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Thursday, Dec. 25
The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD


COURTESY PHOTO
Norbert Kraph

This ain't no ordinary heist

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When I sat down to watch "Inside Man," I was more interested in seeing if director Spike Lee could pull off a bank heist movie about race, gender and other social issues than the story itself. Cause, you know, he's Spike Lee, and that's what he does. He makes movies about social issues. I tend to think he's hit or miss; often morally ambiguous, his movies and characters are fully human, faults and credits to their names.


Chris Pickrell

You got Punk'd

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A fan spat onto the lead singer of The Methadones from the balcony of Uncle Fester's, located on Kirkwood Avenue. "That's not cool," the singer said, glaring at the fan. "Keep playing you pussy. It's a punk show," another fan retorted. The singer threw water, the fan threw beer and the singer leaped onto a speaker, launching himself into the balcony to fight. The fight was broken up and the singer came back down and finished the set. It sounds typical for a punk night, but its founder, Josh Johnson, insists it's the only real incident they've had.


No one gets away clean in the world of “Traffic.”

Soderbergh's finest hour

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Back in 2000, director Steven Soderbergh had the year of his life. Snagging Best Picture Oscar nods for "Traffic" and "Erin Brockovich," Soderbergh earned two Best Director nods in the same year -- an accomplishment not seen since Frank Lloyd back in 1929. Ultimately he won for "Traffic" and we still remember it over that year's big winner, Ridley Scott's "Gladiator." Penned by writer Stephen Gaghan (writer/director of 2005's "Syriana") with inspiration gained from the British mini-series "Traffik," "Traffic" carries a heavy message on a topic we're all familiar with: drugs. From the West Coast to the U.S.-Mexican border and way over in Washington D.C., a massive portrait is painted on how drugs can factor into almost anything and, ultimately, do harm to us all.


IDS FILE PHOTO
Senior forward D.J. White slams the ball over teammate Lance Stemler and Ohio State's Matt Terwilliger (42) Sunday, Feb. 10 in Columbus, Ohio. White, and former IU guard Eric Gordon, are expected to be drafted in Thursday's NBA Draft.

An open invitation from his Purpleness

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No matter how often the media poke fun at his bizarre and reclusive lifestyle or how many times Dave Chappelle ranks on his quirky, sexual purpleness, Prince is still one hell of a talented musician. Which is why listening to 3121, the newest addition to the artist formally known as the artist formally known as Prince's repertoire, is so disappointing. Following in the footsteps of 2004's Musicology, a highly successful, but fairly mediocre album, Prince attempts to return to the '80s synth-pop rhythms and sounds that made him exclaim, "Baby I'm a star," and mixes things up with a bit of hip-hop and Latin instrumental flavor.

Richa Sharma cleans tables at the end of the night at Hoosier Cafe’ in Read Residence Center Sunday night. Sharma also works as a lab assistant in the chemistry school and volunteers at the Shalom Community Shelter. Photos by Anne Rebeck

Fast Cash

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Books. Clothes. Late night pizza runs. And in some cases, tuition. These are but a few of the expenditures college students face. According to a recent National Retail Foundation survey, college kids annually pump over $26 billion into the economy -- with each student spending $666 on back-to-school supplies every year. For some, having an extra money supply in the reserves is critical for making a college education possible. And for everyone, a little extra cash can always make the weekends more fun.


All About Me:

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An Indiana native and business major in finance, junior Betsy Henke was voted IUSA President in March 2006. Although she has "no future in politics," Henke says the job "just kind of fell into my lap." She has worked a lot with other divisions of IUSA, such as the student organization funding. Henke hopes to use her previous experience and contacts she made to make this a productive year for IUSA. "I'm honored for this. I'm really excited because we have a good team. People want to be involved and that's important to help cover more ground."


Brandon Foltz

Who let this dog out?

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If you make out with your spouse who's trapped in an animal's body, is it still considered beastiality? Apparently not in this update of the old Disney "Shaggy Dog" films. Tim Allen plays a busy father too obsessed with his career as a Los Angeles deputy District Attorney to be concerned with his wife ("Sex and the City's" Kristin Davis), son (Disney slave Spencer Breslin) and daughter (an overacting and annoying Zena Grey). But faith intervenes when a genetically altered canine bites Allen, transforming him into a dog and allowing him to see the errors of his ways.


Chris Pickrell

This is one filet of a film brotha

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Having never endured the divorce of my parents, I'm not sure I could ever truly empathize with the kids in Noah Baumbach's "The Squid and the Whale," but that fact in no way dulled the impact the film had on me. Produced by Wes Anderson, "Squid" factors in all the subtle dark humor, and a bit of the intricate set decoration, of "The Royal Tenenbaums" and "Rushmore" while at the same time feeling, unlike Anderson's directorial triumphs, wholly organic and unrehearsed. It's 1986, Park Slope, Brooklyn, and 16-year-old Walt (Jesse Eisenberg, autobiographically modeled after Baumbach himself) and 12-year-old Frank (Owen Kline, son of Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates) must deal with their parents Bernard (Jeff Daniels) and Joan's (Laura Linney) divorce.


COURTESY PHOTO
Curt Simic

'Fab Four' bore

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You have to give Stereolab credit for one thing: they stick to their guns. The "groop," as they're called, are famous for blending '50s and '60s pop with subtle shades of electronica and cleaner-than-clean sonic polish. In Fab Four Suture, Stereolab doesn't break any new ground, but for some people, that is more than enough. If you like adding variety to your days-long shuffled playlist, there's no other band out there quite like Stereolab. As background music, Fab Four Suture (or any of the groop's records) can make any party a little bit groovier. But if you're looking for a record to slip into your car's stereo, this album will probably get boring.


Film Illuminated on DVD

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"Everything Is Illuminated" is a wonder of a film, and it achieves something so rare that it is hard to believe it comes from a first-time director/screenwriter. Its achievement lies in its uncanny ability to evolve from a quirky, hilarious road picture into a solemn and poetic meditation. The central theme is remembrance, involving one of the most horrific events of the 20th century: the extermination of the European Jewish community in World War II. Acclaimed actor Liev Schreiber ("The Hurricane") adapted the autobiographical novel by Jonathan Safran Foer for the screen and finally got it produced by Warner Independent Pictures after a couple years of shopping for a financier.


Chris Pickrell

Jones' directorial debut a masterpiece

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Open upon a town right on the border of Texas and Mexico. Nothing much ever happens here aside from the daily affairs of the Border Patrol, whose job it is to prevent illegal immigrants from crossing into America. Somehow, a man named Melquiades Estrada (a paranoid but content Julio Cedillo) crosses that border and with it comes a warm friendship and ranching job from Pete Perkins (Tommy Lee Jones looking old and weathered).


The Indiana Daily Student

Best to stay away

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It's official. The video game industry has taken the entertainment industry by storm. Video games have always been successful by themselves, but now with the release of "Stay Alive," a film which revolves around one, it seems this fad is getting ridiculous. The film is about an underground horror video game of the same name that causes one to die the same death as in the game. After the death of three friends, some fellow gamers decide to commemorate their friends' untimely deaths by playing the game they played right before they died.


COURTESY PHOTO
Ken Gros Louis

Hasidic artist proves to be indestructible

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Matisyahu, a Hasidic Jewish reggae rapper, is easily the most intriguing artist to hit mainstream airwaves in years. Often described as Bob Marley reggae meets Sublime, dub-ska-punk meets hip-hop meets Phish inspired jam; Matisyahu's sound is a fusion of genres which is finding welcome ears in pop audiences across the country. A bona fide teenage hippie by 14, Matisyahu (aka Matthew Miller) was more interested in music than the classroom, eventually dropping out of high school to follow Phish on a national tour.


The Indiana Daily Student

Space Jam

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"Hey man, it's gonna be a great show. Just let yourself go and get lost in the music. Take an amazing journey! Woo hoo!" Okay, that might be a little exaggerated, but I've heard something along those lines more than once among a crowd at a jam band concert. Yes, hippies live for such events. But they're not the issue, often being disproportionately mixed together with jam band music. There's more to the recipe. Ever since the Grateful Dead and Allman Brothers Band became jam band pioneers in the late 1960s, live performances have stood as the cornerstone of the movement. Record sales were marginal compared to the amount of ticket sales. Although album releases were frequent, instead of waiting a year or two for another vinyl, fans salivated at the word of a concert at a nearby venue.


The Indiana Daily Student

Grad students protest health insurance cuts

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The chants of about 30 IU graduate students echoed down Kirkwood Avenue Wednesday morning as members of the IU Graduate Employees Organization protested cuts in their health benefits. The students gathered at the Sample Gates, holding signs and repeating chants like "They say cutbacks -- we say fight back!" Meanwhile, inside Bryan Hall, administrators and student representatives discussed which specific cuts would be made for graduate employee health plans. "We're here to protest the administration's decision not to fully fund the increases in our health care coverage, and that's leaving us with either increased costs or cuts to our benefits," said Elizabeth Rytting, a graduate student and internal communications officer of the GEO steering committee. "One way or another, it's going to come out of our pockets."



The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington...and all that jazz

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The lights dim and a sea of colored luminescent lights flood the busied café. The musicians take stage -- rhythm in the back and horns, trumpet and saxophone up front. The ensemble rustles its music then turns to the sax player who begins to snap his fingers. The room is silent save the uniform tapping of the feet to the recognized beat. The foot is understood. After the count off, the horns blare and the players begin to craft their musical art. For the players in The Mike Epstein Quintet, a local IU student jazz combo, this musical ritual embodies their typical Friday night.


The Indiana Daily Student

The infractions

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Kelvin Sampson might have carried some extra baggage on his flight to Bloomington. The former University of Oklahoma men's basketball coach -- expected to be announced as IU's coach soon -- could be cited for inappropriate recruiting at OU as soon as April, according to The Associated Press. The NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions meets April 21 in Park City, Utah. It could cite the OU athletic administration as having lacked institutional control.


The Indiana Daily Student

You got Punk'd

·

A fan spat onto the lead singer of The Methadones from the balcony of Uncle Fester's, located on Kirkwood Avenue. "That's not cool," the singer said, glaring at the fan. "Keep playing you pussy. It's a punk show," another fan retorted. The singer threw water, the fan threw beer and the singer leaped onto a speaker, launching himself into the balcony to fight. The fight was broken up and the singer came back down and finished the set. It sounds typical for a punk night, but its founder, Josh Johnson, insists it's the only real incident they've had.


The Indiana Daily Student

Fast Cash

·

Books. Clothes. Late night pizza runs. And in some cases, tuition. These are but a few of the expenditures college students face. According to a recent National Retail Foundation survey, college kids annually pump over $26 billion into the economy -- with each student spending $666 on back-to-school supplies every year. For some, having an extra money supply in the reserves is critical for making a college education possible. And for everyone, a little extra cash can always make the weekends more fun.