Chris Bickel most notably fronted the bands In/Humanity and Guyana Punch Line. Both bands could be considered to be Powerviolence and Hardcore punk, but Bickel jokingly described In/Humanity's as Emo Violence and introduced another word, Smashism with Guyana Punch Line. Power violence or powerviolence is a sub-genre of grindcore that tends to refocus its musical energies on the original crust punk and hardcore punk, that had created the genre (grindcore) in the first place, as contrasted to the modern grindcore variants that have become increasingly associated with death... Hardcore punk (or hardcore) is an intensified version of punk rock usually characterized by short, loud, and often angry songs with exceptionally fast tempos and chord changes. ... Emo Violence, also related to Hardcore Emo, is a subgenre of music that evolved from Emo in the early 1990s, primarly in San Francisco, San Diego, and Boston. ...
In/Humanity was around from the 1992-1998 and GPL from 1998-2003. After the demise of the latter, he sang in the short-lived Newgenics and now sings in Four, 3, One. Other musical projects of his include Confederate Fagg and Anakrid. This article about a musical group, band, singer, musician, album, or song does not make it clear whether the subject meets the WikiProject Music criteria for importance. ...
Bickel runs Stereonucleosis Records, which released many Antischism records as well as those of Bickel's bands. He also was a columnist for Maximum RocknRoll for a while. Antischism were an anarchist crust punk band from Colombia, South Carolina. ... Maximum Rocknroll Issue #1 Maximum Rocknroll is a monthly punk fanzine based in San Francisco, USA. Featuring interviews, columns and reviews from international contributors, Maximum RocknRoll could be thought of as one of the most important presences in punk. ...
Nathan Goodman, Carl Leuschen, Richard Plumb, Chris Allen; Proceedings of the 1996 International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS '96); Lincoln, NE, May 1996, pp.
Pradeep Kondamuri, Chris Allen; Technical Report ITTC-FY2004-TR-33750-01; June 2004.
In the 1950s, German pediatrician Horst Bickel discovered that temporarily modifying the early diet of afflicted newborns would largely prevent retardation; and in the 1960s, American microbiologist Robert Guthrie (motivated by having a child afflicted with PKU) invented a simple screening test to detect the disorder.
Nowadays, most of the 4 million babies born in the U. every year are tested for the disease, and affected babies are fed a preventive diet.
Yesterday "Hardball with Chris Matthews" featured a short debate between Discovery president Bruce Chapman and NCSE director Eugenie Scott about intelligent design and whether it should be required instruction in science classes.