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Wednesday, June 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Is a Jägerbomb worth risking pneumonia?

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Late last Thursday night I was tooling around in my Geo Prizm doing donuts in the stadium parking lot. The fresh four inches of powder gave me a once-in-a-winter chance to turn my four-cylinder economy ride into a performance ATV.



The Indiana Daily Student

Tragic 'Friedmans' flick too troubling

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You can't help but feel sorry for the Friedman family. The Long Island family was tragically torn apart in the late 1980's when the father and one of the sons were accused, perhaps rightly or wrongly, and sent to jail for child molestation. But while watching "Capturing the Friedmans," an agonizing and frustrating documentary by first-time filmmaker Andrew Jarecki, you also can't help but feel like you have absolutely no business sticking your nose in their lives.


The Indiana Daily Student

Triple the flavor, triple the Folds

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Ben Folds fans rejoice! The name and fingers behind rock's greatest three-piece fivesome has returned with a series of three EPs. This, after an all-too-long hiatus following his 2001 solo debut, Rockin' the Suburbs, and his subsequent and wittily titled, Ben Folds Live, which dropped in late 2002.

The Indiana Daily Student

Sailing toward mediocrity

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Starsailor's second album, Silence is Easy, which follows on the heels of 2002's somewhat superior Love is Here, is a pompous display of production. How fitting that former reclusive genius/current charged murderer Phil Spector was at the helm during much of the album's creation.


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Look out Below! 'Kamikaze' drops from Chi-town

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It's been six years since Twista released an album, posing the question: just what has he been doing all this time? Aside from being featured on various heavyweight CD's including Jay-Z's Blueprint 2.1 and Ludacris' Word of Mouf, he's remained in relative obscurity, all the while riding the wave of his '97 hood classic, Adrenaline Rush.


The Indiana Daily Student

Music to make 'Playground Love' by

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It is sometimes troublesome that electronic bands so often fall into the trap of being too sterile, too emotionless and lacking the organic power of music played by live musicians. Kraftwerk, of course, turned this problem into an attribute and launched a movement. But Air, with its newest album, Talkie Walkie, seamlessly binds electronically produced beats with samples of live instruments, creating an effective indie-pop/electronic blend.


The Indiana Daily Student

Big themes, small film

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America has worked so hard to compress all its disparate elements into a cohesive whole that we have projected our national character onto the consciousness of the globe. America is more than a country, it's an idea. With "In America," Irish-American writer/director Jim Sheridan and his daughters/co-screenwriters Naomi and Kirsten tell a semi-autobiographical story of a family fighting for redemption against the backdrop of Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Gospel of John' should pray for forgiveness

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There is nothing fundamentally wrong with religious films. Movies like "The Ten Commandments," "Jesus Christ Superstar" and "The Prince of Egypt" provide solid adaptations of stories held dear to many faiths. Unfortunately, "The Gospel of John" does not succeed in adapting the biblical story of Jesus' life into anything but a boring, terribly acted waste of celluloid.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Score' likely to make you snore

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How many things can the letters SAT stand for? Suck Ass Test, for one. Stoned And Toasted, for another. But the jokes stop there in MTV's horrible, horrible attempt at moviemaking. Stick to just not showing music videos, MTV.


The Indiana Daily Student

FINDING FANTASY

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Caroline Scott, a sophomore, admits she wouldn't go to theatres to see the first "Lord of the Rings" movie until a friend forced her to. She says the world of fantasy entertainment was not of any interest to her.


The Indiana Daily Student

ACOUSTIC PAIN

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The amount of noise Jackson Pain creates without the aid of distortion, forming a solid wall of sound, doesn't seem like it could be coming from an acoustic set. Senior Mike Chapman's vigorous guitar and vocals, along with the combination of senior Rob Stogsdill and Kyle Gobel's horn section, create soaring melodies backed up by Jeff Lawson's crash-filled drums and Andrew Caito's bass. All of these elements come together to form a sonic anomaly where it's hard to believe there is barely any electric influence on stage.


The Indiana Daily Student

A Supreme Change

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Fifty years ago, the United States was "separate but equal." Schools, restaurants and hotels opened their doors to one race. Fifty years ago, Bloomington resembled the rest of America's segregated cities. Barbershops and social facilities throughout the city denied access to families who had lived here since the Civil War, and the only school black children could attend was Banneker Elementary. Fifty years ago, IU did not have a single integrated fraternity, and black student athletes had to stay in separate hotels at away games. Fifty years ago, with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education, the country went from "separate but equal" to equal.


The Indiana Daily Student

Singer Luther Vandross won't attend Grammys

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NEW YORK -- An ailing Luther Vandross will not be able to attend Sunday's Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, where he's nominated for five awards, including song of the year for "Dance With My Father." Luther is most famous for his songs " Here and Now," and Dionne Warwick's "A House is Not a Home."


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers give away Illinois game

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For the IU men's basketball team, it's the one that got away. A home game, a halftime lead of seven, and the lead the entire game -- with the exception of the last three minutes -- made it look like no one but IU's ballgame to win. But something went terribly wrong in the second half costing IU (11-8, 5-3 Big Ten) a 51-49 loss to Illinois (14-5, 4-3). "We missed a lot of open shots and shots around the basket that we normally make," junior guard Donald Perry said. "We had every opportunity to win. We had the opportunity, we just didn't do it."


The Indiana Daily Student

North Korea agrees to resume nuclear talks

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SEOUL, South Korea -- North Korea agreed Tuesday to resume six-nation talks Feb. 25 -- a breakthrough in American-led efforts to persuade the communist state to abandon its nuclear weapons programs for economic and other concessions from Washington.


The Indiana Daily Student

Homeless seek shelter in campus buildings

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With half a foot of snow on the ground, below zero temperatures and no place to call home, IU's homeless population is left with few options during the winter. IU Police Department Lt. Jerry Minger said that means trespassing in open campus facilities.


The Indiana Daily Student

Exploring Diversity

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As a second-year graduate student from China, Xiaofei Wang, greatly the IU Chinese Students and Scholars Association. The groups helped her sign a housing agreement before arriving at IU, gave her a ride from the airport and organized an orientation where she met her boyfriend. Today, Wang is studying telecommunications and is public relations chair for IUCSSA.


The Indiana Daily Student

Ticket wants 'wet' campus

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IU Student Association elections are fast approaching, and students are already scrambling to organize their tickets. The Big Red ticket has officially announced its candidacy for the 2004 IUSA election campaign. IUSA allows voters to cast a straight-ticket ballot for one party, including candidates for the executive and legislative positions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Senate shut after ricin poison scare

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A white powder found in Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist's office tested Tuesday as an "active" form of the deadly poison, ricin, forcing cancellation of most Senate business in the second such scare from a lethal toxin to hit the capital.