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Cheers: Inn Complete serves students, faculty as part of decades-old tradition

By Katherine Salisbury

The Inn Complete was created primarily as a graduate student facility, though many South Campus undergraduates are attracted to the convenient location. Its relaxing atmosphere and low food and drink prices don't hurt either. Founded in 1987, the restaurant is one of few places run by SU that serves alcohol.

Love, sex to propel poetry night

By Edward Paik

Seventeen students decided four weeks ago that "What is Love?" was a corny and cliché title. They wanted something "catchy." "Sex is the catch that most people may want to talk about," said Cedric Bolton, Verbal Blend program facilitator. "What love and sex are, how they deal with relationships.

Students search for identity in independent play, "Little Person"

By Blake Rong

Inspiration comes to the mind at play. At least that's what Mark Blane would have people believe. Blane, a sophomore acting major, and four students from the College of Visual and Performing Arts recently collaborated on an independent theater production that attempts to define the concept of identity.

Aged to perfection: U2 still going strong with 11th studio album

By Jen Littman

Anyone who has flipped on the television set in the last decade or so is a witness to the desperate and oftentimes pathetic attempts of former celebrities to stay on the map. U2, on the other hand, is part of a rare breed that has managed to stay relevant over the years, even in the treacherous swamp of middle age.

Review: Boy Least Likely To, "The Law of the Playground"

By Peter Slavish

On its follow-up to 2005's "The Best Party Ever," the Boy Least Likely To come back strong with an album that offers much more than your typical British pop. Multi-instrumentalist Pete Hobs and vocalist Jof Owen take the genre to a whole new level, with synthesizers flowing to the lyrics and a banjo plucking over acoustic guitar rhythms.

Review: Neko Case, "Middle Cyclone"

By Caitlin Dewey

Critics the world over hailed Neko Case as the manifest savior of Americana when she released her groundbreaking country noir album "Fox Confessor Brings the Flood" in 2006. There can be no pressure quite as acute as following up that kind of acclaim, but if Case's sixth studio album is any indication, the Virginia-born songstress is far from her peak.

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