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Saturday, April 4
The Indiana Daily Student

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The boys are back in town

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It's hard to believe that four years have passed since the "Jackass" boys last graced movie screens with their outlandish stunts, but the boys are back, finally, with a new stable of even grosser, cruder and more death-defying gags to please their core audience.


Kweller doing what he does best

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He's a little goofy, perhaps even a little neurotic, but that's precisely what we've come to love about Ben Kweller since his 2002 full-length debut, Sha Sha. And with his new self-titled effort, we're treated to plenty of that, but also Kweller at his best musically -- an eclectic blend of piano and acoustic guitar -- a sound a bit absent from his harder, more in your face disc -- 2004's On My Way.


Kanye protege doesn't disappoint

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Kanye West's first graduating class of protégés is exceeding expectations this summer. Rhymefest's Blue Collar hit stores with little anticipation in July but was highly praised by critics. Lupe Fiasco's debut album, Food & Liquor, spent the better part of 2006 having its release delayed by Internet leaks and record company disputes. In fact, anybody with BitTorrent and a general interest in hip--hop probably had half the album in May.


The Indiana Daily Student

It came from beneath the Cinemat

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It's three a.m. and a small, motley group is standing outside of the Cinemat on the corner of Walnut and 4th Street, practicing some fire-eating techniques. "It's a cold fire," explains a short, round-faced woman with spiky black hair as she lights another metal stick with what looks like Pennzoil. She is one of the fire-eaters who are trying to convince me to try to eat some flames myself, but I, never being one to stick strange objects in my mouth without at least learning their name first, am obviously hesitant.

The Indiana Daily Student

Ugly Dutchess

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If you're a particularly non-enterprising music consumer, you might not download your music. You might, if you're completely missing the point of Internet access, buy albums in CD form from Amazon.com instead of downloading them from one of a dozen legal or hundred illegal music sharing sites.


Reinventing the western

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The sky is a burning mixture of reds and oranges as the sun sets upon the horizon. For miles all one can see is nothing but the dusty, tree-less plains, with not even a mountain in sight. It looks just like a Western, yet we learn we aren't in the American west; rather, the Australian outback of the late 19th century.


Li 'Fearless' in his final fight

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As many have learned, "Fearless" marks the final time martial arts powerhouse Jet Li will perform his craft in front of the camera. He has become convinced that the culture of Wushu held so dear to him has become abused and tainted in so much of his Western output. It's a shame really, as I'm convinced that "Fearless" is Li in his finest hour.


Karaoke kraze

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Though I love to sing, my years of classical voice training have foiled all my previous attempts at karaoke. My operatic soprano seems ill-suited for popular karaoke numbers like "Respect" and "Proud Mary." Add to that a nasty streak of stage fright from my childhood, and I tend to avoid the karaoke stage altogether, unless I'm in the company of a large group of drunken friends.


The Indiana Daily Student

Great actors don't make a great movie

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I recently re-watched "A Civil Action," a taut legal drama penned by Steven Zaillian whose other impressive credits include "Gangs of New York" and "Schindler's List." In the company of these beautifully written and well-studied dramas, I am shocked that his adaptation of Robert Penn Warren's "All the King's Men" was as blandly bad as it was.


Skin~Scapes

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It wasn't an everyday baby shower. Rather than giving her a three-tiered "cake" made out of diapers, Sharon Wailes' friend painted a ceremonial henna peacock on her stomach while she was pregnant with her second child. Her doctor was slightly alarmed at the sight of the bird, Wailes says, but the experience is what inspired her to find out more about the art of henna. Fifteen years later, as an IU doctoral student in the department of Germanic studies, Wailes does several how-to shows every year to help other people have their own unique first experiences with henna.


My name is goofball comedy

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Ever since the last hilarious scene in the movie "Mallrats" where Jason Lee takes over "The Tonight Show," I've thought, "Man, that guy really should have his own show." Now he does. I typically don't enjoy hick-based jokes, and "My Name is Earl" isn't the format I would've expected Lee to be in -- but it works. Lee still has that impeccable timing and as a big fan of karma, it's nice to see it appreciated and passed on here.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dungy, Colts trying to figure out what's wrong with run defense

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Tiki Barber and Brandon Jacobs overpowered the Indianapolis Colts run defense. Fred Taylor and Maurice Drew shredded it. Three games into the season, the Colts have struggled to stop any team this side of the grounded Houston Texans, but players and coaches aren't worried yet. Sure, they all agree improvement is needed, but they don't think a major overhaul is needed.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers beat Kentucky in OT

The IU men's soccer team earned its first home win of the season, and it came off the head of sophomore midfielder Brian Ackley.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former NHL player new hockey coach

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As a former player in the National Hockey League and an experienced coach, Al Karlander's strategy for winning a national title with the IU club hockey team is surprisingly simple. "We need to improve two things (to win a national title): We need to play better team defense since we allowed too many goals in big games last year. But we also need to improve our already sound offensive," Karlander said. "I always say that the best defense is a good offense."


The Indiana Daily Student

Student arrested for stealing laptop in library

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Police discovered the identity of the thief of a stolen laptop Wednesday morning after University Information Technology Services located the culprit through its tracking system, said IU Police Department Sgt. Don Schmuhl, reading from an IU Police Department report.



The Indiana Daily Student

Hitchens: Orwell is journalistic guide

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"Was George Orwell a journalist?" controversial foreign correspondent and essayist Christopher Hitchens asked a large audience Wednesday night in Alumni Hall at the Indiana Memorial Union.


The Indiana Daily Student

New student group enables global travel

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A new program at IU will give students the opportunity to interact with hundreds of students from more than 100 countries in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, this February. Education Without Borders is an international organization that holds student conferences every two years in the United Arab Emirates. The organization helps build networks and bring people from across the globe together to discuss and create solutions to some of the world's greatest social problems, according to the group's Web site.


The Indiana Daily Student

TV's Back -- can you feel it?

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It's here, it's finally here: TV premiere week! Sure this summer had "Entourage" and Tim Gunn's stroke victim--like squeals of "make it work" to hold us over, but there's no better feeling than rejoining old friends and making new ones. My poor TiVo, I'm not sure if she'll be able to handle the overload of recording her master has thrust upon her. But how else to decide which new shows to get addicted to and which to cancel? Fortunately for you, I'm here to clue you in.


The Indiana Daily Student

Karaoke kraze

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Though I love to sing, my years of classical voice training have foiled all my previous attempts at karaoke. My operatic soprano seems ill-suited for popular karaoke numbers like "Respect" and "Proud Mary." Add to that a nasty streak of stage fright from my childhood, and I tend to avoid the karaoke stage altogether, unless I'm in the company of a large group of drunken friends.