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Saturday, May 9
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD



The Indiana Daily Student

Real 'Hotel Rwanda' manager speaks

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With around 30 guns pointed as his head, half-Hutu/half-Tutsi former Mille Collines Hotel General Manager Paul Rusesabagina refused to accept a weapon to murder his wife, four children and 26 of his Rwandan neighbors at the start of the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He responded instead, "Listen, sir. Myself, I don't know how to use guns, and I don't see any reason why to kill that many people."


The Indiana Daily Student

Officers prepare for race weekend

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Every IU Police Department officer will work extra hours during Little 500 weekend, but IUPD Lt. Jerry Minger said their perspective on law enforcement won't be any different from any other weekend. "Our primary function, purpose and perspective is always to minimize any kind of unsafe issues and deal with any kind of illegal or unsafe activity," Minger said. "That's our primary goal. As far as our particular activities and perspective, the way we do business doesn't really change."


The Indiana Daily Student

Women's hoops hires coach

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IU Athletics Director Rick Greenspan introduced Felisha Legette-Jack as the new IU's women's basketball coach Wednesday, less than two weeks after the position opened up. Legette-Jack signed a five-year deal with the University, with a first-year base salary of $175,000 plus incentives.

The Indiana Daily Student

FRIENDLY FOES

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As a 3-year-old, Katie Thompson was allowed to ride her bike only so far down her block. Her parents set up a barrier a few houses down so she would not escape their sight. Eight houses away from Katie's, Lauren Ziemba frequently pedaled her training-wheel-supported bike to the barrier her parents established.


The Indiana Daily Student

Weather could produce more student arrests

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If history is any indication, the weather may play some role in how many people are arrested during the weekend's Little 500 festivities, police and University officials say. While no official statistics are available to indicate a rise in illegal activities, IU Police Department Lt. Jerry Minger said his 34 years of experience have shown that a warm day typically includes more arrests than a cold, rainy one.


The Indiana Daily Student

Nepal security forces kill 4 protesters at rally

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KATMANDU, Nepal -- Security forces fired on thousands of pro-democracy protesters in southeastern Nepal Wednesday, killing at least four, and the government reimposed a curfew in the capital to prevent a massive rally urging the king to loosen his grip on power.


The Indiana Daily Student

White House staff shake-ups continue

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WASHINGTON -- White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl Rove gave up some of his responsibilities, and White House press secretary Scott McClellan announced his resignation Wednesday, continuing a shake-up in President Bush's administration that has already yielded a new chief of staff. Rove is giving up oversight of policy development to focus more on politics with the approach of the fall midterm elections.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

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In response to Christina Galoozis' column "Hush up generals" (IDS Wednesday): As a war veteran, I found the points you raised in your article were well-made. However, you might have missed one key element about the secretary of defense's influence; namely, that his policies have gotten people killed. These people are American citizens who volunteered to serve their nation by serving in the Armed Forces. His decisions got a lot of them killed.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hundreds gather for Monroe's youth abused

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Bloomington community members gathered at the Sample Gates Wednesday evening at 6 p.m. for a vigil against child abuse and neglect. The event, sponsored by Prevent Child Abuse Monroe County and the Monroe County Court Appointed Special Advocate program, garnered 30 to 40 participants, including parents, children and social workers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Instant advertising

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The other day I was having a nice little chit chat on American Online Instant Messenger, otherwise known as AIM. I noticed something out of the ordinary in my chat window. No, it wasn't "Omg, lol or wtf." There was a little box that said, "Vonage: 1st month free!" AIM found a new place for advertisements.


The Indiana Daily Student

Just the facts

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There is a colossal effort afoot to discredit any fact that might vindicate regime change in Baghdad. Many fallacious and fatuous statements have followed in the wake of this racket to the effect that jihadists wouldn't be in Iraq were it not for America's presence. Such unscrupulous and credulous critics must be as dumb as they sound, regurgitating the prevailing wisdom that Saddam Hussein was hardly even an enemy of America's, and if he was, at least he provided "stability." But facts are stubborn things. I hope and trust that they will put this low groupthink to rest once and for all.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dead American butterfly

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The United Nations, an institution birthed from the idea of global freedom from oppression and tyranny for all, is often perceived as dysfunctional at best and impotent at worst in preventing and intervening in genocidal neighbor-to-neighbor disputes and other ideological-driven wars. Loose talk about U.N. reform has centered on the removal of specific deceitful characters and the revision of other paper shuffling commonplace among so-called democratic bodies.


Little 500 kicks in to high gear

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Little 500 weekend is coming up, and many students will have the honor to host a slew of guests at their houses, in the dorms or at their apartments. But along with that comes a frazzled state of mind on how to accommodate them. Having guests can be quite an overwhelming thought, but some careful last minute planning could help ease the stress of having Little 500 squatters at your house. There are essentially three main components that guests are going to need from their hosts: food, a place to sleep and entertainment.


Film fails to bring scares and laughs

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If during your daily routine today you happen to witness someone trip, stumble or fall down, congratulations, you've pretty much seen "Scary Movie 4." Looks like the "Scary Movie" franchise has run out of steam, and rather abruptly too, considering "Scary Movie 3" was surprisingly entertaining. The film begins with a weak "Saw" parody featuring Dr. Phil and Shaq, especially when compared to the hilarious intros spoofing "Scream," "The Exorcist" and "The Ring" that began the previous three films. This unfunny sequence sets the pace for the rest of the painful film.


Greg Buhay

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Greg Buhay, a senior majoring in business, is better known for what he does outside of the classroom. Buhay is the "business man" of the Cutters cycling team because he keeps the team's organization under control, but also has the crazy jokes and sense of humor to keep his teammates going on their six-to seven-hour rides. So when he's training hours upon hours a week and spending 75 percent of his college days with his team, here is why Team Cutters has had such an impact on this Pittsburgh native's life:


Welles trapped within a puzzle box

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If someone told you at least eight different versions of a film existed, which version would you watch? Nobody has ever had more trouble when it came to editing control than the legendary Orson Welles. Granted "Citizen Kane" remained under his control, the rest of his output rarely was. While "The Magnificent Ambersons" and "Touch of Evil" became the victims of deadly studio scissors, nothing was more admittedly painful for Welles than watching his own "Mr. Arkadin" be torn from his grasps and shredded to pieces. There may be many versions of this fateful film, but the general story follows that of Guy Van Stratten (Robert Arden), a smuggler hired by tycoon turned amnesiac Gregory Arkadin (Welles himself with curly wig and curlier beard) to investigate his forgotten past.


'Wolf Creek,' Aussie for suck

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"Wolf Creek" is a horror movie that, like most horror movies, you'll either love or hate. And like most horror movie fans, I give them a chance because I rarely dislike even the most asinine of horror delights, mostly due to how exaggerated or unintentionally comedic they often turn out to be. Unfortunately there was none of that in "Wolf Creek." It's a horror movie that takes itself seriously, which is why its many shortcomings made it very displeasing to watch.


Album built to bore

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Reviewing a new Built to Spill album is like reviewing a new Sonic Youth or Fall album. Granted, they've only been around since the early '90s (and, unlike the Fall, don't have 100,000 albums), but there's a certain weight on your shoulders when critiquing anything new by Doug Martsch and whatever new band members he's acquired for his latest release. This is the band, after all, that put out two absolutely phenomenal albums in the late '90s: 1997's Perfect from Now On and 1999's head-exploding Keep it Like a Secret. At their zenith, they managed to foil Martsch's emotive songwriting with even more emotive guitar work. And what's more, it was good.


A once in a lifetime album

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The year was 1979. Ambient music pioneer Brian Eno and Talking Heads frontman David Byrne began work on a two-year exercise in the experimental that would take their budding creative marriage to new heights. In 1981, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts was released to much acclaim, earning immediate status as a groundbreaking work, a synthesis of world music, ambient and the polyrhythmic funkiness of the Talking Heads. Twenty-five years after its initial release, My Life has been given new life with seven bonus tracks and extensive liner notes by Byrne and Eno. The re-release is a complete package, shedding new light on the creative process behind one of the definitive experimental works of the last quarter century.