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Tuesday, July 7
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Heroin rises in local popularity

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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Police and doctors believe a local resurgence in the popularity of heroin is responsible for some of the 10 deaths attributed to drug overdoses so far this year. Heroin may be more commonly associated in the public mind with tough urban neighborhoods than the shady streets of a central Indiana college town. But police do not believe the drug is a newcomer to Bloomington.



The Indiana Daily Student

Car once owned by Hearst nets hefty sum

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AUBURN, Ind. - One of the most unique vehicles at this weekend's annual Kruse auto action was sold for a hefty price -- $535,000. The sale price for the 1930 Duesenberg once owned by publisher William Randolph Hearst, however, was much less than what its owner could have banked earlier this year when he was offered $900,000 for the car.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rain swamps Labor Day holiday

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Labor Day is traditionally a time to enjoy the last days of sunny summer weather, but Monday's rain made it hard for area residents to enjoy the day off. Despite the storm, IU students also had a hard time celebrating the holiday. With classes beginning, students spent the day heading off to the first day of classes for the fall semester.

The Indiana Daily Student

Course harms gay rights?

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Following the politically-charged summer of gay rights issues, it seems the University of Michigan campus is gearing up for a similar fall semester. The school's most controversial class --"How to Be Gay: Male Homosexuality and Initiation" -- is back in session.



The Indiana Daily Student

Multiple backs rotate in game

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IU utilized three different running backs throughout Saturday's game. Sophomore Chris Taylor had the most success, gaining 79 yards on 13 carries. Senior Brian Lewis rushed 11 times for 33 yards, and freshman BenJarvus Green-Ellis carried seven times for 18 yards in his Hoosier debut. "I think we have three good running backs," coach Gerry DiNardo said. "I just felt like we'd be OK playing all three."


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Game

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The IU women's volleyball team traveled south this weekend to Coral Gables, Fla., to compete in the Hurricane Invitational. The Hoosiers opened up their season with a hard-fought, five-game match against Kent State.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Nation

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NEW YORK -- A vial of blood is all that will be buried at firefighter Michael Ragusa's funeral next week, nearly two years after he was killed in the World Trade Center attack on Sept. 11, 2001.



The Indiana Daily Student

on the SIDELINES

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CHICAGO -- Doug Davis made another strong start, pitching into the ninth inning as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 2-0 Sunday. Right fielder Jason Conti made a sliding, game-ending catch with the bases loaded to preserve the 12th victory in 13 games for Milwaukee, which had a 10-game winning streak snapped Friday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Look ma, no hands

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I drove 15 hours to see IU play football, and all I got was this lousy performance. Sure IU's 34-10 loss to UConn wasn't the lowest moment in team history. It might not even rank in the Bottom 10. But it certainly was one of the more excruciating displays of football that I have ever had the pleasure of witnessing.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers victorious in own tourney

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For the first time since 1998, IU captured the 21st annual adidas/IU Credit Union Classic this weekend by beating No. 17 California 3-0 Friday night and battling Alabama-Birmingham to a 0-0 draw Saturday.


The Indiana Daily Student

LoVecchio out-dueled in debut; struggles in first half

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East Hartford, Conn. -- Quarterback Matt LoVecchio probably didn't envision an IU debut quite like this. The junior, who sat out last season as a transfer from Notre Dame, struggled against UConn amid dropped passes, turnovers and a defense that limited him to only 28 yards passing in the first half of IU's 34-10 loss.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not a day off for everyone

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Labor Day, a holiday in honor of workers, means many local businesses and local schools will be closed, and picnickers will have one last chance before fall weather sets in. IU students, on the other hand, will be heading to their first day of classes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Freshmen invade Wal-Mart

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Madness doesn't even begin to describe it. Words like chaos, mayhem and pandemonium might be more appropriate. The buses were packed, the aisles were crowded and the lines were long. Still, students and Wal-Mart associates agreed that Midnight Madness was exciting, spirited and once more, a real success. The annual late-night promotional event put on by Wal-Mart targets students and features lowered prices and raffles.


The Indiana Daily Student

UConn hands IU tough loss

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East Hartford, Conn. -- Four years vs. 104. That's how long the University of Connecticut has been playing Division I-A football compared to IU's tenure in the Big Ten. But on Saturday, it seemed the opposite as UConn manhandled the Hoosiers offensively and defensively to claim a 34-10 rout in the opening of Rentschler Field. The much anticipated debut of junior quarterback Matt LoVecchio never got off the ground as two UConn offensive stars -- junior Dan Orlovsky and sophomore Terry Caulley -- stole the show. Orlovsky completed 26 of 42 passes for 307 yards while Caulley gained 170 yards on 22 carries. Coach Gerry DiNardo said he didn't expect the offense's inefficiency and IU's three fumbles that resulted in turnovers.


The Indiana Daily Student

Welcome to the party

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The weekend festivities start at roughly 9:30 p.m. While some haul couches to front porches, plop kegs down in kitchens and hang dark bed sheets in windows, others spend hours getting ready and coordinating on cell phones. For some students, the quest is to find that $3 red plastic cup filled with diluted "all-you-can-drink" jungle juice or less-than-quality beer. For others, it's a trip to the bars to mingle and meet friends. The scene seems familiar -- another year of "Thirsty Thursdays" that bleed into all hours of the weekend.



The Indiana Daily Student

Arrests do not rely on ranking, IUPD says

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Since IU earned the reputation in the eyes of the Princeton Review as the No. 1 party school in August 2002, members of the campus community seem to wonder what effect that title has had on the way the IU Police Department enforces alcohol laws on campus.