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Tuesday, June 30
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

Program offers London internships

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Students can spend hours after hours trying to look for a decent internship on the Internet. They also hesitate when deciding whether they should study abroad with fear that credits won't get transferred back to IU.


The Indiana Daily Student

Business In Brief

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NEW YORK -- Using stolen passwords from legitimate customers, intruders accessed personal information on as many as 32,000 U.S. citizens in a database owned by the information broker LexisNexis, the company said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Polar Pop Express

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It's 10:43 p.m. Monday. Mac's employee Ben Kulow stands behind the counter. He's busy as six people wait in line while more flow through the doors. This might seem like an everyday scene in convenience stores nationwide.


IDS File Photo

Great acting doesn't save 'Jacket'

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"The Jacket" is a dark, bleak film rife with harsh screeches and brutal, stabbing flashes of memory. Sounds normally peripheral are unnaturally loud, like breathing or the buckling of straps. Director John Maybury employs numerous extreme close-ups of eyes and mouths. The jagged, tuneless music complements the cramped, cheerless tone of the film perfectly. If any of these things in large quantities make you uncomfortable, then this film may not be to your liking.

Muncie Fire

Send this prequel back to hell

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After wasting 114 minutes of my life with "Exorcist: The Beginning," I can only recommend that others not even bother watching it. Like the original "Exorcist"? It doesn't matter. Looking for a good lark to watch with your buddies over a few beers? Don't rent it. Watch "Blood Freak," "Basket Case" or something else with low production values and a high camp factor.


David Corso

Travolta comes up 'Shorty' in sequel

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Ten years after "Get Shorty" hit theaters comes the unnecessary but intermittently entertaining sequel, "Be Cool." Despite dismissals from numerous critics across the country, "Cool" actually lives up to its name at times.


NASCAR Michigan Auto Racing

Claiming the posthumous prize

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I suppose I should open with a few simple queries. Is there actually anyone out there who truly feels that Ray Charles made the finest album of 2004? Was Green Day's American Idiot too overtly blue state-friendly? Was Kanye West's The College Dropout too generously explicit? Were Usher's Confessions and Alicia Keys' The Diary of Alicia Keys jam-packed with too much pedestrian and mundane R&B? I suppose none of that matters, because Charles died, and untimely death will always take precedence over genuine artistry.


Chris Pickrell

Sunny SIDE UP

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She can already hear the waves crashing, feel the wind blowing and smell the salt water churning. Spring break is so close she can taste it. Lounging on the beach, soaking in the sun and truly taking the definition of vacation into context, junior Lida Coalter is hours away from spending her break in the Bahamas. Many students have been preparing for this magical week off in mid-March by packing and finishing up school work. Coalter has other plans. She's been preparing for spring break in a manner that has been catching on around campus and the nation in the past few years. A few weeks ago, Coalter started going to a tanning salon.


James Brosher

'Phoenix' rises to the occasion

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The DVD release of "Flight of the Phoenix" is a lot like the movie itself: mediocre fluff, but ultimately a little less than good. The movie is good, in a Saturday-afternoon-at-the-movies sort of way. It's a popcorn flick, without any real cinematic value, but I liked it. A team of humanitarians involved with a Red Cross-like agency are flying across Mongolia on their way home. Naturally, the plane crashes in the least accessible part of the desert, and because their agency was already strapped for cash, it doesn't look like anyone is going to be coming for them.


Michael Vick Football

Movies make the best medicine

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I had a friend come down with mono last week, so I did what any good friend would do: I swooped in with a box of popsicles and an armload of DVDs. But this wasn't any hasty rescue mission, mind you. It was a well-planned humanitarian act. And she needed my help; when I arrived at her apartment she was watching an Oprah movie. And it wasn't even a good Oprah movie. Poor thing.


SWITZERLAND FONDATION BEYELER

'Bringing Up' a classic

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What happens when you combine Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, a dog and a pet leopard all into one movie? You end up getting one of the greatest comedies of the classic Hollywood era, that's what!


NASCAR Michigan Auto Racing

Fitty avoids sophomore slump

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Even for someone possessing the brash bravado of Curtis Jackson (aka 50 Cent), following up a record as brutally loaded as his own debut, Get Rich or Die Tryin', would prove an overwhelming task. With 11 million copies sold, Get Rich threw 50's intimidatingly talented hat in the ring while doing its part to bring back some of rap's ferocity lost after the deaths of Biggie and Tupac. It's also become somewhat of a modern rap classic.


Muncie Fire

Johnson's latest 'Dreams' a success

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Jack Johnson traded in his surfboard for a guitar when he was 14 and has since secured international success with On and On, and his January 2001 debut, Brushfire Fairytales. His latest album, In Between Dreams, was released March 1, and the first single "Sitting, Waiting, Wishing," already has people anticipating that sweet, Cat Stevens-esque simplicity that he mastered on his first two recordings.


Courtesy Photo

Don't ever put 'Frances' on 'Mute'

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It's been almost five years since post-hardcore act At the Drive-In parted ways and went on to form all new musical incarnations. While three-fifths of ATDI created the atmospheric Sparta, the rest of the band, singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala and guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, would go on to form the highly experimental group the Mars Volta. And while Sparta is pretty good and the old tunes of At the Drive-In are simply unforgettable, the Mars Volta does an amazing job on its latest release, Frances the Mute.


Courtesy Photo

WINE: Uncorked

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Wine had a stigma once upon a time. Anyone who drank it was seen as a pretentious, self-absorbed and erudite snob who used words like "erudite" and preferred to be called an enophile instead of what others all knew they really were: a manic lush.


Jay Seawell

CHEAP THRILLS

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Dinner at an average restaurant -- $10 per person. Movie at Showplace East or West -- $8 per person. A night of drinking at a bar -- $25. Having a good time without spending a ton of money -- priceless. Luckily for a college student on a budget, there are many ways to have a great week in Bloomington without spending a lot of money.



Jay Seawell

Too much plot, not enough time

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What happens when a musclebound action hero finds himself bound by circumstances to protect a house full of children in the land of suburbia? Who knows? But here's a better question: didn't Hulk Hogan already make this movie a few times a decade before Vin Diesel became "The Pacifier"? And wasn't Hogan a lot cooler?


The Indiana Daily Student

Support for a free Lebanon

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RAKOW, Poland -- Once the greatest power in Eastern Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries, Poland ceased to exist as a sovereign nation less than two decades after the United States declared its own independence. In one of the most criminal land grabs in history, the Russian, Prussian and Austrian empires carved the nation up for themselves in three partitions during the late 18th century. The foreign powers exploited their neighbor's internal strife simply to increase their own powers.