AltWeeklies Wire

Philly's Rise in HIV Among Young Gay Males Has Led to New Testing Measures ... at Night Clubsnew

Years ago, drawing vials of blood and waiting two weeks for results gave way to a finger-prick or cheek swab and a 20-minute wait. Since today's tests are light on equipment, the process has been moved out of stuffy clinics and into RVs that can be parked in parts of town where incidences of the disease run high.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Tom Namako  |  08-05-2008  |  Science

It's Been a Year Since Steven 'Butter' Miller Was Killed. Does Anyone Remember?new

When Butter was shot dead by police -- shot at 85 times, hit about 20 -- he was high, standing on a corner and waving a loaded gun. He hadn't pointed it at anyone, or if he had, it had been completely accidental, coincidental, because Butter was blank-eyed, detached from the world.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Tom Namako and Doron Taussig  |  07-29-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Round Two: Obama Needs to Conquer Philly All Over Againnew

Obama supporters were pretty excited for the primary. Can they get revved up for the general election too?
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Emily Schultheis  |  07-29-2008  |  Politics

Matt Davis Creates a New Ode to Philly Every Monthnew

Davis, a 29-year-old jazz guitarist and composer who's halfway through a yearlong project he calls City of Philadelphia 2008.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  David Adler  |  07-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Can Location-Specific Advertising Generate Revenue for WiFi?new

When NAC took over EarthLink's Philly network, it proposed a hybrid business model: steady revenue from wired broadband for large businesses combined with a free public access network that could generate revenue from advertisements. This latter part is particularly interesting, because, while it sounds promising, no reliable model exists for ads on a WiFi network.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Timothy J. McLaughlin  |  07-22-2008  |  Tech

The Phillies' So Taguchi has Lost His Waynew

But the slumping outfielder remains determined to find it.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  G.W. Miller III  |  07-14-2008  |  Sports

Many Immigrants Abandon Accomplishments to Start Anew in Americanew

Many highly educated Philadelphians from other countries are stuck working dead-end jobs for minimal pay. Their stories may surprise you.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Alli Katz and Erica Palan  |  07-07-2008  |  Immigration

Inaugural Philadelphia Independent Film Festival Programs Honest-to-goodness Indie Filmsnew

Coming as it does in between April's behemoth Philadelphia Film Festival and July's ever-expanding Philadelphia International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, the Independent Film Fest has to be looked at as David next to a pair of well-established Goliaths.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  07-01-2008  |  Movies

Wireless Philadelphia is Still Around, but Its Objectives are Differentnew

If low-income residents can grab a brand-spanking-new free wireless signal anywhere on the streets of Philadelphia using laptops they probably don't own, can't afford and don't know how to use, does it count as digital inclusion?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Tasneem Paghdiwala and Anthony Campisi  |  06-30-2008  |  Tech

Can Philly's Bold Experiment in Preventing Foreclosures Work?new

With the foreclosure crisis in full swing, Judge C. Darnell Jones issued an order declaring that before any foreclosure goes to sale, a representative for the lender must sit down with the borrower in court. He also postponed all sales of owner-occupied houses scheduled for April or May until July. The order immediately drew national attention, and last week, the experiment began.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Isaiah Thompson  |  06-24-2008  |  Housing & Development

Locked Down: What It's Really Like Inside Philly's Overcrowded Prisonsnew

The city's prisons woefully overpopulated and have been for several decades. Efforts to fix this problem have come up against the seemingly immutable fact that, on an average day, 108 people enter the six-prison system while only 105 leave it.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Tom Namako  |  06-24-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Marc Brodzik on His Launch of Scrapple.TVnew

Scrapple.TV, an internet TV station, exists at the moment is a virtual pirate TV commune featuring every badass art bastard and stared-at-in-the-street crazy Philly street culture freak around.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Steven Wells  |  06-16-2008  |  Tech

Philadelphians are Trading in Their Cars for Scootersnew

It's tough to look manly on a scooter: They're small, they're cute, they're popular in Europe. Our car-obsessed cowboy culture should want nothing to do with them, but it's amazing what $4 a gallon will do to cultural identity.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  John Steele  |  06-16-2008  |  Transportation

Foreclosure May Hurt Children the Mostnew

"When foreclosures force children from their homes, their education is disrupted, their peer relationships crumble, and the social networks that support them are fractured," according to a recent study by First Focus. "Indeed, their physical health, as well as their emotional health and well-being, is placed at risk." Tiffany Rodriguez, a North Philly 14-year-old, would have to agree.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Tasneem Paghdiwala  |  05-27-2008  |  Housing & Development

Gas Prices are High; Tension between Drivers & Cyclists Shouldn't Also Benew

At a time when gas prices, as well as motorists' tempers, are rising, it seems we should be embracing alternative forms of transportation. But instead of ditching the car, the masses of would-be cyclists are scared shitless. Twenty-five pounds of steel powered by an unprotected human body is no match against traffic powered by internal combustion and human aggression.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Stewart Dean Ebersole  |  05-20-2008  |  Transportation

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