Few 'Flaws' in the music
Flaw returns with Endangered Species, its second album overseen by producer/mixer David Botrill of Tool and Mudvayne fame.
Flaw returns with Endangered Species, its second album overseen by producer/mixer David Botrill of Tool and Mudvayne fame.
Springtime -- the birds sing in the blooming trees, a warm breeze blows over red and yellow tulips, and lawn chairs sprout up on the sidewalks like dandelions in an open field.
The Beta Band's sound has undergone a major evolution since the band's 1997 formation from electronica/trip-hop to indie rock.
Sorely overlooked during awards season this past year, "The Last Samurai" arrives on DVD in a sterling two-disc package that doesn't quite live up to the grandeur of the film itself, but is quite impressive nonetheless.
Mark Bowen grins and heaves hard as he hoists his end of a 10-foot projection screen up an inconspicuous pulley that runs up the side of the orange Soma coffeehouse sign overlooking Grant St.
Patrons of the Monroe County Humane Society, Mayor Mark Kruzan and animal enthusiasts gathered Wednesday to celebrate the completed expansion of Bloomington's Animal Shelter.
My experiences studying and travelling abroad have made me realize, above all else, how much the continent of Europe scapegoats America. If you have not been paying attention, much of the world seems to be in utter chaos -- and for better or worse -- the rationalization that America is in part to blame predominates over here. In Paris, right after the Madrid, Spain bombings, I read a story with a headline reading 'Has Bush's War on Terror Made Us All Targets?'
While the board of trustees approved the controversial one year, $30 student athletics fee, more fees do not seem to be on the immediate horizon for IU students.
With the gubernational election only five months away, the governor's race is winding down, and Republican candidate Mitch Daniels and incumbent Democratic Gov. Joe Kernan are putting the finishing touches on their respective campaigns.
A new report issued by the Institute for Higher Education Policy, a non-partisan research group, and Scholarship America, an organization distributing student financial aid, reports not all qualified high-school students from low-income backgrounds may be able to obtain aid to help them attend college.
Controversy has been swirling around IU trustee approved funds, appropriated by IU administrators for the construction of the Simon Hall Multi-Disciplinary Science building.
A Monroe County jailer has been charged with two counts of felony battery in the case of a Bedford man who died while being booked into jail. At a hearing Wednesday at the Monroe County Justice Building, Judge Marc Kellams said he found probable cause for the arrest of jailer David Shaw, who used a Taser gun to repeatedly shock James Borden last November.
The IU men's track and field team travel to Purdue this weekend to compete in the Big Ten outdoor championships. The competition begins at noon Friday and concludes after Sunday's 4x400-meter relay, scheduled for 3:45 p.m. After last year's third-place finish, IU's best since 1992, the Hoosiers have set their sights high this year. "This time of year it's all about business," coach Randy Heisler said. "We have a chance to be very competitive. You never know what will happen in championship meets." A number of athletes are prepared to score big points. Reigning triple and long jump champ, junior Aarik Wilson, currently leads the Big Ten rankings in both events. Freshman Kiwan Lawson is ranked third in the long jump, the same spot he claimed at the Indoor Championships in February.
Math and music are rarely thought to have much in common, but a local choir will hold a program this weekend exploring the links between the two. The Voces Novae choir will perform the program, "Music and Mathematics" 7 p.m., Sunday at the First United Church at 2420 E. Third St. Swaney said mathematics is underneath all of the music we hear, make and appreciate and the group just wants to hold that up and examine the relationship.
INDIANAPOLIS -- Gov. Joe Kernan announced Wednesday that Amy Brown Kruzan, wife of Bloomington Mayor Mark Kruzan, will served as Kernan's new policy director for health issues. She begins her work May 24.
BPP showcases disgruntled heroes in 'Super Lair' The Bloomington Playwrights Project premieres the latest in its Dark Alley Series, "Meanwhile Back at the Super Lair," 11 p.m., Friday, at the Lori Shiner Studio located at 314 S. Washington St. In this play by Greg Kalleres, four neurotic superheroes fight to prevent being downsized when an efficiency expert evaluates if they are earning their salaries.
Muslim Dialog Group to duscuss free will The Bloomington Muslim Dialog Group is holding an open discussion from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday titled "Believing in Divine Determination and Human Free Will" at the Monroe County Library in Room 1A on the first floor. The discussion will cover the way that the Islam religion is affected by free will. Participants are urged to come with questions.
DAMASCUS, Syria -- Syria denounced U.S. economic sanctions Wednesday and other Arab countries -- including close U.S. allies joined in the criticism. Europe ignored the penalties by dispatching a trade delegation to Damascus.
Borst files for recount in General Assembly primary INDIANAPOLIS -- A Republican who has for three decades held one of the most powerful positions in the General Assembly filed for a recount Tuesday in the primary election he lost by 48 votes.
LOS ANGELES -- When the blue-collar barroom comedy "Cheers" ended its run in 1993, it managed the neat trick of turning beer into champagne. "Frasier," the "Cheers" spinoff about psychiatrist Frasier Crane and his dysfunctional family, became its own vintage blend of sparkling wit and dependably funny highbrow neuroses.