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Friday, April 17
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Alternative Ways To Rock'N'Roll

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The Jacobs School of Music at IU is highly regarded throughout the world for its in-depth instrumental and performance programs, as well as experienced and knowledgeable professors from prestigious schools of music all around the world. "It is considered the third best music school in the world, behind Berkeley and Juilliard," says Garrett Baker, a music major. "If you get a degree from this music school, you should pretty much be set for whatever you want to do."


The Indiana Daily Student

Show Your PRIDE

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On Jan. 26, the Buskirk-Chumley Theater, 114 E. Kirkwood Ave., will play host to Bloomington's third-annual PRIDE Film Festival. Started in 2004 by IU arts administration students, the festival has quickly gained popularity in Bloomington. Tickets can be purchased at the Sunrise box office at the Buskirk-Chumley. Tickets are $8 per screening or $25 for a festival pass. Student-priced tickets are sold for $2 per screening or all films can be seen with the discounted $10 festival pass. The pass gets the holder into all screenings and also into the exclusive PRIDE dance party, to be held on Jan. 27.


The Indiana Daily Student

Examining the role of family

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Few films truly exemplify life in 'small town' America, and very seldom do films do the miraculous task of showing the thin line between city folk and small town folk. Cameron Crowe's "Elizabethtown" tried hard to master this feat, but ultimately was lost in a sea of incoherent plots and sappy, melodramatic songs. Enter "Junebug," an indie sleeper from 2005 that works not only as a wonderful character study, but also a fascinating and complex examination of small town life, clashing with big city social politics.


The Indiana Daily Student

One of years 'smartest' documentaries

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Any political documentaries in the past few years have compromised their presentation of the truth in order to promote a partisan agenda -- most notably Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 9/11." Thankfully, "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room" does what it can to avoid politics. Instead, it tells a story about morality, lost in a haze of unchecked ambition. Jeffery Skilling was proud of Enron once. As the film tells it, Skilling believed he was a "fucking smart" man. He saw Enron as a company full of smart people. It seemed to be a symbol of how dreams can conquer the constraints of reality.

The Indiana Daily Student

'Two for the Money' is a good gamble

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The business of sports gambling has no rules, except to win. Inspired by a true story, "Two For the Money" took audiences for a ride when it came out in theaters back in October, and now plans to do the same with it's recent release on DVD. Matthew McConaughey ("Sahara," "A Time To Kill") stars as former hotshot quarterback Brandon Lang, who works a lousy job making sports picks in Las Vegas until Walter Abrams (Al Pacino) comes a calling. In a matter of days, after getting a job offer from Abrams, Lang hops on a plane to New York in order to act as a gambling advisor making large sums under Abrams while also picking up a posh new life.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not quite the 'Lord' of movies

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This tale of moral bankruptcy gives us a window into the world of a private, international and illegal arms dealer, Yuri Orlov (Nicolas Cage). The Ukrainian born, American Yuri is good at his chosen profession, and it has allowed him to rise above the poverty of his youth. He sells indiscriminately to anyone with the ability to pay and Yuri's only concern is for himself and his family. He attempts to keep his trophy wife relatively in the dark as to the true source of the income that allows her and their young son to live more than comfortably.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jesus walks in the jungle

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As an amateur movie critic, I give very few points for trying. If you put a lot of effort into your film and it still sucks, then I'll call it as I see it. No hard feelings. Someone, you know, might value my opinion and base whether they see it themselves on what I have to say. It's possible. I can't, in good conscience, give a movie a decent grade because the people involved meant well. That's how I feel about "End of the Spear." Good intentions will only get you so far, and then you're stuck with a hokey movie about Jesus in the jungle.


The Indiana Daily Student

A flashy, but poor action sequel

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It's hard to say what exactly made "Underworld" a worthwhile film. Bits of action mixed into a Gothic-horror-thriller, a chilling cinematographic palette of blues and grays, an interesting storyline depicting the war between vampires and werewolves (called "lycans" in the film), or maybe all of this was an impressive mark for first-time writer/director Len Wiseman.


The Indiana Daily Student

A failed look at 'Comedy in the Muslim World'

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If you think you're going to learn something from Albert Brooks' ("Mother," "Taxi Driver") new film, "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World," you've got another thing coming. This movie is a distinctly no-learning zone, despite a premise chock full of creativity and a trailer that seems to suggest the possibility of a hilarious quasi-documentary.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Beautiful Discovery

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Terrence Malick is somewhat of a hermit among the filmmaking community, what with only directing three films during the past 32 years. Good thing each one of them was a genuine artistic achievement worth fawning over, or else we might have forgotten about him by now. Malick's fourth film, "The New World," is another event in and of itself, combining a sense of visual wonder and subtle, moving drama that towers over all the Jesus lions and Queen Latifahs clogging today's cineplexes.


The Indiana Daily Student

A songwriter's minor album

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Releasing three albums in eight months is no easy task. Maybe that's why Ryan Adams sounds so tired on 29, the final album of his 2005 trilogy. After the breezy country-rock of Cold Roses and the more traditional twang of Jacksonville City Nights, 29 comes off as excessive and unnecessary, even for a guy who is known for being overly prolific.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Hell No' to Beck remixed

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Maybe it is just my music ADD, but with Beck's Guero CD from last year I would usually stop listening or tune out by the sixth or seventh song ("Earthquake Weather" or "Hell Yes," depending on my mood). If approached randomly and asked if I listened to Beck, I'd answer with a resounding yes. I even listed him under music I like in my Facebook profile. So when the opportunity was offered to review Beck's new CD Guerolito, a remix of Guero, I volunteered immediately.



The Indiana Daily Student

Vaden ties single-game 3-point record in loss

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When sophomore forward Robert Vaden threw in his eighth 3-pointer of Tuesday night's game, he suddenly -- despite the score -- had a whole lot in common with the opposing Iowa Hawkeyes.


The Indiana Daily Student

Unearthing an underground history

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Alexander McClure, a slave in Tennessee, sought to ship himself to freedom, to a new life in the North. With help, McClure sealed himself in a dry goods crate in Nashville, Tenn., bound for Cincinnati by rail. Documents unearthed by the Indiana Historical Bureau Underground Railroad Initiative reveal that McClure endured more than 10 hours holed up in a three-foot by two-foot crate.


The Indiana Daily Student

Faculty pleased with provost post

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While some faculty members are pleased with the new provost position, others are frustrated after being left out of the discussion to shift some of the University's major administrative roles. Faculty members voiced their concerns Tuesday during the first Bloomington Faculty Council meeting held since the IU board of trustees voted to approve President Adam Herbert's restructuring plans.


The Indiana Daily Student

Artest-to-Kings trade called off

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CLEVELAND — The Ron Artest trade to Sacramento is off -- for now. The Indiana Pacers had reportedly agreed to ship the volatile forward to the Sacramento Kings for Peja Stojakovic, but Indiana coach Rick Carlisle said Tuesday night no deal was imminent.



The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers 'unsatisfied' with weekend ties

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After losing a double-overtime thriller to Ohio State 6-5 in late November 2005, the IU hockey team sought revenge against its conference rivals this weekend in Columbus, Ohio. However, the two-game set didn't go as planned as the Hoosiers came away with two ties, 5-5 and 6-6.