Progress stops with 'Phobia'
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.
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
The city of Bloomington has a great recycling program, but it is a program that is hardly used to it’s full potential. There is certainly no lack of access to recycling facilities around the city for those greenies that would like to make their planet just a little more sustainable, but the reality is that the number of participants in such activities is pathetic.
In the Sept. 30 issue of the IDS, radical activists from Hillel and the Indiana Israeli Public Affairs committee claimed that Judge Richard Goldstone’s report to the U.N. human rights council was somehow biased for unfairly targeting Israel – a helpless victim of “terror.” The unfortunate irony was that their column was downright misleading and biased in its own right.
The title to Jarrod Lowery’s recent column, “Missing the Point,” does a very good job of describing his article. Lowery not only misses basic points of U.S. history but also the basic point of today’s health care debate, the right to live.
In his Sept. 30 column “Second Amendment Love,” Waddell Hamer criticizes a South Carolina political fundraising event being referred to as a “machine-gun social.” Dean Allen, who is running for adjutant general, hosted the event, in which locals could get ammunition to use for target practice along with barbecue for $25. Rather than limiting his criticism to this admittedly unique method of raising funds, however, Hamer takes a leap in logic by attempting to connect this event with crime and murder in his hometown of Gary, Ind.
Commentary regarding the “Woodburn preacher” seem to be a little uninformed. His references to Nazi organizations and DNA connections to early Hebraic/Jewish ancestry are certainly fringe and a bit inconsistent. However, many points he raised are integral to the beliefs of a majority.
On the second stop in their cross country tour, bands Bad Veins and The Subjects, as well a performance by local artist Smedley Jergins did not disappoint an intimate audience who came to hear sincere indie pop and rock gathered at The Bishop late Tuesday night.
There will be a demonstration 5 p.m. today at the Monroe County Courthouse Square encouraging the government to end the war and bring troops home from Afghanistan. The activists are calling for "Peace for Afghanistan", according to a press release.
For the first time this season, the No. 14 IU men’s soccer team faces an opponent from Indiana when it plays Butler at 7 p.m. today at Bill Armstrong Stadium.
David J. Allen, who died Friday of an acute form of leukemia at age 74, is remembered for helping form the School of Public and Environmental Affairs in 1972 and becoming one of its strongest supporters.
On Monday, Indianapolis received 3,500 doses of H1N1 Flu Mist, an active, intranasal form of the H1N1 vaccine, which will be used to inoculate the city’s health care workers.
IU studied up, so to speak, and this year they earned a little better environmental sustainability grade.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. - A former Yale University lab technician charged with strangling a graduate student and stuffing her body behind a laboratory wall appeared in court Tuesday but did not enter a plea to murder.
TOLEDO, Ohio - The U.S. Supreme Court has turned down an appeal filed by a Roman Catholic priest convicted of murdering a nun in Ohio.