AltWeeklies Wire

The 'It' Factor of the Wong Boysnew

Hailing from the land of Lego and blue cheese, the Wong Boys are a pair of Danish music-scene vets who "talk punk and walk rave," as they put it, which essentially means they bang out obtuse, ass-kick electro-pop that's rank, dank, raunchy and stupid in an exceptionally clever manner.
Montreal Mirror  |  Rupert Bottenberg  |  03-13-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Larkin Grimm Uses Music to Express Her Different Way of Seeing the Worldnew

Larkin Grimm is an amazingly talented singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist whose raw, dynamic and sometimes hallucinatory songs effectively communicate a perspective unlike anyone else's.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  03-12-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Husband-and-Wife Duo Discover that Working from Home Can Greatly Increase Productivitynew

Having their own studio separate from their house, but still at home, allowed Viva Voce to live their lives without dealing with the gigantic wad of cables.
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  03-12-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

On the Hunt for Empty Housesnew

Some real estate speculators see foreclosed houses as golden opportunities, even as many of their colleagues lose everything.
The Inlander  |  Daniel Walters  |  03-12-2009  |  Economy

One Day in Dallasnew

Adam Braver’s book deserves to be known; it ranks first among novels focused on the death of JFK.
The Texas Observer  |  Don Graham  |  03-12-2009  |  Fiction

Who's Making Our Medicine?new

To treat everything from allergies to heart problems, half of Americans take a prescription medicine every day. It’s perfectly safe, though, because the Food and Drug Administration regulates the ingredients, right?
The Texas Observer  |  Jim Hightower  |  03-12-2009  |  Science

Why a Texas County Is So Eager to Get Dumped Onnew

Waste Control Specialists LLC has spent the last 20 years pulling political, business, and regulatory strings to do what no other company in the nation has been able to do in three decades: license and build a new radioactive waste dump.
The Texas Observer  |  Forrest Wilder  |  03-12-2009  |  Economy

Unseated by Republican Redistricting, Five Former Texas Congressmen Cash Innew

An investigation has discovered that the Texans whom Tom DeLay gerrymandered out of Congress have proven even more likely than the average member of Congress to become lobbyists.
The Texas Observer  |  Andrew Wheat  |  03-12-2009  |  Politics

FairPoint's Finances Are Failing Fastnew

Two major safety valves in the financial house of cards that is New England's largest landline telecommunications service provider blew last week, leaving FairPoint Communications in a position of significant weakness, even as the company admits that its financial picture will worsen in the short term.
Portland Phoenix  |  Jeff Inglis  |  03-12-2009  |  Policy Issues

Samantha Hunt Weaves Historical Fiction From Nikola Tesla's Biographynew

Despite being overstuffed with tangential subplots, too-convenient characters, and predictable plot mechanics, The Invention of Everything Else brims with Tesla's prescient ideas about energy.
Portland Phoenix  |  Christopher Gray  |  03-12-2009  |  Fiction

The Army's Controversial Anthropology Programnew

The US military embeds cultural anthropologists in war zones in hopes of easing relations with native populations. The scientific community wants the program brought into line and are demanding a place at the policy-making table.
Boston Phoenix  |  Peter Piatetsky  |  03-12-2009  |  War

Soldiers Committing Suicidenew

The US military is experiencing a troubling uptick in suicides -- both with active-duty troops overseas and with returned vets. The culprit is post-traumatic stress disorder, and the Pentagon has neither the money, the know-how, or the will to stop it.
Boston Phoenix  |  Jason Notte  |  03-12-2009  |  War

Covenant Marriage Laws in Louisiananew

When Louisiana became the first state to enact covenant marriage, supporters expected it to sweep the country and lower the rate of divorce in America. What are the results of this experiment?
Gambit  |  Kevin Allman  |  03-11-2009  |  Religion

Bobby Jindal and the Stimulus Plannew

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal's decision to refuse part of President Barack Obama's stimulus package is supported by the business community and opposed by Democratic lawmakers.
Gambit  |  Jeremy Alford  |  03-11-2009  |  Economy

Monkey Business: The Louisiana Science Education Actnew

Louisiana's Science Education Act is touted as promoting "critical thinking skills," but what it really does is allow teachers to use materials that haven't been approved by the state's Department of Education to question the validity of evolution. Enactment of the law is costing the state money and could lead to a lawsuit.
Gambit  |  David Winkler-Schmit  |  03-11-2009  |  Education

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