Famous people and UFOs
UFO sightings aren't just for country bumpkins.
UFO sightings aren't just for country bumpkins.
We have already tackled the best and worst of alien action on the smaller screen, so it is only fair that we do the same for the small screen right?
That crash in the New Mexican desert is only one in a string of famous UFO sightings.
Stories of extraterrestrials have become the new American folklore during the past 60 years or so. Many people claim to have seen UFOs or, even worse, to have been abducted and experimented on by alien life forms. In my hometown of Troy, just north of Dayton, Ohio, the stories of little green men are intensified by a well-known conspiracy theory. Those who believe in this theory think the extraterrestrial material recovered from the alleged incident in 1947 at Roswell, N.M., is now inside Hangar 18 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base’s Foreign Technology Division in nearby Fairborn, where I lived when I was younger and where my grandparents currently live.
If you’ve ever had an insatiable curiosity for UFOs , there may be a career choice for you yet. While The History Channel recently canceled “UFO Hunters,” the profession itself still exists. However, it is not an easy one.

Twenty-three-year-old Debbie Kauble had just arrived at her friend’s house one evening when she received a panicked phone call from her mother telling her to come home immediately. Kauble had noticed a strange light out by the pump house before leaving the home on Indianapolis’ southeast side that she shared with her parents and two children. But the light was gone by the time she walked outside to leave, and though she noticed the garage door open, she had dismissed it. Returning home, Kauble walked out to the garage to investigate. Armed with a shotgun, she found the family dog cowering under a truck. The shotgun wasn’t loaded, but Kauble was relying on appearances. The garage was empty, and Kauble was about to turn back when suddenly her body temperature sky-rocketed. Confused and uncomfortable, she started in the direction of the door when something thudded into her chest. Frozen, Kauble dropped the gun as an intensely bright light enveloped her and her entire body started to vibrate.
“Whip It” wants to be the cutest movie you’ve ever seen. Although it feels like a charming, feel-good indie film, Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut is horribly formulaic.
When it comes to horror-movie monsters, I’m firmly in the zombie camp. Fast, slow, virus-stricken or voodoo-bidden, I am pumped to see them bow-leggedly strut their stuff in the newest addition to the zombie comedy trend.
Love him or hate him, Michael Moore is the king of documentary filmmaking. The proof is in the pudding: Three of his films (“Fahrenheit 9/11,” “Sicko,” “Bowling for Columbine”) are in the top six- highest grossing documentaries of all time, and his most recent effort will likely join this prestigious group.
Mariah Carey’s new album “Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel” attempts to empower females, but ends up alienating both men and women.With a plethora of anthems that resemble the single, “Obsessed,” Carey over simplifies male and female relationships by depicting men as stalkers and love interests and women as catty characters from “Mean Girls.”

Disney keeps churning out child pop stars, and Selena Gomez’s debut album “Kiss and Tell” follows the likes of Miley Cyrus and the Jonas Brothers. It’s exactly what one might expect, with its youthfully clever lyrics and bubbly sound.
Lynyrd Skynyrd’s new album “God and Guns” plays into the central country music motifs of a false sense of nostalgia and traditional southern values.The band uses the duration of the album to preach their firm beliefs in conservative values: religion, guns and tradition.
The one thing that all musicians strive for is musical growth, and Paramore shows no problem achieving this on their third release “brand new eyes.” Though vocalist Haley Williams is only 20 years old, her voice is all grown-up and shines brightly on this album.
With past albums “Saturate” and “Phobia”, Breaking Benjamin kept improving their style with stronger guitar riffs and improved vocals. However, that all seemingly stopped, as “Dear Agony” is severely disappointed.
Many people agree that there is a time and place for country music: at a line dance, at a rodeo, maybe after a hard day on the ranch. But after coming in third place in the reality-TV show “Nashville Star,” Texas native Miranda Lambert attempts to bring country to the masses with her sometimes sweet, rolling lyrics.
Goth punk legends AFI have gone progressively more mainstream in their last two albums, dropping some of the grit from earlier releases while adding more hooks and pop sensibilities. And by the time their newest effort “Crash Love” ends, it’s clear AFI is now a well-oiled pop-rock machine.
Brett Eppley recaps this week's Gossip Girl.
Stephanie Kuzydym and Kevin Loughery will bring you this evening's match against Butler at 7 p.m.
The IU men’s tennis doubles team of sophomores Jeremy Langer and Maxime Armengaud continues to surprise at the All-American event on the campus of Tulsa.
Hundreds of the nation's optometrists came to campus for the Indiana Optometric Association's. annual fall seminar, which started today