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Monday, June 15
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Basketball tourney to help kids

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The beating of hearts and the bouncing of basketballs will be heard throughout the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation's Wildermuth Gym Sunday as Sigma Alpha Mu fraternity will hold its first annual Bounce for Beats 3-on-3 basketball tournament to support the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS foundation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Habitat sponsoring race

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Carrying a full backpack to multiple classes a day and taking a test may be manual labor for some of the IU population, but IU Habitat for Humanity members have a different definition. As part of the Magnificent 7 Road Race Series in Indiana, the IU chapter of Habitat for Humanity will hold a 5K run/walk race at noon Saturday in Lower Cascades Park. Simona Stoica, co-coordinator of the 5K, said she hopes the event will raise about $2,000 so the group may continue to build houses in underprivileged areas.


The Indiana Daily Student

EU agrees on anti-terrorism official

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BRUSSELS, Belgium -- European leaders named a former Dutch minister Thursday to coordinate new counterterrorism efforts at their first summit since the deadly Spanish rail bombings exposed the continent's vulnerability to terror attacks.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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Women's History Month to end with a celebration Middle Way House will wrap up Women's History Month with a day-long celebration Saturday. Beginning at noon, women artists will be displaying and selling their artwork at the Ballroom on the third floor of Fountain Square Mall. The display will last until 6 p.m.

The Indiana Daily Student

Life, liberty and abortion

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In this age of political correctness where truths are obscured by words that mask their meaning, certain clarifying distinctions must be made. The most disturbing case in point is the abuse of the word "right" as it applies to civil liberties and privileges in today's society -- most notably to abortion.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mexicans are people, too

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The spring breaks I've had in the past have always been relatively uneventful. They usually consisted of staying in Bloomington and sleeping. This year, I made slightly more interesting plans and joined the hordes of college kids bound for Mexico.


The Indiana Daily Student

An American in Dublin

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For almost 13 years now, I haven't observed daylight saving time. Since I was nine years old, I have neither sprung forward nor fallen back. Because of this, my internal clock has settled, like the contents of so many bags of Fritos during shipment, into an unshakable stasis.


The Indiana Daily Student

Snapshots and sweatsocks

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Some rules are made to be broken. Other rules are made to prevent bad things from happening. The new cell phone ban in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation locker rooms is designed to protect the University from civil liability.



The Indiana Daily Student

Auburn Pres.: Davis on list

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Auburn Interim President Dr. Ed Richardson said IU men's basketball coach Mike Davis is on Auburn's list of possible candidates for the school's coaching vacancy. Richardson told the Opelika-Auburn News he alone would choose the next basketball coach for the SEC school, and Davis was on the list of candidates.


The Indiana Daily Student

$30 athletics fee to be reviewed by IU trustees

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The IU board of trustees will review a proposal from athletics director Terry Clapacs that would charge students on the Bloomington campus an annual $30 athletics fee to help alleviate a deficit in the athletic department. The athletics fee was proposed to the trustees at a statewide forum to discuss tuition and fees in Indianapolis Tuesday afternoon.


The Indiana Daily Student

Coach, team meet Bush

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After 41 years of leading IU to six national championships, retired men's soccer coach Jerry Yeagley lead his Hoosiers for the first time to Washington, D.C., for a championship reception with President Bush. The visit to Washington, D.C., included a tour of the Capitol, and an alumni reception at the National Press Club.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lessons for success

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When Mark Cuban looked over the podium at the IU Auditorium Wednesday, he never dreamed he would be standing where he was. He never dreamed he would be addressing IU students, including the many who idolize him, while dressed in extreme business casual -- a light blue sweater and old jeans.


The Indiana Daily Student

House protects campus recruiting

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A bill to protect a federal law denying funds to colleges refusing to allow military recruiters on campus, is expected to go to the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives sometime this week.


The Indiana Daily Student

RIAA president defends lawsuits

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The president of the Recording Industry Association of America, Cary Sherman, held an online press conference with college newspaper reporters Wednesday evening, declaring lawsuits filed Tuesday against 89 college students at 21 universities served to send a message that file-sharing is illegal and has serious consequences. Sherman said the RIAA decided to pursue college students for illegal file-sharing because they are "obviously" a big part of the problem.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU group surveys transgenders

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The IU community is working toward better acceptance for transgender students with a new survey aimed at accommodating their needs. The survey was conducted by the IU Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Alumni Association.


The Indiana Daily Student

ECP focuses on children

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When sophomore Amelia Reiling witnessed friends being bullied and harassed, she didn't just stand by and watch -- she decided to do something about it. That's when she learned about Educating Children for Parenting.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indianapolis' Eastgate Mall to close June 30

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Eastgate Consumer Mall, an Indianapolis retail fixture for nearly 50 years, will close June 30. Mall tenants received notice of the closing this week in a letter from an attorney representing owner Haywood Whichard, The Indianapolis Star reported Wednesday. "We've seen it coming for a long time, but we didn't think it would come this quick and in this manner," said John Duncan, who works at Kinda Kountry, a craft and gift shop at the mall. Eastgate was built in 1957 as an open-air shopping center on what was then the city's outskirts and once boasted retailers such as Sears and JC Penney. But it fell victim to encroaching competition from newer malls and big-box retailers as the area developed. Eastgate was remodeled and reinvented as a discount mall more than 20 years ago, but business continued to slide throughout the 1990s. Whichard, a North Carolina investor who also owns Fort Wayne's mostly vacant Southtown Mall, bought Eastgate from Simon Property Group in 2002.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The State

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MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. -- A body found by a LaPorte County judge has been identified as an Illinois man, Indiana State Police said. The body of Miguel Angel Ayala, 27, of Chicago Heights, Ill., was identified through fingerprints in a federal database, detective Dave Kirkham said Tuesday. Ayala's fingerprints were on record because of a drunk driving charge, he said. Investigators declined to comment on the cause of Ayala's death. LaPorte Superior Court Judge Walter Chapala found the body March 6 while walking in a State Department of Natural Resources fishing site along Trail Creek near the city about 30 miles west of South Bend. The body was wrapped in plastic and covered with yard debris and tree limbs about 6 feet off the edge of a road, police said. Ayala's body has been kept at a morgue in Fort Wayne since an autopsy. Family members are working with the LaPorte County coroner's office to return his remains to Illinois for burial, Kirkham said.


The Indiana Daily Student

11th annual beer festival kicks off tonight

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Big Red Liquors will host the party tonight and tomorrow night at the Monroe County Convention Center with its 11th annual Beer Festival. Midwest beer drinkers will assemble at the event from 6 to 9 p.m. Patrons can taste over 200 different domestic, import and micro-brew beers while strolling along the vendors' tables and chatting with various company representatives and brewmasters. "The beer festival is an opportunity for people to taste more expensive beers for less money," said Rob Williamson, promotions director for Big Red Liquors.