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Tuesday, May 5
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

The Bravery drop bold debut

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I remember walking into the local Best Buy, doing my rounds and looking for stuff to buy over spring break. When I walked up to the register, an old friend working there came over and asked if I had ever heard of a band called the Bravery, to which I kindly replied "No." He then rushed over to a counter and handed me what would be the Unconditional EP that came free with my purchase. I popped in the CD as soon as I returned home and by the middle of the first track I knew I would find myself purchasing the debut full-length the day it hit shelves.


The Indiana Daily Student

If you can't trust a boy scout…

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For a columnist, finding irony in governmental policies, corporate actions or international relations can be wonderful, or at best a self-writing column. Unfortunately, the same situation is often tragic from a citizen's point-of-view.


The Indiana Daily Student

Everybody sells out sometimes

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So last week I got a tattoo, which, in itself, isn't too unusual. Lots of people get tattoos in college. The difference, though, is that this tattoo will probably end up in a video game at some point in the future. That's because I joined a small but ever-growing legion of people willing to sell off small portions of their body in the name of advertising.


The Indiana Daily Student

Homeland scare-curity

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Dear Department of Homeland Security, My boyfriend is afraid of commitment. What should I do? -- Suzie Dear Suzie, Remind your boyfriend that safety comes in numbers. In case of a chemical terrorist threat, you'll want to seal off a room with tape and plastic. This will go much faster with two people.

The Indiana Daily Student

Theses for all, for cheap

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We all know school's expensive. In addition to tuition and living expenses, there's the cost of paper and other supplies. For graduate students finishing their dissertations, those costs are not negligible, and the University is doing something about it. That might seem like a boring topic, but to IU's graduate students, hundreds of dollars is not a boring issue.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iraq to name president Wednesday

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Ousted dictator Saddam Hussein will watch from his Baghdad jail cell as Iraq's newly elected parliament chooses a new president Wednesday, the next step in building Iraq's first democratically elected government in 50 years, Iraqi officials said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Plans revealed for pope's burial in grotto

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VATICAN CITY -- Before he died Saturday at age 84, Pope John Paul II made his wish known "to be buried in the ground" and not placed in an above-ground tomb, Archbishop Piero Marini said Tuesday. John Paul will be buried in the tomb left vacant after the remains of Pope John XXIII were exhumed from the cramped grotto under St. Peter's Basilica in 2001 and moved to the main floor after his beatification.


The Indiana Daily Student

Daylight-saving provisions ruled illegal

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Provisions of a bill that would allow some counties to opt out of statewide observance of daylight-saving time are illegal, the federal government said Tuesday. Gov. Mitch Daniels sought a legal opinion Tuesday from the U.S. Department of Transportation, which regulates time zones.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Art of Living Club helps students relax

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As finals approach, stress levels on campus rise. Beginning Thursday, the IU Art of Living Club will offer a six-session class to help educate people about how to breathe correctly and control themselves in stressful situations. Senior Daniel Moss said the club was interested in presenting the course because it is relevant to how students perform in their everyday lives.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spring changes attitudes, causes distractions

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It happens every year. When the sun shines, sitting in a classroom sounds like an impossible task. Students arrive late, toting snacks and drinks and wearing smaller, shrunken versions of their winter wardrobe. It seems the day spring arrives, the rules of classroom behavior go out the window. "It just becomes a lot more loose," said sophomore Clay Cook.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former IU-B chancellor to discuss censorship, privacy

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A former IU-Bloomington chancellor will return to campus Thursday to speak with the Bloomington chapter of the American Association of University Professors on academic freedom and homeland security. Robert O'Neil, who is now a law professor at the University of Virginia, plans to discuss how American universities have had to adapt after the Sept. 11 attacks.


The Indiana Daily Student

UNC survives Illinois charge

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ST. LOUIS - Of course, there was no way it was going to be easy. North Carolina did it, though, and now it's time to stop asking Roy Williams that doggone question.




The Indiana Daily Student

Pope carried to St. Peter's

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VATICAN CITY -- Pope John Paul II's body was carried solemnly on a crimson platform to St. Peter's Basilica, past a sea of more than 100,000 pilgrims who waited for hours Monday under a blistering sun for a glimpse of the late pontiff before his funeral and entombment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dissertation submission goes digital

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Graduate students finishing their dissertations only to be slapped with mounting printing fees have an alternative this year. Electronically submitted files, now in use at IU for the second consecutive semester, are changing the way Ph.D. and master's students turn in their theses.



The Indiana Daily Student

Professor takes steps toward viral gold rush

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The laboratory is filled with equipment for cutting-edge imaging, including lasers and supercomputers programmed to detect the faintest glimmers of light. Bogdan Dragnea sits and gazes, smiling at a sight that, in his thick Romanian accent, he likens to "bright beacons, like stars in the night sky."


The Indiana Daily Student

Speech calls for 3-sided investigations

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IU consistently ranks as one of the leading research institutions in the nation. Based on this record, it is not surprising that top researchers from all fields come to Bloomington to conduct research in their respective fields. The school highlights this research each year by coordinating a lecture to allow distinguished professors to share their work with the University community.


The Indiana Daily Student

Particles

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WASHINGTON -- Faced with a nation of rapidly expanding waistbands, the government is seeking advice on how to change food labels to help people better understand what they're getting. The Food and Drug Administration said it has received complaints about products that appear to be packaged as single servings, but contain nutrition labels that indicate they really include two or more servings.