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Sunday, April 12
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Columnists unite

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Some people may complain that sports get boring when they see the Lakers, Yankees or Red Wings play for the championship every year. Change is good after all. Often times, these people mean no ill will; they just want to see somebody different. Often times, they do. ("Shaq travels or commits a foul every time he gets the ball." To which I say, "Yeah, yeah, yeah.") If we are willing to address change in the outcome of competition, then we sports columnists need to change the impression of the way we live, breathe and interpret sports.


The Indiana Daily Student

After season ending injury, Mack is back

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Last season, the men's soccer team ended their season one game away from the NCAA championships playing without one of their stars. Now, senior Ryan Mack is back, and wants to help lead the Hoosiers back to the title game. Mack's season ended prematurely last year due to a torn anterior cruciate ligament, leaving a hole in the midfield. Mack's return could complete the puzzle for the Hoosiers to return to championship glory from 1998 and 1999 in Mack's freshman and sophomore years. Already this season, following the Hoosier's defeat of Hartwick and Air Force in the Butler Classic last weekend, Mack was named to the College Soccer News National Team of the Week.


The Indiana Daily Student

DiNardo ready for next game

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After reviewing game tape from the weekend, coach Gerry DiNardo said in his weekly press conference he was happy with the better play from his team. He said he was pleased the team was able to do the things well that they had emphasized in practice this week, including stronger effort from the offensive line.


The Indiana Daily Student

Back to school

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It's 12:30 p.m. and Jeff Cannon walks out the doors of Ernie Pyle Hall into the bright sunshine. He is finished with class for the day, but he doesn't turn toward the Union to grab a burger and discuss last night's parties with his classmates. Nor does he head back to the dorms to add to an MP3 collection and watch reruns of the "Real World." Instead, he heads to a car just outside the Journalism School where Cannon's wife, Angie, and two daughters, 3-year-old Emma and 8-month-old Abby, wait to greet him after a day at school.

The Indiana Daily Student

IU playwrights seek Masters

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Within the next couple of months, two IU Master of Fine Arts playwright students will have their original works performed to the benefit of the Bloomington community. Jonathan Yukich, in his second year of the MFA program, has written and will also direct his work entitled "The Mime Crime." The play tells the story of a mime who commits a murder in broad daylight.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spanish film festival seeks respect

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MADRID -- The Spanish-speaking world's biggest film festival, San Sebastian, opens Thursday, still struggling for respect on its 50th birthday. As usual, there's a smattering of stars (Francis Ford Coppola gets a lifetime achievement award; John Malkovich presents his first movie as director) and a full slate of movies -- 233 -- but no major world premiere. San Sebastian's Golden Shell -- to be awarded Sept. 28 -- lacks the glamour associated with the Palme d'Or (Cannes), Golden Bear (Berlin) and Golden Lion (Venice), not to mention Hollywood's Academy Awards.


The Indiana Daily Student

Poker and revenge

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Hopefully the upcoming weapons inspection in Iraq will show us that Iraq has absolutely nothing. Something tells me that Saddam Hussein has been carrying out a four-year bluff with the whole world. I don't think he's been trying to fool us, I just think he doesn't have anything worth fighting a war over, and he doesn't want us to know that.


The Indiana Daily Student

This theory counts too

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The Ohio State Board of Education will decide later this year whether or not they will continue teaching Darwinian theory of evolution as the only explanation for the origin of life. Those pushing for reform within science curriculum are hoping that teachers will highlight the controversy surrounding Darwinism, perhaps leading to discussion of the other theories.


The Indiana Daily Student

It's okay to miss your mommy

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I may be 21, but I can still miss my mommy. And I'm sure that there are many other college students here who have also felt the pinch of homesickness during these first few weeks of school. Joe Freshman is sitting in class attempting to figure out what human beings did wrong to deserve Finite Math, when suddenly he'll realize that he now has to do his own laundry and that he doesn't know the difference between detergent and anthrax.


The Indiana Daily Student

WTC survivor trivializing Sept. 11

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World Trade Center survivor Edward Fine is charging $911 for a two-hour interview, the New York Post reported last week. He said the sum is no coincidence. Hard to believe? So far, 12 media organizations have paid.


The Indiana Daily Student

Iraq: Inspectors will see truth

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BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraq said Tuesday that returning U.N. weapons inspectors could learn the truth about the country's alleged weapons of mass destruction "within a reasonable time," but claimed the United States still might find a new reason to attack. It was the country's first public comment after bowing to Arab and world pressure and agreeing to allow the unconditional return of inspectors following a nearly four-year absence. Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz said Iraq had balked because it was not sure if U.S. and British demands were "a genuine concern or a pretext."


The Indiana Daily Student

Fuel tanker with dynamite seized

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KABUL, Afghanistan -- A fuel tanker seized over the weekend with sticks of dynamite attached to it was headed to Bagram Air Base, the headquarters of the U.S. military in Afghanistan, a peacekeeping spokesman said Tuesday. The truck was filled with aviation fuel when it was stopped Saturday by Afghan soldiers and international peacekeepers at a checkpoint in southern Kabul, said Squadron Leader Terry Hay, a spokesman for the multinational force. Two men in the truck were arrested, Hay said.


The Indiana Daily Student

West Nile outbreak continues to spread

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CHICAGO -- Bob Meisenheimer liked to sit in his back yard with friends on sultry summer nights, wearing a T-shirt and trying to solve the world's problems. The one that killed him -- West Nile virus -- has authorities scrambling for answers. The mosquito-borne illness has hit Illinois harder than any other state this summer, with 399 cases so far, including 21 deaths. That is far worse than even hot, humid and swampy Louisiana, which has had 11 deaths.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tampa lawyer beats Reno in tight race

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MIAMI -- Florida finally sorted out the mess Tuesday from last week's bungled election as final vote counts showed Bill McBride narrowly defeating Janet Reno for the Democratic nomination for governor. The former Clinton administration attorney general conceded the nomination, saying she told McBride "he was going to be a great governor." McBride, a Tampa lawyer and first-time candidate, won by about 4,800 votes out of more than 1.3 million cast, according to the still-unofficial figures. He will face Republican Gov. Jeb Bush in November.


The Indiana Daily Student

Man linked to dead reporter

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KARACHI, Pakistan -- An al Qaeda militant arrested with alleged Sept. 11 organizer Ramzi Binalshibh has been identified as one of the killers of Wall Street Journal correspondent Daniel Pearl, a senior police official said Tuesday. The identification was made by a Pakistani held but not charged in the kidnap-slaying of the newspaper's South Asian correspondent, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.



The Indiana Daily Student

Abortion-rights group may challenge ruling

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INDIANAPOLIS -- An abortion-rights group is considering challenging an appeals court ruling that Indiana's law requiring women to get in-person counseling before an abortion is constitutional. Betty Cockrum, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Greater Indiana, said the group is reviewing the ruling to decide whether to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. "As we've said all along, those waiting periods are very burdensome," Cockrum said Tuesday. "My greatest emphasis is how difficult an abortion is for any woman who is faced with it. It is not a frivolous undertaking on any woman's part, and to the extent that you add to that burden, it's a problem."


The Indiana Daily Student

Ragweed plagues Indiana's seasonal allergy sufferers

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INDIANAPOLIS -- As summer gives way to autumn, rising levels of ragweed pollen are sending many Indiana allergy sufferers running to tissue boxes and doctors' offices. An estimated 20 percent of the state's residents suffer from seasonal allergies, and many have had a tough summer, even though, according to experts, this has been an average allergy season. Eric Willman looks forward to the changing of the seasons. But not from summer to fall. He prefers winter, when everything is dead.


The Indiana Daily Student

Living like King Tut

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COLUMBUS, Ind. -- Patrick Conner acknowledges that the two pyramids in his side yard are a bit unusual and attract a lot of attention. "People stop by every day and ask about them," Conner said. "They are kind of hard to miss." The two large structures are visible from U.S. 31 and curious motorists often use the front yard of his home as a parking lot, so they can get a closer look. But if those visitors think Conner's outside pyramids are unusual, they should peek inside his house. The interior looks like the inside of the pyramids used as burial chambers for ancient Egyptian royalty.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU families face financial woes

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Each semester, about 200 families facing hardships like death, illness and job losses consult with assistant bursar Janet Flynn. Affected families may be allowed to spread students' school expenses over a longer period. This year, stock prices dropped, job growth was stagnate and IU tuition rose. But Flynn says she has seen no increase in hardship families. "I don't think there's any large difference I've seen," she said. While some national media report on students' financial crises caused by the country's economic problems, there are few visible signs in Bloomington of financial disasters forcing undergraduates out of college. And experts and statistics suggest there are a few.