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Saturday, May 9
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

The fengshui way

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Love it or hate it, we are knee deep in moving season in our lively college town. There are the lucky few who have retained their residences over the summer, but for most it's cardboard box heaven as the process of unpacking begins. But with a new living space on your hands, a question presents itself : "Where's all my stuff going to go?" Just getting rid of the boxes is the setup strategy for some, but recognizing home as a sanctuary prompts others to carefully consider an ideal room layout. Such an intuitive sense of comfort is just what fuels the ancient Chinese practice of Feng Shui.




The Indiana Daily Student

Diversity: Get involved

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Welcome to IU, freshmen and other new students, and welcome back, faculty and returning students. I have the responsibility and privilege of working in the Office of Diversity Education on issues of diversity for IU-Bloomington. This is a responsibility I share with many colleagues in the Commission on Multicultural Understanding, in our wonderful culture centers, in the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Student Support Services office, in Residential Programs and Services, and in many other offices across campus.

The Indiana Daily Student

Holy elections!

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Remember Katherine Harris? In case you didn't vote in the 2000 elections, let me remind you: She was the Florida secretary of state who proudly declared George W. Bush the winner of Florida's 25 electoral votes in November 2000. Now she's a U.S. representative from Florida, and she's making waves again.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pluto's deserved demotion

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Pluto was demoted to the status of dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union's assembly in Prague last week. While Pluto meets two of the three qualifications of a planet (it orbits the sun and is large enough to have a round shape) it fails to clear the other objects from its orbit. The vote has been met with controversy, in no small portion due to the fact that only the 424 astronomers that remained in Prague for the concluding day of the conference voted on the demotion. Mike Brown, the discoverer of newly categorized dwarf planet UB313 (quite a name), said that he "may go down in history as the guy who killed Pluto" (BBC, Aug. 25).



The Indiana Daily Student

Iraqi security forces progressing

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The top U.S. general in Iraq said Wednesday he believes Iraqi forces can take over security with little coalition support within a year to 18 months.


The Indiana Daily Student

Prime Minister: Israel won't withdraw forces until cease-fire

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JERUSALEM -- Israel rejected demands Wednesday from visiting U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan that it immediately lift its sea and air blockade of Lebanon and withdraw its forces once 5,000 international troops are deployed. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert indicated Israel would only lift the blockade and withdraw its soldiers from Lebanon after the full implementation of a U.N.-brokered cease-fire.




The Indiana Daily Student

200 attend Evansville immigration hearing

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EVANSVILLE — Supporters of immigrant rights waved small American flags while others called for strict border control during a federal hearing on immigration. More than two dozen hearings by the House Judiciary Committee have been held around the country during the last two months, including the one in Evansville attended by 200 people Tuesday night.


The Indiana Daily Student

"House" : Making diseases enjoyable

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House may be the only show I have ever watched that actually makes me want to catch a rare deadly disease just so I can be abused by a morally ballast self loathing cripple. Sometimes I get so caught up in the fantasy, I forget that if I do come down with a bitchin' case of lupus and get sent to Princeton Plainsborough Hospital, Dr. House isn't going to be there to cure me of my disease and what ever lingering feelings of self worth I may have.


The Indiana Daily Student

N3 battles with the best

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Ninety-Nine Nights is not a complex game. About 90 percent of the gameplay is just pressing "X" repeatedly. Every now and then you might press "Y." About once a level you hit "B." Repeat that a few dozen times and you beat the game. But what N3 lacks in depth it makes up for in style. Every new press of the "X" button or combo with "Y" unleashes a giant slash of your melee weapon that sends literally hundreds of orcs and goblins flying that's just as exciting to see the 100th time as it was the first time.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lackluster performance

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For what it is, Madden 07 is a solid football game, but EA's sophomore outing on the 360 falls well-short of what it could be. In terms of pure play mechanics, 07 is as solid, challenging and addictive as any other Madden. Take more than about three seconds to throw after the snap and you're almost guaranteed to get laid out in the turf. And if you think about throwing before your receiver's open, it's going to be another interception for the defense.


The Indiana Daily Student

A Rebel's Magnificent Waltz

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If you're a band at the epoch of success how do you follow up what is often considered one of the best rock albums ever made? For The Clash, whose epic 1979 double LP, London Calling, is to this day one of the best selling and most renowned albums to ever spin the answer was simple. Go beyond grandiose.


The Indiana Daily Student

Danity's debut album: "Manufacturing" success

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Danity Kane are inherently formulaic. Diddy's handpicked, burgeoning five-member all girl group of MTV "Making the Band 3" stardom are one part Pussycat Dolls (spectacular looking women), one part Paris Hilton (get the hottest producers to make your tracks) and one part Ashlee Simpson (MTV reality show giving your debut CD all kinds of exposure before it drops.) These are all ingredients in the recipe for commercial music success these days, no doubt. Diddy's choice in sticking to this formula seems to be working.


The Indiana Daily Student

Paris is burning

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The only way to fairly critique Paris Hilton's debut album is to assume that there is no such person as Paris Hilton. Paris had about as much to do with the writing, recording, and production of her debut LP as Brian Jones had to do with the writing, recording, and production of the Stones' "Let it Bleed," which is not too damn much. She's there. You can hear (a reasonably vocoded facsimile of) her voice on each track, but her presence is about as heavily sensed as that faint fecal stench on a freshly cleaned toilet. No, Paris is not to blame for the relative disaster that is "Paris." Her songwriters, producers, and record label are.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not a Petty classic

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Tom Petty is one of those artists that I have become associated with solely due to the fact that my parents listened to him. Having said this, I'm not a Tom Petty fan per se. I respect him as a musician and acknowledge his great talent. Thus, this is a bit of a stretch for me to review something like this. But I'm not one to dismiss an album based on the fact that it's not something I regularly listen to. Well, on to the review.


The Indiana Daily Student

Idlewild helps hip-hop evolve

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Dead Prez once rapped in a studio somewhere, "All ya'll records sound the same. I'm sick of that fake thug, R&B-rap scenario, all day on the radio, same scenes in the video, monotonous material…" But ya'll didn't hear Dead Prez right. But, OutKast did. So much is clear with the new release of their album "Idlewild." Don't be thrown off by the flowery title and the Vaudeville themed CD -- OutKast is real hip-hop. OutKast has long been proven to be one of hip-hop's kings with albums such as "Stankonia" and "The Love Below/Speakerboxxx." But their latest album, and by far most unique album, truly epitomizes what hip-hop is about.