, 62 percent said no. Of those who had been harassed, more than half said they were unaware of the current procedure for registering a complaint. The study focuses on the University of Iowa only, but the implications on a larger scale are easy to see. Sexual harassment is, and will likely continue to be, a problem nationwide. The point here, though, is that while this type of behavior is common, it goes largely unreported. Reporting it carries a stigma, and people are often reluctant to label unwelcome behavior as sexual harassment. The Iowa study highlights this and creates important possibilities for campuses across the country.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iran vows to continue nuclear program

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TEHRAN, Iran -- Iran's president lashed out Wednesday at the United States and vowed to resist the pressure of "bully countries" as European nations circulated a draft resolution urging that Tehran be brought before the U.N. Security Council for its nuclear activities. In a speech to thousands of supporters hours after President Bush's State of the Union address, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad derided the United States as a "hollow superpower" that is "tainted with the blood of nations" and said Tehran would continue its nuclear program.


The Indiana Daily Student

Saddam, defense team boycott new session of trial

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Saddam Hussein and four other defendants refused to attend a new session of their trial Wednesday and their lawyers boycotted the proceedings, demanding the removal of the chief judge, who they claim is biased against the former Iraqi leader. Chief judge Raouf Abdel-Rahman pressed ahead with court-appointed defense lawyers and only three defendants present. Five prosecution witnesses were heard before the 4 1/2 hour session was adjourned until Thursday. One witness, a woman, testified that she was arrested by Saddam's security forces and tortured in prison. She said she was stripped naked, hung by her feet and kicked repeatedly in the chest by Barzan Ibrahim, Saddam's intelligence chief at the time and the top co-defendant in the trial. "What crime have we all committed to go through this agony?" she said, speaking from behind a beige curtain to preserve her anonymity.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local initiative assists pregnant women without insurance

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When Dorothy DiCristo moved to Bloomington from New York in 1998, not only was she pregnant, but she was also without health insurance. Her husband's new job did not provide benefits, leaving her first child without coverage as well. When she thought she had nowhere else to turn, she discovered Hoosier Healthwise. "I was new in Indiana, so I didn't know anyone," DiCristo said. "Hoosier Healthwise was a source of help and support." Hoosier Healthwise is a federally funded Medicaid health insurance program that offers free or low-cost health care coverage to children and pregnant women. Initiated in 1994, it now provides nearly a half million Indiana residents with health insurance, according to a recent Hoosier Healthwise report.


The Indiana Daily Student

Divided House advances Daniels' highway plan

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INDIANAPOLIS - A divided Indiana House on Wednesday approved Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels' highway plan and the authority it would give him to lease the Indiana Toll Road to a private consortium for $3.85 billion. All 52 House Republicans voted for the plan while 47 Democrats, who have criticized it along several fronts, voted against it. The money from the lease would help pay for numerous transportation projects around the state. Daniels' top legislative priority now moves to the GOP-dominated Senate, whose leader, Senate President Pro Tem Robert Garton, said its chances of passing that chamber were good.



The Indiana Daily Student

LAMP gives students multi-faceted education

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Senior Matt Snyder loves LAMP. Snyder, one of the 270 students enrolled in the Liberal Arts and Management Program, said he knew right away that he wanted to get involved with the program when a guidance counselor described the program to him. "A light was turned on for me ... it just clicked," Snyder said. "It's a program that for me, at least, fits perfectly," LAMP provides students with the opportunity to obtain a business background paired with a major that targets students' interests in outside concentrations through the College of Arts and Sciences.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sound the Drum kicks off month

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The Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center will hold the Annual Sound the Drum and Family Feast in its Grand Hall tonight. The two-hour event helps mark the beginning of the Center's celebration of Black History Month. Neal-Marshall Center Director Oyibo Afoaku said this fourth installment of the Sound the Drum and Family Feast is a perfect beginning to the month-long celebration. "This significance of (the program) is that it's about bringing the community together and encouraging people to think about what BHM means to them individually and collectively," Afoaku said.



The Indiana Daily Student

Gatsby's greatness transcends decades

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F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel "The Great Gatsby" has withstood the test of time. The illuminating novel about the degradation of the American dream during the 1920s is still succeeding in the literary world. In fact, "The Great Gatsby" is the Bloomington Area Arts Council's choice for the 2006 One Book One Bloomington & Beyond campaign. Copies of the Jazz-age novel are being stocked at local bookstores around the area, and a series of community discussions will be held at the end of this month and throughout March.


The Indiana Daily Student

Limber dancers highlight musical 'Chicago'

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There's nothing quite like seeing a live show. True, movie theatres might have made advancements when they came out with surround sound, but you can't beat the riveting suspense that comes with a stage performance. Where else can you find women climbing tall ladders in spiky heels, tights and black leather underwear? Where else can you hear the resonating sounds of an operatic woman, only to find out it's a man in drag, or see men running around in top hats and tight black pants picking up women and carrying them around on chairs? The national tour of "Chicago," at the IU Auditorium this past Tuesday and Wednesday nights, had all that and more.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jokes on the rise

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Giggles, clicks, chortles, chuckles, hoots, cackles, sniggers and guffaws. Laughter in all its forms will be available this Friday and Saturday at the first ever IU College Comedy Festival. The spectrum of comedians performing ranges from IU students to professionals. The Union Board-sponsored event is free and takes place 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Indiana Memorial Union. All three of IU's student comedy groups (Full Frontal Comedy, Awkward Silence and All Sorts of Trouble for the Boy in the Bubble) will be performing along with visiting student comedy groups from other universities.


Brandon Foltz

Revenge, the Bergman way

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The 1960s were a time of great cultural change, both in America and abroad. The film community saw classics born, and the world watched with awe at a new band of filmmakers accurately labeled "auteurs," the authors of the new cinematic generation. Ingmar Bergman is one of the pinnacle filmmakers of that generation and possibly of all time. When Bergman released "The Virgin Spring," it was received by the cosmopolitan left as an instant classic, an astonishing tale of tragedy and love. However, mainstream values didn't quite coincide with some of the film's more graphic elements, and so it did not initially fare well in the U.S. However, after winning the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film at the 1961 Oscar ceremony, it propelled to worldwide success.


Chris Pickrell

Suck on this

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The film, boiled down into one scene, would be emo-child Justin watching the front of a girl's t-shirt. He's supposed to be planning his debate rebuttal, but he can't stop looking at the "Club sandwiches, not seals" logo. Justin (Lou Pucci) is a 17-year-old, whose life is wracked with the tumult of being 17. Per the title, he still sucks his thumb, but the film isn't about his thumbsucking. It's about him being 17, and to Justin, that involves sucking his thumb. He loves an environmentally minded girl named Rebecca, his teachers want him self-medicated on Ritalin and his parents haven't really resigned themselves to the fact that they're old enough to have kids.


Brandon Foltz

A trippy fix of British fun

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I have to be honest, when I first saw the trailer for "Nanny McPhee," I thought it looked trippy. I'm as big a fan of trippy movies as the next guy, but this one initially looked like it lacked the substance deep enough to see and enjoy it. How wrong I was. "Nanny McPhee" (based on a popular British series of children's books in the 1960s and 70s) comes out of nowhere as a crafty, funny subversion of the family movie norm, whose frank awkwardness becomes a point of intrigue. Bottom line: the whole thing is bizarre but in a good way. The story is weird but absorbing. At some undisclosed time, in some undisclosed, British-sounding place, there was a man, Cedric Brown (Colin Firth), whose wife died, leaving him with seven disgruntled, poorly behaved children. After the nanny service in town blacklists him, he resorts to his only option: the strange, ugly woman who appears at his doorstep promising that she can make his children well-behaved. Of course, she will do this with magic and trickery and requires Sunday afternoons off.