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Tuesday, May 5
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

'Dead' brings the 'Payne' to Xbox

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\"Dead to Rights" is a sleazily entertaining new game available solely for Xbox. A cross-breed of "Grand Theft Auto 3," "Max Payne" and the old-school "Double Dragon," "Dead to Rights" is essentially a cheesy cop flick-turned-video game.


The Indiana Daily Student

Tarantino blasts his way onto DVD

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Quentin Tarantino is without a doubt the most dominant filmmaker of the 1990s. He burst onto the scene with the hilarious misconcieved-heist picture "Reservoir Dogs" in 1992, then followed that up with the Palme d'Or-winning crime caper "Pulp Fiction" and peaked with his 1997 blaxploitation-tinged Elmore Leonard adaptation "Jackie Brown." Each film was different than the other, yet singularly the voice of Tarantino.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fear dot crap

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This is one of those movies that isn't supposed to be funny but is. The premise is this: a psychopathic doctor tortures and kills young women, then broadcasts it over the Internet. In a quest for revenge, the soul of a woman he murdered has taken to living through a site called fear.com.


The Indiana Daily Student

Aniston shines as 'The Good Girl'

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I wonder if Jennifer Aniston is sick of doing "Friends." Could she be dreaming of a career in film, hoping for that moment to put it all behind her and maybe get a little Hollywood respect? Sure, she is filthy rich and married to Brad Pitt, but maybe every day she wakes up wondering why she's stuck in a sitcom rut, eager to find the role that will turn it around for her.

The Indiana Daily Student

Stones roll on with re-release

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This record should be played loud." At least that's what the Rolling Stones advise you to do on the inside cover of Let It Bleed. And every word of it is true. Quite simply, Let It Bleed is one of those landmark albums that every rock fan should have in his or her collection, from the quality cover of the Stones as birthday candles to what's inside the package itself.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sleater-Kinney's newest stretches no boundaries

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The band that Greil Marcus, the god of rock critics, dubbed the best band in rock and roll is back after a two-year hiatus. Sleater-Kinney has returned with its most experimental album to date. The musicians are no longer sporting the "Ramones read Newsweek" assault on the listener. Instead, One Beat is a showcase for instrumental aptitude.


The Indiana Daily Student

Round one: Ben Folds vs. R.E.M.

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If what they say is true about presentation being everything, then no one is going to want to eat this CD. It looks like Goner paid a fifth-grader to use his home computer to print off the album cover. Maybe the idea was to lower expectations, because the quality of the CD surprised me after removing it from the case.


The Indiana Daily Student

Aussie popsters show no progress

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Coming up on their fourth album, the three guys who make up the Australian rock outfit Silverchair still haven't figured out what kind of music they want to play. Diorama suffers from the same inexorable identity crisis that afflicted its predecessor, 1999's Neon Ballroom.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jazz Fables celebrates 25th year

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Every Thursday since 1989, Bloomington residents and IU students have been able to hear original jazz and favorite standards from Bear's Place house band, Jazz Fables. Tonight the group will be celebrating its 25th anniversary (13th at Bear's) of playing together and presenting jazz to the community during a no-smoking concert. The group consists of founder David Miller (trumpet), Tom Walsh (tenor saxophone), Luke Gillespie (piano), Steve Houghton (drums), Bruce Bransby (double bass), Lida Baker (flute) and special guest David Baker (cello), an IU School of Music professor. "David Miller's Jazz Fables has meant a great deal to the jazz scene in Bloomington," pianist Luke Gillespie said. "Miller has been a constant supporter and promoter of jazz music over the years, and his Jazz Fables performances with many visiting jazz artists, especially at Bear's Place, have helped to expose jazz to a wider audience, including students, faculty and the extended Bloomington community."


The Indiana Daily Student

Chicks have soul and let it show

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Country music has been reduced to mockery. With modern country infused with the pop-driven sounds of Faith Hill and, well, everyone else, instead of the Cash and Haggard-type soulful strumming, the best you'll hear on country airwaves is usually some untalented, lovesick ballad with a token steel-guitar riff. But you won't get that from the Dixie Chicks.


The Indiana Daily Student

Reissue fails to capture live Who

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When the Who first became the Who, the group was little more than an amphetamine-charged James Brown cover band. The guys billed their music as "Maximum R&B," playing old soul and rock and roll standards at high speed and high volume, and their Mod followers ate it up. By the mid-1960s, the Who had already cemented its reputation as a premier live band, a group that derived its energy from playing in front of a crowd.


The Indiana Daily Student

The divine look of body art

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Tattooing has been around for centuries, but Bloomington's tattoo studios are now able perform this ancient art in its most contemporary form. Those with a design or an idea have several choices for safe, quality body art.


The Indiana Daily Student

Four bands rock the IMU

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Last year, the Indiana Memorial Union's "Rock Explosion" was held outdoors and Bloomington's best were rained upon. This year, Laborius Clef, Blue Moon Review, Three Minute Mile and Jeremy Radway featuring SPRED are holding court indoors tomorrow night in the IMU to give their current fans and first-year students a chance to sample the Bloomington music scene.


The Indiana Daily Student

LOCAL H: rock and roll professionals

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Having only two members, Local H already sets itself apart from the rest of the rock world anyway. According to lead singer/guitarist David Scott Lucas, that's not such a bad thing, either.


The Indiana Daily Student

George W.ar must ask

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The Bush administration has continued to portray Saddam Hussein as a despot and a threat to world security that must be removed from his stranglehold of power in Iraq. And there is little doubt that Hussein's reputation of brutality to his own people is by no means respectable or acceptable for a world leader. However, unless he gets congressional approval and worldwide support, Bush would be sorely mistaken in taking action to overthrow the current Iraqi regime, even though he is not bound by law to do so.


The Indiana Daily Student

Superior Spitz

Seven events. Seven gold medals. Seven world records. Possibly the greatest single Olympic performance ever. But for American swimming legend and former Hoosier Mark Spitz, his unprecedented and unmatched achievement at the 1972 Munich Olympics simply represented the final chapter in his storied career. When Spitz looks back 30 years, he sees Munich as "the culmination of a journey of different events in my career." The string of Munich races he won - 100 and 200-meter butterfly, 100 and 200-meter freestyle, and three team relays - ended an incredible stretch to close his career.


The Indiana Daily Student

New state waste policy expected to stop cleanup costs

INDIANAPOLIS -- State environmental officials are preparing a new policy that would allow some hazardous waste spills to be left without cleanup if they pose no threat to human health. Manufacturers and state officials consider the policy a common sense approach, but environmentalists worry it could eliminate incentives for businesses to avoid spilling hazardous waste.


The Indiana Daily Student

Slow donations leaves blood center short reserves

INDIANAPOLIS -- The surge in blood donations after last year's terrorist attacks has long since faded, leaving the blood center that covers much of central and southern Indiana with far less than its normal supplies. The Indiana Blood Center's shortage has been critical since April 17, prompting the center to try everything from a Greek cookout to merchandise giveaways to lure donors, spokeswoman Elise Brown said. So far, no hospitals have had to cancel elective surgeries, but "we never want to put a hospital on hold," Brown said. The blood center needs about 500 donations a day to maintain an adequate supply, she said, but has averaged 200 to 300 daily donors throughout the summer. "We are constantly in a critical shortage because we have back orders, and hospitals are calling and putting in orders every day," Brown said. "We're very conservative when we call it critical; we could call it much more than we do."


The Indiana Daily Student

Fund created for victims' families

WASHINGTON -- Former President Clinton and former Sen. Bob Dole announced Tuesday they've raised $105 million to create a college fund for families whose relatives were killed or injured in the Sept. 11 attacks. "Any victims' spouses or children -- whether or not they're American citizens -- can qualify," Clinton said on CNN's "Larry King Live." Several corporations and organizations donated money to the effort, along with 20,000 private contributors. Children of victims can apply for scholarships of up to $28,000, depending on their need.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fee to make IU competitive

The dust has settled, and freshmen at IU now have at least two days of classes under their belts. But there's something about IU's largest freshmen class that already places them on a familiar plane with the rest of the student body. They too will be among the beneficiaries, one of the incumbent classes, that will not shoulder the expense of IU's latest student fee. In a June 21 meeting, the Board of Trustees unanimously approved a $1,000 fee on the incoming class for the 2003-2004 school year.