AltWeeklies Wire

Do Something: Let's Be There for Samuel Dalembertnew

Samuel Dalembert, the 76ers' center, grew up in Haiti. Dalembert lived in Port-au-Prince, the capital and hardest-hit city, until he was 14. (Several of his family members remain there.) His foundation has been seeking foreign assistance for Haiti since its inception three years ago.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  E. James Beale  |  01-26-2010  |  Sports

One Small Step For Robots: Drexel Lab Has Big Plans For its Humanoidnew

Jaemi HUBO, a robot, sleeps at the Drexel Autonomous Systems Lab, the headquarters for a five-year, $2.5 million federal grant from the National Science Foundation. Its goal is to make the United States a world leader in humanoid robotics.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Brian James Kirk  |  01-26-2010  |  Tech

Bars, Lounges and Wine Cellars to Visit During the Sundance Film Festivalnew

There is no shortage in Park City of places to drink and, maybe, bump into a B-list celebrity during the Sundance Film Festival. But if you want to know where A-listers are likely to turn up — or at least where you and your pals can score a good glass of wine or cold beer in a snazzy setting — read on.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Ted Scheffler  |  01-26-2010  |  Food+Drink

Snake On a Train: Getting to Know Patricia Highsmithnew

It's no small achievement that playwright-biographer Joan Schenkar is able to find perverse charm and consistent fascination in the messy, globetrotting life of Patricia Highsmith. At almost 700 pages, Schenkar's The Talented Miss Highsmith: The Secret Life and Serious Art of Patricia Highsmith is a horse pill of a book.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Jimmy Fowler  |  01-25-2010  |  Nonfiction

TCU Professor's Memoir: Happy, Poetic, But Slightnew

Titled after his college nickname, Alex Lemon's Happy is another in a slew of memoirs in the vein of Boy Meets Obstacle, Boy Overcomes Obstacle, Boy Finds Redemption. Typically in such books, a self-destructive young man is thrown into exigent circumstances that force him to confront the selfish asshole in the mirror.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Anthony Mariani  |  01-25-2010  |  Nonfiction

How Craig Cunningham Gets Bill Collectors Off His Back: He Sues Themnew

While most Americans with unpaid bills dread the collector's call, Craig Cunningham sees them as opportunities. Many collection and credit card companies violate little-known consumer rights laws, and Cunningham's favorite pastime is catching them doing so and suing them.
Dallas Observer  |  Kimberly Thorpe  |  01-25-2010  |  Economy

Patti Smith on Christ, Cobain and Robert Mapplethorpenew

Twenty years after the death of her friend and lover, photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, punk-rock pioneer Patti Smith has released Just Kids, her memoir of the couple's bohemian, hardly-fed days in late-'60s New York City.
Seattle Weekly  |  Chris Kornelis  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Tooth & Nail’s Latest Cover Boy, a Grammy-Nominated Seattleitenew

Rural Appalachia is not generally regarded as a breeding ground for the arts, but it was in a house on a hillside in the West Virginia woods that Jordan Butcher cut his teeth as a rock-'n'-roll designer.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Seattle's Program for Handling Injured Workers is in a World of Hurtnew

Employers complain that Washington's workers'-comp system is generous to the point of crippling employers. They believe rates are being raised to support ever-expanding benefits that are too easily obtained, and a bloated bureaucracy.
Seattle Weekly  |  Laura Onstot  |  01-25-2010  |  Business & Labor

Is Obama Going To Force Leftists To The Center?new

Dean didn’t say this, but I will. Calling someone a Nazi is harsh, yet Republicans nowadays embrace parts of the Nazi ideology, which is a peculiar mixing of racism and phony populism. In hard times like we got, it sometimes works.
Random Lengths News  |  Lionel Rolfe  |  01-22-2010  |  Commentary

The Latest 'Bad Lieutenant' Isn't Good or Bad. It Just Isnew

Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans (why the "Port of Call" part? Who knows! Who cares!) is a conventional detective thriller in basic form, but the procedural elements are sometimes listless.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  01-22-2010  |  Reviews

A Professor Investigates Africa’s Most Dreaded Disease: Malarianew

At first glance, UVM assistant professor Arne Bomblies seems like an unlikely person to be conducting research on malaria, an illness that kills more than a million people worldwide each year, most of them African children, at a rate of one every 30 seconds.
Seven Days  |  Ken Picard  |  01-22-2010  |  Science

Brooklyn's Clare and the Reasons Make Charmed Chamber Popnew

Clare Muldaur’s honey-sweet vocals and fanciful soundscapes may belie the sophistication of her compositions and her husband’s arrangements of brass, strings and woodwinds, but it’s that levity and wonder that make Clare and the Reasons so charming.
Montreal Mirror  |  Lorraine Carpenter  |  01-22-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

For the Other Definition of Success as a Band, Look Up Glossarynew

Success in music can be broadly defined. On one hand, there's the quantifiable success of hit records, sold-out stadiums, cocaine and hookers — the gold standard, rock-star version of success.
Nashville Scene  |  Sean L. Maloney  |  01-22-2010  |  Reviews

Buffalo Native Adam Lippes Has Fashion Design Down to a Teenew

When pondering the elements of high fashion, the staple known as the T-shirt rarely comes to mind. Let alone finds its way down the runway. To contrast with the logo-printed and distressed tees out there, Adam Lippes yearned to create a more substantial hallmark suitable for everyone’s wardrobe.
Artvoice  |  Morgan Schimminger  |  01-22-2010  |  Fashion

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