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Sunday, April 26
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

Union accepting credit cards

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Those with large appetites but a low supply of cash can now purchase food in the IMU with credit and debit cards. Sugar & Spice, Burger King, Kiva and The Market began accepting plastic at the end of last semester to meet the demand of credit card carrying customers. Sophomore Jorge Tirado said he was not surprised by the change. "Taking credit cards must be better for their business, because I know a lot of times I've stepped into restaurants and only had a credit card," Tirado said as he ate a Burger King meal. "I don't see any cons to it."


The Indiana Daily Student

Big Brothers Big Sisters looks for new mentors

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IU senior Anthony Dee has a busy schedule. He's involved in multiple organizations on campus and studies hard. But when Dee is devoting his time as a mentor for the program Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central Indiana, he focuses on a child's happiness and development, not his own social life. "I pretty much act like a little kid," Dee said. "It's pretty fun." Dee, a member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, became involved with Big Brothers Big Sisters his sophomore year when his fraternity hosted a philanthropy event in which children played games with members of the fraternity. One of the goals of the day was to match children with compatible mentors, and Dee found a young boy with similar interests and became his big brother.


The Indiana Daily Student

Daniels promises balanced budget

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At the commencement of the State of the State address Wednesday, Governor Mitch Daniels described his first year with initiatives aimed at pleasing partisan interests. With help from the General Assembly, he has won tax benefits for businesses, begun to decentralize government and pushed through the daylight-saving bill. "Indiana is no longer on its heels, waiting while our problems bounce past us or through our legs," he said in the televised address. "Even though the inning is still an early one, we are moving forward against our challenges." Daniels reminded Indiana residents that not long ago, the state had a $2 billion surplus. With less attention paid to special interests, the state passed the tightest budget in 50 years, he said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Weekends on the rocks

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As winter approaches many IU students become more hesitant when it comes to going out at night into the cold. And while the Bloomington bar scene may not be far from most off-campus housing, there is often a walk involved for the weekend bar-hopper. But when the temperature drops lower than the legal drinking age, some begin to question whether or not it's worth enduring the brrr for the beer. Some students believe coat checks would be convenient at bars throughout the winter months.

The Indiana Daily Student

Dysfunctional family, dysfunctional film

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The trend to make characters in films wholly unlikable is one that I'm not sure I'll ever understand. There is a lot of ground to be gained by making characters 99 percent unlikable, with a glimmer of hope or redemption. But if a writer or director can't reel the audience in, all could be lost, as it is in Noah Baumbach's ("Mr. Jealousy," co-writer "The Life Aquatic") insufferable "The Squid and The Whale." I suppose "likable" is in the eye of the beholder.


Ashley Udell

Third Strokes album falls short

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With all that has been said and written about The Strokes, it's hard to blame them for becoming the most self-conscious band in rock. The crush of expectations, hype and backlash surely has to weigh on their minds, and being branded the "saviors of rock" has always been an impossible label to live up to. Up to this point, none of that talk has really mattered though. The only thing that did matter was that The Strokes were a fresh and exciting young band that put out two great records.


busting out block from buster

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It has been an exhausting week of no longer being able to sleep in, being out late to catch up with friends and getting back into the daily grind of class. And now, all students want to do is relax. What better way to unwind by renting a movie? To avoid pricey rentals and hidden late fees here are some alternative places to rent your favorite movies without the hassle or venture beyond your favorite genre and try something new.


Brandon Foltz

Beauty over substance

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For fans of Arthur Golden's sumptuous book, "Memoirs of a Geisha" offers up a virtual smorgasbord of eye candy -- it's simply beautiful to look at. But unlike the artfully coy geishas, under the film's beauty, there's not a lot of substance. Trying to cram the epic novel into a two-and-a-half-hour long movie is understandably difficult, but the screenwriters focused more on hitting all the appropriate plot points rather than providing depth of feeling. It would have also been more useful to newcomers had the touching end line not been given away in the trailer.


Adam Fithian

Jackson's latest epic stuns

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Not since Boris Karloff's performance in 1935's "Bride of Frankenstein" have audiences felt such sympathy for an intimidating movie monster. Andy Serkis and WETA Digital surpass those heights in Peter Jackson's ("The Lord of the Rings Trilogy") latest three-hour-plus opus, and Naomi Watts deserves praise for portraying Kong's muse so delightfully and convincingly.


Ledger and Gyllenhaal play two workman who find love where they least suspect it.

A triumphant love story

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There are typical love stories and then there are actual love stories. Every once in a great while, someone makes an actual love story into a film. Ang Lee's ("The Ice Storm," "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon") "Brokeback Mountain" is the type of actual love story that might leave you breathless. Lee has been a filmmaking acrobat from day one of his directing career, leaping from genre to genre with the fluidity of a professional gymnast. His films have explored people in love in different eras, countries and social circumstances.


Daniel Herman

"Stone" hits rock bottom despite great cast

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Ripping off the famous "family meets the significant other" story plot, "The Family Stone" is about Meredith Morton's (Sarah Jessica Parker) attempt to win over her boyfriend's family over the Christmas holiday. Through the many tests the family throws at them, Meredith and her boyfriend, Everett (Dermot Mulroney), question whether they are made for one another. While "The Family Stone" features a great cast anyone can appreciate, there isn't another aspect of the film to compliment the stars. The writing is poor at best as it never establishes some of the character's personalities. This winter I would recommend one to take a trip to see their own family rather than to see this family bomb.


Mary J's 'Breakthrough' Gospel

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The Queen of soul and R&B is back in her latest release which unleashes a fiery ball of raw emotional honesty, brutal truths, headbangers and tear wrenching tales of hope. Mary J. bares her insecurities, joys and soul on her newest release The Breakthrough, showing she still has the guts and the will to give herself to the public. Few female R&B stars have been able to achieve legend status without gimmicks, constant club jams or the occasional booty shaking.


The Indiana Daily Student

Welcome to the suck

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Kristanna Loken ("Termninator 3") has nice breasts. That is the one and only reason you should go and see the horror/adventure/vampire flick she stars in, "BloodRayne." She pulls them out and bounces around on top of some mulleted vampire hunter for about two minutes. You get to see them. It's kind of nice. But, although they may not be hers, I'm told you can see all sorts of boobies for free on the internet. So that kind of cancels out the film's only draw. Beyond that, I'm at a loss. There's hardly anything to tell you; it's just really, really bad. Really. But okay. Because someone is bound not to listen to me, Loken leads as Rayne.


Ashley Udell

Carrey comedy is anything but fun

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As far as Jim Carrey comedies go, "Fun with Dick and Jane" is not one of his finest. While there are moments of classic Carrey slapstick humor, the film relies too heavily on cheap laughs and practical jokes to be truly funny. 'Dick and Jane' is the story of a middle class family living the American dream, until one day when Dick Harper's (Carrey) company takes an Enron-esque plunge. He and his wife (Leoni) then decide to rob banks in silly costumes and set up Carrey's filthy rich ex-boss (Alec Baldwin).


Ashley Udell

'Grandma's Boy' goes up in smoke

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A good stoner flick is hard to do. There are the truly good, there are the so-bad-they're-good, and there are the mediocre. "Grandma's Boy" is right in the middle of the mediocre. Allen Covert, who has worked in 12 of Adam Sandler's 15 films, plays Alex, a 35-year-old video game tester. After his roommate squanders their rent money on hookers and they get kicked out of their apartment, Alex moves in with his grandmother, Lilly (Doris Roberts of "Everybody Loves Raymond") and her two roommates.


Brandon Foltz

'Hostel' tortures stomachs

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Word has spread that "Hostel," Eli Roth's follow up to his 2003 horror flick "Cabin Fever," is gory. In the sense that blood is spilled and random shop tools are used to inflict pain, this assertion is true. However, I would say the film is not so much gory as it is physically discomforting. The blood in this movie seems tame compared to the severed body parts, gushing pus and spewed vomit. Keep in mind that the gore does not begin until the halfway point of the film, so you do have some time to prepare.


James Brosher

Foxx brings the naughty

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Next up to attempt entertainment industry domination? Jamie Foxx. With an Oscar already on his mantle, and the success of "Golddigger," the amazingly successful collaboration with Kanye West, a solo album seemed inevitable. Funny how things change. In a former life Jamie Foxx played himself on a TV sitcom about a struggling singer living and working at his families hotel to make ends meet. Sadly the show was canceled seemingly sending Foxx into the ocean of obscurity that has swallowed up the careers of so many promising talents starved for exposure.


The Indiana Daily Student

A puzzling, but worthy film

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On first viewing, it might take you a little while to figure out what's going on in writer-director Stephen Gaghan's "Syriana," but once the seams come off and the film becomes whole, it's a worthwhile experience. It's a complex, fascinating and sobering movie with stories about American interests in oil abroad, and the various interlocking lives of the many different people affected. George Clooney, Matt Damon, Chris Cooper and Jeffrey Wright all give strong performances as players absorbed into the wildcard game.


Brandon Foltz

Spielberg reinvents self with 'Munich'

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Despite its lengthy pacing and somewhat underdeveloped characters, Steven Spielberg's "Munich" allows the director to finally reinvent himself and break free of the Frank Capra-esque mold which encased so much of his work. Spielberg's take on the Israeli backlash towards the 1972 Olympic murders is one visceral gut-punch of equally mixed tightrope thriller and paranoia-laden plight, where the hunters quite possibly have become the hunted.


Courtesy photo

'Casanova' offers charm, eye candy

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Almost 30 years ago when director Federico Fellini attempted to adapt the memoirs of Giacomo Casanova, the notorious lover of thousands of women, he tried too hard. The film was surrealistically awkward and casting Donald Sutherland as the infamous libertine was an error. Lasse Hallström, the same director responsible for the romantic "Chocolat," makes an attempt not to tell the life story of Casanova, but only a small segment of it. Unfortunately, he didn't try hard enough.