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Tuesday, May 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf



The Indiana Daily Student

COACH HEP: On the field, Off the field

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Ten days after IU students "Met Coach Hep," new football coach Terry Hoeppner made further appeals to the student body, speaking to representatives of IU greek houses Thursday at the Hoosier room in Memorial Stadium.


The Indiana Daily Student

Successful Mozart opera closes season

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The occult is not only a recent obsession. It has centuries of cultural history behind it, and is now written into one of the most popular operas in America: "The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflöte)."


The Indiana Daily Student

Israeli police arrest 31 Jewish demonstrators at holy site

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JERUSALEM -- Thousands of Israeli police mobilized at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site Sunday but confronted only a handful of Jewish extremists intent on scuttling a Gaza pullout by tying up security forces. In Gaza, militants fired dozens of mortar shells after Israeli forces killed three teenagers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Loan program aims to lure key teachers to urban schools

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Efforts to draw teachers to critical math, science and special education jobs in Indiana's poorest schools could get a boost from a new loan forgiveness program. But many teachers say they are unaware of the benefit, which President Bush signed into law in October.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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Statehouse bomb threat creates minor disturbance INDIANAPOLIS -- A Rushville man arrested for threatening to bomb the Statehouse never posed a serious threat to state government, an Indiana State Police spokesman said Sunday. Local police found two crude bombs in the trunk of a car belonging to Randal A. Robbins on Saturday, and state police explosives experts safely detonated them later, 1st Sgt. Dave Bursten said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senate Republicans reject proposal to use gambling funds for education

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Republicans who control the Senate rejected Democrat proposals Friday to put devices similar to slot machines at Indiana's two racetracks to help funnel more money toward public schools. Among other proposals to boost education funding, Democrats suggested splitting 5,000 pull-tab slot machines operated by the Hoosier Lottery between racetracks in Anderson and Shelby County.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indonesia rocked by earthquake

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JAKARTA, Indonesia -- An undersea earthquake that hit Sunday near the Indonesian island of Sumatra sent people fleeing from their homes in panic, but the temblor was not strong enough to generate a tsunami, seismologists and meteorologists said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pakistan official kidnapped in Baghdad

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The family of a Pakistani embassy employee kidnapped in Baghdad appealed Sunday for his captors to release him, and al-Qaida's ally in Iraq claimed to have kidnapped and killed a senior police official. The kidnappings came as Iraq's most feared terrorist organization issued an Internet statement rejecting any efforts by the new government to make peace.


The Indiana Daily Student

Eric Rudolph to plead guilty in Olympic Park bombing case

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- The lawyer at the center of the deal that will spare serial bomber Eric Rudolph's life has helped keep other big-name defendants off death row -- including Unabomber Ted Kaczynski. Judy Clarke has been described as a "one-woman Dream Team" by a colleague who helped her defend Susan Smith, the South Carolina mom who avoided a death sentence after being convicted of drowning her two little boys in 1995.


The Indiana Daily Student

Social Security needs open conversation

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Every so often a major economic or social issue is brought up by one of the political parties, and, more often than not, both sides have good arguments to support their points of view. Invariably, in their desire to win, the extremists in the opposing camps begin to create alarmist scenarios to scare the public into supporting one proposal over the other. We are currently witnessing this phenomenon in the debate over Social Security.


The Indiana Daily Student

Record crowds give final farewell to John Paul II

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VATICAN CITY -- Presidents, prime ministers and kings joined pilgrims and prelates in St. Peter's Square on Friday to bid an emotional farewell to Pope John Paul II at a funeral service that drew millions to Rome for the largest gathering of the powerful and the humble in modern times.


The Indiana Daily Student

I think Afri-can

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Hey, y'all, I'm a black Catholic! So, I'll confess: While everyone in Sister Celine's fourth grade class talked about church revivals and first-Sunday oyster crackers, I was singing "Ave Maria", Latin and all, in my nine-year-old head.


The Indiana Daily Student

I believe we're naked

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Nudity? At a strip club? Stop the insanity! A Boise strip club called Erotic City thought it had found a way around Idaho's anti-nudity law when it instated "Art Night," a weekly event when patrons were provided with pencils and sketch pads for drawing the dancers, a few months ago. Idaho law states that full nudity is only allowed in instances of "serious artistic merit."


The Indiana Daily Student

As American as apple pie?

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Imagine David Horowitz throwing pies into the audience during his speech. As a guest on our campus, he might figure that the best way to get his point across would be to chuck coconut cream at anyone who asked a question he didn't like.


The Indiana Daily Student

New Abraham Lincoln museum stirs debate

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SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -- In most museums, Abraham Lincoln is discussed in hushed voices and illustrated with sepia-toned photos and marble statues that give him a saintly air. The new Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum doesn't buy into that reverence. It brings Lincoln to life with booming cannons, holographic ghosts and latex statues so lifelike the arms have freckles. It shakes visitors up and shows them all sides of the former president.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Coquette' a venue for creative flair

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The Ralph Laurens and Donatella Versaces of tomorrow aren't in New York -- they're in Bloomington. Aspiring fashion designers showcased their work at the Coquette Fashion Show, which took place on Friday at Alumni Hall in the Memorial Union. Eight students participated in three categories -- runway, portfolio and accessories.


The Indiana Daily Student

Horowitz speech sparks protests

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Receiving standing ovations and loud "boos" simultaneously is nothing new to political activist David Horowitz, who spoke Thursday night at the IU Auditorium. Horowitz, whose speech was sponsored by the Union Board and the IU College Republicans, was heard by people of many different political backgrounds from the IU and Bloomington community.


The Indiana Daily Student

2 women challenge stereotypes in sorority

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Blue and yellow, the colors of Sigma Gamma Rho Incorporated, dominate the scheme of junior Hannah Jones' room. A collage of T-shirts, picture frames, blue and yellow shoes and even a Sigma Gamma Rho doormat reflects the importance of Jones' membership in her traditionally black sorority.