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Arts & Life

‘Danger Mouse’ duo delivers

By Richard Thornburgh
Writer

James Mercer, lead singer of The Shins, and Brian Burton, formally known as Danger Mouse of the group Gnarls Barkley, have formed a new group called Broken Bells, releasing their self-titled debut album March 9th.

The first track “The High Road” was released December 22 as a single, preparing the industry for the new technical style of Broken Bells. There are noticeable similarities between each artist’s previous group. Broken Bells’ sound features the characteristic quick pace and high-pitched voice of The Shins, as well as Gnarls Barkley’s frequent usage of overdubbing, sampling and addition of multiple beats and sounds. As “The High Road”  progresses, the collaborative effort blends more and more smoothly.

“Vaporize,” features an eerie organ and bass line that melds with Mercer’s voice to fit Burton’s sound. After the slower, three-part “Your Head is on Fire,” is “The Ghost Inside,” sounding like a higher-pitched Gnarls Barkley with scattered guitar and piano. “Sailing to Nowhere,”  incorporates sounds of the ocean through synthesizers and slow guitar. The string quartet and piano solo includes of the noise of docking ships, flying seagulls and patrons boarding horn-blown ships to send the listener “Nowhere.”

The acoustic guitar-driven “Citizen” quietly moves into the more popular “October.” A build-up of strings glide into a transition of electric keyboard and guitar, “October’s” success is furthered by Mercer’s vocals. While the closing song to the album does not dazzle, the previous track “Mongrel Heart,” does wonders with the electric keyboard synthesizer and bass line that lead into a trumpet-driven ballad in the final minute.

While their original bands are at a standstill with new music, James Mercer and Danger Mouse have found a way to stay busy with the release of “Broken Bells.” With music that attracts several genres of hip-hop, alternative and indie rock, chances are high that the group will attract diverse audiences.

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Featured Opinion

Letter to the Editor

An extraordinary opportunity lies before us. This summer, the University bookstore will move downtown to a new location on Market Street. The move will open up 12,000 square feet for which the student body must act decisively to claim its sovereign right.

Among the University’s few structural weaknesses is its lack of a communal space of an academic nature where students can gather in small groups or form clubs to work collaboratively on new enterprises. This lack of gathering space fragments campus life unnecessarily, contributing detrimentally to gender interactions, which are left to dorm encounters and segregated social groupings in our sororities and fraternities. In a vacuum, the first floor of Bertrand Library substitutes as the most social place on campus-albeit mostly trivial chats en passant between book retrieval and morning coffee.

The design of our dining system, with its dispersion of students to their respective watering holes, severely limits cross-gender and interdisciplinary -collaboration-unless you include weekend social activities! Most respected universities offer dynamic, student-designed spaces for improvisation, to advance collegiate and intellectual interaction. Refitting the bookstore’s void would immediately become one of the University’s greatest assets. The University should rise to the challenge and create an environmentally-designed student club to nourish student ventures and to attract the brightest and most talented scholars of tomorrow.

The Elaine Langone Center renovations need to become the first priority of both the administration and the student body this spring. During the presidential search and transitional period, a university-led renovation of the space would signal a much-needed commitment to cultivate greater student cohesion on campus. While the attention of the trustees is focused-understandably-on long-term infrastructure projects, investment to improve this existing asset would see handsome returns. Let us focus the budget on utility-maximization, thereby leaving the University with a space that it has long desired.

I have a vision of returning to my alma mater, in the near future, to find a social laboratory of bright students sharing business plans, writing plays together, plotting off-campus service and performing music. I picture future Bucknellians plopped on some chairs,     delving through Plato or Aristotle with their legs quietly folded on coffee tables. Others collaborate over puzzling economic problems. Walking deeper into the new student lounge, I notice first-years settling a dispute over their ping-pong talents, while sorority sisters try their hand at a game of shuffle board.

Deeper still, I discover a billiards table sitting idly in wait for patrons, and a small stage where aspiring poets and musicians supply the evening fare. In the back left corner, I see the BSG office-moved from its old, isolated locale on the ELC third floor-newly relocated with efficient placement, to properly operate as student headquarters. Yet, my exploration still finds this new territory’s greatest treasure: in the far back-where once I picked up new reads at the inception of every semester-I now see a row of five group-study rooms! Each one bears resemblance to Bertrand’s hotly-contested study rooms that faithfully provided me the environment from which I attacked my collegiate work. How lucky these students are to have a center to stimulate curiosities, foster imaginations, tackle course work and even challenge friendly adversaries!

Whether your vision aligns with mine, there must be no doubt: student apathy towards this opportunity will lead to a result far from favor. One cannot start a movement with ears deafened by iPods, so wake up! Voice your opinion!
-Davis Alexander Rosborough ’10

Categories
Opinion

Editorial

College students can be incredibly creative when it comes to finding ways to save money.

Take the students who use Bostwick Marketplace’s “Take-Out” program as an example. The program allows students to substitute one of their meals inside the cafeteria for a to-go meal.

Students are given two plastic containers to carry food, a cup for a drink, a plastic container for soup (by request), utensils and a bag to carry their neatly packaged meal out of the cafeteria.

The program is intended to help students who are too busy to stop and eat during the day from missing out on important meals.

Students quickly discovered ways to use the program other than the way it was intended.

Some people totally pack the containers with deli meat, grab a couple of slices of bread, and take out enough supplies to make sandwiches for the next week.

Others have filled entire containers with cookies or pies and turned their to-go meal into a colossal dessert. Another common use of take-out drink cups is getting supplies for making mixed drinks over the weekend, like Hawaiian Punch or orange juice.

In response to the abuse of their system, Parkhurst shrank the size of the largest take-out container, so that less food will fit into it. Students who frequently get meals to-go reacted with shock and outrage.

Does changing the size of the containers solve the problem at all?

Many students passionately cling to the belief that Parkhurst charges way too much for its dining services on campus, and that anyone with an unlimited-swipe meal plan has the right to take as much food as possible to get their money’s worth.

Making the take-out containers smaller is not likely to deter these students.

Changing the size of the to-go containers is merely frustrating for those students who use the take-out program as it is intended; for anyone with a hearty appetite, fitting an entire meal into the smaller containers is a challenge. It is frustrating to see situations like this, where the group as a whole is punished for the actions of the few.

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Headline News

‘shading silhouettes of smaller ones’ to premiere Saturday

By Lenore Flower
Web Editor

“I just want people who are passionate about the message, and the concept and the process,” Bianca Roman ’10 said as she described her cast, punctuating each word with a pound on the table. The choreographer-turned-playwright’s devotion to her original play, “shading silhouettes of smaller ones,” has infected cast members and spread to the campus community.As of Monday, “shading silhouettes of smaller ones” had already sold out for Saturday’s debut performance.

Student-directed theater productions are not uncommon at the University. What makes “shading silhouettes” different is its originality-every detail of the production, from its poetry-inspired script to its costumes, has been conceptualized and created by students over the course of the past year.

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Featured Opinion

Obama needs stronger human rights policies

On Jan. 22, 2009, President Barack Obama carried out his promise to end torture and human rights abuse by issuing an executive order to shut down Guantanamo Bay and the military tribunals overseeing affairs.  The implications of this order are far-reaching and will change the United States’ legal ideology.

It also represents a departure from the beliefs of the Bush administration’s “by all means” philosophy that limited civil liberties and freedoms in the name of the pervasive “war on terror.” Obama showed insight in ordering the closure of the Cuban military base for multiple reasons.

This change seems to be almost completely physical in nature. The closure of Guantanamo Bay did not end the harsh interrogation methods used by the CIA, or the long-term detention of about 47 subjects in military commissions. Obama refuses to investigate or prosecute those that committed human rights abuses on Bush’s watch.

I understand that the key to politics is compromise. Most say that in order to be meaningful, progress must be coupled with debate and the legislative process. But there are certain absolutes that all legislators should confirm-that the United States does not torture, that we should protect the rights of our own citizens and that we should set an example of freedom and liberty for the rest of the world.

Obama needs a stronger stance on human rights. Such a strong voice would enhance our claims as a free, liberal society by actually endorsing those claims. While “practice what you preach” may seem like common sense, the United States has justified for years the invasion of Iraq under the pretense that we were “liberating” its people from a dictatorial regime.

On the other hand, we were jailing dissidents within our own country, tapping phones with the Patriot Act and setting up kangaroo courts with the Military Commissions Act of 2006. This is not only against constitutional law, but also against the Geneva Conventions and the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. A reversal of these policies will give us more leverage in international politics and put America above the things we fight against-torture, injustice and tyranny.

The country Obama has envisioned and begun to lead, is in line with the civil liberties that are so essential to our development and progression as a nation. But his voice on human rights must be followed with actions towards those goals.

Categories
Featured Sports

Men’s soccer nets two in final ten minutes to upend Colgate

The men’s soccer team added two more victories to match the program high for wins in a season, coming from behind to beat Colgate 2-1 on the road Saturday before dispatching New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) 2-0 Tuesday evening.

The team’s record now stands at 13-4, heading into a nationally televised encounter this evening against Lafayette at 8 p.m. at Emmitt Field.

Colgate, the defending Patriot League champions, came out strong, outshooting the Bison 10-4 in the first half. The Raiders were able to notch one goal before the break when Alex Weekes scored in the 31st minute.

Bison goalie Tommy Caso ’12 finished the night with a career-high 10 saves, helping to keep the Bison within touching distance of the Raiders.

Colgate controlled play early in the second half, and as the game began to wane the Orange and Blue found themselves in need of a score to tie the game. Then, in the 81st minute, Conor O’Brien ’10 got the ball to striker Josh Plump ’13.

“A pass had come into the box … and Conor was to the left of me, and he got his foot on it and was able to deflect it over to me,” Plump said. “The ball took one bounce, and my weight was carrying me back, but I was just able to get the outside of my right foot on it.”

Plump’s first goal of the year knotted the game at 1-1. Unfortunately for Colgate, the Bison would not settle for just a share of the spoils. In the 89th minute, Andrew Powell ’12 received the ball on an errant clear, dribbled past a defender and tucked a shot in the back post from 25 yards out.

“We stuck together as a team, defended well and created many good scoring opportunities,” Powell said. “This game showed that we are a very difficult team to beat and that we never give up.”

Plump agreed. “[This game] shows how hard we are going to fight until the game ends. No matter what the score is, people are always giving 100 percent effort and energy.”

The Orange and Blue took that energy into their match at NJIT. Neither side pulled ahead in the first half, but two quick strikes in the second proved to be all the Bison needed to secure the win.  Luke Joyner ’12 powered a header into the net in the 57th minute, giving the Bison a 1-0 lead.

Less than four minutes later, Joyner combined with O’Brien to set up Plump, who headed the ball in for his second career goal in as many games.

Commanding keeper Will Byrne ’10 recorded three saves on the way to the shutout for the Bison.

The Bison’s 13 wins match the program record set in 2002. Tonight against Lafayette they have a chance to move beyond that team under the spotlight of the Fox Soccer Channel [FSC].

“The FSC game against Lafayette on Friday is a huge game for our team,” Powell said.

The team has been looking forward to this game all year.

“This game is a huge opportunity for us in terms of our league position, setting a school record and winning a game against a rival on national television,” Pat Selwood ’10 said. “We feed off the energy and atmosphere of the crowd, so the more people and the more noise the better. Let’s show the country what this University is all about.”