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Sunday, Jan. 25
The Indiana Daily Student

Longform


The Indiana Daily Student

I've fallen down the 'Well'

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Hardcore is the punk-metal hybrid that has a hard time getting a mainstream following since punks and metalheads disagree more often than "tastes great" and "less filling." The other problem is the larynx-shredding vocals. Even those with a hardy musical appetite have a hard time getting used to the hyperintense barking.


The Indiana Daily Student

Once again the French appropriate

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In the most generalizing and stereotypical way possible, one can divide most indie-rock bands into two broad categories: the 'always building up to something' band, and the 'something important is happening right now' band. The French electronic band M83 belongs to the latter category. Its second full-length Dead Cities, Red Seas, & Lost Ghosts creates a sound that is as big as an ocean (or a sea?) and as depressingly ephemeral as, uh, a ghost.


The Indiana Daily Student

Using good music to make good music

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Tindersticks, a six piece big band with an intimate sound, has created a beautiful album with Waiting for the Moon, its sixth studio LP. And it is enjoyable to listen to despite its lack of originality. Tindersticks play a sound derived, clearly, from Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, but somehow it works. Cave, the reigning king of underground music (at least as far as this reviewer is concerned), specializes in morbid lounge ballads that are beyond astounding.


The Indiana Daily Student

Oohs, Ahs, too many robes

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The connection between the neo-psychadelia of The Polyphonic Spree and cult living is a little too easy to make; it's been done before. But for a band with 23 plus members, pop orchestral arrangements and vaguely alluring lyrics, ignoring the connections would be a fallacy.

The Indiana Daily Student

Buddy Guy's 'Blues Singer'

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Buddy Guy lives in my hometown. I'm not talking about Chicago, I'm talking about Flossmoor, a particularly white, southern suburb of the city. Flossmoor is an isolated place. Buried beneath cavernous oak trees, it is surrounded by mildly dangerous, lower-class black towns like Ford Heights, Hazel Crest, Country Club Hills and Middle America -- consumer culture riddled (you know, business parks and endless strip malls), asphalt suburbs. You can't park a pickup truck in your driveway in Flossmoor, or leave your lawn unmowed -- it's against the law. The town was built up around Western Ave. as a weekend and summer retreat for rich, city businessmen.


The Indiana Daily Student

Buddy Hackett made me laugh

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Buddy Hackett made me laugh. That's probably something that the marketing staff at any entertainment-producing organization would want to hear. After all, I am not in Buddy Hackett's target demographic. That's also probably irrelevant now after Hackett's death at age 78 last Monday. But now's a good time to make another point.


The Indiana Daily Student

Historical epic comes home

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Martin Scorsese is perpetually being robbed. After having directed such classics as "Mean Streets," "Taxi Driver," "Raging Bull" and "Goodfellas," it's mind-boggling to think the man's never won an Oscar. And so the story goes again with Scorsese's latest effort -- his dream project -- "Gangs of New York." Hailed by critics and abandoned by audiences, "Gangs" is a near-masterpiece that should have taken home a slew of golden boys, including Best Costumes, Best Set Design, Best Actor and Best Director, but alas, didn't.


The Indiana Daily Student

Henry Rollins saves the world

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This game has such potential it makes me want to cry. It is the distant future, you are Mace Griffin, a "Ranger;" a galactic cop. Framed, by the political fat cats, for a crime you didn't commit, you get sent to prison and when you come out, the universe is a different place. The Rangers are disbanded and the galaxy is rife with crime and chaos. So what do you do? It's simple: you vow revenge on the politico punks who threw you in the slammer and become… a bounty hunter. Sound like fun? Wait, there's more. This is also the first game to seamlessly combine the action of first-person shooters with the excitement of flight simulation, and to top it all off, you get Henry Rollins voicing Mace Griffin. I mean come on! What else does a game need, right?


The Indiana Daily Student

There's nothing 'Broken' about this 'Social Scene'

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Once in a while, a band breaks through the dull pop-culture scene and tears the norm to shreds. Toronto-based Broken Social Scene brings solo artists like Jason Collett and members of bands such as Metric and Stars together in a beautiful culmination of musical knowledge and experimental personality. You Forgot it in People is the second CD from this indie collective and is unlike anything I have ever heard. The first song, "Capture the Flag", lulls you into mellow anticipation and abruptly ends in a climactic explosion of guitar, cymbals and a drum beat so hypnotic that you can't help but love it. Innovative transitions between songs are jolting but entertaining.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sailing not so smooth with 'Sinbad'

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The theater was deserted save for four young children who ran raucously down the aisles while their parents looked silently on. I wondered briefly about the emptiness as I sat down, but it didn't take me long to realize why. "Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas" tells the tale of the great Arabian pirate and adventurer, Sinbad (voiced by Brad Pitt), who after being falsely accused of stealing the Book of Peace, is condemned to die. He is, however, given ten days to prove his innocence, and thus embarks on an extraordinary adventure to recover the stolen book. Sounds like the plan for a great movie, but for some reason, "Sinbad" fails to rise above mediocrity.


The Indiana Daily Student

Bigger and blonder equals dumber

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Legally Blonde 2: Red, White and Blonde" is definitely blonder, but that doesn't necessarily make it better. The original was silly, lighthearted fun. The sequel is a rehash, and though the stakes are higher, the premise seems even more unlikely than in the first. Elle (Reese Witherspoon) is about to be married to Emmett (Luke Wilson, collecting a paycheck). Though, when she discovers that one of her firm's clients uses animal testing and wants to protest, she is fired.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Terminator' flick anything but robotic

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After the cinematic maelstrom that was "Jingle All the Way," "Batman and Robin," "End of Days," "The 6th Day" and "Collateral Damage," it's amazing that Arnold Schwarzenegger still has a career. His last certifiable hit was "Eraser," all the way back in 1996, and even that flick was proceeded by the half-assed turd of a movie, "Junior."


The Indiana Daily Student

Bloomington: Not just for drunks anymore

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Bloomington is home to entertainment of all kinds. This town regularly features various kinds of movies and musical acts, both local bands and those known nationwide. If none of that is what you consider fun -- honestly, you're probably not one of our readers. But say you're tired of that sort of thing, and are looking for something else to do. Of course, Indiana University has been named the Princeton Review's No. 1 party school of 2002, so there's always getting drunk. Though, maybe that isn't what you want either.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hackers knock out obscure Web sites

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WASHINGTON -- A battle among hackers erupted Sunday on the Internet as some factions disrupted a loosely coordinated "contest" among other groups trying to vandalize thousands of Web sites around the world. Unknown attackers for hours knocked offline an independent security Web site, zone-h.org, that was verifying reports of online vandalism and being used by hackers to tally points for the competition. U.S. government and private technology experts warned last week that such vandalism was likely.



The Indiana Daily Student

Students on trial for assault

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SOUTH BEND -- The attorney for four former Notre Dame football players charged with sexual assault asked a judge to exclude from their trial statements the statements they made during an expulsion hearing.


The Indiana Daily Student

Professors study ticks to help prevent Lyme disease

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Most people avoid the tiny, vampire-like bugs or remove them as quickly as possible, but Keith Clay collects ticks in plastic vials off of his dog or even off his wife's pants. The tick vials end up at work where Clay and his colleagues are examining how harmless and disease-causing bacteria interact inside ticks. Their work could lead to methods of limiting the spread of diseases like Lyme disease to humans and other animals.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUSA gets down to business

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While many students are spending this summer lying out on the beach taking a break from the grind, IU student government officials are looking to improve aspects of campus life. The current party in office is Crimson, which was elected last winter. Junior Casey Cox, president of the IU Student Association, along with Crimson executives seniors Grant McFann, Alan Grant and Anne Eichengreen, is spending the summer drafting proposals, negotiating contracts and passing budget plans.


The Indiana Daily Student

Car chase leads to capture

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A wanted felon who escaped prison after being arrested for bank robbery led the Bloomington Police Department on a chase Saturday evening, ending with a car crash and a foot pursuit. The felon and his companion were taken into custody near the intersection of Fess and Cottage Grove avenues.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Celebrating the Fourth'

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Fire trucks, a marching band, a bagpipe band, military caravans, pro-life protesters and political campaign floats were just a handful of those present at this year's Monroe County Fourth of July Parade on Friday. Thousands of spectators, armed with cold drinks, blankets and lots of sunscreen, lined the streets of downtown Bloomington. Temperatures rose to the mid 90s as the sun beat down on those celebrating Independence Day.