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Thursday, April 23
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

World Cup stays at 32 teams through 2010 event

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PARIS - The 2006 World Cup will remain at 32 teams, with Oceania stripped of its guaranteed berth and South America given the chance to send a fifth team to the tournament through a playoff. The executive committee of soccer's governing body Saturday also said the field will not be increased for the 2010 tournament.



The Indiana Daily Student

St. Louis: More than just an arch

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St. Louis, a beautiful city situated along the Mississippi River, is an eclectic blend of big-city expansion and Southern charm. The people are generous hosts, and its peaceful surroundings are a bed of relaxation. The quaint city also is home to the St. Louis Gateway Arch, a 630-foot monument you can see from 20 miles outside the city. The structure greets out-of-towners as it shimmers over downtown. The Arch sits on the river, providing a cool hideout in the city. At any given moment, you can find people hanging out on the steps and riding the tram to the top. Seth Berkowitz, a resident of St. Louis, said the Arch is a great spot to visit. "I would definitely say people should hit up the landmarks and visit the Arch and the arch museums during the day," he said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Volunteers trained for emergencies

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In the event of a large-scale disaster --such as a flood, tornado or terrorist attack -- it could take a long time for emergency response professionals to reach every person in need, officials from the Monroe County Citizen Corps said last weekend. So they are training volunteers to help.



The Indiana Daily Student

Senate approves aviation center

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GARY, Ind. -- A Senate committee has approved almost $15.6 million for the first phase of construction of an Indiana Army National Guard aviation center at the Gary/Chicago Airport.


The Indiana Daily Student

Metropolitan Indy faces industrial issues

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The economic rift between metropolitan Indianapolis and the industrial cities of Indiana appears to be widening, leaving industrial cities fearful the state is neglecting their needs.


The Indiana Daily Student

Festival promotes health

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A gorgeous summer day was the scene at last Saturday's 2nd annual Bloomington FitnessFest, held in downtown Bloomington on Kirkwood Avenue. Crowds of bystanders attended the festival which included a health fair and a bike race. The health fair was organized by senior Jamie Kivett and sponsored by the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation, Bloomington's Parks and Recreation, IU RecSports, and Bloomington Hospital. Organizing the health fair was part of Kivett's senior project.


The Indiana Daily Student

Supreme Court makes ruling in many historic cases at end of term

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WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court ruled last week on two historic civil rights cases -- one striking down bans on what some states have called deviate sex acts and the other mandating public libraries make it harder for Internet surfers to look at pornography or risk losing government funding.



The Indiana Daily Student

Celebrating freedom

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The annual African American Cultural Juneetenth festival kicked off Saturday at Bryan Park. The "Celebration of Freedom" was host to many activites and many families from the Bloomington community. There were little children running around dancing to music with their mothers, and plenty of people taking advantage of the $2 plates being served.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU Trustees approve budget

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The IU Board of Trustees approved a $2.08 billion operating budget Friday created by the Indiana General Assembly for the 2003-04 fiscal year and a new science precinct on the north side of the Bloomington campus. The budget is $120 million more than the 2002-03 budget of $1.96 billion.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU team receives NASA grant

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A team led by an IU professor is trying to discover exactly what kind of creatures reside deep below Earth's surface as part of a NASA grant. IU geology professor Lisa Pratt is directing a new team of researchers that received a five year grant worth $5 million from the NASA Astrobiology Institute. Astrobiology is the study of the origins, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe, according to the NAI Web site.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ball State improves faculty diversity

MUNCIE -- The College of Sciences and Humanities at Ball State University has created a task force to improve diversity among its faculty members.


The Indiana Daily Student

Guaranteed tuition still poses problems

URBANA, Ill. -- It sounds like a simple proposition: Guarantee that tuition won't rise during a university student's four years of school.



The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

Unhumorous Association The comic strip by Michael Teague entitled "Blender Kitty" (June 19, shown at right) provoked a series of emotions from members of various Latinos organizations on and off campus. We are writing collectively to voice our disgust over the insulting message found in that particular comic strip.


The Indiana Daily Student

Working reforms

When the state of Pennsylvania took control of the Philadelphia public schools last summer and decided to privatize them, many dubbed it the grandest school reform experiment in the history of American education. The decision ignited strong opposition from teachers' unions and bands of students who protested with signs reading: I AM NOT FOR SALE! SAY NO TO PRIVATIZATION! Students had a legitimate reason to be upset; 45 of the city's schools would be managed by two nonprofit companies, three for-profits and two universities.


The Indiana Daily Student

Filtering right to privacy

When it comes to battles fought over the constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech, the persistent reality is that they have mostly been fought over the unsavory issue of pornography. The U.S. Supreme Court delivered another blow to the First Amendment by ruling for the Children's Internet Protection Act on June 23 in United States vs. American Library Association.