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Monday, July 6
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Around the Arts

Low-income youth scholarships available The Bloomington Area Arts council has made available 50 scholarships for low income Bloomington residents under the age of 18. These scholarships can be used to enroll in camps, workshops or art classes offered by the John Waldron Arts Center.



The Indiana Daily Student

Baghdads landmark statues falling to looters in postwar lawlessness

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BAGHDAD, Iraq --The world watched the toppling of the Saddam Hussein statue April 9. But few saw the falling of the stately figure of Abdul Muhsin al-Saadoun -- or more than a dozen other landmark bronzes that once watched over this city's squares and boulevards.


The Indiana Daily Student

Corrections

• In the July 7 issue, Sharon Chandler is misidentified in a photograph for the "Celebrating the Fourth" story.

The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD Blotter

The IU Police Department reported the following activity. July 1 • Sophomore Kent Roberts reported the theft of his cell phone from the IU Outdoor Pool. Estimated loss is $150.


The Indiana Daily Student

New visa rules disuade international students

College officials across Indiana fear new visa restrictions adopted in response to the 2001 terrorist attacks could cause many foreign students to miss this year's fall semester.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hits just keep getting harder to find

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Baseball is one sport people love to over-intellectualize. I've heard fellow Cubs fans tell me that Carlos Zambrano is a better young pitcher than Kerry Wood or Mark Prior. (He's not.) I've heard even non-Cardinals fans tell me that Albert Pujols deserved the 2001 National League Most Valuable Player Award over Barry Bonds because Pujols' team made the playoffs and Bonds' didn't, forgetting that Bonds hit 73 homers. (Nope.) And countless times, I've heard that so and so didn't win not because they lacked better players but because they lacked team "chemistry," whatever that is. (That's preposterous.)


The Indiana Daily Student

Southern Ind. trustees raise tuition 8 percent

EVANSVILLE -- Trustees at the University of Southern Indiana voted Monday to approve a nearly 8 percent increase in tuition and fees for the 2003-2004 school year. University President H. Ray Hoops said the school's business office will "manage the heck out of the dollars." Tuition for in-state, undergraduate students will be $3,885 a year.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana residents pull together to stop flooding

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DECATUR, Ind. -- Strangers and National Guardsmen joined together Wednesday in an effort to save homes surrounded by flood waters brought on by days of thunderstorms. The St. Marys River in northeastern Indiana remained at record levels and several hundred homes around Decatur had been flooded or were being threatened by high water.


The Indiana Daily Student

Singapore mourns twins' death

SINGAPORE -- Fighting back tears and reading from the Quran, dozens of mourners Wednesday prayed as they prepared the bodies of two Iranian twins who died during separation surgery for the long journey home.


The Indiana Daily Student

BPP, Community Kitchen to band together against hunger

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Most people know that the Bloomington Playwrights Project is a great place to find innovative theatre, but few realize how this organization benefits the community outside of the artistic sphere. One of the many ways the BPP gives to the community is with the Acting Against Hunger Benefit in conjunction with the Community Kitchen of Monroe County. The Second Annual Acting Against Hunger Benefit will be at 6 p.m. Sunday at the BPP office, 312 S. Washington St. The cost is $30 a person and because of limited seating, reservations must be made by Friday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sodomy laws past their time

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In 1986, the Supreme Court ruled that states can make private sexual behavior illegal. This case, Bowers v. Hardwick, has been held over the heads of homosexual couples since that time by those who consider homosexuality deviant and immoral.


The Indiana Daily Student

An American columnist in France

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If there were such a thing as an architectural crime against humanity, Paris' Charles De Gaulle Airport would be one. After struggling through the bottleneck-plagued circular check-in room, you take a moving walkway through a plastic tube the color and texture of a giant intestine to a floor of insipid duty-free shops.


The Indiana Daily Student

A fifty year success

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From the day we take our first breath to the day we take our last, one thing controls our life more than anything else -- love. Whether it is love of God, love of country or love of another person, it is an emotion we can't escape and can't live without.


The Indiana Daily Student

Quiet Riot?

Imagine having to tell your parents you got expelled from school because you couldn't walk fast enough. That's just what college students in Ohio might have to do.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana soldier killed in Iraq

BATESVILLE, Ind. -- A roadside bomb exploded in Iraq as an American military convoy rolled past, killing a soldier from Indiana.



The Indiana Daily Student

Laos releases prisoners

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BANGKOK, Thailand -- After international pressure, Laos freed two European journalists and an American interpreter who had been sentenced to prison for the death of a rural guard Wednesday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pray this isn't 'For the Ride Home'

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Looking at the album cover, I see Josh Kelley's drinking a cup of coffee. He must have been listening to this album. Of the two things that most offend me most in music, the completely, intentionally, sterilized, unoffensive manufacture of mainstream pop music ranks right up there with the hypocritical shock-value arrogance of pseudo-self-important modern art. Now that I've got that out in the open, I can go into detail on the music for the drones. The few hooks that exist seem borrowed and the writing is empty at best: "You've been bad / You've been good / Did you lose your mind / Like I knew you would?" In his sweater and unkempt hair, Josh Kelley is a hard guy not to like and the organ work and occasional banjo and steel help too.


The Indiana Daily Student

Type O Negative a bloody mess

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Goth and metal don't mix. For evidence, listen to Type O Negative's Life Is Killing Me. Is frontman Peter Steele serious or joking? The more one listens, the more unsure one gets. For example, a song on Life Is Killing Me is called "(We Were) Electrocute." Sorry, but wordplay doesn't go with this music. While this reviewer might be missing the joke, there's no questioning the music: it's lethargic, restrained and bland. Guitar shredding is absent, leaving the listener to focus on Steele's overmodulated baritone. With repeated listenings, Steele's singing just gets annoying.