AltWeeklies Wire

Photographer Paul Duda Captures China's Cultural Landmarks as They're Destroyednew

Duda has been documenting the way things used to be -- before the 2008 Olympics spurred a national call for modernization of Beijing -- and the way things are now, with crumbling walls and loose bricks around every corner. "I got to photographing these areas in Beijing without any prior knowledge they were going to wipe it out," he says. "Then I went back and realized they were gone, so I just kept going back, kept re-photographing."
New Haven Advocate  |  Laura Yao  |  06-03-2008  |  Art

Eugene Tsui Says It's Time for Thinking Bignew

How big? The architect proposed a 2,340-foot tower for Oakland and a two-mile high structure that could house all of San Francisco.
East Bay Express  |  Eliza Strickland  |  05-28-2008  |  Housing & Development

Why is the Media Covering Up Bush's War Crimes?

Kids in secret prisons. Chinese intelligence officers invited to torture at Gitmo. Why is the American media covering up these horror stories?
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  05-27-2008  |  Media

Twitter Beat the U.S. Geological Survey to China Earthquake Infonew

Earthquakes are notoriously difficult to predict, but the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) does an admirable job of tracking tectonic activity across the world and providing early warnings for people in quake zones. The USGS was able to report on the Chinese event after only a few minutes. Still, it was no match for Twitter.
NOW Magazine  |  Joseph Wilson  |  05-27-2008  |  Tech

Abrahm Lustgarten Rides the Rails to Tibet on the Eve of the Beijing Olympicsnew

Lustgarten spent four years traveling to China and Tibet researching the Qinghai-Tibet Railway -- a 50-year plan to build the highest train line in the world and solidify Beijing's hold on the disputed region.
Willamette Week  |  James Pitkin  |  05-22-2008  |  Nonfiction

Hallmark Cares Enough to Send the Very Best ... Jobs to Chinanew

How did Kansas City's card maker bank $4.4 billion in revenue last year? Partly by sending hometown jobs to China.
The Pitch  |  Eric Barton  |  05-21-2008  |  Business & Labor

Chinese Americans Reach into Their Pockets To Help Quake Victimsnew

The Committee of 100, a national group of influential Chinese-American leaders, is calling for donations to aide the victims of Monday's disastrous earthquake in China.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Joe Piasecki  |  05-20-2008  |  Disasters

Five Ways New Mexico is Connected to the Beijing Olympic Controversiesnew

Tibet, Falun Gong, Darfur, poisoned imports and the threat of pandemics all hang over the games. And while these serious problems will likely continue long past the Beijing Olympics, the event presents the perfect opportunity for the world to protest and, perhaps, for China to listen.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Dave Maass  |  05-15-2008  |  Sports

Where Should the Focus of Olympic Protest Lie?new

The pre-emptive repression of political speech of Olympic athletes is mind boggling. The entire reason the Olympics are even in Beijing is political in nature -- an effort by the West to embrace China as a 21st-century economic and military superpower. So why shouldn't athletes be allowed to voice protest?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Dave Zirin  |  05-05-2008  |  Sports

Add One More Criticism to the Beijing Olympicsnew

Oregon agricultural experts say the Games are contributing to higher food prices.
Willamette Week  |  Beth Slovic  |  04-30-2008  |  Sports

The Ongoing Olympic Torch Relay Brings Fresh Nightmares and Memories of 1980new

Thanks to the IOC, China has the opportunity to use the world stage in August as a platform for propaganda. And that awful word, boycott, has seeped back into the Olympic movement's consciousness. You have to wonder what might happen if the situation escalates much more.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Ralph Routon  |  04-29-2008  |  Sports

Tech Advice for Dissident Bloggersnew

Blogging is free speech's last frontier against government suppression. It's cheap (free), accessible (easy), and worldwide in seconds (bitchin!). Governments in need of control over information know this -- and they're pissed. So how do you get the word out?
Charleston City Paper  |  Joshua Curry  |  04-23-2008  |  Tech

Shedding Light on the Olympic Torchnew

China wants the torch to travel through the nations of Western Europe and the United States as well as Tibet as a way to spread the gospel of China's global reach. The torch's 1936 route was also planned with political considerations in mind. The torch was carried exclusively through European areas where the Third Reich wanted to extend its reach: particularly southeastern and central regions.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Dave Zirin  |  04-22-2008  |  Sports

John McCain's Beijing Bouncenew

No matter how well American athletes do in the Olympics, McCain should get a lift from the Games.
Boston Phoenix  |  Steven Stark  |  04-17-2008  |  Commentary

We Score an Exclusive Interview with the Olympic Torchnew

While thousands of San Franciscans were disappointed to miss the Olympic torch relay last week, we managed to catch up with the torch -- or Flame, as the aspiring rapper is known to his friends -- at SFO before getting on the plane for Buenos Aires and listening to Jay-Z on his iPod.
SF Weekly  |  Will Harper  |  04-16-2008  |  Comedy

Narrow Search

Category

Hot Topics

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range