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Monday, Nov. 18
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD


The Indiana Daily Student

AIDS Awareness Week to celebrate relationships

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This year, AIDS Awareness Week will be celebrated with loving relationships in mind. AIDS Awareness Week/Safe Love 2001, which began Saturday and runs through Friday, will be celebrated on campus with events to include all students, not only those who have been touched by AIDS. This is the first year AIDS Awareness Week has included the additional focus on relationships and the concept of safe love.


The Indiana Daily Student

Criticize policies, not character flaws

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There is a profound and deep-seated bigotry simmering on this campus. It is as stark and far-reaching as the anti-African sentiments of the deep South before the 1960s. It is as blatant and disturbing as the anti-semitism of the Nazis.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hey NRA, protect your interests

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I was visiting my uncle, an avid hunter, when I came across an advertising insert for a gun shop. I've been in the market for a nice handgun for some time since I want the ability to kill any uninvited guests who show up in my house at 3 a.m. Hey, if someone breaks into MY home to steal MY Sony Playstation, he or she deserves to have his or her brains splattered all over the walls. It says so right there in the Constitution.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fed chairman to speak

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This week, a number of economic reports will be released, including the producer price index report and the retail sales report. Investors will examine the data released and attempt to determine how quickly the economy is slowing. If economic reports in the next few weeks are weaker than expected, fear of a recession might rise.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tintern Abbey brings funk, folk music

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Jenny Appleby, bassist for Tintern Abbey, growled into the microphone midway through the band's three-set performance Thursday at Kilroy's Sports, "You have lost all your clothes, but you can keep your hat on." His words summarized an evening of music that defied a classification into one genre.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spirit of Sport returns

Spirit of Sport, an annual event sponsored by the IU Division of Recreational Sports, will start today at 5 p.m. in the Health, Physical Education and Recreation's Wildermuth Gymnasium, going until 5 a.m. The event is designed to raise money for Indiana Special Olympics.


The Indiana Daily Student

Indiana must change with times

It's about time Indiana joined the rest of the civilized world in observing daylight-saving time, falling an hour back in the fall and jumping an hour forward in the spring. Although Congress adopted daylight savings time nationally in 1966, states were allowed to opt out, and Indiana chose to do so.


The Indiana Daily Student

Team to use 1st game as catalyst for season

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In the grand scheme of things, the softball team's first game at 3 p.m. Saturday at Evansville could be considered just another pre-season game. But coach Diane Stephenson sees it as a potential catalyst for a successful season.


The Indiana Daily Student

Cassady carries Hoosiers in win

Suspended IU senior Rachael Honegger wasn't the story in IU's 83-79 overtime win against Wisconsin Thursday. Junior guard Heather Cassady made sure of that -- in the game's first five minutes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rested Hoosiers ready for revenge

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After a week off from games, sophomore guard Tom Coverdale said it's time to get back to business. Not that he hasn't enjoyed the time to rest -- he's averaging nearly 38 minutes per game -- but he's looking forward to playing Michigan at 1 p.m. Sunday in Assembly Hall.


The Indiana Daily Student

Anti-harassment team offers help

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Racial slurs and swastikas carved into doorways and walls of campus buildings. Anti-gay messages on dry-erase boards in the residence halls. An associate instructor making fun of a Jewish student's religion. These are only three examples of discrimination cases that were reported to IU's anti-discrimination teams.


The Indiana Daily Student

Gunman left warning signs

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It was not unusual for Robert Pickett, an IU alumnus and Evansville accountant who fired shots outside of the White House Wednesday, to take unannounced time off of work and drive to Washington, D.C. Clients and his employer say he often made the trip "to consult a lawyer" in his ongoing litigation with a former employer, the Internal Revenue Service. Sometimes he would disappear for weeks at a time during the tax season.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bayh to head Democratic centrist group

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It would be hard to disagree that Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., is a rising star in the Democratic party. Tuesday, he was appointed chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council, a centrist group. The council of "New Democrats" has helped launch the national careers of many former chairmen, including then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt of Missouri.


The Indiana Daily Student

Volunteers' efforts help Special Olympians

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From helping the Special Olympians put on their bowling shoes to cheering for them as they bowled, the Spirit of Sport volunteers bonded with the athletes at the Special Olympic bowling tournament last November. The bonding experience at the tournament helped the volunteers focus on what they are working toward for this weekend's Spirit of Sport events, said Christine Geary, the assistant director of special events for Recreational Sports.


The Indiana Daily Student

Centers offer evening help

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Students looking for homework or study help late at night have a place to turn. The Academic Support Center offers tutoring in various subjects, workshops and advising 7 p.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

Kevin Glowacki, assistant professor of classical studies, was awarded the 2000-01 Archaeological Institute of America Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching.


The Indiana Daily Student

Council approves historic district

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The Bloomington Historic Preservation Commission won its petition to make McDoel Gardens the city's first historic conservation district. But the attempt to hold the district together fractured the community. The petition was passed by a vote of 6-3 in the city council meeting Wednesday, but not without a debate between supporters and those opposing the petition. Discussion on the petition, which began at 8 p.m., continued until the early hours of the morning. The area being designated as a historic preservation district means the commission would have to approve any demolitions or relocations of houses or businesses, as well as any new construction in the district.


The Indiana Daily Student

AIDS on the rise ... again

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Every major network channel broadcasts messages about AIDS. But how much is actually getting across? How much of this information are viewers absorbing and using to prevent contracting this disease? According to recent figures, many people are not listening. A study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows AIDS is on the rise -- 12 percent overall. But, for homosexual black males, one in three are are at risk of contracting the virus.


The Indiana Daily Student

Time change would be pointless

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Indiana is one of only three states that don't recognize daylight-saving time. Neither do Arizona and Hawaii. Because these states don't fit into a specific time zone, the business community wants them to conform to the rest of the country and adopt daylight-saving time. Every year, a bill comes before the Indiana General Assembly to adopt daylight-saving time, and every year it fails.