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Friday, April 17
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


Adam Fithian

'Pete & Pete' a brilliant paradox

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We had it lucky growing up. The kid shows we had were truly great, like "The Tick" and "Pinky and the Brain." But before an invulnerable idiot in blue spandex foiled a chair-faced madman's plan to deface the moon, and before two albino lab mice tried to take over the world, there were two red-headed brothers with the same name whose epic suburban adventures became the stuff of cult legend.


The Indiana Daily Student

IMU voted best place to lay your head

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Along with having a social life, studying and sleeping rank high on collegiate "to do" lists. The University population has spoken, and the library and the Indiana Memorial Union have been ranked as the Best in Bloomington for studying and sleeping on campus, respectively. Sitting in the lobby of the Herman B Wells Library, sophomore Katrina Babin simultaneously listens to her iPod and translates her Arabic homework as she waits for her professor.


The Indiana Daily Student

Best Of Bloomington 2005

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Second to outfit selection, restaurant selection is the most stressful part of a Saturday night on the town. Have you just worked up the courage to ask that hottie in the third row of your psych class out for dinner? Well, when those big brown eyes gaze back and ask "where?" you've got to be prepared with an answer because, quite frankly, sweaty palms and flushed cheeks won't exactly keep 'em coming back for more. Or are your overeager parents in town for the weekend and ready to attempt to take Kirkwood on in true Hoosier manner?


Courtesy photo

'All' is nothing much

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Turn on VH1, plug in the guitar and press record. This seems to be the formula for Santana albums these days. It comes as no surprise that All That I Am, Santana's second attempt at recreating the magic of 1999's Grammy classic Supernatural, is the guitar legend's most unimaginative work to date. The man who released masterpieces such as Abraxas and Caravanserai noodles and wanks his way through 13 tracks that seemingly feature whatever pop star walked into his studio that morning, stars such as "American Idol" reject Bo Bice. Carlos, please, do we have to endure yet another "collaborative" effort?

The Indiana Daily Student

What's on your wall?

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I love looking into other people's dorm rooms. I don't necessarily care to meet those who inhabit them. I don't really care about how the beds are set up or the fancy lamp shades. My attention goes straight to the posters on the wall. Lately this game has become a bore. Every room seems to have the same posters. It's time for people to be different. We need to escape the lure of what I deem the "college posters." There are several overused posters.


Matt Beuoy

Still 'fresh' after all these years

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Punk music tends to not look back. However, with the genre falling into such disarray in the 80s and early 90s, there has been a resurgence in punk nostalgia. The San Francisco band the Dead Kennedys re-released their first full-length album Fresh Fruit for Rotting Vegetables in order to celebrate its 25th anniversary. In a quarter of a century, a lot has changed in the music world. However, this repackaging of Fresh Fruit is a perfect example of paying attention to the past while still inspiring others for the future.


Matt Beuoy

Say it ain't so Trey!

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Following the breakup of the seminal prog-rock/jamband Phish, Phish frontman Trey Anastasio quickly sought to break all ties with the band and its grassroots organization, favoring a clean slate for a solo career. Shine finds Anastasio, who released five solo works while with Phish, working free of the limits that come with the title of "side project." Phish's last release Undermind found Anastasio's compositions evolving from mere launch pads for the extended jams that came to define Phish into songs you might find on an alt-rock radio station.


OK to blink

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When Blink-182 broke up, every stereotypical hate-it-cause-it's-on-the-air rock listener took their shots at the pop-punk band. In 30 seconds flat they could denigrate any punk band whose lead singer didn't sound like he just finished smoking 60 French cigarettes. Me, on the other hand, I nearly cried. Well, not really. But I wasn't happy about it. The high school dropouts produced some of the greatest summer anthems, doing so in great teenage angst style. Which was perfect for me -- I was a teen when all of their albums came out. Not to mention, these were the guys I had seen play amazing shows, always with great company. They introduced me to Mest, New Found Glory and Simple Plan before any of them made it big. They also toured with two bands I love, Green Day and No Doubt, during back-to-back summer concerts.


The Indiana Daily Student

Chicago lawyer writes war novel

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CHICAGO -- Author Scott Turow's father served as a field surgeon in a medical unit during World War II, but his stories about that experience stopped flowing before his son reached his teen years. Now Turow -- whose work as an attorney has often inspired his best-selling legal thrillers like "Presumed Innocent" -- has used his father's conflicted views about war and courage as the jumping off point for his latest novel, a foray into historical fiction called "Ordinary Heroes."



The Indiana Daily Student

Uptown almost perfect, except for service

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Rumor has it that the Uptown Café is one of the hot spots in Bloomington. Located just off the square in the heart of downtown, the café, better know as Uptown, is recognized for its great food and personable atmosphere. Taking advantage of the beautiful weather, we sat in the restaurant's outside seating.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jordan River Forum

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I would like to thank Kacie Foster for her Nov. 3 article "Forum aims to reduce 'casual racism' on campus." As mentioned in the article, the Facebook can be a great tool to promote student interaction on campus but not when some IU students create groups such as "We hate Asian drivers." This illustrates the need in our community to actively promote the value of diversity on campus.


The Indiana Daily Student

Finito to Scalito

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Dear Judge Alito (or shall I say "Scalito"?), It seems I have caught you at a very momentous time in your life. Early next year you will begin your hearings for appointment to the Supreme Court. While you are, no doubt, a highly accomplished jurist (you have written about 300 rules and participated in about 1,500 cases), I have some concerns, especially regarding the potential reversal of Roe v. Wade.


The Indiana Daily Student

Old paths, same story

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It was a strange sight. They were children, probably dressed in some of the nicest clothing they own. They had violins and guitars and awkwardly screeched out string notes, as many of us probably did in third grade.


The Indiana Daily Student

Why France matters

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By the time this column goes to print, it will have been two weeks since violent protest demonstrations began in Clichy-sous-Bois, a Paris suburb. The spark that caused the riots was nominally the death of two young men on an electrical substation, but since then, the burnt hulks of cars and injured civilians have become symbols of the North African Muslim underclass living in France. People across France and around the world are asking, "How do we stop the riots?" But before the last of the fires is extinguished, they will also be asking "Why?"


The Indiana Daily Student

Sunday schooling

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My earliest memories of Catholic Mass are of the organ playing "Ave Maria" and a large soprano belting out the words as if God himself were listening. All the while, the 5-year-old me in a hand-me-down corduroy suit folded Sunday bulletins into Chinese fans. Yup, I was the bored kid in church; the one who turns around and makes weird faces at everyone as they try to pay attention to the Mass. That was me then, and, well, things pretty much haven't changed.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trying to solve IU's parking problem

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The University is planning a parking garage for the corner of Atwater Street and Fess Avenue. In an ideal world, everyone would be able to walk to class and nobody would need to worry about parking. We don't live in that ideal world, though, and it's good to see the University accounting for that. Now, we realize that this parking garage is probably going to mainly benefit faculty and graduate students.


The Indiana Daily Student

Commission to sponsor talk about religion's role in politics, public life

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The Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commission will sponsor a discussion on the role of religion in politics at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Council Chambers at City Hall, 401 N. Morton St. The event is titled "What Would Dr. King Do? -- On the Role of Religion (Conservative and Progressive) in American Politics and Public Life." The meeting will give the community a chance to discuss the issue of how much influence religion should have on politics and the separation of church and state, said Craig Brenner, special projects coordinator for Bloomington Community and Family Resources. The panelists can use Martin Luther King Jr. as an example of a person who had to balance his religion with politics, he said.


The Indiana Daily Student

Maggie Moo's to reopen as deli

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Maggie Moo's ice cream shop on Third Street near College Mall has closed and will reopen as the delicatessen City Deli. Bill Hobbs, owner of Maggie Moo's, attributed the closing to low revenue. "We tried desperately to keep it open, but the market for ice cream is very small; the market for food is a lot bigger," Hobbs said. Sophomore Melissa Hudson said she was surprised to hear the shop is no longer open but said she wasn't too worried about it affecting her future ice cream decisions.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hoosiers enter Big Tens with No. 3 seed

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It's been 365 days since the IU men's soccer team lost to Michigan State in the Big Ten men's soccer tournament. The Hoosiers said they want to win this weekend's Big Ten tournament with hopes of securing a top-four seed in the NCAA tournament. Any top-four seed guarantees a team home field advantage until the College Cup.