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Sunday, April 12
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Give us a break on textbooks

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As if tuition, rent, utilities, groceries and parking fees (not to mention athletic fees) weren't enough, every semester, college students have to cough up hundreds of dollars for textbooks. It's a burden for students all across the country, but some Maryland politicians may have a solution. Maryland Delegate Peter Franchot (D-Montgomery) would like to see textbooks exempted from sales tax to help students retain a few extra dollars.


The Indiana Daily Student

North Korea wages 'hair war' on people who grow it long

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SEOUL, South Korea -- The order to shaggy-haired North Korean men couldn't be clearer: Get a trim like Kim. The reclusive communist country is waging a hair war, telling its male population to lose the long locks, cut the coiffures and mow the mane to conform to the "socialist style," which is no longer than 2 inches. Even hair-challenged, authoritarian leader Kim Jong Il has trimmed his famous pompadour. One exception, however: Comradely comb-overs are OK for older men.


The Indiana Daily Student

Swept away and seemingly lost

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It's a barely-perceptible line that separates expression from histrionics. It's a dangerous undertaking to attempt a follow-up to a resounding success, almost as dangerous as it is to reach far beyond your grasp. Worlds Apart, the new release from 2002's skull-cracking indie werewolves ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead is a flawed achievement that runs afoul of these lines.


The Indiana Daily Student

Two new discs from a musical genius

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Each of the past three decades has had its own Dylan heir apparent; someone the critics call a 'boy genius,' 'lyrical mastermind,' or the far more intimidating 'voice of their generation.' Springsteen carried that burden in the '70s, a number of since forgotten New Wave frontmen held the position in the '80s and Kurt Cobain held the title all the way down both barrels of a shotgun in the '90s. Now we have Conor Oberst, the creative force behind Bright Eyes, garnering such praise, as well as teeming throngs of rabid fans known as "Conorites" for better or for worse.

The Indiana Daily Student

Music talk makes my brain explode

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I'm envious of sports fans. Seriously, I know very little about sports, but I'm envious of the fact that you can strike up conversations on things that have right and wrong answers. Even if you know nothing, it doesn't take much to know that the Yankees win a lot and that the Colts frustrate and upset. "How about them Colts?" you can say, and people will have something meaningful to say back to you.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Paris Hilton guide to internships

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Rich celebrities are as much a part of American culture as -- who am I kidding? -- rich celebrities are American culture. The rich and famous are even beginning to deny ordinary people the sacred right to be on reality television, but in doing so they're teaching the rest of us important life lessons.


The Indiana Daily Student

Prisons propose moving inmates to save money

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The new head of Indiana's prisons says the system can be operated within the spending freeze proposed by Gov. Mitch Daniels even though thousands of new inmates are expected in coming years. New Department of Correction Commissioner J. David Donahue told legislators Tuesday that the agency would shift many inmates to lower security facilities, focus on community corrections and help better prepare inmates for life outside prison.


The Indiana Daily Student

Education committee endorses legislation to stop bullying

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The Indiana Senate Education Committee endorsed legislation Thursday to curb bullying in Indiana schools. The bill calls for a universal definition of bullying and will allow grant money from the Safe Schools Fund to help finance bullying prevention. "It's a big problem in our schools today already, but it's growing," said State Sen. Thomas J. Wyss (R-15th District), one of the authors of the bill.


The Indiana Daily Student

President Clinton to head U.N. tsunami relief

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UNITED NATIONS -- Secretary-General Kofi Annan has selected former President Clinton to be the U.N. point man for tsunami reconstruction and to ensure the world doesn't forget the needs of those devastated by the Dec. 26 disaster, a U.N. diplomat said Tuesday. U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard refused to confirm the appointment but said his office would release a statement shortly. Clinton had no immediate comment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Those feisty homosexuals

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On the eve of the Iraqi election, Condaleeza Rice gave a beautifully written speech about freedom for all people. She subtly condemned our forefathers for slavery and spoke of how, through the democratic process, injustice in the system can be fixed. I, too, believe in freedom and democracy whole-heartedly. Still, I had a hard time listening to her speech with the concurrent knowledge that a whole population of people is still being constantly denied basic rights and freedoms.


The Indiana Daily Student

King of Nepal isolates country from world

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KATMANDU, Nepal -- King Gyanendra dismissed Nepal's government Tuesday and declared a state of emergency, closing off his Himalayan nation from the rest of the world as telephone and Internet lines were cut, flights diverted and civil liberties severely curtailed.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iraqi president says U.S. troops necessary

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraq's president said Tuesday it would be "complete nonsense" to ask foreign troops to leave the country now, although some could depart by the year's end. Officials began the final vote tally from elections to produce a government to confront the insurgency.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jury selection begins for Michael Jackson case

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SANTA MARIA, Calif. -- Michael Jackson stood and smiled as he faced the first prospective jurors in his criminal trial, a group roughly split between those willing to decide his fate and those hoping to avoid a role in the latest trial of the century. Jackson, dressed in an all-white suit and a jewel-trimmed vest and belt, rose and remained standing as two groups of prospects, about 150 in the morning and another 150 in the afternoon, filed into the courtroom Monday.



The Indiana Daily Student

War in Iraq at center of campus clash

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The clock in the Student Building struck a note of discord Monday at noon as roughly two dozen students and community members used it's midday chime as a sign to begin chanting "No justice, no peace, USA out of the Middle East." Members of the Bloomington Peace Action Coalition and the newly formed campus group Against the Occupation of Iraq gathered at the Sample Gates to protest the U.S. military's presence in Iraq.


The Indiana Daily Student

BFC to hear proposed changes for NCAA

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The face of intercollegiate athletics could change with an approved proposal today by The Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics, which is made up of an alliance of faculty representatives, including IU professor Bob Eno. The coalition is proposing a draft that outlines three changes to the NCAA bylaws in five areas; admission of athletes, awarding of scholarships, curricular integrity, time commitments of athletes and academic advising for players.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana clocks divided across state counties

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Daylight saving time is sponsored by 47 states across the country, but Indiana is one of three states that does not fast forward and rewind the clock once a year. The Indiana legislature has debated the issue of DST for about four decades, and now newly instated Gov. Mitch Daniels, much like Benjamin Franklin in 1784, wants the issue resolved.


The Indiana Daily Student

FAFSA question might be removed

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Since 2000, every student who has applied for financial assistance or filled out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) answered a question that is being debated in Washington. Last Monday, an independent congressional committee recommended to Congress that the question on FAFSA forms asking students if they have been convicted of a drug crime be removed from the form, claiming it was irrelevant and deterred students from applying for aid.



The Indiana Daily Student

Owens practices for first time since injury

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - T.O. is almost a go. Terrell Owens, the Philadelphia Eagles' All-Pro receiver, practiced Monday for the first time since injuring his ankle last month, moving closer toward returning for the Super Bowl.