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Sunday, April 26
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


Coline Sperling

Not quite 'elite' but good

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This generation of consoles has been oversaturated with stealth and World War II games to a point few gamers can really enjoy anymore. But amazingly, with "Sniper Elite," Namco has come out with a WWII stealth game that is actually fun to play and brings something new to both genres. In "Sniper Elite," you take on the role of a U.S. sniper in the closing days of the war who must stop the Russians from getting a hold of Germany's atomic secrets.


Fear of the 'dark' light

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Hot Topic's favorite sons H.I.M. (His Infernal Majesty) have returned once again with Dark Light, a new album full of depressing dirges and melancholic music emulating their entire back-catalog. Thanks to Bam Margera's love affair with H.I.M., their music reaches the minds of every impressionable kid between the ages of 13-18, begging them to ask the ultimate question: should I just commit suicide now or try and become a vampire?


APTOPIX KOSOVO INDEPENDENCE SERBS

The concert of a lifetime

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In 1971 George Harrison agreed to help his friend, legendary sitar player Ravi Shankar, find a way to assist the refugees from war-torn Bangladesh. What resulted was the first large-scale benefit concert. The concert, held on Aug. 1, 1971, featured many influential musicians and friends of Harrison all playing under the direction of the late formal Beatle.


The Indiana Daily Student

Herman B Wells library isn't just for late night studying anymore

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The musty books. The harsh, overhead lighting. The allure of getting caught. Apparently, the Herman B Wells Library gets IU students hotter than campus in August. In this year's Best of Bloomington poll, the Best Facebook group was "I Would Totally Have Sex in the Library," and the Library won "Best place to Make Out."

Rock Groups

Life in the 'Burbs

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A crescendo of laughter and complaints have followed the notorious career of the little three-paneled comic strip "The Boondocks," since its quiet debut in college newspaper in 1997 at the University of Maryland. And creator Aaron McGruder's new animated series will ensure that those who haven't gotten the chance to be shocked or enlightened (depending on who you ask) reading the strip will learn their lesson visually.


Not your normal family drama

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"Millions" is one of those films that leave you feeling good when the end credits begin to role. It's disguised as a simple family film with the same generic ethical issues you might find in an after-school special, however, as the movie progresses and the plot unfolds, we are presented with something much more important and meaningful.



Cuba Fidel Castro

F. Scott's turning over in his grave

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There's a lot of pressure involved in remaking a film. There's probably an even greater pressure when trying to remake a film based off what has been called one of the best American novels of all time. In the film "G," director Christopher Scott Cherot has taken F. Scott Fitzgerald's well-known novel "The Great Gatsby" and re-imagined it with a modern spin. "G," an independent film produced in 2002 and now playing at Kerasotes West, is most simply described as what happens when hip-hop meets the Hamptons.


Garret Lawton

This 'angel' is a blessing

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"An Angel at My Table" is a rare commodity: a film about a woman saved by her work. It's an uncommon scenario in today's films, where most narratives insist people can only be saved by each other. The film follows the life of Janet Frame, an English prodigy, from her childhood into adult years where she is hospitalized for schizophrenia. She then remains in the psych ward for eight years, not because she is crazy, but because she is paralyzed by her own fear of the outside world. Her way to heal herself is by writing stories and poems, which eventually free her from her self-made prison.


Cuba Fidel Castro

Clooney gains much directorial credibility

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"Good Night, and Good Luck" is a great film on many levels, but above all, it's important and relevant. It demonstrates journalism in its purest form and features the most honest and integral journalist of his time, Edward R. Murrow (Strathairn in a role that demands Oscar consideration).


A modest effort from Kozelek

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Alright. Time to familiarize people with Red House Painters/Sun Kil Moon leader Mark Kozelek. Kozelek began making music with his group the Red House Painters in the early 90s. After RHP's split in 2001, the singer-songwriter-producer-guitarist went solo on an album of AC/DC covers which were so unlike the originals a radio station in Santa Barbara misinterpreted one track as a Leonard Cohen number. Then, in 2003, Kozelek released Ghosts of the Great Highway with his unplugged Sun Kil Moon project, sounding like the House Painters' folksier, sunnier alter ego. Fast forward two years to the present, Kozelek's at it again with a sophomore album under the Sun Kil Moon moniker.


Jay Seawell

'Chicken' has a bad case of ADD

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I remember the first time I heard about Pokémon. Must've been seven or eight years ago. On the evening news they said some cartoon show in Japan was causing seizures in epileptic children. Lots of flashing lights, everything moving at a hyperactive pace.


Martha Stewart-Lagasse

A DVD trip to the Dark Side

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Rarely in cinematic history have films begun with a money shot, but such is the case with George Lucas' latest, and most likely final, astronomically budgeted, multi-billion-dollar-grossing "Stars Wars" installment. Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi pilot their Jedi Starfighters over the expansive surface of a massive cruiser ship, then plunge headlong into the biggest and most chaotic space battle (or battle, for that matter) ever seen in any film. The first 25 minutes of "Star Wars: Episode III" is crammed with non-stop action, almost to the point of geekish delirium.


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.