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Sunday, April 26
The Indiana Daily Student

Women's Golf


The Indiana Daily Student

'Sunshine State' focuses on family

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I went to see this film knowing nothing about the plot. Little did I know I was getting ready to see one of the better films of 2002. This film is an excellent example of how to build plot through the use of great characters. Throughout this film, you'll get to know dozens of people in this small Florida community, and most of them you won't forget.


The Indiana Daily Student

Extra Blue Kind

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The members of the rock band Extra Blue Kind stand in a cramped basement. All four musicians are in their own worlds. They have been practicing for about ten minutes, riffing a little bit and playing two songs that they know well.


The Indiana Daily Student

Locals lacking labels

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Independent musicians are everywhere. For every band that makes it big, there are dozens more that are perfectly happy to play the bar scene and keep their local fans happy. This is about those artists, the ones who work the long hours to record their own music, then go right out and promote and distribute it themselves; those artists who choose to be independent, whether or not they've had contracts to turn down.


The Indiana Daily Student

Turok dances with dinosaurs -- again

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Gamers who played the original "Turok" games for the Nintendo 64 eagerly awaited the release of "Turok: Evolution" on all next-gen platforms (me included), but by comparison, this game doesn't make the technological advances of the first two.

The Indiana Daily Student

Pop artist actually writes own lyrics

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Let me just air this right in the open. This album may not be what you think you need to hear. It may not even be the kind of style you normally enjoy. But don't let your biases against radio pop turn you against what is some of the best pop music I've heard in a long time. In the vein of fellow British artists Craig David and Robbie Williams, what Bedingfield has done with this album is bring some innovation to a tired genre.


The Indiana Daily Student

Still alive and kickin' bluegrass

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Old and in the Gray continues bringing traditional bluegrass about as close to the mainstream as it ever gets. This time out, banjo player and singer Herb Pedersen and upright bassist Bryn Bright are brought in to fill in some of the gaps left with Jerry Garcia's passing. So even though the name has changed ever so slightly (they're typically credited as "Old and in the Way"), this is for the most part the same band.


The Indiana Daily Student

This ain't a PG-13 world

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Remember back in the '80s and early '90s when filmmakers rarely shied away from sex and violence? I do. But now, studio suits and hacks are more concerned with the bottom line as opposed to the quality of the flicks they're producing, spurring tepid, sanitized cinematic works to appease the masses in our post-Sept. 11 climate. Gutless filmmaking is currently in vogue, and I for one am dissatisfied.


The Indiana Daily Student

Buying records by the numbers

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It's always fun to find new music, to step out of the boundaries of the everyday or pop radio. But not all of us know people whom we can trust to help us find a good new band, or even convince us to purchase a forgotten treasure like The Buzzcocks' Singles Going Steady before we've even heard one chord.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Best College Band' soars with debut

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What more did Pseudopod need to do to prove themselves? They've toured extensively since 1998, pausing to earn their college degrees and to win the title of "Best College Band In America," as named by Rolling Stone and iuma.com. But to say they'd reached their pinnacle would be pure self delusion.


The Indiana Daily Student

No music, no problem

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A cappella gives me a break from the flood of "pseudo angry girl skater chick" music that has dominated the radio in recent months. I admittedly enjoy the soulful, guitar/piano-infused music from artists like Michelle Branch, Vanessa Carlton and Avril Lavigne, but they have dominated my summer music-listening. BOCA 2002 is my oasis in the desert.


The Indiana Daily Student

Soggy script sinks DeNiro's latest flick

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Vincent LaMarca (Robert DeNiro) is a man who's lived a hard life. Struggling to overcome his past -- which includes a father executed in Sing-Sing, his own stint with domestic abuse and the abandonment of his only son -- LaMarca became a world-weary Manhattan detective.


The Indiana Daily Student

Soderbergh tries something new

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If you decide to go see "Full Frontal" because it's Steven Soderbergh's new film and you are expecting another "Traffic," "Out of Sight" or "Ocean's 11," you're in for something different. Not just different for Mr. Hitmaker/Big Star Director, different from all movies. "Frontal" is a good film, it's just not for everyone. Many may say that a good film can't have shaky camera work, out-of-focus framing and virtually no plot, but "Frontal" proves this theory wrong.


The Indiana Daily Student

Run of the Mill lives up to its name

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I'm sorry to be so blunt, but I think the only thing this local band has gotten right is it's name. No, wait, on second thought, I'm not sorry. The first thing I thought of when I put this CD in my player was that this group sounds like a clone of Dave Matthews. Now don't get me wrong: there's not a thing wrong with having musical influences or playing to a style that fits you. But it's when the influence becomes bare-bones imitation that I have to draw the line.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lean, mean Queens hire Ween

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Queens of the Stone Age is one of the few hard rock acts that can defy conventionality by being themselves. By borrowing the spirit of great hard rock acts of the '70s but forging ahead with a distinctive sound, the band has put out one of the year's best albums so far.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Swimfan' drowns in mediocrity

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Did you see the trailer for "Swimfan?" Well, if you did, then you've already seen the movie. Actually, as it turns out, you've seen an entirely more entertaining version of this pathetic teen "Fatal Attraction" rip-off. Really. While the 84-minute film (the filmmakers somehow actually believed it deserved to be that long) seemed to have an identity crisis, the two-and-a-half-minute trailer managed to fit every single plot element into a nice little bite-size package that posed no serious threat to your valuable time.


The Indiana Daily Student

Lean, mean Queens hire Ween

·

Queens of the Stone Age is one of the few hard rock acts that can defy conventionality by being themselves. By borrowing the spirit of great hard rock acts of the '70s but forging ahead with a distinctive sound, the band has put out one of the year's best albums so far.


The Indiana Daily Student

Behind Bars

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The life of a bartender: it's not easy. Dealing with drunken fights and customers demanding service are tasks with which Kilroy's bartender Sara Hounshell and manager/bartenders Eric Easton and Doug Lorgeree are all very familiar.


The Indiana Daily Student

Hulkamania never died, never will

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Hulk Hogan is a hero to many, and why wouldn't he be? In his early days he told kids to take their vitamins and say their prayers, he single-handedly made a fake sport into huge, profit-generating entertainment and he starred in amazing films like "Mr. Nanny" and "No Holds Barred." But if fans of Hogan and his films are feeling lonely without the Hulkster, no need to worry, because Terry Bollea (his real name) is back, now on DVD with a chronicle of his life and career as the most famous wrestler to ever get inside a ring.


The Indiana Daily Student

Buying records by the numbers

·

It's always fun to find new music, to step out of the boundaries of the everyday or pop radio. But not all of us know people whom we can trust to help us find a good new band, or even convince us to purchase a forgotten treasure like The Buzzcocks' Singles Going Steady before we've even heard one chord.


The Indiana Daily Student

This ain't a PG-13 world

·

Remember back in the '80s and early '90s when filmmakers rarely shied away from sex and violence? I do. But now, studio suits and hacks are more concerned with the bottom line as opposed to the quality of the flicks they're producing, spurring tepid, sanitized cinematic works to appease the masses in our post-Sept. 11 climate. Gutless filmmaking is currently in vogue, and I for one am dissatisfied.