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Saturday, April 4
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

We Love Cov, and other observations

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Admit it. You were scared. For the first few seconds after Maryland senior Steve Blake hit his improbable half-court shot as time ran out in Tuesday night's game, you were petrified. Perhaps your jaw dropped. Maybe you spilled your drink. Or you possibly echoed Chris Farley's "Super Fans" character and said, "I think I'm 'havin a 'heart attack."



The Indiana Daily Student

Sophomore steps up scoring, team leadership

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Every team needs a player it counts on. They rely on the player when times are tough. For IU women's basketball team, that player is sophomore Jenny DeMuth. Early this season, DeMuth has been playing with a purpose and is determined to lead the Hoosiers back to the NCAA Tournament.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers split up, travel to Ohio, Minneapolis

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The IU women's swim team heads into the month of December looking to improve on their undefeated season as the split squad swims in two meets this weekend. IU will swim in both the U.S. Open and the Miami (OH) Invitational.

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Better Than Ezra thrives

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"Aha, it was good living with you." That's all it took, a man impersonating a guitar's wah pedal and a catchy phrase, to propel three guys from Louisiana from indie-rock status to No. 1 on the Billboard Alternative Rock charts. Even now, Better Than Ezra"s "Good" stands as one of the most memorable tracks from the mid-'90s alternative rock-scene. Tonight, BTE will bring its sound to Axis for a Toys For Tots benefit show.


The Indiana Daily Student

More than one 'King of the Blues'

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If rock music has proven that dying young offers fame, then blues has proven the opposite for many of its great performers. Your best hope for post-mortem fame is to have a slightly androgynous English band from the '60s or '70s cover some of your songs and hope that they are around well after most people retire. But since the Stones didn't really do a lot for the two lesser known Kings of the blues, I figured it couldn't hurt to get out my scarf, grab a beat up Gibson and see where it takes me...or maybe I'll just write about them.


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Metroid prequel lives up to hype

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The naysayers and skeptics can grab a controller and shut up -- "Metroid Prime" lives up to the hype. This brilliant mix of next-gen, first-person-shooter and the old-school, platforming "Metroid" games is an amazing triumph. This is the best reason to own a Gamecube, and even the most hardcore "Metroid" fans will be impressed by the series's evolution. "Metroid Prime" puts players in the role of bounty hunter Samus Aran in a prequel to "Super Metroid." The game begins with Samus responding to a distress beacon on a ship, where she fights an old enemy and crash lands on nearby planet Tallon IV. The story unfolds slowly as Samus explores the planet. The game is not driven by the plot, and much of the details in the storyline depends on how involved you become in the gameplay.


The Indiana Daily Student

U2 produces the ideal best-of

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U2 may not have aged that gracefully, but looking back on the '90s, who can blame the band? As one of the most consistent and somehow experimental bands of the '80s, U2 made some of the greatest, freshest-sounding rock albums in history. But in the '90s, aside from Achtung Baby (which is overrated anyway), the guys essentially became a singles band that used its albums to find out just how much the group's fans would be willing to accept.


The Indiana Daily Student

Animation can't save Sandler

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I'm going to make this short and sweet. Chances are, if you're an Adam Sandler fan, you'll have already seen this film by the time this review hits the page; for you, I'm so sorry. Yet, through the magic of newsprint, I can spread this warning far and wide to those that have not seen "8 Crazy Nights": DO NOT SEE THIS FETID PILE OF GARBAGE. Got it? Great. Go rent "Billy Madison" instead. The basic "plot" is that Davey Stone (Sandler) is running around his small town creating "mischief" that involves an ungodly amount of agonizing unfunny bodily function jokes. Sandler also pulls an Eddie Murphy and plays two additional characters in addition to Davey, the aged Whitey and Whitey's clueless sister, Eleanore. The trick is, you can completely tell it's Sandler voicing the characters, since altering his unique voice is about as easy as getting IU to a bowl game.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dream cast shines on soundtrack

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Whether you like him or not, it's safe to say that few artists on the planet are as hot as Eminem right now. The Eminem Show has been met with critical praise while also establishing itself as one of the top-selling albums this year. And now, Eminem is taking on Hollywood with "8 Mile," a film roughly based on his life. The soundtrack for the heavily anticipated film has been equally awaited. The CD features 16 cuts, and Eminem takes executive-production credits for everything. The disc features an all-star cast of hip-hop acts, including Eminem (of course), Xzibit, D-12, Jay-Z, Nas, 50 Cent, Gang Starr, Rakim and more. With such talented emcees on the bill, this soundtrack has the potential to be one of the best hip-hop soundtracks ever. The album wastes no time, delivering the hit "Lose Yourself" as the first track. The song is as close to a ballad as Eminem will ever get. With the adrenaline-laced lyrics, "Lose Yourself" could be the hip hop equivalent of "Eye of the Tiger."


The Indiana Daily Student

Kick it with 'FIFA 2003'

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Every updated EA Sports game in 2002 made huge leaps from its 2001 predecessor. Now, with a new onslaught of 2003 versions, EA has improved on its formula, but just by tweaking an almost perfect model anyway. This is no different with "FIFA 2003." EA did not create a new game, and the game is played almost exactly like "FIFA 2002," but there are some little extras that make it worth owning. There is the always-impressive season mode, playable with more than 350 teams, and even more impressive are the 8,000 real players on these teams. There are also a bunch of different tournaments that can be played with the 16 different leagues, and an international tournament that is pretty much the World Cup without the licensing.


The Indiana Daily Student

Louis Stevenson meets Disney

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I find it pretty hard to know what to expect out of Disney these days. While I'm not sure that the company has completely switched its attitude toward what kinds of movies to make, there does seem to be a push toward a new style of storytelling and a new approach to crafting the animated feature. Maybe this has all been brought on by the success of animated films from Pixar and Dreamworks, but like "Atlantis" before it, "Treasure Planet" represents a new form of Disney, one that trades the spontaneous musical numbers for a more kinetic action-adventure pace.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dredging up new psychedelic, concept album

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Concept albums make me cringe. Bands with pretentiously misspelled names like Dredg make me wince. After listening to Dredg's El Cielo, I may need to reconsider. Part of the problem is that the first thing that comes to mind when the words "concept album" come up are, "Domo arrigato, Mr. Roboto." Ugh. The second thing is wailing about how dragons will take over the Earth by the year 10,000. Double ugh.


The Indiana Daily Student

Spend your Friday somewhere else

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So it's Friday again, and who would have guessed it, Craig (Ice Cube) and Day-Day (Mike Epps) are behind on their rent. The only difference this time is that the two perennial slackers had their rent money swiped by a ghetto-Santa-Claus-thief (that, as they often remind you, is how it goes in the 'hood...ha). What's more, their naggy old landlady won't bend on the rent deadline and has promised the duo an encounter with her recently paroled nephew, a former jailhouse acquaintance of Craig and Day-Day who would love to "get to know them better" on behalf of his dear aunty. And now it's just like any other Friday. Our slacker heroes have 24 hours to come up with cash to protect their precious "dignity," and as you can imagine, their journey for the dough will run them into all sorts of trouble, create all sorts of excuses for fart jokes and introduce them to all sorts of madcap ghetto caricatures (well, maybe just a bunch of busty women, a mini-pimp and some good, old-fashioned 'hood-rats).


The Indiana Daily Student

Planning a primo party

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It's Saturday night and you've decided to accompany a few of your friends to a party. The shindig is being held at a friend's house, and by the time you arrive the place is hoppin' with drunken revelry. After muscling your way through a shoulder-to-shoulder crowd and nearly falling on your face after tripping over a piece of furniture, you finally make your way to that permanent party staple: the keg. But after downing several cups of the golden brew, you find yourself waiting in a bathroom line so long that you begin to worry about either seriously damaging your bladder or finding the nearest potted plant that needs watering.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dylan's collection a holiday bonus

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In 1975, Bob Dylan toured the Northeastern states and parts of Canada in a medicine-show spectacle he called the Rolling Thunder Revue. Traveling like a circus with Dylan were such characters as T-Bone Burnett (producer of the "O Brother" soundtrack), Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Roger McGuinn and Allen Ginsberg. In retrospect, '75 was seen as a year Dylan returned to form; he released his heartbreaking Blood On the Tracks album, came back to protest with "Hurricane" and generally seemed happy and engaging on stage.


The Indiana Daily Student

The two sides of Conor Oberst

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New albums by Desaparecidos and Bright Eyes are two very different experiences masterminded by the same boy wonder, Conor Oberst of Omaha. Oberst has been drawing praise for years now and continues to do so with Desaparecidos' debut album and Bright Eyes' fourth album, Lifted. For the record, as of 2002 he is a veteran at the ripe old age of 22. Bright Eyes is an emo-type outfit that Oberst fronts like a folk troubadour. On the band's latest album, his words and acoustic guitar are moved to the front. Instead of the usual rock band accompaniment, Lifted... is rounded out with old-world instruments and '60s pop arrangements.


The Indiana Daily Student

Groove to the music

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A few stragglers run through the door, their footfalls unintentionally pounding out the beat of the music that blasts from the speakers. "How you guys doing tonight?" yells junior Diana Ballas above the music to the group assembled before her, all while her hips keep time. Her question is answered with cheers, whoops and claps, signaling the beginning of class. Ballas is one of the four Group X leaders who instruct a hip-hop dancing class at the SRSC.


The Indiana Daily Student

Top 10: A documentary of my Thanksgiving holiday

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1) The Thanksgiving Party and Dinner Thanksgiving in my parents' house was spent in some ulterior time frame. A large portion of my family was there, and I avoided eye contact all night. Questions like, "So, when are you graduating?," etc... 2) Faith Hill Special on ABC, Thursday Night As Thanksgiving dinner broke and the fam exited to the living room, the television was turned on to this moronic schlock-fest. It was a surreal experience, in a way. I thought about how it might be funny to gut myself while sitting on the couch, replacing order with chaos and finally giving everyone a purpose.


The Indiana Daily Student

Two words: Dragon fighting

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People often question me when I say I really like "Reign of Fire." I mean, true, it's not exactly what I'd call a "good film," but when I want a movie to entertain me, it doesn't get much better than 102 minutes of humans and dragons doing everything they can to kill one another. Dragons awake and occupy themselves by killing off all things living. Enter Quinn (Bale), fire chief and protecting leader of a small community of struggling survivors. Then enter Van Zan (McConaughey), hardcore freelance dragon slayer who hunts down the beasts via a modern arsenal. Together, the two men set out to reclaim mankind's place atop the food chain. It's one hell of a show.