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Wednesday, May 6
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

University to restore ash deposits on Range Road

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Near an old shooting range on Range Road is school property where IU had deposited ash from its 10th Street steam plant until 1979 and stored emergency coal until 1998. The site has not yet contaminated surface or ground water and a plan to clean up the site hopes to ensure this does not happen in the future. August Mack Environmental, a consulting firm, began on-site work to restore the area this week. Kirk White, IU director of Community Relations, said work will last until late August -- to avoid disturbing move-in traffic -- and then will pick up again after the first week of the semester.


The Indiana Daily Student

Friendship bridges borders

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After a two-year absence, the International Friendship Association is making plans to ensure its presence will be felt on campus for the upcoming school year. IFA is a student association that brings international and American students together to foster stronger relationships and to help new students with questions so they are prepared when they arrive in Bloomington. IFA treasurer Ye Win Latt said this does not mean the group is only for international students, but includes domestic students as well.


The Indiana Daily Student

Scientists concerned over Bush stem cell veto

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With about 30 scientists working on stem cell research at IU-Purdue University at Indianapolis, University faculty expressed concern over President Bush's recent veto blocking a bill Congress passed to extend research funding on embryonic stem cells. Eric Meslin, director of IU Center for Bioethics, said the veto is troubling because it will take away material from scientists on the brink of discoveries that could save millions of lives. However, he said, IU's research will not be directly affected too much, as the University focuses on research involving adult stem cells.


The Indiana Daily Student

Patrick stays in IRL

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CHICAGO -- New team. Same circuit. Danica Patrick is making a move, but she's staying with the Indy Racing League, for now. A switch to NASCAR will have to wait. Though she isn't ready to give up the speed of open-wheel racers for the popularity of stock cars, Patrick wants a change. One of the IRL's most popular drivers in years signed Tuesday with Andretti Green Racing, which has produced two straight series champions and last year's Indy 500 winner. "They're a very good team," Patrick said. "They have won races and championships the last couple of years. As a driver, that's something that sticks out and is something I want to be a part of."

The Indiana Daily Student

Introducing the new Hoosiers:

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In signing 6-foot-4, 230-pound tight end Brad Martin, the Hoosiers may have picked up its most versatile athlete in the 2006 class. Hailing from Marion Pleasant High School in Marion, Ohio, Martin led his team to an 8-3 finish his senior year and earned first team all-league honors as a tight end, defensive back and punter. He earned first team all-district as a tight end and all-state recognition in the Associated Press Division V poll in his senior campaign.


The Indiana Daily Student

Introducing the new Hoosiers:

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The Hoosiers added another weapon to their offensive repertoire with the signing of 6-foot-4, 235-pound tight end Jeff Sanders. Rated as the 25th-best prospect from Illinois by Rivals.com, Sanders, who chose IU over the University of Illinois and Vanderbilt University, led Sacred Heart-Griffin High School to a 14-0 record and its first state title in school history. Sanders is not the only player to join the Hoosiers from Sacred Heart-Griffin as red shirt junior running back Kenni Burns also played there. In the championship win over Rock Island Alleman, Sanders caught 10 passes for 134 yards. In his senior year alone, Sanders caught 59 passes for 671 yards and three touchdowns. During Sanders' high school career, Sacred Heart-Griffin posted a 38-2 record and three straight Central State Eight championships.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Have they lost their minds?'

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When I heard the rumor that Andy Roddick was pursuing Jimmy Connors as his coach, my first thought was, "Oh my." And when Roddick confirmed Monday that Connors is his coach, I didn't even know what to think, other than, "Have they both lost their minds??" To me, it seems that Roddick should choose someone calmer and someone who has been around the game more recently than the 53-year-old Connors, who retired back in 1992 and hasn't really done anything professional tennis-related since, aside from playing senior tennis and trying to create an all-star exhibition doubles match in 2004. Still, I guess the key word in the previous sentence is calmer. Call me crazy, but I can't picture Connors patiently analyzing Roddick's strengths and weaknesses and intently working with him to hone his streaky backhand and net game. And I certainly can't see Connors helping Roddick work out his mental issues.


The Indiana Daily Student

Abrupt ending enhances 'Thorns' intrigue

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Rebecca Horsfall's dazzling dive into the mysterious lives of the world's most elite ballet dancers is impossible to put down. In fact, I couldn't for the few days that it took me to read the nearly 800-page novel, "Dancing on Thorns." Each day, I read several new chapters in the lives of the Islington Ballet dancers, following their triumphs, trials and scandalous love affairs with each other. I was drawn into their world and I was very disappointed to be thrust out at the abrupt ending.


The Indiana Daily Student

Festival will celebrate eastern culture

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The Bloomington-based Silk Road Ensemble will present its 14th annual Silk Road Bayram, a word meaning "festival" or "celebration" in several Turkic languages, from 2:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. July 30 at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater on Kirkwood Avenue. The event will begin with an exhibit of arts and handicrafts at 2:30 p.m., followed by a concert with the theme of "Musical Stops on the Silk Road." The performances will include guest artists from several regions and a fashion show. The event is open to the public and admission is free.


The Indiana Daily Student

Japanese love story on stage with Opera Theater's 'Mikado'

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Summer fun is often associated with baking in the sun and eating barbecue by the ton, but community members are invited to dress their best for a night of Gilbert and Sullivan opera. IU Opera Theater is showcasing Arthur Gilbert and W.S. Sullivan's Japanese-themed "The Mikado," acclaimed as one of the most popular musical masterpieces ever written, at 8 p.m. July 28-29 and Aug. 4-5 at the IU Musical Arts Center. "The Mikado," which opened internationally March 14, 1885 at the Savoy Theatre in London and nationally August 19, 1885 at the New York Fifth Avenue Theatre, tells the "timeless" tale of two young lovers who strive for romance despite a windfall of family and cultural obstacles.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloody playground

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Two-hundred thousand years of humanity is littered with folklore of neighbor-to-neighbor conquest for every reason from "oh, pillaging feels good," to "my God is supreme," to the psychopathology of manifest destiny. But those claims to national shame no longer have an audience in the global community, considering that human beings need one another to exist. "We the (world's) people" are responsible for setting the international tone in regards to liberty, justice and freedom for all. Moreover, humanity's obligation to her children and grandchildren is to prove that face-to-face dialogue within communities and the global political sphere -- in the name of "human being" goodwill -- can and will conquer all social oppression, government tyranny and terror -- at home or abroad. But have we?


The Indiana Daily Student

Touring Utica

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Utica, N.Y., is a nasty, run-down old city that has almost nothing to offer. Once a place of proud and productive industry, Utica fell apart years ago when the mines stopped producing and the government of the town failed to keep other businesses afloat. The town now sits, a bloated ghost town, abandoned buildings lining streets created for traffic that isn't there. I decided to visit Utica because a buddy of mine was having his 21st birthday, and I wanted to celebrate -- not to mention get out of Washington, D.C. for a while. I ended up taking a series of Greyhound buses and spending 12 hours sitting next to increasingly disturbing people.


The Indiana Daily Student

Miss hungry

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Last Sunday, a beautiful 18-year-old woman from Puerto Rico, Zuleyka Rivera Mendoza, won the title and a $250,000 crown of Miss Universe. About 40 minutes later, at a news conference, she passed out. The Associated Press and Reuters News Online reported she'd been standing under hot stage lights for hours "in a stifling auditorium" while wearing a dress composed of metal chains, causing her fall. A valid explanation -- but I can't help but think there's more to it. Upon studying beauty pageants, their complexities and cultural implications in class (going well beyond the 'they are degrading for women' argument) and screening documentaries about contestants' experiences in the pageants, I can't help but think that Mendoza passed out partly because she hadn't consumed a substantial meal in days -- or even weeks.


The Indiana Daily Student

Summer internship equity

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In today's competitive job environment, securing a summer internship might be the deciding factor in landing a great job after college. Not only does the internship provide valuable experience in a field, but it also ensures networking opportunities -- students often gain indispensable contacts who will help them with references and connections later on.


The Indiana Daily Student

Get these snakes off my plane!!

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Buckle your seat belts ladies and gentlemen. There are snakes on this plane. Yet this is no ordinary snake-filled plane -- this is an airplane flying from Hawaii to Los Angeles with a ton of poisonous snakes, there to kill a mob witness and everyone on board. Unless federal agent Samuel L. Jackson, the owner of "motherfucking" movie lines, has his way. This upcoming movie, "Snakes on a Plane," hits theaters across the country August 18, with the first official teaser trailer premiering before X-Men 3: The Last Stand in May. Like many summer blockbusters, the anticipation leading up to its release is high, yet this film has a particularly unique following. It's rare that a movie like SoaP received such extensive parody before its release, and even before its official publicity started. Cult films like "Evil Dead," "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and "Reefer Madness" didn't have massive amounts of followers until after their release, often years later. The "Star Wars" movies, particularly the original trilogy, and "Star Trek," in all its incarnations, have a dedicated fan culture that developed once audiences filled the theaters on and after opening day.


The Indiana Daily Student

Smith strikes back

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When Kevin Smith misfires, he misfires big. When he hits his target, be prepared to laugh your silly ass off. With many of his fans still left with the sour taste of "Jersey Girl" and about half of "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" in their mouths, Smith returns to his roots with a sequel to the film that made him famous. Thankfully, "Clerks II" is an exercise in Smith firing on all cylinders in terms of both his writing and his direction of physical comedy. It's also his best movie since the original "Clerks."


The Indiana Daily Student

'Lady' is a bore

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M. Night Shyamalan is one pretentious son of a bitch, and his latest film, "Lady in the Water," sucks. There, I said it. That was hard for me. I am, admittedly, an M Night Shyamalaniac. I thought "The Sixth Sense" was entertaining. I enjoyed "Unbreakable" and "Signs." I even thought "The Village" was pretty boss. But sometimes things go too far. You trust someone to make a decent film, you welcome the guy into your home and readily defend his more questionable titles to people you assume are small-minded assholes. And the next thing you know there's money missing from the dresser and your daughter's knocked up; your trust has been abused.


The Indiana Daily Student

Every guy's worst nightmare

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If you thought Superman had father figure issues, Kal-El's got nothing on G-girl, the heroine of "My Super Ex-Girlfriend." A lack of fatherly affection at a young age is the only possible explanation for the insane way she lashes out at gentlemen callers. Luke Wilson plays Matt Saunders, an unsuccessful dater who takes a chance on asking out a stranger, Jenny Johnson, on a subway. Unbeknownst to Matt, Jenny is actually superhero, G-Girl (Uma Thurman). The two start to date and Matt gets to experience what it's like to be with someone who is, well, super. During the first hour the film's tone is kept quick and breezy. It actually manages to sneak in some good laughs about what it'd be like to date a super. And because it never really takes itself too seriously, it manages to be kind of fun. But it's all down hill once Matt dumps Jenny, and as G-Girl, she begins to make his life hell.


The Indiana Daily Student

More filth than fun

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Who is the artist known as Peaches? She's got a mouth like a Red Fox record. She's honed minimal beats in the vein of Kraftwerk. She's a girl power rocker influenced by Joan Jett (we'll come back to her later). She's dirtier than Lil' Kim and Missy Elliot. The PMRC would have a heart attack if they heard this. Is it punk or disco, electronica or rap? Well, it's all of the above. Peaches brings the trashiness with her new album, Impeach My Bush. Sexual innuendo is included. It's always good to start a record off with the f-word. "Fuck or Kill" is a short punk anthem against our president with a sexual twist (or is it the other way around?). Things move right into a dance floor shaker. Straight up dirty synth and hand claps, "Tent In Your Pants" is basically raunchy electroclash trash.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alt-Country supergroup returns

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A conglomeration of members of the Jayhawks, Soul Asylum and Big Star, among others, the "supergroup" Golden Smog is now probably most notable for its most famous member, Jeff Tweedy of Wilco. Another Fine Day, the group's first offering since 1998, is a mixed bag of an album that disappointingly yields mixed results. Tweedy, who is no stranger to side projects (Loose Fur, The Minus Five) contributes on fewer than half of the album's 15 tracks, and only has writing credits on two. Day reduces the rocking twang that most of the members' previous groups (and also the previous Smog albums) were known for, in favor of a slicker pop sound, which is much more of a hindrance than a breakthrough. Reportedly this whole project was started when director Guy Ritchie approached Smog and Jayhawk member Marc Perlman about writing a song for a Corvette commercial he was directing. The resulting song, "Corvette," which sounds like a lost Go-Go's track, is so cheap and cheesy that you can't even imagine these guys playing it without cringing. And in this slight direction goes about half of the album; modest and breezy Chilton-esque pop that sounds uninspired far too often. There are a few standouts, though. The driving piano of "You Make it Easy" opens the album with some bite, and "Cure For This," is an acoustic beauty, with Jayhawk Gary Louris trading bittersweet harmonies with guest vocalist Muni Camon. The Todd Rundgren-esque "Think About Yourself" closes the album with a rumination on egotism amid swirling organs and corkscrew guitar.