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Wednesday, May 6
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Team looks for 'sweet revenge'

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First game: Aug. 30. First official team practice: Aug. 9. From the look of things, the season is still a little way off for the women's volleyball team. But, numbers can be deceiving.


The Indiana Daily Student

AIDS explained to kids in new book

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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -- A green pock-faced monster with red eyes and fangs is depicted as the HIV virus in a new children's book that seeks to explain the science of AIDS to South African children.


The Indiana Daily Student

Strauss opera fun for the whole family

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"With all this carrying on you would think we were at the opera," proclaims the Eisenstiens' chamber maid Adele, played by Shelia Murphy, when she hears a man singing outside of her mistress' window. "At the opera they go on and on usually until somebody dies. That can be arranged you know."


The Indiana Daily Student

Mind your own lockbox

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Some things just naturally go hand in hand. The economy and retirement plans are an example of two matters that cannot be separated. Their connection makes the recent trend of corporate abuse especially worrisome. The state of the economy will ultimately determine the choices Americans make about their retirement choices. Most likely, when many baby boomers see their 401K decline, they'll turn to the government for social security handouts, steadfastly relying on the government for economic provision. We're now all aware, though, that social security reserves are dry and that the next generation of retirees will completely empty the coffers, leaving coming generations to foot the bill.

The Indiana Daily Student

So much information, so little time

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Opponents of the planned extension of Interstate 69 from Indianapolis to Evansville said they are angry that they will only have a few weeks to review an environmental report on the proposed routes that was 30 months in the making.



The Indiana Daily Student

Tracking system helpful

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All of the IU international students are going to be tracked before Jan. 30 due to new regulations set forth by the Immigration and Naturalization Services. This act has some groups worried of government wire taps and surveillance simply because an individual is from a foreign country. Images of Rocky Balboa being trailed by Russian liaisons in Rocky IV have people worried that the U.S. government will try to do the same due to Sept. 11 backlash. But there is one key point to the new system: It was passed in 1996.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fitness is a way of life

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Feeling overweight or out of shape? Stuck in your workout routine, or searching for a new one? Trying to avoid the freshman 15? Fortunately, you now have someone to turn to for the answers to all of your workout and fitness-related questions. I am here to provide solutions to your queries and assist you in understanding exactly how your body works, and what it will take to make you look and feel great. Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Brian Haney, and I am a junior journalism major who has been personal training for about four years. I'm a health and fitness nut, and I have turned it into a real hobby. Since my youth, athletics and fitness have been major parts of my life. I grew up in a private, all-boys school environment. There, I competed athletically; fueling my desire to achieve physically and test myself. But I struggled with my workouts.




The Indiana Daily Student

No more than a decent cover band

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Smash Mouth might be destined for the used CD rack, but at least it's putting up a fight. Despite their predictable and often formulaic sound, this album shows they've matured a little along the way. After all, it's not easy rewriting the same song 10 times an album. But at least it's their song and not another faceless band whose sound depends on the rest of the industry.


The Indiana Daily Student

Disappointment

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CHICAGO -- The men's basketball team faced a bittersweet disappointment in the Big Ten tournament March 11. After having won one game in three years at the tournament, the Hoosiers advanced to the championship game. But they lost to Iowa in that game. Barely.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lotus fest carries on despite troubles

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Lee Williams is exhausted. After months of planning the Eighth Annual Lotus World Music and Arts Festival, booking bands, arranging venues and transportation and ticket sales, his efforts were jeopardized when four terrorist hijackings grounded flights nationwide last week.


The Indiana Daily Student

Camp stayed past welcome

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Have you ever had visitors over you were happy to see when they first arrived, but as the night drew on, you just wanted to politely ask them to leave without hurting their feelings? That's how we feel about the Dunn Meadow Peace Camp.


The Indiana Daily Student

Colleges track, register foreign students

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WASHINGTON -- One day into the federal government's high-tech push to track foreign students, Peggy Hudson of Lewis & Clark Community College in Godfrey, Ill., breathed a sigh of frustration.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mandatory retirement questioned

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When former athletics director Clarence Doninger retired last year, it wasn't purely by choice. Hired in 1991 to assume leadership of the IU Athletics Department, Doninger held the position of director for just more than ten years before he was forced to retire under IU's mandatory retirement policy, which requires administrators to retire at age 65.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Breaking Away' composer visits campus

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The Academy Award-winning movie "Breaking Away" is one of the few things that has put the small, quiet town of Bloomington on the map. The film focuses on the annual Little 500 bike race, and while most IU students remember it for its location, the film's score was perhaps its greatest aspect.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mural to stay put

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The morning press conference Amidst reporters, cameras, lights and concerned students, Bloomington Chancellor Sharon Brehm held a press conference yesterday in the Maple room of the Indiana Memorial Union to make public her decision on the Benton mural featuring Ku Klux Klan members in Woodburn Hall 100. Brehm stated the mural would not be covered because of moral issues, and could not be moved because the painting could suffer irreparable damage. "I am convinced that moving or covering the mural would be morally wrong," Brehm said. "It would, in effect, do what Benton refused to do: That is, it would hide the shameful aspects of Indiana's past."


The Indiana Daily Student

McNally hints at future potential

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Shannon McNally must be wallowing in good luck. Whether it is good luck to be signed to a major label is a matter of preference. But to latch on to Capitol at the tail end of Lilith-Fair-girl-frenzy and receive three and a half stars for her first widely-released album in Rolling Stone isn't too shabby for a 27-year-old artist.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers lose in first round of Big Tens

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The IU field hockey team went into the 2001 Big Ten Tournament with hopes of pulling an upset of No. 2 seed Ohio State, but the Buckeyes jumped on the freshmen and sophomore laden Hoosier squad with a goal less than five minutes into the match.