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Wednesday, May 13
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


Not so Secretly Canadian

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In June, the soulful chamber pop group Antony and the Johnsons, winners of the 2005 U.K. Mercury Music Prize for best album of the year by a British or Irish act, will launch their summer tour across Europe. Meanwhile, Austin, Texas, folk-rock band Okkervil River is working on the follow-up to their critically lauded 2005 album, Black Sheep Boy, and preparing to play the May All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Somerset, England, alongside a host of indie rock heavyweights. And Saturday, WIUX's Culture Shock festival will feature, among its roster, Catfish Haven, Richard Swift and David Vandervelde.


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ARTiFACTS

What: Fiesta mask from Loiza Aldea, Puerto Rico.


Ironically named album

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I knew full well before listening to this album that Hilary's voice is more like talking than actual singing (think Mary-Kate and Ashley in the "Brother for Sale" days). Still, I was really, really hoping she'd be able to put something together that would show more maturity than her previous hits like "So Yesterday" and "Come Clean" (which was probably only a hit because it was the "Laguna Beach" theme song). I mean the girl is 19, after all. But her fourth album is just as teen-pop and childish as the first three. What makes this one even worse is the lack of improvement in however many years she's been singing.


The Indiana Daily Student

In England, King Arthur’s legend lives on at Tintagel

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TINTAGEL, England – Storms and gusting winds have chiseled away at this corner of southwestern England for centuries, but the legends that inhabit the area still loom large. The rocky headland near the village of Tintagel has become so entwined with the legend of King Arthur that its true history seems almost incidental, despite a collection of rough stone foundations and listing walls that hint at its rich past. According to various poems, stories and popular myths, it was here, at the fortress of a Cornish duke, that King Arthur was conceived. Later versions of the story say Arthur was born at the site and may have lived here for a time.

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Stick to producing

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Why is it that hip-hop producers have such a difficult time making a good album of their own? Whether its Pharrell or P. Diddy, great hip-hop producers just seem unable to make something worthwhile on their own. Maybe that's why Timbaland, last year's "It" producer, recruited a ridiculous guest arsenal for Shock Value, featuring Justin Timberlake, 50 Cent, Missy Elliott, Fall Out Boy, Elton John (!?) and many, many more. By taking almost all the attention off himself, it seems like Shock would be just a first-class album of Timbaland-produced tracks, but that's simply not the case. In fact, Shock Value turns out to be quite the mess.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dugdale matures with latest piece

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Most of the times I find Colin Dugdale’s column incredibly juvenile and silly (a typical Dugdale column can be paraphrased as follows: “I’m gay! Here’s a penis joke. By the way, I’m gay. My penis is gay, too. Penis joke.”). His April 5 column, “Man pickles,” represented quite a remarkable maturation of Mr. Dugdale’s typical formula. Yes, he still used his shtick of homosexuality and penis jokes, but he did so in a refreshingly mature way (if a penis joke can be considered “mature,” that is) and found the right balance of comedy and heartwarming anecdote. After finishing today’s column, I found myself thinking, “Well done, Colin! Why aren’t all your columns like this?” Here’s to hoping this trend continues in his future work. Dave Klein Graduate student


The Indiana Daily Student

Just TurnItIn

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Four teenagers from McLean High School in Virginia have filed suit against anti-plagiarism Web site TurnItIn.com. The basis for their suit? The students claim their homework papers are personal work products that deserves the same copyright protections most authors enjoy.


The Indiana Daily Student

Culture Shock '07

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Seniors Zach Pollakoff and Brian Kerr remember a scarcely attended Culture Shock from two years ago. Only six or seven dedicated concertgoers made it to the headlining band playing behind the radio station. Pollakoff says Culture Shock wasn't nearly as good in the past because it was full of bands he didn't want to see, but both he and Kerr said they are excited to see every band on the lineup this year. Major improvements last year saw a big increase as an estimated 1,000 fans filled Dunn Meadow and this year looks to expand even more as Culture Shock expands into a new venue filled with national acts, adds an indoor after party and delivers a day filled with music for free.


The Indiana Daily Student

Almodovar returns

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"Volver" is a Spanish word that literally means "to return" but is used here to mean "coming back." Indeed, this whole film is a kind of coming back for its makers; Pedro Almodovar returns to his roots as a man of La Mancha, and Penelope Cruz returns to the cinema of her origin where she is obviously most at home. Almodovar's films are often lively, celebratory visions of the world. He is noted for his liberal use of the color red and his subtle object metaphors that give silent clues to the motivations of his characters. (Watch for Cruz's use of knives.) Perhaps most importantly, he is known for his deep, empathetic understanding of women.


The Indiana Daily Student

Student calls Peace Corps ‘life-changing’

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When Brett Kuhnert was a Peace Corps volunteer, he was assigned to a remote area of Morocco with no running water or electricity. But the village did have satellite TV, so he was able to watch “The Jerry Springer Show” in French. Still, Kuhnert said the trip was one of the greatest experiences of his life. Kuhnert, who is now IU’s Peace Corps campus representative, led a panel Tuesday night to give students more information on volunteering with the organization.


The Indiana Daily Student

ACC to demonstrate hula dance

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The Asian Culture Center will inspire aloha spirit and teach hula moves this Friday from 5 to 6:30 p.m. as part of ACC’s Asian Cultures Around Campus program. The hula lesson will feature Carol Reynolds and guest Ed Hiram, both native Hawaiians, demonstrating Hawaii’s native dance. Hula is best known today as a dance usually performed at luaus and celebrations. But the hula was originally performed as a religious ceremony to honor and worship Hawaiian gods such as Pele, the goddess of volcanoes. “Hula is the folkdance of the Hawaiian people,” Reynolds said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Columnist has bright future ahead

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In response to “Analysis: IU building should not be named after a racist,” April 10: This was an extraordinarily well-written and compelling column. I had no idea of the history behind this story. I find it impossible not to agree with the writer. Andrew Shaffer has quite a future ahead of him. Good luck in the effort. John T. Stuckey Alumnus


The Indiana Daily Student

Better concept than album

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I want terrible things to happen to Trent Reznor. It's not that I have anything against the man. In fact, he's one of my favorite artists, but he clearly does his best work when he's incredibly depressed and abusing drugs to excesses that would make Keith Richards blush. Year Zero marks the second Nine Inch Nails album since Reznor has gone sober, and much like 2005's With Teeth, it's a fine album but fails to live up to the high quality of his earlier work.


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Around the World

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The operator of a cruise ship that struck a reef and sank off a popular Mediterranean resort, leaving two people missing, said Wednesday that human error was to blame.


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Woman writes English translation of Quran

CHICAGO – One of the first English translations of the Quran written by a Muslim woman is expected to hit bookstores next week.



The Indiana Daily Student

Pentagon to lengthen troop duty

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WASHINGTON – The Pentagon will lengthen tours of duty for all active-duty Army units in Iraq to 15 months from the current 12 months as the military struggles to supply enough troops for the conflict, two defense officials said Wednesday.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sampson inks 6th recruit for next season

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The IU men’s basketball team added another player to its already illustrious 2007 recruiting class. Chicago native DeAndre Thomas – a 6-foot-8, 295-pound forward from Chipola Junior College in Florida – signed his national letter of intent to play for the Hoosiers next season, IU coach Kelvin Sampson announced Wednesday afternoon.


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Not-so-starving Artists

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While some work “McJobs” just to stay in school, others find ways of using what they’re passionate about to further their careers and fatten their bank accounts before diploma time. The following five students are just a few of the many young go-getters on campus using their artistic skills to pay the bills.


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Group works to help Kenyan orphans

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To many, 11 million might seem an abstraction, simply a number written on a page. But in sub-Saharan Africa, this number – how many children, as of 2001, who had lost one or both of their parents to AIDS – is a harsh reality. And according to a 2006 UNICEF report, by 2010 the number of children in the region orphaned by AIDS is expected to reach 42 million. But turning stark statistics into a unified mission, one group on campus has made it its passion to help these orphaned children and to provide a beam of hope from an ocean away. The Daraja Children’s Project-Kenya was started last year as an organization focused on providing a dependable bridge between donors and programs that support Kenyan children. According to the National AIDS Control Council, Kenya, a country where about 7 percent of adults have HIV, has a growing number of orphans since an estimated 150,000 people there each year die of HIV/AIDS.