AltWeeklies Wire

What's Next for a Congressman Who Rode in on Obama’s Coattails?new

People did vie to shake his hand and share his lunch table, but having U.S. Rep. Gary Peters at a homeless shelter last week for a meeting of community group leaders wasn't exactly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for many people there.
Metro Times  |  Sandra Svoboda  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Who Should Control Rochester's Schools?new

Mayor Bob Duffy cites many reasons for wanting control over the city's schools, including decades of low graduation rates and a law that requires the city to dole out $119 million annually with no say in how that money is spent. School Board members tend to bristle at any attempted involvement by the city.
City Newspaper  |  Christine Carrie Fien and Tim Louis Macaluso  |  01-19-2010  |  Education

African Women and Children Affected by HIV/AIDS Let the World Innew

The program The House is Small But the Welcome is Big allows women and children affected by HIV/AIDS in Africa to tell their own stories, and to gain empowerment, through the experience of creating art.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Edie Adelstein  |  01-19-2010  |  Art

On Sheila Dixon: A Liberal's Lament for What Might Have Beennew

Perhaps my original expectations of Mayor Sheila Dixon had been so low that mere competence had moved me into her cheering section. But she'd gone beyond competence. At the very least, her administration was really good at managing public perceptions, which is a crucial skill in governing a morale-challenged city.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Tom Chalkley  |  01-19-2010  |  Commentary

Amy Bloom's (Mostly) New Stories Look for What Matters Mostnew

Amy Bloom's new collection is a revelation of the emotional violence and loss within friendship and complicated love. Many writers would do well to heed Bloom, who can compound the very essence of a relationship in a single phrase.
New Haven Advocate  |  Nora Nahid Khan  |  01-19-2010  |  Fiction

Why Urban Chicken Farming is Not as Weird as it Soundsnew

Have you ever had a fresh egg? Not simply organic, not just free-range, but one yet to see the inside of a refrigerator. A fresh egg is like a tomato straight off the vine, barely resembling its supermarket brethren, beautiful in its imperfection.
New Haven Advocate  |  Adrienne Kane  |  01-19-2010  |  Food+Drink

Afterburn: Coatesville Struggles to Emerge From the Ashesnew

For most people, seeing the house in which they'd lived for the past 28 years burned to the ground would be an unimaginable nightmare. For Karen Engle, it was a blessing in disguise. By the time arson reduced her home to rubble, her neighborhood had become a hotbed of violence.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Rebecca VanderMeulen  |  01-19-2010  |  Crime & Justice

A Fire Within: Charles Darwin Biopic Stays Cold

As reworked by screenwriter John Collee, Jon Amiel's adaptation of Randal Keynes's novel "Annie's Box" is too driven by melodrama to work as a biopic. The story moves to the relationship between Darwin and his brilliant daughter Annie (wonderfully played by newcomer Martha West).
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  01-18-2010  |  Reviews

Former Prostitutes Visit the Local Women's Prison With Message of Hopenew

Katrina Robertson and several others from Nashville's Magdalene program, a nonprofit residential treatment program to help prostitutes turn their lives around, visited the women's prison this week as part of the "Find Your Way Home" national prison tour.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Bianca Phillips  |  01-15-2010  |  Crime & Justice

City Councilor Ed Adrian Is Burlington's Political Provocateurnew

In recent months, heated exchanges about Burlington Telecom have led to lengthy city council meetings, exhausting the participants and audience members in attendance. Yet one city councilor seems to thrive on the chaos: Ed Adrian.
Seven Days  |  Shay Totten  |  01-15-2010  |  Politics

The Incredible Shrinking Metro: Building and Buying Our Way Toward Declinenew

It’s time to count up the money. There is around $150 million in taxpayer money that has been committed for the Erie Canal Harbor development, on top of more than $46 million in public funds that have already been spent, and the plan is to spend it out over the next few years to build a retail and entertainment district.
Artvoice  |  Bruce Fisher  |  01-15-2010  |  Commentary

Michael Eades' Label YK Records Bridges the Physical-Digital Gapnew

In his role as Spongebath Records' webmaster, Michael Eades told the staff and bands about a new digital audio encoding format called MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3 — more commonly known as MP3 — that would later flip the old music business model on its lid.
Nashville Scene  |  Matt Sullivan  |  01-15-2010  |  Music

Colin Firth's Presence Elevates Tom Ford’s Directorial Debutnew

A deeply felt and slickly polished adaptation of a novel by Christopher Isherwood, the directorial debut by designer-turned-filmmaker Tom Ford primarily succeeds as a showcase for its star. Indeed, it’s exciting to see what Colin Firth can do when he’s pushed out of his comfort zone.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Jason Anderson  |  01-14-2010  |  Reviews

Rising Brew Culture: Japan is Producing Some World-Class Beernew

There’s another invasion coming from the land of Godzilla — an attack from Japan’s emerging craft beer scene. You may laugh at the notion of Japan making great beer, but it’s producing some of the world’s best, with 13 brews already on the shelves at Calgary beer stores.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Mike Tessier  |  01-14-2010  |  Food+Drink

Earthquake in Haiti: Made in USA

As grim accounts of the earthquake in Haiti came in, the accounts in U.S.-controlled state media all carried the same descriptive sentence: "Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere..." Gee, I wonder how that happened?
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  01-14-2010  |  Disasters

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