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Friday, April 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Smoking policy might change

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An amendment to IU's 1993 smoking policy is scheduled to be presented to the chancellor's office as early as today. The creators of the amendment want to restrict smoking to a certain distance away from doorways, windows and building ventilation systems around the IU campus. The current policy bans smoking in all IU buildings and University-owned vehicles.


The Indiana Daily Student

Prevalence of women in scientific fields increasing

Lisa Pratt feels like she has it all. Geologist, mother and wife, she's made it into the elite of her profession while still making time to have a family. Some would say Pratt's success is a sure sign that women are now welcome in the world of science. But Pratt doesn't say that. In fact, she says her success is a matter of luck.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

Those were the days It would be refreshing to see reminders to those who pontificate upon inclusion and diaspora studies that racism is not wholly an issue for Caucasians to address, and that painting those of differing opinions upon the efficacy of inclusion as "Archie and Susie Bunkers" is a simplistic retort, unworthy of anyone who claims that liberal education sets one free from such assumptions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Just call me Aesop

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I've always wondered what happened to fireflies after the summer. Nature's little flashlights just seem to vanish as August drifts into fall. Do they migrate? Do they die off? Do they magically transform into Christmas lights? I've always kind of hoped lightning bugs hibernate through winter. You know ... like grizzly bears.

The Indiana Daily Student

Stand by your man

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Dating is tricky. In my first year of college, RAs in my dorm tried hard to impart upon the freshmen the painfully learned rules of dating (such as don't get involved with people on your floor) -- all to be disregarded by us. As life progressed, dating did not become any simpler.


The Indiana Daily Student

Breaking up is hard to do

The appointment of the first openly gay bishop to the United States' Episcopal Church has sparked controversy and dissent among many of its members. The Episcopal Church is a branch of the 77 million-member Anglican Communion, which now is threatened by a rift over the new appointment. On Tuesday, Rev. V. Gene Robinson was elevated to bishop-elect status, and the next day, Episcopal conservatives protested the election by walking off the floor of their national legislative meeting.


The Indiana Daily Student

Europe suffering from record heat wave

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PARIS -- Melting Alpine glaciers unleashed a cascade of rocks, London choked in a record 100-degree temperatures and with wildfires raging in seven countries, the Pope urged people to pray for rain.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Region

Federal aid granted to flood victims KOKOMO -- Federal and state officials said Friday they have approved more than $15.5 million in aid to about 5,000 victims of last month's flooding and storms across Indiana.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Arts

French director Jacques Deray dies at 74 in Paris PARIS -- French director Jacques Deray, known for classic thrillers and police movies, died at home in a Paris suburb, his family said Sunday. He was 74. Deray made nine films starring actor Alain Delon, notably "La Piscine," (The Swimming Pool), a 1968 psychological drama set in a villa in the beach resort of Saint-Tropez. Austrian actress Romy Schneider also appeared in it.



The Indiana Daily Student

Newsroom minorities fall

DALLAS -- In just two years, the percentage of minorities in television newsrooms nationwide has dropped from 25 percent to 18 percent, according to an annual survey. Leaders of three groups of journalists, speaking Friday at the National Association of Black Journalists' national convention in Dallas, called the decline highly alarming and pledged to work together to increase minority participation in television and radio newsrooms.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tap dancer Gregory Hines dies of cancer at 57

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LOS ANGELES -- Gregory Hines, the greatest tap dancer of his generation who also transcended the stage with successful film and television roles, has died at 57. Hines died Saturday in Los Angeles of cancer, publicist Allen Eichorn said Sunday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gibson gives private 'Passion' viewings

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NEW YORK -- Those who have seen Mel Gibson's film about the final hours of Jesus Christ have called it beautiful, magical, a great and important work. Those who fear "The Passion" could fuel anti-Semitism, however, until now hadn't been allowed to see the film. Seven months before its release, this extraordinary vanity project is stirring passions over Gibson's exclusionary screenings and the potential for a negative depiction of Jews.




The Indiana Daily Student

Local resident pushes for safer highways

BLOOMINGTON -- A Bloomington resident is pushing for changes to a hilly stretch of highway southwest of the city, which she blames for a crash that left her husband severely injured. James Mathis received broken bones and brain damage in a head-on collision July 28 on Indiana 45. Police have said they believe a truck crossed the center line, hitting Mathis' truck and causing it to go airborne and roll, according to his wife, Roxie Mathis. Now Roxie Mathis has vowed to see that changes are made to the highway. "Something needs to be done," she said. "It's ridiculous. The day of his wreck, there were two other wrecks on that road."


The Indiana Daily Student

Local hardcore band gets its 'Revenge'

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Bloomington's hardcore scene is surviving. That is, if the Eve's Revenge three song EP, When Feathers Fall, is any indication. All the classic elements of a hardcore band are present -- unrelenting electric guitars, the continuous bash of drums and cymbals and unintelligible vocals, screamed at a volume almost certain to damage the singer's voice.


The Indiana Daily Student

Music's better when it's Vulgar

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For a long time, The Vulgar Boatmen were out of sight, out of mind. Along with the La's, they were one of those late '80s/early '90s bands that left a meteoric flash in the night sky. And they happened to be, at least partially, from this part of the world. Did anybody know what happened to them?



The Indiana Daily Student

Eve 6 gets stuck, but not in your head

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Well, the boys of Eve 6 are back with another one. It's All In Your Head is its fourth release and the group still hasn't broken out of its comfort zone. I'll be the first to admit it, I have a soft spot for these guys. Eve 6 is a fairly good band, its songs are catchy, and a rock band that doesn't conform to the new scene is always refreshing.