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Sunday, April 19
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

11 women to participate in annual Black and Gold Pageant at Buskirk-Chumley

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Eleven IU women are hoping to earn financial aid Saturday by excelling in public speaking and evening gown attire. Participants of the fraternity Alpha Phi Alpha's 13th annual Miss Black and Gold Pageant will be competing for a $1,000 scholarship at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater Saturday. They will be judged on an introduction (performed in business attire), a talent, a group performance, a pre-performance interview, their GPAs, their community service, the amount of advertisements they sold and their evening gown attire presentation. The top five finalists will also participate in a question-and-answer session, on which they will also be judged.


The Indiana Daily Student

Mapping system has its day at IU

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IU's fifth annual GIS Day mapped its way to the Indiana Memorial Union's Frangipani Room Thursday, celebrating and informing the IU community about one of the country's fastest-growing information technology fields. Representatives from the Indiana Geological Survey, an applied research institution of IU, the IU Geology Library and the City of Bloomington's Information Technology department gathered at the conference to share the numerous uses of the geographic information and imaging systems and global positioning system.


The Indiana Daily Student

Pope Benedict XVI attends screening of made-for-TV movie about John Paul II

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VATICAN CITY -- Pope Benedict XVI attended a Vatican screening Thursday of a television miniseries on the life of Pope John Paul II -- giving equal billing to the latest biopic on his predecessor after watching a rival production six months ago. Benedict said "Pope John Paul II," which CBS will broadcast Dec. 4 and Dec. 7, provided an important service in spreading the message about the life and works of the late pope.


The Indiana Daily Student

Designer giving pairs of $215 specialty sneakers to illegal immigrants

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SAN DIEGO -- The high-top sneakers cost $215 at a San Diego boutique, but the designer is giving them away to migrants before they cross to this side of the U.S.-Mexico border. These are no ordinary shoes. A compass and flashlight dangle from one shoelace. The pocket in the tongue is for money or pain relievers. A rough map of the border region is printed on a removable insole.

The Indiana Daily Student

Is Dupont No. 1 party school?

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Even when Bloomington had the No. 1 party school rating due (in part) in to a rambunctious street riot as a result of losing the NCAA men's basketball championship a few years ago, we couldn't compare to the nonstop sex, drugs and drinking described by Tom Wolfe in his fiction novel "I Am Charlotte Simmons."


The Indiana Daily Student

Satire city: Kill, kill, kill

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Last month, satire as we know it ended. The ability to joke at other's expenses died with a whisper out in California with the stroke of a pen. Why, you may ask? Because California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed bill AB1179 into law. That bill will make it illegal to rent "violent video games" to children. This includes game that features "the range of options available to a player includes killing, maiming, dismembering or sexually assaulting an image of a human being."


The Indiana Daily Student

Steal this column -- then listen to it

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During a weekend back home this time last year, a group of what I like to call Evanston street thugs burglarized my small Japanese economy sedan. The aftermath of the heist, although not terribly severe, was upsetting to say the least. The crooks got away with a handful of change from my ashtray, helped themselves to the $40 VCR in my trunk and even indulged in a pack of Orbitz Winterfresh gum. The horror.


The Indiana Daily Student

The Boys in the Basement

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The music rings through the "Mobley House," drawing from an old staircase and a dimly lit basement. The voices of the band thunder off the walls, they argue, they laugh, they agree and the music continues. The songs play among pizza boxes and dirty laundry. The sounds echo in between an ironing board and an old microwave. This might sound like your average college band, but Mobley is far from average.


The Indiana Daily Student

Radio Stays Alive

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We've all been there -- we tune the radio, hoping for one of our favorite songs, and what we get instead is a deejay rambling on about some new contest or other radio station-sponsored event. But radio is supposed to be about music, not contests. Isn't it?


The Indiana Daily Student

What happened to the Weekend?

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It's 11 p.m., Monday, Oct. 10 and senior Andrew Phillips has class at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. While some IU students are spending their Monday nights at home studying or sleeping, Phillips and his roommates, seniors Jonah Pryor and Ben Falk, are sitting on the patio at Kilroy's on Kirkwood enjoying the weather and hoping to achieve their near-daily goal: to get drunk.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not quite 'perfect'

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With Hilary Duff and Heather Locklear starring as a mother-daughter duo, this movie is the epitome of the saying, "nothing in life is perfect." Jean (Locklear) is a single mother who is desperate to find the perfect man. The problem is every time her relationship with a man falls through, she packs up and moves her two daughters to a new city. Irritated by her mother's immature ways and determined to do anything to make her mother happy, Holly (Duff) creates an imaginary admirer to boost her mother's confidence.


The Indiana Daily Student

Horror worthy of rejection

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For anyone familiar with Rob Zombie, the ex-front man of rock band White Zombie, you will know that he is a devout fan of horror movies. His music videos always had a creepy style to them, his stage presence was always elaborate and his 2003 directed horror film "House of a 1000 Corpses" was packed with personal odes to the genre he loves. His recent opus, "The Devil's Rejects" is a continuation of "Corpses"' vicious story. But does this already mediocre story really need a follow up?


The Indiana Daily Student

Japan's movie masterpiece

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Kenji Mizoguchi's "Ugetsu," a film often treated as the "Citizen Kane" of Japan's cinematic history, is quite possibly one of the longest overdue DVD releases since the technology was created. Originally released by the Criterion Collection on laserdisc many years ago, Criterion now releases "Ugetsu" on DVD.


The Indiana Daily Student

Couldn't be better if it were made of chocolate

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Tim Burton strikes gold by bringing back to life the world of Willy Wonka. But unlike the original, Burton creates the story through his eyes. And because it showcases the bizarre signature style of its director, Burton once again delivers. At the same time, he also creates a film, unlike his others, that is optimistic. And what would a Tim Burton film be without over-the-top imagery and bizarre characters?


The Indiana Daily Student

Is it supposed to hurt?

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Are you ready to listen to some serious growling mixed in with a few soothing lyrics about suicide? From Autumn to Ashes, self-proclaimed "metalcore" music takes a hybrid approach to mix metal, rock and emo. Get ready to bang your head into some concrete walls. The album starts out with distorted riffs which bleed into Benjamin Perri's screaming in "Where Do You Draw the Line." What's really amazing about this band is that the drummer actually does the main vocals. Francis Mark manages to cool down the growl fest by throwing in some emo vocals.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not left up to 'fate'

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Female singer/songwriters are a dime a dozen, so it takes something extra special to get recognition in that genre. We already have Fiona Apple, Alanis Morissette and Jewel (who even hails from Earl's home state of Alaska). But Kate Earl offers something just a little different than those who have paved the road for her.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Greatest Hitz' according to the band

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There used to be a time when great bands made great albums and then years later took their best and most beloved songs and released a greatest hits CD. Nowadays, bands feel that after releasing a couple of albums each containing two or three singles, they are ready to make a greatest hits CD. This shouldn't be the case. Greatest hits albums should promote exactly what it says, a band's greatest hits.


The Indiana Daily Student

Love and zombies!

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Halloween may have passed, but for those still not ready to let go, Mest's new album is sure to keep the holiday spirit alive. Tony Lovato (lead vocals), Jeremiah Rangel (guitarist/vocalist), Nick Gigler (drums) and Matt Lovato (bass) formed the band Mest about four years ago in their working class suburb of Chicago. John Feldmann of Marvin Records helped produce the fourth album, Photographs.


The Indiana Daily Student

Getting "to the pain" never felt so good

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In this day and age of punk rock and rap music dominating the music industry, it's refreshing to hear bands that aren't afraid to play heavy metal. Nonpoint is one such band that has always managed to stay true to their roots and their fans. They have experimented with their sound a number of times over the years, but they always end up redefining themselves and making themselves better.


The Indiana Daily Student

Relive the "OC"

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I don't know too much about indie rock music, but if Seth Cohen likes it, it's good enough for me. As an "O.C." aficionado, nothing brings me greater joy than a release of any new "O.C." product. The "O.C." producers know how to match scenes with the perfect music.