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Friday, June 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

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Adam Sedia's reviews of musical performances are nothing less than an outrage. Beyond even his seeming lack of qualification -- a chemistry student writing about music? -- are his unfounded judgements. Most upsetting is his blanket labeling of 20th century music as "cacophonous" and "dreaded," among other derogatory adjectives.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Tunnel Vision' is one to skip

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I'm confused by British people. With that out of the way, "Tunnel Vision," Keith Lowe's debut novel, is a dismal attempt at explaining the British fascination with the London Underground. The premise of the novel is a tad farfetched. The protagonist (and I am using this term loosely) is a trainspotter and tube fanatic who is willing to risk his impending marriage to the girl of his dreams for a collection of vintage tube tickets. The bet he has made with his mate Rolf, who is conveniently enough the antagonist, is that he can travel throughout the entire London Underground in less than 24 hours. Keep in mind, that is traveling through over 240 tube stations in the oldest subway system in the world. Oh yeah, and the world record for such a feat is around 19 hours. Strikes me as an implausible feat at best, but whatever. I suppose it makes for a good enough premise.


The Indiana Daily Student

Simpson plans to explore run for governor

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INDIANAPOLIS -- State Sen. Vi Simpson took the first step Thursday toward a possible run for Indiana governor in 2004 by forming an exploratory committee that will allow her to begin raising campaign funds. With her announcement, Simpson became the first Democrat to enter the fray since Democratic Lt. Gov. Joe Kernan announced Dec. 9 that he would not run.


The Indiana Daily Student

O'Bannon chooses route

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Gov. Frank O'Bannon approved an I-69 route that travels through Bloomington Thursday, bringing the $1.7 billion project to build an interstate between Indianapolis and Evansville one step closer to reality. O'Bannon's decision, announced in Evansville, was encouraging to Bloomington Mayor John Fernandez but riled many environmentalists and local activists.

The Indiana Daily Student

Council member resigns

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Jeffrey Willsey announced his resignation Tuesday from the Bloomington City Council as representative from District 4. His last day will be Jan. 15.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bepko turns focus to General Assembly

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On Wednesday, Interim President Gerald Bepko arrived in Bryan Hall, eager to begin work and to settle in the office left vacant by former president Myles Brand. "I've been coming to this office for meetings for the last 16 years, so it's pretty familiar to me," Bepko said. "I haven't had time to settle in yet, but it sure is a comfortable place to work."


The Indiana Daily Student

An artist filled with ambition

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Jeff Jackson meticulously paints a section of his current piece, an impressive twist on Bottacelli's Birth of Venus. For this ambitious work, Jackson uses a watercolor set not from a deluxe art store … but from a dumpster. His sister's husband, who has a garbage-rummaging fetish, found the watercolors in a bin near his Nevada home and mailed them to Jackson. Dressed in a plain, forest-green button-up shirt, worn-in jeans and a salt and pepper beard, local abstract artist Jeff Jackson is as humble and unpretentious as people with eye-raising talent come.


The Indiana Daily Student

The twelve days of Christmas in sports

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'Tis the season to be a sports fan. The recipe for the perfect holiday dish is simple: Just add three or four cups controversy, a dash of violence, a sprinkle of feel good story and top it off with a scoop of scandal. Your sports salad, if you will, should be low in calories and high in entertainment.


The Indiana Daily Student

No run for Gore in 2004

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WASHINGTON -- Former vice president Al Gore, who came agonizingly close to winning the presidency two years ago, said Sunday he will not run in 2004, and probably will not have another opportunity to seek the White House. "I don't think it's the right thing for me to do," Gore said. He said that a rematch with President Bush "would inevitably involve a focus on the past that would in some measure distract from the focus on the future that I think all campaigns have to be about."


The Indiana Daily Student

Brand bids IU final farewell

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After eight years at IU, Myles Brand has just over two weeks remaining as IU president before he takes over the helm in Indianapolis as the head of the NCAA. Brand not only leaves behind a string of accomplishments but also some memorable controversies. From his Strategic Directions Charter to the firing of former men's basketball coach Bob Knight, from the creation of the School of Informatics to the accusation of IU violating Indiana's open door laws, Brand has witnessed IU's ups and downs first hand.


The Indiana Daily Student

GOP whip Nickles wants new Senate leadership

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WASHINGTON -- Breaking ranks, a veteran Senate Republican called Sunday for new leadership elections, saying Sen. Trent Lott has been so weakened by a race-based controversy that "his ability to enact our agenda" is in doubt. "There are several outstanding senators who are more than capable of effective leadership. And I hope we have an opportunity to choose," said Sen. Don Nickles of Oklahoma, the outgoing GOP whip.


The Indiana Daily Student

U.N. inspectors continue hunt

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- U.N. inspectors hunted for weapons of mass destruction at missile plants and nuclear complexes Sunday, while an unusual visitor -- Hollywood star Sean Penn -- spoke out in Baghdad against a U.S. attack and in support of the Iraqi people caught up in an international crisis. In Berlin, meanwhile, the German defense ministry said the United Nations had asked it to supply the inspection operation with unmanned spy aircraft to help in the search for banned Iraqi weapons or the facilities to make them.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pakistani police foil bomb plot

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KARACHI, Pakistan -- In a foiled suicide bomb plot, Islamic militants planned to ram an explosives-laden Volkswagen into a car carrying U.S. diplomats in Karachi, Pakistan police said Sunday. Police said they arrested three men Friday and Saturday and seized about 250 sacks of ammonium nitrate, a fertilizer used in explosives. They said the suspects had been trained at a camp in Afghanistan run by Islamic militants fighting Indian rule in the disputed province of Kashmir.


The Indiana Daily Student

Phi Taus returning to campus

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Plans are under way to bring Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity back to IU after almost a decade of absence. The fraternity will begin rebuilding its Beta Lambda chapter in spring of 2003, according to a news release by the fraternity. The colonization process will attempt to entice students to rebuild the defunct fraternity through a series of awareness and recruitment campaigns. "We're confident it is an experience that can be successful at IU," said director of Phi Kappa Tau's chapter services Mike Gabhart.


The Indiana Daily Student

Freshman explodes against Boilers

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INDIANAPOLIS -- A pivotal reason why the IU women's basketball team lost by a mere two points to arch-rival No. 6 Purdue Saturday was the performance of freshman center Angela Hawkins. The 6-foot-3-inch center grabbed a game-high 12 rebounds in addition to scoring nine points. "This was her second back-to-back wonderful game," coach Kathi Bennett said. "She has been especially good defensively."


The Indiana Daily Student

Emotions run high in Indy

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The RCA Dome generally doesn't host a college basketball game until the NCAA or Big Ten tournament. But when IU and Purdue faced off in a pre-conference showdown Saturday night, many of the characteristics of a high-stakes conference or March Madness game were present.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers pleased with play despite loss

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INDIANAPOLIS -- The women's basketball team was looking for the ultimate upset over 6th ranked Purdue Saturday in the RCA Dome. A repeat of last year's victory over the Boilermakers would have been the perfect way to prove they were a team worth competing with. While the final score was in Purdue's favor 51-53, it turned out to be a loss that showed IU can compete. "I really like where my team is at right now," coach Kathi Bennett said. "We started coming together, and it's a positive step for us."


The Indiana Daily Student

Down to the wire win in 'Dome'

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INDIANAPOLIS - It appeared as if the IU men's basketball team had the game under control. After scary moments of lost leads, waning offensive moments and blown game plans, the Hoosiers seemed to be in the clear against Purdue. But the theme of Saturday's "Duel in the Dome" was fighting, and the Boilermakers intended to do that to the final buzzer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Killing Chicago River may stop infestation

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CHICAGO -- It's impossible to kill all the exotic species sloshing between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River basin, so some scientists suggest killing the river that links the two watersheds. It's a radical long shot of an idea that bucks the federal Clean Water Act. But the fact that some wildlife advocates would even think of returning the Chicago River to its former, sludgy self underscores the ecological and economic disaster wrought when Asian carp, zebra mussels and other undesirables emigrate.


The Indiana Daily Student

Daniels thinking about bid for governor

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INDIANAPOLIS -- White House budget director Mitch Daniels said Saturday he was "seriously thinking" about running for Indiana governor in 2004 and would devote his full time to a candidacy if he runs. As he has for months, Daniels remained noncommittal and asked for patience from Republican backers who are urging the former Eli Lilly & Co. executive to run.