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Friday, May 15
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

It's never to early to start drinking

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Well, it's kind of difficult to review live albums. Personally, I'm not really a fan of live albums. I would much rather go to the show personally and experience the band firsthand. But I realize that this isn't always possibly, especially with bands that aren't around anymore (like the Clash). Anyway, I'm rambling. I haven't even told you what's being reviewed yet. Flogging Molly have been on the top of their game for several years now, and they don't plan on stopping anytime soon. The band has followed up their brilliant 2004 release Within A Mile Of Home with a new album entitled Whiskey on a Sunday. Four acoustic tracks, five live tracks, and a brand spanking new studio track.


The Indiana Daily Student

J5's 4th a good time, but not their best

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Jurassic 5 is a stunning array of talent. Take five MC's (each with their own distinct sound) and two DJ's putting out honest, raw and catchy hip-hop reminiscent of the old-school days of NWA and the Wu-Tang Clan (when ODB was still alive and not in jail). This is the boys' 4th release, entitled Feedback. Party people, get ready for some old-school party rap here. Unfortunately, this release is a bit disappointing for a J5 fan. First off, the production is weak. This can be explained by the departure of DJ Cut Chemist, who is pursuing a solo career. Gone are the goofy samples and speedy cutting and crossing that Chemist brought to the distinct J5 sound.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not mind-blowing

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I guess maybe I expect too much from Pharrell. His new album, In My Mind, is full of good beats, great raps and electrifying falsetto singing. Too often, though, these highlights do not occur at the same time. In my mind, Pharrell is the fashionista of our time -- like Madonna, except not annoying -- which might be why In My Mind seems tepid sometimes. Fans should expect every song to be as well crafted as the $200 Ice Cream shoes or $100 Billionaire Boys Club hoodies he crafts when not tending to rap.


The Indiana Daily Student

The perfect murder. The perfect movie.

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Woody Allen seems to have finally gotten things right with last year's "Match Point", and now "Scoop." It looks like he might be making a comeback after all. Its one thing for me to get into the movie and really like it; that's my personal taste, but you could tell that the entire audience (a semi-full theatre) felt the same way. "Scoop," a fast paced murder-mystery, has a little bit of Woody's "Manhattan Murder Mystery" and "Match Point" mixed together. Scarlett Johansson (who starred in Allen's "Match Point") stars as Sondra, a young American journalist who has a habit of sleeping with the people she interviews without ever getting the scoop. While in London she feels compelled to solve the mystery of the "Tarot Card Killer."

The Indiana Daily Student

One 'Bully' you wouldn't mind knowing

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With "The Ant Bully," "Monster House" and "Barnyard" all in theaters, how's an 8-year-old supposed to choose what movie to beg their parents into submission to take them to see. Well, uh, if you were an 8-year-old, "The Ant Bully" would be a decent choice. Sick of being picked on by the neighborhood bully, nerdy Lucas takes his anger out on the helpless ant colony in his lawn. Fed up with the destruction to his society that Lucas causes, Zoc (Nicolas Cage,) the wizard ant (yes, a wizard ant, sounds dumb, but the plot needs to start somehow) creates a potion that shrinks Lucas to ant size. Put on trial for his crimes, the Ant Queen (an underused Meryl Streep, how do you underuse Meryl?!?) orders Lucas to work amongst the ants to learn and appreciate their ways.


The Indiana Daily Student

Another teen flick to add to the collection

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I know what you're thinking, we don't need anymore teen flicks. But the future generations need one for their time and "John Tucker Must Die" is it. Although it is the first teen flick for writer Jeff Lowell ("Just Shoot Me!"), it is, for the most part, a success. Now whether that is because of the actual movie itself or the cast, I don't know. The whole movie is a cliché. Kate (Brittany Snow) is the new girl at school, and being quite the wallflower, she finds it hard to get herself noticed. Kate takes on a job as a waitress at a local restaurant and that is where she first meets Mr. Popular, John Tucker ("Desperate Housewive's" Jesse Metcalfe).


The Indiana Daily Student

Crockett and Tubbs return

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"Miami Vice," created long ago by Michael Mann when pastel shirts were in and it was cool to wear your sunglasses at night, has now received a complete update that makes it seem like the 1980s never even happened. "Vice" is now dark, gritty and lacking any sort of humor -- it isn't your normal police procedural in the least. Crockett (Colin Farrell) and Tubbs (Jamie Foxx -- whose performance in Mann's "Collateral" guaranteed they'd work together again) get in over their heads with a South American drug cartel and as they get deeper, the risks become greater. To make matters worse, Crockett is falling in love with his boss's girlfriend, Isabella (Gong Li, "Memoirs of a Geisha").


The Indiana Daily Student

Man discovered masturbating in IMU mail room

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The IU Police Department has advised Indiana Memorial Union staff members to be on the look out for a subject after a worker discovered a man believed to have been masturbating in the basement mail room of the IMU Monday afternoon.


The Indiana Daily Student

With toll road, daily drive may be more taxing

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Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels is seeking an I-69 toll road that extends from Evansville to Indianapolis, but some Southern Indiana Hoosiers like Thomas Tokarski have drawn a line in the limestone sand, saying I-69 is "beginning to look more and more absurd."


The Indiana Daily Student

CIA not just looking for 'secret spies'

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Four men in suits - Henry, Jamal, Greg and Joe - giving only their first names because of the sensitive nature of their positions, flipped through slides and weaved in and out of the playful mystery of what their jobs entailed in front of a captivated crowd in the IU Career Development Center.


The Indiana Daily Student

Faculty in talks about labor studies

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A fundamental difference of opinion among IU's faculty became apparent Friday at an open forum held to determine whether a massive restructuring and dismantling of the Division of Labor Studies is needed.


The Indiana Daily Student

IUPD to receive tech upgrade

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In times of emergency, saving every second is critical and now the IU Police Department can cut out every wasteful one with a new text-based wireless communication system they are set to install.


The Indiana Daily Student

Discovering the discoverer

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For more than 500 years the historic ship has silently escaped all human presence, hiding with it secrets from one of the most important periods in human history.



The Indiana Daily Student

Local venues weigh in: Is sandwich making an art?

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Art is in the eye of the beholder, but what about the stomach? Even though college town food markets are often saturated with pizza palaces, burger bordellos and ice cream parlors, sandwich shops provide community refugee for students, residents and guests to explore the art of stuffing just about anything between two slices of bread.


The Indiana Daily Student

IU hosts top swimmers

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For the fifth consecutive year, IU's Counsilman/Billingsley Aquatic Center played host to the Speedo Champions Series.



The Indiana Daily Student

Cyclic critics

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In David Halberstam's "The Best and the Brightest," New York Times reporter Neil Sheehan described the United States government at war as "a centralized state ...


The Indiana Daily Student

Living on the edge

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I'm a fence-sitting Oprah fan -- I teeter on the fence of her empire until I fall onto the "I hate Oprah" or "I love Oprah" side. I usually fall on each side several times per episode.


The Indiana Daily Student

Exiting executives

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Far from being the only institution with president issues, IU appears to be part of a larger national trend -- a "crisis of confidence" in university leadership, with presidents coming under fire from dissatisfied faculty, governing boards, regents, state lawmakers and other major players in the politics of higher education.