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Friday, Jan. 23
The Indiana Daily Student

Longform


The Indiana Daily Student

Man admits to killing kids

CONCORD, N.H. -- A man accused of killing his two children told authorities he shot them in New Hampshire and buried them in a shallow grave in the Midwest after saying a prayer and making a duct tape cross on each child's chest, according to court documents released Wednesday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jazz orchestra comes to IU

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Thirteen years ago, David Baker had a vision. The IU Distinguished Professor of Music wanted a way to convey jazz music the way the composers and arrangers intended it to be played. In order to re-create original big band jazz music, he needed a talented orchestra capable of reconstructing the music of the biggest jazz masters. He needed "a vehicle to play the masterworks," Baker said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Herbert to take office on Friday

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IU officials are anticipating the arrival of the newly appointed IU president, Dr. Adam Herbert, to the Bloomington campus Friday. Herbert will be residing in the Bryan House, the on-campus home reserved for IU presidents. "We are all eager to start working with Dr. Herbert," said IU-Bloomington Chancellor Sharon Brehm. "This is a very exciting moment for IU and a great opportunity for us to grow as a community."


The Indiana Daily Student

Legislation takes effect Friday

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The public smoking ban for Bloomington and all of Monroe County will take effect Friday. The ordinance encompasses all public buildings, including office buildings and restaurants. The only exception is private clubs and businesses, which do not admit minors and already have smoking sections. These places will have to be smoke-free by January 1, 2005.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU alumnus, former senator dies

WASHINGTON -- Former Sen. Vance Hartke, a liberal Indiana Democrat whose staunch opposition to the Vietnam War put him at odds with President Lyndon B. Johnson, died Sunday from heart failure. He was 84.


The Indiana Daily Student

Playboy mansion, Hustler monastery

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A few weeks ago, while listening to the car radio, I learned that my traffic report was brought to me by California peaches. Actually, I'm not entirely sure it was peaches because I was so astonished by the notion of any sort of fruit collecting traffic information and broadcasting it over the radio that I found it difficult to concentrate on anything else.


The Indiana Daily Student

Viva la Lance

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What is a hero? According to "Webster's Dictionary," the definition of a hero is someone who is noted for their feats of courage or notability that serves a higher purpose in society. Pretty clear if you ask me; yet the term hero seems to be misused greatly by our generation, especially in the world of sports. Surprisingly, it seems everyone with an endorsement deal is a role model, which forces me back to my original question, "What exactly is a hero?"


The Indiana Daily Student

Watching out for your butt

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Young, skinny, wimpy dudes have been taking it from behind for ages. Literally. In 1824, at the conclusion of a prison tour along the East Cost and in the South, Reverend Louis Dwight remarked: "I have found melancholy testimony to establish one general fact, videlicet, that boys are prostituted to the lust of old convicts."


The Indiana Daily Student

If a baloo is a bear …

Marion County schools are being pressured by state officials to change the time-tested A-B-C grading system to a numerical score of one, two or three. These scores would be given in different areas of each subject, three meaning the child has mastered the subject, one and two meaning that the child needs more work.


The Indiana Daily Student

Columbian mayor places warnings on streets

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BOGOTA, Colombia -- The streets of Colombia's capital have been splashed with hundreds of bright yellow stars with white question marks in the middle -- "death stars." They mark spots where people have been killed -- not by the leftist rebels and rightist paramilitary fighters of Colombia's long civil war, but by drunk drivers and speed demons who wreak havoc on Bogota's crowded streets. On average, nearly 700 people die every year in traffic accidents in Bogota, and more than half of them are pedestrians.


The Indiana Daily Student

Germans address problems in school systems

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FRANKFURT, Germany -- It sounds like every child's dream: only four-and-a-half hours of school a day, no attendance taken, a free day if a teacher is sick, no punishment for playing hooky. But this is no dream, as Germans have suddenly awakened to discover; it's the sorry state of their schools.


The Indiana Daily Student

Final 'last edition' Beetle hits streets

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PUEBLA, Mexico -- Volkswagen is saying goodbye to its icon, the Beetle, ending production and sparking an international battle among collectors who want a final reminder of the car that was popular with everyone from post-World War II suburbanites to hippies. The world's last new Volkswagen bug rolled off the assembly line Wednesday at the VW plant in Puebla, 65 miles southeast of Mexico City.


The Indiana Daily Student

Interim Iraqi leader chosen

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A Shiite Muslim member of a political party banned by Saddam Hussein was chosen Wednesday to be the first leader of Iraq's U.S.-picked interim government, serving a one-month term that will be rotated among eight other faction leaders. The Iraq Governing Council, meeting in Baghdad's Convention Center, also lashed out at Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa for failing to recognize the interim government's authority.


The Indiana Daily Student

Flames devour truck, burn painters

INDIANAPOLIS -- Rush-hour motorists watched in horror as a cargo truck burst into flames on a busy freeway, burning more than a dozen members of the painting crew inside, most of them critically.


The Indiana Daily Student

Combs elected local Party chair

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Perry Township Trustee Dan Combs was elected as chairman of the Monroe County Democratic party Sunday evening. The election was watched closely as candidates Combs and Brian O'Neill vied for the leadership position Frank McCloskey resigned from. Combs acknowledged that McCloskey has left "big shoes to fill."



The Indiana Daily Student

Sad demise marks Hearts' pop

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So, it's hard to write a review of a band that just passed away. Heading out to tour following their first LP release, the Exploding Hearts lost three members (Matt Fitzgerald, bass and vocals, Adam Cox, guitar and lead vocals, and Jeremy Gage, drums) to an automobile accident on the way home from a show in San Francisco. Surviving are Terry Six, guitar, and Rachelle Ramos, manager.



The Indiana Daily Student

The Kills have no fills, no frills

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The Kills might be like The White Stripes, but a big difference is that The White Stripes are famous and The Kills are still obscure. The Kills have an outlaw personality, which might make them less viable commercially. In fact, their song "Jewel Thief" is what Bonnie and Clyde might sound like if they could rock.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cycling and techno mingle in 'France'

The Kraftwerk single and its latest album's title track, "Tour de France 03," is a Tour de Fun. The song follows in the tradition of Kraftwerk's minimal beat style, however it has been updated to fit with the times. Kraftwerk seems to have been influenced by current trends in electronic music, even though it helped pioneer the genre in the early '70s.