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Monday, July 13
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Silenced sounds

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The backstage of Auer Hall looks like a mechanic's shop. Rows of soldered metal pipes, wooden freights full of tools and two-story-high scaffolding hide behind the façade of an instrument so large, it soars from the balcony to the rafters in height.


The Indiana Daily Student

Actor Nipsey Russel dies

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NEW YORK -- Nipsey Russell, who played the Tin Man alongside Diana Ross and Michael Jackson in "The Wiz" as part of a decades-long career in stage, television and film, has died. He was 80. The actor, who had been suffering from cancer, died Sunday afternoon at Lenox Hill Hospital, said his longtime manager Joseph Rapp.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington reacts to gay ban by Vatican

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A Vatican official last week reaffirmed the belief of the Catholic church that homosexuals cannot be appointed priests, a statement which has drawn outcry across the nation and in Bloomington. The American prelate overseeing the evaluations, Archbishop Edwin O'Brien, said earlier this month that most gay candidates for the priesthood struggle to remain celibate and the church must "stay on the safe side" by restricting their enrollment. He stressed that the church was not "hounding" gays out of the priesthood, but wants to enroll seminarians who can maintain their vows of celibacy.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bush taps counsel for 2nd pick

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President Bush nominated White House counsel Harriet Miers to the U.S. Supreme Court to replace Justice Sandra Day O'Connor Monday morning. Bush praised Miers in his speech at the nomination ceremony. "She has devoted her life to the rule of law and the cause of justice. She will be an outstanding addition to the Supreme Court of the United States," he said.

The Indiana Daily Student

Landslides, heavy rains kill 31 in El Salvador

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SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- Heavy rains triggered landslides that killed at least 31 people in El Salvador on Monday, while rising rivers forced the evacuation of dozens of people there and in neighboring Guatemala. Both countries put their Pacific coasts on alert as a tropical weather front swept over Central America, unleashing downpours and causing principal rivers to overflow.


The Indiana Daily Student

Legendary coach Ditka speaks in Bloomington

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With a homecoming game around the corner, IU head coach Terry Hoeppner may have been able to take some advice from coaching master Mike Ditka, who was in Bloomington last Thursday to speak on behalf of the National Football Foundation's Central Indiana Chapter.


The Indiana Daily Student

Particles

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Scientists photograph giant squid for first time TOKYO -- When a nearly 20-foot long tentacle was hauled aboard his research ship, Tsunemi Kubodera, a researcher with Japan's National Science Museum, knew he had something big. Then it began sucking on his hands. But what came next excited him most -- hundreds of photos of a purplish-red sea monster doing battle 3,000 feet deep. It was a rare giant squid, a creature that until then had eluded observation in the wild.



The Indiana Daily Student

Simple activities reduce blood pressure

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IU researchers have determined that incorporating physical activities, such as walking a dog or cleaning the house, into a daily routine can effectively lower blood pressure.


The Indiana Daily Student

Instrument boasts 3,500 pipes

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The word "organ" derives from the Latin word "organum," the earliest instrument ancestor of the pipe organ. The organum was used in ancient Roman circus games. The major parts of a pipe organ are the pipes, console and blower. The blower supplies the air to the instrument. The Auer Hall organ has four keyboards: three controlled by the hands and one controlled by the feet.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU finishes errorless preseason

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The IU women's softball team continued its streak of errorless games Sunday, splitting its twin bill with a win over Butler University and a loss to the University of Louisville.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chicago, there's a new team in town

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It's finally that time of year. It's getting a bit colder, the leaves are changing and the seemingly 18-month major league baseball season is finally culminating. That means the playoffs, probably the most exciting sporting event held every October, are here. And despite the naysayers who always whine about baseball being boring, games being too long and all that other bologna, I'm as excited as ever. Just like the girls that sit behind me in Assembly Hall and ask how many quarters are left, these haters can't diminish the thrill.


The Indiana Daily Student

How to leverage effectively -- save your time and money

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Editor's note: This is the third column in a six column series giving advice to beginning entrepreneurs. Check out www.davidweisburd.com for more information about Weisburd and his business. The ability to leverage effectively is an important part of becoming successful in business. Everyone seems to talk about leverage and leveraging, but what is it exactly?


The Indiana Daily Student

Around Business

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Design of $100 laptop for world's kids unveiled CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- The $100 laptop computers that Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers want to get into the hands of the world's children would be durable, flexible and self-reliant.


The Indiana Daily Student

Count Basie Orchestra still alive and well

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Friday featured one of the oldest and finest big bands in existence at the IU Auditorium: the Count Basie Orchestra. It might be incredible to imagine that this big band, first devised by Count Basie in 1936, is still going strong today. Many band members have come and gone through the years, but there are still members playing today who actually played with Count Basie, namely Clarence Banks on trombone, John Williams on baritone saxophone, Butch Miles on drums and James Leary on bass.


The Indiana Daily Student

Restorers work to conserve art battered by Katrina

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CHICAGO -- Helen Conklin whisks a cotton swab delicately across a 19th century painting of silvery fish set in deep earth tones. She's looking for, of all things, mud on the canvas -- and sure enough, there it is. She peers at another painting through a microscope, focusing on a cardinal's rich crimson robes that have faded to a sickly pink. That's the mark of floodwaters.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gallagher gives 'smashing' performance Sunday

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Loud laughter filled the IU Auditorium, coming from all directions. Comic and entertainer Gallagher, who has been making people laugh for 35 years, put Sunday's audience into hysterics. Gallagher's act included a little bit of everything, from simple jokes to twisted talks about everyday life to smashing pies. The infamous "Sledge-o-Matic" has been a staple at Gallagher shows for many years and hasn't disappeared yet.


The Indiana Daily Student

Plan to expand forest logging divides environmentalists

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The state's plan to boost by up to fivefold the amount of timber cut each year in Indiana's state forests has divided environmentalists, some of whom said it's all about money even as others argue the plan will safeguard forest diversity. David Haberman, the assistant coordinator of the Indiana Forest Alliance, opposes the plan announced Sept. 16 by Gov. Mitch Daniels, calling it "an outrageous document." "It's not based on solid science," Haberman said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Critics say governor's I-69 privatization risky

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Critics of Gov. Mitch Daniels' plan to privatize and put tolls on the Interstate 69 extension say the plan is risky and won't work. A group of I-69 critics -- spearheaded by the Hoosier Environmental Council, which has long opposed the highway -- said Monday that Daniels' new plan puts profits before citizens. "The questions about funding reinforce what we've been saying all along: that we don't have the money to do this," said Tim Maloney, who heads the environmental council. "And I think this talk of privatization and tolling just brings this into sharper focus."


The Indiana Daily Student

Grand jury indicts Tom DeLay again on new money laundering charge

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AUSTIN, Texas -- A Texas grand jury on Monday re-indicted Rep. Tom DeLay on charges of conspiring to launder money and money laundering after the former majority leader attacked last week's indictment on technical grounds. The latter charge carries a penalty of up to life in prison. Last week, DeLay was charged with conspiracy to violate campaign finance laws.