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Monday, April 6
The Indiana Daily Student

Longform


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

'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

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.


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.

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.


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.


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.


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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.


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.


Long live the 'King'

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'm the first to admit to being a sucker for award shows. No matter how hokey, silly or self-serving they may be, something about them draws me in, and I end up watching, stunned, like a deer in headlights.


The Indiana Daily Student

Solving Racism Part 2

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This is the second in a three part series. How do you change a person's prejudices? As we have seen, people's prejudices and beliefs are difficult to change. And yet, people's beliefs do change. How does this happen? In order for a person's beliefs to change, they have to be challenged. If a person believes gay people are evil, his belief may be changed if it is challenged by a positive experience he has with a gay person, or by a new popular belief of society. In time, he may begin to change his beliefs. Beliefs and prejudices change over time as they are challenged by other beliefs. The other part of the racism equation is power -- the systems and institutions that control large parts of society.


The Indiana Daily Student

Barbie meets the hood

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White girls with microbraids and violet-eyed brothas with blonde hair -- it was like Soul Train meets TRL, right there in the middle of Wal-Mart's toy section. And if you're wondering whatever happened to Sisqo -- he's been secretly kidnapped and cloned, along with Christina Aguilera and Justin Timberlake. Or at least, that's become my theory since seeing Happy D, Kiyoni Brown, Liam, P.Bo, Tika and Tre, in standard B-boy stance, patiently waiting to be purchased by some good-intentioned soccer mom hoping to spoon feed her 10-year-old a taste of manufactured multiculturalism.


The Indiana Daily Student

The new tax menu

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Taxes -- and how governments collect them -- have subtle and far-reaching effects. Take Indiana's local governments -- cities, counties and townships. Most of their revenue comes from property taxes, based on the value of buildings and land. This system worked well in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when economic activity was primarily physical. But the economy is no longer tied to the land as closely as it once was. Instead of manufacturing and agriculture, most economic activity today is in the service sector, which includes everything from Arby's to advertising firms.


The Indiana Daily Student

Former nuclear scientist admits leaking top secrets

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -- The founder of Pakistan's nuclear weapons program claimed responsibility Wednesday for leaks of nuclear secrets he said were made behind the government's back, begging forgiveness in an extraordinary televised address to the nation.


The Indiana Daily Student

Give us our rental rights

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It's 11:30 Saturday night. After a week of planning, you've finally decorated your living room for that special two-month anniversary. The rose petals are scattered. An aromatic candle spreads its sweet scent. Marvin Gaye serenades in the background. Just as things begin to get interesting, in walks the landlord with a wrench in his hand. "Didn't you say your sink was broken?" he asks. Under current law, scenarios like these happen all too often. Landlords are free to wander in and out of their rental properties as they please. But this might soon change. A bill recently introduced in the state legislature would ban unannounced visits by landlords. The bill, introduced by IU alum and State Rep. Matt Pierce D-Bloomington, requires landlords to give tenants at least one day's notice before entering a renter's place of residence.


The Indiana Daily Student

Five dead in rural Monroe County fire

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UNIONVILLE, Ind. - Three children and their parents died Wednesday in a fire caused by the overuse of electric heaters in their rural Monroe County trailer home, officials said. All died from smoke inhalation, carbon monoxide poisoning and burns, county Coroner David Toumey said. Firefighters called at 5:46 a.m. to the home 10 miles northeast of Bloomington arrived to find it engulfed in flames. They found five bodies in what remained of the trailer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Optometry grant to aid community

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IU has received a $150,000 grant to go toward something other than the traditional benefit of scientific research, or the frequent expansion of an academic department. Last November, the IU School of Optometry, in partnership with the School of Medicine, received a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust to aid in providing the proper eye care for those who are not able to afford or have access to the medical necessity, said Gerald Lowther, dean of the School of Optometry.


The Indiana Daily Student

Talk will focus on 'cultural icon'

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Joe Louis, the second African-American heavyweight boxing champion in American history, will be the subject of a program at 7 p.m. today at the Monroe County Public Library. Professor Emeritus William Wiggins, Jr., of IU's African American and African Diaspora Studies, will present the talk. According to the Monroe County Public Library's Web site, Louis was known as the "Brown Bomber" for his boxing talent and heavy punching prowess. He became the heavyweight boxing champion in 1937 and defended his title 25 times until 1949.


The Indiana Daily Student

Local Dean group fighting onward

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Howard Dean supporters gathered at the Monroe County Public Library Wednesday for a voter drive. The group, which calls itself the Bloomington Dean Supporters, will be sending postcards to undecided registered voters in Wisconsin and Virginia and calling voters in Michigan urging them to vote for Gov. Dean in the primaries and caucuses to be held the next week.


The Indiana Daily Student

Housing fair aids in home hunting

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Many students found a new home Wednesday, thanks to a visit to the Housing Fair. Or at least, they have a better idea of where they want thier new home to be. Neon-clad construction workers, a life-size Elvis cut-out and piles of candy greeted visitors to the fair, sponsored by the IDS. Over 100 rental complexes made an appearance, making it hard to stand out without a bit of ingenuity. The representatives from Colonial Crest apartments were decked out in construction gear while sporting buttons that read "Making friends, Building relationships." The slogan and the outfit are symbols of the relationship between the complex and the resident, said Elena Colón, assistant manager in leasing. "We want to relate to our residents and let them know that we're out there to help them," she said.