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Wednesday, June 10
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

House Republicans make plans for upcoming year

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The Indiana House Republicans are looking in a new direction this year. With the release of the 2004 legislative agenda and the State of the State address, Republicans of the Indiana House of Representatives will look to topics such as job creation, eliminating executive branch scandal, taxpayer protection and the state's budget problems.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers, justice, change

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The Gentleman From Indiana, written by Booth Tarkington, is a descriptive account of what Indiana was like one hundred years ago. Published by the Doubleday, Page & Company in 1899, Tarkington tells an autobiographical story about an editor named John Harkless, who turns a small town's dilapidated weekly paper into a political capital. Set in Central Indiana, in the heart of the lonesome flattands of Indiana, where the winters are bleak and the summers are hot and sticky, Tarkington's story provides readers with a historical tale full of Indiana culture.


The Indiana Daily Student

The next big thing

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When you discover a band you really love that barely anyone knows about, it can be greatly rewarding. You read about them in Pitchfork or NME, give them a whirl and they end up becoming your own little thing, carving out a niche in your life, defining your personality and tastes to a T. You tell your friends, let them borrow an album, and if any of them decide to buy it, you get that fuzzy feeling in your heart knowing you helped spread the word.


The Indiana Daily Student

Star-Spangled shower sandals

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I've been thinking a lot lately about my shower sandals. Living in a dorm makes shower sandals a necessary weapon in the ever-raging war against fungus, bacteria and foot-related misfortune of all sorts. But simply because they are a necessity doesn't mean shower sandals can't be an expression of style. Mine, for instance, are your standard size twelve flip-flops -- simple, comfortable and functional -- but what makes them noteworthy, is their design. They're blue with white stars and "U.S.A." emblazoned on the soles in red graffiti letters.

The Indiana Daily Student

Sweatshop as saviors

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Sweltering rooms packed with young women manufacturing merchandise for American consumption -- this has become a symbol of the wrongdoings committed by multinational corporations. At this campus and many others across this country, it has become an accepted truth that wealthy nations and corporations exploit cheap labor in other countries. After moving factories to developing nations, corporations often pay their new workers a tiny fraction of what their American or "first-world" counterparts had earned. It seems to be a rotten deal for everyone…except the corporation and their stockholders.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fixing the books

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Thanks to recent copyright laws, the spiked cost of reproduction rights is sending course packet prices sky-high. Course packets are now nearing, and even clearing, $100. Add this to the already steep prices of textbooks and it's no wonder or surprise students' bank accounts are dwindling faster than the Gephardt campaign.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fans commiserate loss to Patriots

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An epidemic of football fever swept across Bloomington Sunday as Colts fans showed up en masse and filled every table at Yogi's Bar and Grill to watch their team go for its first Super Bowl appearance in Indianapolis franchise history. However, the New England Patriots defense was effectively able to subdue the Colts offense and the crowd's collective mood in a 24-14 AFC Championship victory. As is often the case before the big game, fans were in good spirits. People razzed the announcers any time they suggested that the Colts might lose, or in the case of Deion Sanders, every time he opened his mouth. When Dan Marino picked the Patriots before the game, someone asked, "What do you know about the Super Bowl?" When quarterback Tom Brady marched the Patriots offense onto the field for the first time, he was met by the cry of "Pretty boy!"


The Indiana Daily Student

Legal director demoted by McKaig

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John Irvine, director of Student Legal Services, has been relieved of his duties, as Dean of Students Richard McKaig asked him to step down last week, citing personnel issues. Assistant Director of SLS Paula Gordon will serve as the interim director through June 30. In the near future, McKaig will appoint a review committee to look at the mission, structure, management and operating policies of the SLS Office. Irvine is now a staff attorney, and there has been no pay decrease for him.


The Indiana Daily Student

Assault suspect turns self in

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Charges have been filed in the assault of an IU Police Department officer outside an IU football game last year. A non-student turned himself in at the Monroe County Sheriff's Department after a warrant was issued stemming from the November incident.


The Indiana Daily Student

Walking the path of progress

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Seventy-five years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. was born. Fifty years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of desegregation. Eighteen years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. Day was instated as a national holiday. Now, in 2004, the world has changed because of the King, but there are still social battles to be fought, said keynote speaker Ellis Cose Monday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kerry wins caucus in Iowa

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DES MOINES, Iowa -- John Kerry rode an 11th-hour surge to victory in Iowa's kickoff presidential caucuses, upsetting Democratic front-runner Howard Dean and stunning caucus favorite Dick Gephardt. Kerry's comeback blew the nomination fight wide open, setting the stage for a free-for-all in New Hampshire's follow-up primary.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Game

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Men's tennis falls in season opener The IU men's tennis team got the season started this weekend by facing off against Notre Dame in both teams' first matches of the year. The Irish had too much for the Hoosiers, as IU fell 6-1 to Notre Dame and to 0-1 on the spring season. Despite not being able to pick up a win in the first match of the year, there were a few bright spots for the Hoosiers to carry over into their next match.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former prof returns for keynote speech

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The anticipation was breathtaking at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater Monday night, as a packed hall rustled, whispered and shook with song in preparation for a keynote address not soon to be forgotten. Children from University Elementary School lined the walls, members of the IU African American Choral Ensemble filled the space backstage and an audience exemplifying Bloomington's racial and cultural diversity jammed into whatever vacant house seats it could find.



The Indiana Daily Student

Two sparkplugs are better than one

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For four years, A.J. Moye has proven Hoosier fans don't need a mascot to pump them up. They just need a guy who will throw himself all over the floor (or off of it, if need be) and flap his arms around when loud cheering is appropriate. A sparkplug.



The Indiana Daily Student

Fun Fest uses creative activities to educate

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Bloomington High School South hosted an educational fun fest Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The lively event was filled with elementary to middle school-aged children, IU student volunteers and parents. The event was held in honor of MLK Day and to promote diversity, understanding and volunteerism. Most of the activities were run by IU student group volunteers to educate children about the importance of the day.


The Indiana Daily Student

OT win ends two game skid

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If any word can sum up IU's 58-55 overtime win it, would be streaky. IU and Northwestern traded scoring tirades, traded the lead eight times and tied the score seven times. The Hoosiers faced tough outside shooting from the Wildcats, who hit five of their first six shots from behind the arc. Northwestern's sharp shooting, led by Wildcat freshman Alex Mueller, who hit three consecutive three's in the first half, put IU into an early 23-14 deficit.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers sweep Boilers

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The brooms came out Saturday night as the Hockey Hoosiers capped off a sweep of in-state and division rival Purdue. IU won the first game, played in Fishers, Ind., 6-2 and netted their second win of the weekend with a 5-2 effort in Bloomington the following day. The two rivals treated fans to classic contests between the bitter rivals, highlighted by countless penalty minutes and a benches-clearing brawl. With time winding down in the second period of Friday's game, a Purdue defenseman threw an illegal knee on a fast-breaking Hoosier. As the IU team responded to protect their downed skater, the benches from both sides cleared and pandemonium ensued. IU then rallied, putting the game out of reach by killing a five-on-three shorthanded penalty situation. But the damage was already done, as the brawl led nine Hoosiers and several Boilermakers to suspension for Saturday's contest, with a few more suspended into next week.


The Indiana Daily Student

OSU in Columbus tough combo

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Senior guard A.J. Moye said he can hardly remember the last time Indiana beat Ohio State in Columbus. "I think I've won there once, and that was my freshman year and we had Kirk Haston hitting shots out the wazoots," Moye said. "It's tough playing there." IU (8-6, 2-1 Big Ten) will face Ohio State (9-7, 1-2) at 7 p.m. tonight at the Value City Arena at Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus, an arena that holding 19,200 fans. "The fans get into it regardless of their record," Moye said. "But we showed good on the road the last time. We need to have a carry-over and I think we will."