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Sunday, May 17
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

IUPUI announces new initiatives to help minorities

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IU-Purdue University Indianapolis administrators announced Wednesday they will establish a multicultural center and other diversity initiatives in an effort to meet the demands of black student leaders on campus. Two weeks ago, senior Dominic Dorsey, president of IUPUI's Black Student Union, addressed University officials in an eight-page letter with a list of demands, including $78,000 of funding for black student groups, a black culture center and a degree offering in African-American studies.


The Indiana Daily Student

Benefit concert held for Wal-Mart burn victim

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Robert Eury loved playing the guitar. An avid fan of the band Lynyrd Skynyrd, he would pluck out favorite tunes on his guitar, until eventually he became skilled enough to compose his own music and lyrics.


The Indiana Daily Student

Task force to investigate smoking ban

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Student smokers might soon have to leave campus to get their nicotine fix. In response to a proposal submitted by the Students' Smokefree Coalition, IU President Adam Herbert has assigned a task force to look into the possibility of making IU-Bloomington smoke-free, according to a letter sent to the coalition.


The Indiana Daily Student

Arson suspect in deadly California wildfire denies setting blaze, gives reason for being caught at site

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RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- The suspect in a massive arson wildfire that killed five firefighters told prosecutors he drove to a spot near where it started on the night it was set to watch the flames, according to a police report obtained Wednesday by The Associated Press. Raymond Lee Oyler, 36, denied having anything to do with the crime when he spoke to investigators Oct. 27, the day after the fire began. He told investigators he had been gambling at the Morongo Indian Casino & Spa and then stopped at a Shell gas station before "traveling toward the Esperanza fire to watch it," according to the document that summarizes Oyler's interviews with police.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Hoosiers' hearts beat on

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Facing a penalty kick in the first half of IU's first-round NCAA Tournament game Wednesday night, IU sophomore goalkeeper Chay Cain was shivering in the box, but not because of the pressure.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers defeat Valpo 85-51, move to 3-0

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Coming off an upset win against then-No. 15 Kentucky, the IU women's basketball team extended its record to 3-0 with an 85-51 win against Valparaiso University Wednesday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Brand: NCAA's purpose is educational, deserves tax-exempt status

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INDIANAPOLIS -- NCAA President Myles Brand aggressively defended the organization's tax-exempt status in a 25-page letter to Congress, arguing the primary goal of the NCAA is education. Brand pointed to recent academic reforms that increased eligibility standards and studies showing the average SAT scores of athletes are higher than those of the general student body as examples that the NCAA is committed first to educating athletes.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU advances in NCAA Tournament

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On a rain-soaked, mud-covered playing field, the IU men's soccer team slugged its way to a fourth-consecutive shutout Wednesday night and advanced to the third round of the NCAA Tournament.


The Indiana Daily Student

Courbet exhibit in Maryland spotlights painter's innovations

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BALTIMORE -- When Gustave Courbet painted "The Stream of the Puits Noir," or black well, he emphasized the noir. The picture is drenched in black to the point of near-abstraction. It offers a primordial view of nature, yet it's more seductive than foreboding. "Courbet and the Modern Landscape," an exhibition on display at the Walters Art Museum, makes the case for Courbet (1819-1877) as a radical. Best known for his realist, figural pictures such as "Burial at Ornans," Courbet churned out countless landscapes in his late career, but many of them were painted by assistants with only a brief touchup by the master.


The Indiana Daily Student

Famed conductor will join Jacobs faculty in fall 2007

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The IU Jacobs School of Music recently confirmed the appointment of renowned conductor Leonard Slatkin to the School of Music faculty, continuing its long tradition of attracting the music world's greatest talent to teach its students. Though the announcement was made last month, the excitement has yet to die down. "We're overjoyed," conducting professor David Effron said. "He's done so much for American repertoire, and he's a terrific teacher."


The Indiana Daily Student

In it for kicks

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Iuri Santos pulled back his long dreadlocks and wordlessly chose a partner from the row of performers playing a lively beat on several instruments. He silently delegated the switching of instruments from the chosen opponent to another member still playing music, then, along with his partner, knelt in front of the others and performed a set of synchronized prayer-like movements. Santos and his partner faced each other and touched palms before breaking away and beginning their competition.


Nerds, crosswords and an IU grad

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If you're looking for an exciting way to spend a weekend night, I suggest watching a documentary about crossword puzzles. Seriously. Directed by Patrick Creadon, "Wordplay" is a behind-the-scenes look at the masterminds of The New York Times' crossword puzzle and the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament. Creadon does the best thing he can to actually make this movie interesting: He tells the stories of the people involved. Creadon focuses on the editor of the Times crossword Will Shortz, who is originally from Crawfordsville, Ind. and graduated from IU with a degree in enigmatology (the study of puzzles).


'Queen' of the castle

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When Princess Diana was fatally killed in a car accident in 1997, I was an eighth grader. It was a time when I was young and had more important things on my mind -- I really didn't know much about her at all. After seeing "The Queen," I felt as if I was given a most rewarding history lesson.


Tower of Iñárritu

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As the story goes in the Bible, long ago all people spoke the same language and lived in a giant tower that pushed toward the Heavens. God, who feared what his own creations might accomplish -- and seeking to punish mankind for its blind ambition -- struck down the structure and made everyone speak different languages so they would be unable to communicate with one another.


It ain't much, but we call it 'Thanksgiving'

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Cooking Thanksgiving dinner is a daunting prospect. Most of my friends' mothers didn't even attempt to on Thanksgiving. Their families packed their things, drove over the hills and through the woods to grandmother's house and let her do all the work. This has left me to wonder if when this generation of grandmothers dies, Thanksgiving dinner as we know it will fade away, only to be replaced by TV dinners and Hamburger Helper. My mother, who began her day in the kitchen at 9 a.m. and didn't end it until the last dish was on the table at 5 p.m., quite literally waged war against the meal. Between balancing squash, corn, carrots, green beans, sweet potatoes, cranberry sherbet, pumpkin pie, two kinds of stuffing, gravy and of course the damned turkey, she looked physically drained by the time the family sat down to dinner. At the annual Thanksgiving get-together of Indiana Daily Student staffers, the job of cooking the turkey always falls, to much complaining and protest, on the most mature and oldest staffers, in the hopes that along with the ability to hold their tongues and manage their time well, these people have also somehow picked up the ability to effectively cook a 25-pound monstrosity of a turkey in a dinky college apartment oven.


Protest music for a new era

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In the years since the invasion of Iraq, critics have occasionally complained about the dearth of protest music today. But it's out there -- it just doesn't sell well or get much mainstream airplay (you can decide which leads to which). And after digging around a little, you'll find modern music that could easily hold its own against what your boomer parents listened to -- including the two albums by The Evens.


The Indiana Daily Student

An unfitting legacy for the late ODB

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This posthumous release tactic seems oddly familiar...does the name 2-Pac ring a bell? Ol' Dirty Bastard, the spastic but loveable member of the world-famous Wu-Tang Clan, has a new record out, two years after his untimely death in the Wu-Tang studio. This is the third proper release from Dirty, and unfortunately, by far his weakest effort.


Make the 'Pain' stop

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I hope Keith Urban cracks open a fortune cookie soon and reads the following message: "Give up on your music, and just be happy with your lovely wife." Nicole Kidman could undoubtedly support her husband if he decided to call it quits. My wish won't come true, though, which is a travesty; Love, Pain & the Whole Crazy Thing digs Urban deeper into the hole that is his career.