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Wednesday, June 24
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

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Students to take part in national teleconference IU students will participate in the first national teleconference on student civic engagement Thursday, as one of 50 groups participating in 23 states. The Community Outreach and Partnerships in Service-Learning is sponsoring the event at IU and the Midwest Collaboration of Campus Contacts is hosting the actual teleconference.


The Indiana Daily Student

Students learn costume history

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The Elizabeth Sage Collection, a costume collection at IU, preserves clothing that traces the evolution of fashion. Elizabeth Sage founded the collection in 1937, when she was appointed IU's first professor of clothing and textiles. The collection is located off-campus in a private warehouse. Items in the collection are never worn again but are used in certain exhibitions for perspective. The Sage Collection is a historic collaboration, consisting of more than 17,000 artifacts representing the evolution of styles from 1765 to modern day. The collection features men's, women's and children's clothing. It also includes a large array of fashion books, articles and magazines such as Vogue, with issues dating back to 1920. The collection is limited to dress and adornment of Western fashion. It doesn't include ethnic or folk dress.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Arts

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IU professor performs faculty pieces Voice professor Patricia Stiles will present a recital of songs by composers who have taught or are currently teaching at the IU School of Music. Tonight's program will begin with a cycle of 13 songs, titled "Haiku," by Dr. Edwin Penhorwood of the Opera faculty. Stiles will also perform a world premiere of three songs by piano professor Emile Naoumoff set to the text of poets Paul Valery, Emile Verhaeren and Armand Marquiset. The program will also feature Sven-David Sandstrom's "Three Love Songs for Voice, Violin, and Piano"; "3 poems of E.E. Cummings," by the late Thomas Beversdorf; and "Songs of Living and Dying," a cycle of songs by jazz professor David Baker using texts from the Harlem Renaissance. The program will begin at 8 p.m. in Auer Recital Hall. Admission is free. For more information contact 855--1583


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers for Higher Education to lobby for IU at annual event

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Legislation pertaining to higher education is not normally a top priority for most college students. But for the members of Hoosiers for Higher Education, the 13th annual trip to the Indiana Statehouse to meet with legislators is more than just a field trip. HHE members, faculty, staff and students from each of the eight IU campuses will travel to Indianapolis Monday, Feb. 23 to discuss higher education concerns with state legislators.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU Law team makes semi-finals in trials

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With the case theme "Elroy Fudd, the caskets are us," the IU Law team advanced to the semi-finals in the Regional National Trial Competition in Chicago. Second-year law students Jason Towns, Layne Keele and Leslie Morse were part of the team that advanced Feb. 7, but ultimately fell to Loyola. The IU team competed at the Daley Center and argued its case against other law schools from Indiana and Illinois. Twenty-three teams competed for the top eight spots, one of which was won by IU.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fashion knows no borders

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Last week was the heart of New York Fashion Week -- a week full of runway shows, parties and free gifts. Unfortunately, I was not able to attend this season, but my misfortune opened my eyes to a bigger picture. On my way to New York, I got into a car accident and so I asked Mallory Zalkin, a fashion reporter for the Indiana Daily Student, to report on the week's festivities. As I was editing her story, I had to log on to an Associated Press site and pick out pictures to accompany her coverage.


The Indiana Daily Student

Journalists like sex, too

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Four years ago, my dad and I took a little collegiate road trip to help me decide where I wanted to go to school. As an eager, young journalism student who spent senior year as co-editor in chief of the high school newspaper, I was considered a "blue chip" journalism recruit. Even with the number of agents who called my parents urging them to let me go pro ("I can't give you any names, but there are several big time papers interested in your son right now"), we decided I should see what college had to offer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoagies, Theo and race relations

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Footage of cars being flipped over and set on fire just a channel away, and there I was, busy watching my man Theo graduate from NYU. Not that I wasn't mad about the acquittal of racist policemen who beat Rodney King, it's just that I was seven. Plus, I loved Theo. With his sleeveless sweatshirts and old school British Knights, he was hot stuff. I claimed him as my boo since the day he and Cockroach summarized the history of Julius Caesar in a dope rhyme, complete with beatboxing.


The Indiana Daily Student

Choices large and small

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SHANGHAI, Feb.15 -- I'm 10,000 miles from home, and all I can think of is economics. Not the big topics the word "economics" suggests, like China's joining the World Trade Organization or the massive problems facing this country's financial industry. No, the economics which concern me at the moment are more immediate. I am trying to decide whether or not to turn on the heat. This is a pressing issue, far more important than any statistic showing a troublesome -- or even a heartening -- trend in foreign direct investment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Focus on the issues

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Less than a week remains before IU Student Association election day, and the banners are flying, the t-shirts are flashing and finally, the issues are appearing. We have to admit we were worried -- when candidates discuss nothing but alcohol and the politics of partying, it reminds us more of a sixth-grade election than a college campaign. Think of Johnny Popular from elementary school, standing on a chair and shouting, "More pizza! Longer recess!"


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The World

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NEYSHABUR, Iran -- Runaway train cars carrying a lethal mix of fuel and chemicals derailed, caught fire and then exploded hours later Wednesday in northeast Iran, killing more than 200 people, injuring at least 400 and leaving dozens trapped beneath crumbled mud homes. Most of those reported dead were firefighters and rescue workers who had extinguished most of the blaze outside Neyshabur, an ancient city of 170,000 people in a farming region 400 miles east of the capital, Tehran.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pakistan, India set peace 'roadmap'

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- Pakistan and India laid out an aggressive timetable for peace talks on a wide-range of topics, including the hot-button issue of Kashmir and confidence-building measures regarding their nuclear arsenals, Pakistan's representative


The Indiana Daily Student

Dean exits campaign

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BURLINGTON, Vt. -- Howard Dean, bowing to the political realities of a 17-contest losing streak, ended his Democratic presidential campaign Wednesday but promised to keep his "campaign for change" alive while supporting his party's eventual nominee. The former Vermont governor did not endorse either of his top rivals, Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts or Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina. He called both men before his announcement to tell them his decision.


The Indiana Daily Student

Legislators try to ban ephedra

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An Indiana bill prohibiting the sale of ephedra or products containing a form of ephedrine passed the Senate last week by a margin of 47-1 but stalled in the House. State Sen. Ron Alting, R-Lafayette, and State Rep. Peggy Welch, D-Bloomington, sponsored the bill, which was co-sponsored by State Rep.


The Indiana Daily Student

There's a badly-acted 'Party' going down

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Macaulay Culkin's first film since 1994's "Richie Rich" finds him looking about 16 and unable to carry a scene, much less a movie based around his character. "Party Monster" depicts the story of Michael Alig (Culkin), the darling of the late '80s and early '90s New York City club scene who boasted his own record label, magazine and well-known party night before he was arrested for murdering his drug dealer and roommate, Angel (Wilson Cruz).


The Indiana Daily Student

Don't rent 'Sylvia,' read her

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The problem with "Sylvia," a biopic starring Gwyneth Paltrow as the unstable poet Sylvia Plath, is the same problem many films about artists encounter: you'll learn more about them by experiencing their art than you will from a scenes-in-the-life-of cinematic depiction of them.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Wonderland' less than wonderful

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Remember that boring stretch toward the end of "Boogie Nights" when all the hophead morons try to pull off a big heist? "Wonderland" is a two-hour film dedicated to that. After "Porn King" John Holmes' star faded, he bumped around LA with low life hustlers and thieves. In early July of 1981, four people were brutally murdered in a house on Wonderland Ave. and John Holmes was either tangentially or directly involved with the murders, depending on whose version of the story you believe.


The Indiana Daily Student

Coen flick and indie pics come home

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Being a member of the small but zealous group of movie fans who believe "Citizen Kane" doesn't hold a candle to "The Big Lebowski," anything the Coen Brothers put their name on deems my attention. Exit the indie financers and enter Brian Grazer with his infinite budget.


The Indiana Daily Student

Altman's 'Company' devoid of character

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A fascinating trend I have come to observe in great, or at least interesting, films is that they will often divide their critics on shared conclusions: the reason they hate the film is the exact same reason that they love the film. Robert Altman could probably be the poster septuagenarian for this theory.


The Indiana Daily Student

French flick fantastically far-out

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A dark horse has emerged in the race for Oscar's Best Animated Film. Funny, freaky and subtly sweet in a way that's not overly cloying, "The Triplets of Belleville" may have what it takes to broadside the Mouse House and Pixar's perennial powerhouse, "Finding Nemo."