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Saturday, June 27
The Indiana Daily Student

Longform


The Indiana Daily Student

County election heats up

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In the midst of the highly contested campaigns for November's presidential election, Monroe County voters are being subjected to a similar campaign locally. The race for Monroe County Commissioner brings 33-year-old Democratic rookie Mike Englert into the political picture, vying to unseat Republican incumbent Joyce Poling. As a first-time campaigner, Englert faces an uphill battle against the District 2 Commissioner, Poling, who has held the seat for 12 years.


The Indiana Daily Student

New program to aid students with disabilities

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A program developed in the spring of 2003 to aid students with disabilities in reading will be available for students this fall. Last year, IU's Adaptive Learning Technology Center partnered with Bookshare.org, an online service with a library of pre-scanned books. According to University Information Technology Services there are a number of schools who have started using this program to better benefit students with disabilities in reading, such as visual impairments, dyslexia and learning disabilities, including attention deficit disorder.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU, Harmony Center to improve education

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IU's School of Education is teaming up with Harmony Education Center to help preschool through 12th grade students across America achieve a better education. "This (collaboration) is the clearinghouse for school reform," said School of Education Dean Geraldo M. Gonzalez. "It provides new and different training for initiating innovative processes."


The Indiana Daily Student

Taking a stand

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In his continuing effort to be all things to all voters, Sen. John Kerry recently tried to take both sides of the issue of abortion. In a July 4 interview in the Dubuque, Iowa, Telegraph Herald, Kerry, the presumed Democratic nominee for president, communicated his personal view that life begins at conception, but then said he does not want to force his religious beliefs onto others, so he supports a woman's right to choose. While this view may look OK on the surface, after further review, it is extremely flawed.

The Indiana Daily Student

The mislabeled senator

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Each year, the National Journal, a non-partisan, weekly publication covering politics, policy and government, publishes an arbitrary list of the most conservative and liberal congressmen and senators. This year, the list is on citation overload. Much has been said and will continue to be said through the election about Sen. John Kerry's placement on the Journal's recent rankings as the most liberal senator in the U.S. Senate. What no one is saying, though, is how negligently this statistic has been cited.


The Indiana Daily Student

A poignant clash of cultures

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Drop City," the ninth novel by literary force T. Coraghessan Boyle, is perhaps his most subtle and poignant work to date. At times hilarious, at others incredibly tragic, it is an imaginative study of the counterculture's slow fade to black in the early 1970s. He skillfully melds character study with plot, and the interaction of his flawed characters is breathtaking in its beauty and its surprisingly complex interplay between conflicting loyalties.


The Indiana Daily Student

The future's not so futuristic

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This past Monday, the United States Postal Service issued a stamp commemorating the 50th anniversary of Buckminster Fuller's patent for the geodesic dome. Buckminster Fuller (1895-1983) was an inventor, architect and futurist whose innovations ranged from three-wheeled "Dymaxion Cars" to prefabricated "Dymaxion Bathrooms." For those of you who haven't been to Epcot Center, the geodesic dome is a spherical structure with a framework of interlocking triangular and circular panels.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alumna explores eating disorders in 1-woman play 'This IS my BODY'

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Self-loathing permeates IU alumna Amy Fortoul's "This IS my BODY," a one-woman show addressing eating disorders, body image and sexuality. In a unique combination of movement and spoken-word theater, Fortoul sang, mimed and screamed her way through the poetic autobiographical script dealing with her struggles with bulimia and self worth this weekend at the Rose Firebay in the John Waldron Arts Center. "It's healing," she said at a post-performance discussion group Saturday. "It has to be. I relive it every time."


The Indiana Daily Student

Internationally known group returns to Auer Hall

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Forty-nine summers ago, as the newly formed Beaux Arts Trio made its public debut at the Berkshire Music Festival, which is now the Tanglewood Music Festival, pianist Menahem Pressler had no idea he would still be performing with the same ensemble nearly half a century later. "I expected (the group) to last a week to make a record," Pressler said. The week Pressler anticipated the group staying together multiplied into decades. The group has recorded an impressive discography covering the entire piano trio repertoire and made innumerable concert appearances all over the world.


The Indiana Daily Student

Student sports talk show makes noise on WIUS

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The Bloomington radio airwaves are being treated to "The Total Package" this summer. Supported by the IU student radio station, WIUS-AM 1570, "The Total Package" is a sports talk show hosted by graduate students Pete Rowley and former IDS columnist Kevin Switaj. At 8 p.m. every Tuesday, Switaj and Rowley sit down for an hour with various guests to discuss sports issues concerning IU and other institutions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Can I get a hallelujah?

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For a guy who isn't religious, explaining the unexplainable presents an especially difficult challenge. But I can honestly say that what I felt this weekend was nothing short of a spiritual rebirth. And as I trek home from the Mecca of the Midwest, all I can think of are balls, strikes, pine tar and some of the finest Cracker Jack's ever made. Like any pilgrimage, the road to revival was a long and difficult one.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former football player rowing to Athens

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Former IU offensive tackle Phil Trinter played at IU from 1988-91, but after graduation his competitive spirit never died. The four-time letterman began sailing at the age of eight and took up racing in 1992. In addition to winning the 1993 Star World Championship and the 2003 Star North American Championship, Trinter won world championships in the 50-foot and Maxi boats. He also was involved in two campaigns for the America's Cup, a worldwide yachting competition that boasts the oldest trophy in international sports and competed in the 1996 and 2000 Olympic Trials. More recently Trinter has been training over the summer in Athens for the upcoming 2004 summer Olympic Games.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kruzan approves residential grant for city

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Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan announced the approval of four neighborhood improvement grants June 22 totaling $46,960 and will be used for specific projects in different Bloomington communities.


The Indiana Daily Student

Blair accepts responsibility for Iraq

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LONDON -- Iraq had no stockpiles of usable chemical or biological weapons before the war, and British intelligence relied in part on "seriously flawed" or "unreliable" sources in deciding to join the U.S.-attack to oust Saddam Hussein, an official inquiry reported Wednesday. Prime Minister Tony Blair accepted the report's findings and took "personal responsibility," although his government was absolved of "deliberate distortion or culpable negligence."


The Indiana Daily Student

Local task force honored

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The Monroe County Racial Task Force has been recognized by the Justice Kennedy Commission of the American Bar Association for a recent study entitled "Race and Criminal Justice in Monroe County, Indiana." The Commission also recommended the task force to be representative of a national model for similar organizations across the country, recognizing the task force study as a "model project implemented by a community that made a commitment to the elimination of racial disparity in its criminal justice system."


The Indiana Daily Student

Storms cause power outages

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Tornado sirens rang throughout Bloomington Tuesday in the midst of a severe thunderstorm that left trees and power lines down and traffic lights out along College Mall Road and State Road 45/46. A firefighter sighted a funnel cloud south of Bloomington and reported it to dispatch but no damage has been reported.


The Indiana Daily Student

1-woman play examines human experience

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Nearly 10 years after graduating from IU, former theatre and drama major Amy Fortoul returns to Bloomington with a unique show she created to discuss the rather difficult subjects of image, sexuality, eating disorders and the human experience. The play is titled "This IS my BODY," and much of Fortoul's body and soul have gone into its creation. For this performance, Fortoul is working as the writer, director and sole actor.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senate blocks gay marriage vote

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A proposal to amend the U.S. Constitution to define marriage as a union between a woman and a man was blocked by the Senate Wednesday. Fifty senators voted against the amendment, which seeks to place a federal ban on gay marriage. Forty-eight senators voted in favor, but they were unable to muster the required 60 votes needed to advance the measure to a formal vote.


The Indiana Daily Student

Israel plans in event of Yasser Arafat's death

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JERUSALEM -- Israel is worried about chaos that might follow the death of Yasser Arafat and will do everything possible to prevent the Palestinian leader from being buried in Jerusalem, according to a contingency plan obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press.


The Indiana Daily Student

Single-engine plane lands safely on I-70 median

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MANHATTAN, Ind. -- The pilot of a small, single-engine plane made an emergency landing Wednesday on the median of Interstate 70 in western Indiana. Craig Lee Carlson, 49, of Spanaway, Wash., was not injured. The plane, a 1946 Stinson 108, did not appear to be damaged by the landing. Carlson said he was flying the plane about 700 feet above the ground when it suddenly developed fuel problems.