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Thursday, May 7
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Group collects furniture, appliances for the poor

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It’s the end of the year, and students all over campus are finding ways to get rid of unwanted furniture. Rather than throwing it away, some students are donating it to a good cause. This Saturday, St. Vincent de Paula faith-based charity, is opening a furniture distribution center, where students can donate furniture they no longer want to less-fortunate people.



The Indiana Daily Student

Event to highlight Africa’s cultural achievements

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The IU African Students Association’s goal is to “uplift the African consciousness” about Africa’s cultures, said President Axelle Atchade, which is why the group is hosting an African Culture Night this weekend that focuses on Africa’s cultural achievements.


The Indiana Daily Student

Duke DA apologizes to lacrosse players after pursuing case for year

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DURHAM, N.C. – The local prosecutor who charged three Duke lacrosse players with raping a stripper apologized to the athletes Thursday and said the North Carolina attorney general’s decision to drop the case was right. “To the extent that I made judgments that ultimately proved to be incorrect, I apologize to the three students that were wrongly accused,” Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong said.


Jay Seawell

Hoosiers face pair of rivals this weekend

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The toughest weekend of the season has passed, but the IU women’s tennis team can’t fall asleep on this weekend’s opponents. The No. 33 Hoosiers lost to No. 2 Notre Dame and now-No. 9 Northwestern last weekend in what was the team’s most difficult pair of matches this season. IU’s schedule eases up this weekend, but only by comparison.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the World

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A Norwegian oil rig support vessel carrying 14 people capsized off northern Scotland on Thursday, and four crew members were missing, the coast guard said. Ten crew members were rescued after the Bourbon Dolphin capsized off the Shetland Islands, said Mark Clark, a coast guard spokesman.


The Indiana Daily Student

Changing our priorities

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America is a country of contradictions. We might be a nation of immigrants, but we actively condemn those who cross borders for a better life. We might be the freest nation in the world, but we are also home to its largest prison population. As a society that has greatly neglected the needs of the poor, we are quick to express moral outrage towards same-sex marriage, drug users and murderers. And perhaps no group receives such denunciation like sex offenders.


The Indiana Daily Student

Poet Amir Sulaiman slams on campus

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After about a two-week postponement due to scheduling conflicts, poetry slam fans can rejoice. The Muslim Student Union, Black Scholars Collective and the Union Board presents Amir Sulaiman Friday in the Indiana Memorial Union Gallery.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team travels to Missouri for meet

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Despite unfavorable weather for meets, the men’s and women’s track and field teams will continue to clear hurdles this season. After canceling last weekend’s Indiana Relays, the teams will be taking their top athletes to Columbia, Mo., this weekend to compete in the Tom Botts Invitational held by the University of Missouri.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU seeks more students in stands

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During Saturday’s Cream and Crimson football game, action will not be limited to the turf of Memorial Stadium. The IU Athletics Department plans to set up ticket booths in hopes of raising season ticket sales.


The Indiana Daily Student

Western waters

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I won’t even pretend to be particularly well versed in all angles of current events, aside from various trivial political happenings. News tends to bombard us quickly and in vast, seemingly endless quantities. While I realize that, as the future leaders of the free world, busy college students are most likely somewhat preoccupied and tend to draw the line at glancing over the big important headlines, issues such as “Who is the father of Anna Nicole Smith’s baby?” or “Snoop Dogg facing up to four years of time in a state prison.” Every once in a while though, some little thing on the front page of the New York Times deserves our attention.


Ronni Moore

Hoosiers face No. 9 Illinois, rival Purdue in final home set

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The fun and games are over for the No. 66 IU men’s tennis team. Coming off an exciting, come-from-behind win at then-No. 57 Northwestern, the Hoosiers (13-8, 3-3) face a pair of tough matches this weekend at home against No. 9 Illinois (13-6, 5-1) and rival Purdue (8-9, 1-5).


The Indiana Daily Student

Students compete in cultural pageant

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Poise and talent are not the only things contestants must master to win the title of Mr. or Miss Asia. Knowledge of the Asian culture is also expected. At 6 p.m. Sunday, 11 men and 11 women, representing 11 different Asian organizations across campus, will be cat-walking, answering questions and showing their talents on stage at the IU Auditorium.



The Indiana Daily Student

New York official to speak on gay rights

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Controversial New Paltz, N.Y., Mayor Jason West will be on campus Monday to give a lecture based on his book “Dare to Hope,” in conjunction with the National Day of Silence. The lecture will start at 7 p.m., and will be followed by a question-and-answer session.


The Indiana Daily Student

JWAC hosts young artist competition

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Young artists will be rewarded for their contributions and efforts this Sunday at the John Waldron Arts Center. The Bloomington chapter of the National Society of Arts and Letters will host its 41st competition this Sunday with a showcase of 12 of the most talented young artists around Indiana.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bell picks up Avery Fisher award prize

NEW YORK – When Joshua Bell was a teenager in Indiana, he got a call from Avery Fisher himself telling him he had won an Avery Fisher Career Grant, which helps selected young American classical musicians embark on a career.


The Indiana Daily Student

Baghdad bomber strikes parliament

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BAGHDAD – A suicide bomber blew himself up in the Iraqi parliament cafeteria Thursday, killing at least eight people – including three lawmakers – and wounding dozens in a stunning assault in the heart of the heavily fortified, U.S.-protected Green Zone.


The Indiana Daily Student

Work of influential Senegalese artist on display at IUAM gallery

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The work of Kalidou Sy, a Senegalese painter and former Bloomington resident, is on display until May 20 in the IU Art Museum’s first-floor Special Exhibitions Gallery. Sy’s work was the subject of a lecture by Joanna Grabski, assistant professor at Ohio’s Denison University, Wednesday night in Woodburn Hall. Sy moved to Bloomington in 1997 to marry Eileen Julien, the chairperson of IU’s Department of Comparative Literature. He remained in town, except for a two-year stint in Maryland and annual trips to Senegal, until his death in 2005.