|
When students move, Indonesia had better listen, NATION
|
The Nation (Thailand)
03-09-1998
Anti-Suharto protests have erupted in more than 60 campuses around
Indonesia, and the military is getting worried, reports The Nation's Andreas
Harsono.
It all began two weeks ago at the campus of the University of
Indonesia when some student activists organised a free-speech forum. They
had no intention of confronting President Suharto, whose soldiers heavily
encircled their campus. Instead, their...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Out of New Order (sort of) rises Monaco
The Boston Globe
; You've heard the song come over the radio, that catchy one called "What Do You Want From Me with its breezy lilt, subtle melancholia, ironic "sha-la-la" playfulness, and, most prominently, its distinctive, melodic bass line. This only can mean one thing: New Order has returned from its self-imposed
|
|
New Order, Spinning Out of Control
The Washington Post
; After singer Ian Curtis hanged himself, the remaining three members of Joy Division unenthusiastically drew straws to determine who would serve as the group's new frontman. Soon renamed New Order, the band from Manchester, England, embarked on an often-inscrutable musical voyage marked by that same
|
|
Bang out of order Indie icons New Order once redefined musical boundaries, but is the old magic still there?
The Sunday Herald
; THE BIG EVENT NEW ORDER WAITING FOR THE SIRENS' CALL (LONDON) 2/5 WHEN most people think of New Order, it's probably for one of two reasons: Blue Monday being the biggest-selling 12" single of all time, or John Barnes's terrible rapping on their 1990 World Cup song World In Motion. They're a band
|
|
New Order returns with fresh riffs
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
; New Order returns with fresh riffs By JIM FARBER New York Daily News Monday, October 22, 2001 Peter Hook of New Order knows there's a powerful strain of '80s nostalgia coursing through the culture ...
|
|
A big happy pill of a time from a surly New Order
The Boston Globe
; NEW ORDER At: Great Woods Center for the Performing Arts with 808 State and Sunscreem, last night. MANSFIELD -- The hardest working band in showbiz? It's not New Order. The Mancunian quartet, which played at Great Woods before 5,350 people last night, is currently at the tail end of their first US
|