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Wednesday, May 20
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

BrotherS in the Struggle

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It's called "Roots Reggae Rock," and the band that made this breed of rock-infused reggae ubiquitous calls itself Natty Nation. Tonight at 10 p.m., five members of this up-and-coming band will take the stage at Uncle Fester's House of Blooze to share their unique sounds and pass along what they feel is bridging the gap between not just reggae and rock, but between all types of music.


The Indiana Daily Student

FLYINGSOLO

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No band? No shoes? No problem. One-man jam band extraordinaire Keller Williams will bring his unique live show back to Bloomington Sunday, armed with an arsenal of guitars and a state-of-the-art looping system that defies explanation. Simply, Williams is capable of creating music onstage that defies categorization.


The Indiana Daily Student

Kid Dynamite takes 'shot' at hardcore fame

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Kid Dynamite was a one-trick pony. They wrote short, fast, loud punk songs with a slight melodic edge that owed quite a debt of gratitude to guitarist Dan Yemin's previous band, Lifetime.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Thank you' to Dido for latest album

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Dido's new release, Life for Rent, might have been called No Angel II, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. It's just another CD full of Dido doing what she does best. Life for Rent is full of mellow pop songs with just-edgy-enough beats, performed with Dido's trademark breathiness. But this Dido is slightly more mature, more developed as a songwriter and more comfortable being sexy. She's not as squeaky-clean as she was on No Angel.

The Indiana Daily Student

This ain't heavy, it's my 'Brothers'

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The music industry decided around 1997 or so that electronica would be "The Next Big Thing." They even coined the term "electronica." The whole movement flopped, though, and no, the flop is not some new dance. For example, Prodigy was harsh and uninclusive, and Fatboy Slim couldn't make a hit no matter how much he sold out.




The Indiana Daily Student

Cubs, Red Sox know misery loves company

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Name the following major league baseball franchise. They have won one World Series in their history. They have won only four pennants since 1915. They once scored 14 runs in a World Series game and lost. Cubs? Red Sox? No, that would be the Phillies.


The Indiana Daily Student

Air attack grounds Hoosiers for fourth loss this season

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EAST LANSING, Mich. -- The Hoosiers may have been outplayed by the Spartans in the 31-3 loss Saturday, but the team wasn't helped by a slew of loose balls that rarely seemed to bounce in the Hoosiers' favor. MSU had four fumbles and lost none of them. The Spartans caught a pair of passes on balls knocked straight up in the air by Hoosier defenders.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sosa's HR not enough

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CHICAGO -- Mike Lowell sure wrecked this Wrigley Field party in a hurry. With the old ballpark still shaking after Sammy Sosa's tremendous, tying homer with two outs in the ninth inning, Lowell led off the 11th with a pinch-hit home run that sent the Florida Marlins over the Chicago Cubs 9-8 Tuesday night in the NL championship series opener.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dennisonwins, IU in second

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Senior Karen Dennison fired a final-round 69 to claim her second consecutive Shootout at the Legends title Tuesday. Her three round score of 213 (72-72-69) was only one stroke shy of the school record she set at the Shootout in 2002. She finished three strokes ahead of TCU's Brooke Tull and Missouri's Denise Knaebel.


The Indiana Daily Student

Alumni come home for weekend festivities

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Anticipation has been building this week, and tomorrow IU's 2003 Homecoming, "Sweet Home Indiana," will officially begin. Senior Jo Marchi, Student Athletic Board Homecoming director, has been working since July to help plan the week's events. "Homecoming week creates a good atmosphere in the town overall," Marchi said. "I really think it'll be a lot of fun. It's a great chance for alumni to come back to campus and remember what it's like to be a student and for students to welcome back the alumni.


The Indiana Daily Student

Skating through college

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My old roommate thought he was getting a first rate education. He was an artist. Not with paints or clay or words or music. His canvas was college. His medium: slacking.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sentenced to life for looking

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Let's face it. The old adage "You do the crime, you do the time" just isn't accurate. To make this antiquated proverb truly reflect reality, it would have to be rewritten as "You do a crime that is revolting to the voting public and happens to be a hot topic in the news media, you do the time plus another couple of hundred years to prove a point."


The Indiana Daily Student

Zen and the art of highway upkeep

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Over the summer, my good buddy and I realized that we were both exhibiting symptoms of acute wanderlust. It was no wonder. She hadn't seen an ocean since toddlerhood, and I had never ventured more westerly than St. Louis. It seemed the only treatment for our condition was to hop in her Daewoo and head for the American West. So, off we went, bright-eyed and brave, determined to start curing our Indiana girl naivety.



The Indiana Daily Student

National Guard unit returns home

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INDIANAPOLIS -- Months of worry ended in tears and hugs for dozens of families as about 250 Indiana National Guard troops returned home from the Middle East.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Nation

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WASHINGTON -- President Bush questioned whether investigators would be able to determine who leaked the identity of an undercover CIA officer Tuesday, but said his staff was cooperating.


The Indiana Daily Student

Turkish parliament approves troop deployment in Iraq

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ANKARA, Turkey -- Turkey's parliament voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to allow troops to be sent to Iraq, a move that could lead to the first major contingent of Muslim peacekeepers there. But Iraq's Governing Council said it opposes any deployment of Turkish soldiers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Report outlines diversity progress

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IU's Office of Student Development and Diversity, along with the office's vice president Charlie Nelms, released a comprehensive report last week that tracks and describes IU's progress in becoming a more diverse campus, including recruitment of more minorities.