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Wednesday, June 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

O'Neill denies statements on Bush

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WASHINGTON -- Former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill on Tuesday denied that classified documents were used in a controversial new book in which he paints an unflattering portrait of President Bush. He softened some of his criticism in the face of a strong counterattack by the administration. The Inspector General's Office at Treasury confirmed that it had begun an investigation into whether any laws or regulations had been violated when Treasury employees turned over 19,000 documents to O'Neill after he was fired by Bush in December 2002.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tougher open container law passes

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INDIANAPOLIS -- A Senate committee passed a bill Tuesday that would prohibit open containers of alcohol in vehicles, a move supporters say would bring Indiana millions of dollars in federal highway construction money and prevent drunk driving. Indiana's current law allows passengers to have open containers of alcohol as long as the driver has a blood-alcohol level of 0.04 percent or lower -- half the state's legal limit to drive. The Senate bill would ban open containers in vehicles, including parked cars, even if the driver was sober. Alcohol could be placed in trunks and locked glove compartments, however, and limousines and buses would be exempt from the restrictions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kerouac's draft back 'on road'

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Like the highway that inspired it, the first draft of author Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" rolls over nearly 120 feet of paper, a wandering narrative told in a continuous block of text. Yellowed with age, smudged with editing marks and the author's own ink-covered fingerprints, the scroll is a relic of a literary phenomenon. Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay bought the scroll two years ago for $2.43 million. Having already been on display in Indianapolis, Irsay plans to send what may be the beat generation's quintessential text back to the road from where it came.


The Indiana Daily Student

Students manage dream teams online

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It's a Sunday afternoon and freshman Jacob Moylan's favorite team, the Seattle Seahawks, is losing to the Minnesota Vikings, 35-7. Seattle has no chance of a comeback; nonetheless, Moylan is stuck to the online gamecast, yelling, hoping for another touchdown from Vikings quarterback Daunte Culpepper. Wrong team, right? Guess again. For the time being, Moylan's favorite squad is the fantasy team he manages, owns and operates online. Made up of players from different teams in the NFL, Moylan no longer roots for specific teams, but rather for specific players with hopes of carrying his fantasy team to a league title.

The Indiana Daily Student

Bill Elliot to wind down career

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- Bill Elliott wants to leave NASCAR on his terms. Whether he will is pretty much out of his hands. Partly by choice, partly by necessity, one of the most popular stock car drivers will race an abbreviated schedule in 2004 before he decides whether to say "Goodbye" for good. How many races? The business side of the sport will dictate that.


The Indiana Daily Student

Training trip focuses team for rest of season

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During the first half of the season, the men's swimming and diving team was looking for answers following a dismal 1-5 start, which included tough losses to fellow Big Ten schools Wisconsin and Northwestern. With 16 freshmen being put into the fray and all but one diver red shirting, the 2003-2004 season has begun to show signs of a rebuilding year.


The Indiana Daily Student

Don't rush to judgement

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It's a good thing Peyton Manning can't win the big game, Donovan McNabb is overrated as a quarterback and the Rams are unbeatable at home, because this weekend's conference championship slate of Kansas City-New England and Green Bay-St. Louis looks pretty good. In college, Peyton Manning couldn't pull off a win during the big game. His alma mater, Tennessee, won the national championship the year after he graduated. The same was said about the Colts' quarterback after putting up stellar numbers year after year as that first playoff win still eluded him. After last year's 41-0 drubbing by the New York Jets in the first round of the playoffs, the grumbles in Indianapolis began again, and questions arose about whether Manning had the necessary tools to make the jump to elite status. So what's the best way to silence the critics?


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the Campus

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IUSA sets election dates for Feb. 24 and 25 The IU Student Association announced the Student Body Congress has approved the 2003-2004 election codes, election commissioners have been appointed, and have presented a timeline for 2004 Student Body Elections. Elections will be held on Feb. 24 and 25. The final call-out meeting for candidates is set for Jan. 21. The deadline for applications will be Feb. 4. Students interested in elections should contact IUSA Elections Coordinator Derek Molter at dmolter@indiana.edu.


The Indiana Daily Student

Partying continues amid tightened rules

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It's March 21, 2002. The IU men's basketball team is facing Duke in the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA tournament. Only the Hoosier faithful consider IU a worthy opponent against the powerhouse, and no one expects IU to win. Despite all of the odds and expectations against them, IU players edge Duke 74-73. The campus goes crazy. "It was insane," junior Dan Loomis said. "People were pulling down trees and lighting them on fire." Loomis, who was at Showalter Fountain at the time celebrating the experience with thousands of other students, said he hasn't seen campus like it since -- and doesn't expect to anytime soon. But even though he said that won't happen again, he admitted the partying that accompanied it continues every day.


The Indiana Daily Student

Computerworld names IU professor IT leader

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Before Michael McRobbie, IU wasn't quite the same. The IU vice president for information technology and chief information officer ushered in a new age of campus connectivity, making IU a leader in the field. Now he's being recognized for his contributions by Computerworld magazine, which named McRobbie one of its 2004 "Premier 100 Information Technology Leaders" in the first issue of the year.


The Indiana Daily Student

Attack of the cicadas

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For 17 years, a creature has been lurking beneath the ground in Bloomington. Soon, it will emerge from its lair, and residents will not be able to ignore its presence. This creature is not the subject of a B-movie -- it is a cicada. And while cicadas fill the summer air every year with their pulsating, buzzing sound, this year's batch will be different. Known as Brood X, it is a species that only emerges every 17 years. And it is still a mystery to science as to how these insects always arrive precisely on schedule. Come the week of May 25, they will emerge from the ground and take to the trees.


The Indiana Daily Student

Afghan singer returns to screen

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KABUL, Afghanistan -- The video was old and the song well-known, but the sight of an Afghan woman -- clad in a shiny red dress and simple headscarf -- singing on Afghan television sparked a wave of excitement and a backlash of conservatism.


The Indiana Daily Student

Top Arista executive leaves record label

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NEW YORK -- Antonio "L.A." Reid, who took the helm at Arista Records nearly four years ago and oversaw platinum successes from acts including OutKast, Pink and Avril Lavigne, has left the label, it was announced Tuesday. Reid became president and CEO of Arista in May 2000 after the company's founder and CEO, Clive Davis, left because of parent company BMG's mandatory retirement policy. Reid was not available to comment, according to an Arista spokeswoman. Rolf Schmidt-Holtz, chairman and CEO of BMG, called Reid "one of the music industry's top record men."


The Indiana Daily Student

Lesson learned: Don't climb Everest

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I'll be up front. I have always been a fan of the work of Jon Krakauer. He has struck a reputation of being a top-notch outdoors journalist, carefully and obsessively researching topics before writing about them. "Into Thin Air," his personal account of the disastrous spring of 1996 on Mt. Everest, is no different. Expertly written and exhaustively researched, it captures the horror of being stranded at 24,000 feet above sea level with little hope of rescue.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gelato comes to College Mall

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Ice Cream Gelato is hard to miss. Located in College Mall, the shop nestles close to the South entrance. And the shop's namesake, the gelato, is as brightly colored as the décor. Bins of bright green, pink, yellow, white and purple fill the coolers. These colors are a direct result of the natural fruit and ingredients used to create the creamy treat.


The Indiana Daily Student

Top British murderer commits suicide

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LONDON -- The once-respected family doctor who became Britain's worst serial killer was found hanged in his prison cell Tuesday, cheating his victims' relatives of the one consolation they had hoped for -- an explanation of his 23-year murder spree. Officials are investigating why there was no suicide watch on Dr. Harold Shipman, who was convicted in 2000 of killing 15 patients and later was found to have murdered at least 200 more, mostly by lethal injection. He always maintained his innocence.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ohio Muslim leader arrested

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CLEVELAND, Ohio -- A prominent Islamic clergyman was arrested Tuesday on charges he concealed his links to anti-Israeli terrorist groups when he applied for U.S. citizenship a decade ago, officials said. Imam Fawaz Mohammed Damrah, who leads the Islamic Center of Cleveland, Ohio's largest mosque, withheld information on his membership or affiliation with several groups, including the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, U.S. Attorney Gregory White said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Airliner caught in fog crashes near Uzbek capital

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TASHKENT, Uzbekistan -- A domestic airliner crashed Tuesday approaching the airport in Uzbekistan's capital, the Interior Ministry said. At least 36 people, including the top U.N. official for Uzbekistan were aboard, and no survivors were reported. The plane was an Uzbekistan Airways Yakovlev-40 en route from Termez, in the country's far south along the Afghanistan border, said an Interior Ministry duty officer who declined to give his name. He gave no further details.


The Indiana Daily Student

Americas agree to support free trade zone

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MONTERREY, Mexico -- Leaders from 34 American nations agreed Tuesday to support a hemisphere-wide trade area without setting a firm deadline, a concession to Brazil and Venezuela. The United States had sought a 2005 deadline for the Free Trade Area of the Americas in the summit's final declaration. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez instead pushed for a humanitarian fund that could be used to help countries during financial and natural disasters, but said he would sign the document with reservations.


The Indiana Daily Student

Military accused of war crimes

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A top human rights group accused the U.S. military of committing war crimes by demolishing homes of suspected insurgents and arresting the relatives of Iraqi fugitives Tuesday. The military denied the charges by Human Rights Watch, saying it only destroyed homes that were being used to store weapons, or as fighting positions, adding all Iraqis detained were suspected of taking part in attacks on coalition forces.