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Tuesday, May 5
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Distillers are a Dalle show

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Three albums strong, The Distillers have become a mainstay of rockers everywhere. Rising from and surviving the stagnant punk rock cesspool, the band has released Coral Fang, letting the world know they're a step ahead of other mohawk-rocking punks.


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Pleasant 'nightmares,' Tennessee style

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From Ashes Rise is one of the best bands you've never heard. Their fall/winter tour kicks off this November to bring Nightmares to life in front of a few lucky cities -- a wall of audible aggression.


The Indiana Daily Student

Twilight Singers success is Dulli noted

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In "Seinfeld," they called it "hand" -- the power of having the upper hand in the relationship. In a much grittier way, Greg Dulli sings about nothing but hand. With his previous band the Afghan Whigs, he sang, "I'm gonna turn on you/Before you turn on me." The debonair gentleman was knowing in his jerkiness.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sterling cast elevates legal mumbo-jumbo

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Cinematic adaptations of John Grisham novels can go one of three ways -- the good (A Time to Kill), the bad (The Firm) and the ugly (The Chamber). Well, the verdict's out on his latest, Runaway Jury, and it's acquitted of not sucking. Sadly, the flick is undeniably guilty of being ham-fisted, manipulative, biased and too slick for its own good. But that's not to say it's meritless.



The Indiana Daily Student

Luther reforms to make 'Fiennes' film

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Before Martin Luther King, Jr., there was a man known simply as Martin Luther. Born in the 15th century, Luther joined the Augustinian order at 13 and is since remembered for his radical religious ideals and the subsequent Reformation movement.


The Indiana Daily Student

30 years pass, but the meat stays fresh

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Almost 30 years ago, the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre was unleashed upon an unsuspecting, very squeamish public. Tobe Hooper's brutal, intelligent, independent classic proudly staked its claim among the scariest films of all time. Now, a new vision of this archetypal legend emerges.


The Indiana Daily Student

Eastwood guides all-star cast upstream

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Mystic River marks Clint Eastwood's 24th stint in the director's chair, and by all accounts, it's his best. Sure, he reinvigorated the Western with his Oscar-winner Unforgiven and made one of the '90s most overlooked gems in the form of A Perfect World, but here, Dirty Harry elevates what could've been your standard Boston-based police procedural/Irish gangland saga to Shakespearean proportions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Having a Ball ...old school style

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In the '80s, while most of us were French/Tight (whatever you dorks called it) rolling our pants and teasing our hair (Aquanet forever!), rock bands such as Motley Crue, Twisted Sister and Guns N' Roses were shocking the airwaves and topping the charts.


The Indiana Daily Student

Oldies but Goodies

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If one thing's true about fashion, it's that old styles always come back. Whether we're talking about the hippie-chic fashion statements our parents attempted, the Mary Janes that our grandmothers might have worn or Travolta's famous bell bottoms, it's confirmed that fashion revolves cyclically ... where the return of the past is inevitable.


The Indiana Daily Student

Move over mainstream: Unique flicks

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Many of the people who flip through this issue of Weekend probably never sat through an entire independent, classic or foreign film. With the recent closing of the Von Lee Theater, a favorite venue for art film buffs, an extremely small percentage of people seem to want to explore what lies beyond the packaging of mainstream entertainment.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pipkens earns Big Ten honors

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Among the many freshmen making contributions to the women's soccer team this season, one is already being recognized by the Big Ten for her accomplishments on and off the field. Freshman forward Megan Pipkens has made an impact wherever she has gone, having become a starter already for the Hoosiers early in the season.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers earn split, keep tourney hope alive

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The Hoosiers are still in the hunt for a spot in the Big Ten tournament after splitting their games this weekend against No. 20 Illinois and Northwestern. The Hoosiers lost to Illinois 2-1 Friday night in a hard-fought battle, but they were able to shut out Northwestern 3-0 Sunday afternoon.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU knocks out Buckeyes at home

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The IU men's soccer team was victorious over Ohio State 3-0 Sunday at Armstrong Stadium. The Hoosiers (7-3-4, 4-0-1 Big Ten) have posted four consecutive shutouts and have won five straight matches. IU's last loss came Sept. 18 at Notre Dame when it lost in double-overtime. The Hoosiers have out-scored their opponents 12-1 in the previous five games.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD Bike Patrol helps keep campus safe with fast response

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IU Parking Operations recently donated several mountain bikes to the IU Police Department to help further the department's bike patrol program. The IUPD Bike Patrol began in the early 1990s and benefits the student body with a faster response time. Because of its ability to cut across all sorts of campus terrain, they often arrive at the scene of an incident before a patrol car.


The Indiana Daily Student

Around The Campus

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The IU chapter of the Student Health Outreach Project will have its first callout meeting at 8 p.m. tonight in the psychology building, Room 101.



The Indiana Daily Student

Purdue ahead of IU in 7th Blood Donor Challenge

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IU and Purdue University are going head-to-head again, and this time they're out for blood. But instead of clashing over football or basketball, these universities are competing for who can donate the most blood in the seventh annual Blood Donor Challenge.


The Indiana Daily Student

Police to charge man after Niagara Falls stunt

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NIAGARA FALLS, Ontario -- A man who went over Niagara Falls with only the clothes on his back and survived will be charged with illegally performing a stunt, park police said Tuesday. Kirk Jones, 40, of Canton, Mich., is the first person known to have plunged over the falls without safety devices and lived. He could be fined $10,000. "It was an impulsive one-second thing and in a second and a half I was in the water," Jones said in a telephone interview with WXYZ-TV in Detroit.