AltWeeklies Wire

Leaving the Fast Lane: The Slow Food Phenomenonnew

Central to Slow Food USA is the promotion of good, clean, fair food for everybody, whether you’re in a hut or kitchen or around a campfire. The goal is quite simple: to build community and celebrate cultural diversity through the enjoyment of delicious food prepared from healthy plants and animals.
Shepherd Express  |  Sarah Biondich  |  02-06-2009  |  Food+Drink

Clearing Up Myths About the Stimulus Packagenew

Obama critics advocate the same policies that created this disaster.
Shepherd Express  |  Louis Fortis and Lisa Kaiser  |  02-06-2009  |  Commentary

Pigs Gone Wild: Feral Swine are Tearing it Up in Oregonnew

Call them swine, hogs, pigs or boars, call them what you want, but Oregon calls them an invasive species and has come up with a Feral Swine Action Plan to get rid of the porky pests.
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  02-05-2009  |  Animal Issues

It's Time to Reread Gore Vidal's Enduring Lincolnnew

A reappraisal of Gore Vidal's 1984 novel about the 16th president, in his bicentennial year.
INDY Week  |  Douglas Vuncannon  |  02-05-2009  |  Fiction

Two Artists Render the Mundane Mysteriousnew

Critics have long argued the differences between poetry and painting. Both Jess and Jack R. Smith validate the Roman poet Horace’s claim: "Ut pictura poesis (As is painting, so is poetry)."
Orlando Weekly  |  Jessica Bryce Young  |  02-05-2009  |  Art

Crooked Fingers' 'Forfeit/Fortune'new

Forfeit/Fortune is a musical scrapbook album of sorts, documenting Eric Bachmann's recent travels and new friends he's made over recent tours.
Tucson Weekly  |  James Hudson  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

Mild Experimentation: 'Tonight: Franz Ferdinand'new

With this release, Franz Ferdinand takes an interesting path to bridge the chasm between the fans they quickly garnered and their relevancy in a constantly amnesiac music scene.
Tucson Weekly  |  Michael Petitti  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

The Remake of a Fantastic South Korean Fright Flick Does Not Live Up to the Originalnew

The Uninvited is relatively useless to those who watched and loved the original, but audiences new to the story might get a few good chills out of it.
Tucson Weekly  |  Bob Grimm  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

Animated Documentary 'Waltz With Bashir' Works Well on Every Levelnew

Waltz With Bashir is about the process of coming to remember, and how we should present those memories. In the way it acknowledges its own myopia and self-concern, it's one of the most honest and innovative films of the millennium.
Tucson Weekly  |  James DiGiovanna  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

Does the Border Patrol Deserve More Respect From the New Administration?new

As the Border Patrol settles into the 21st century, it does so with plenty of baggage, from a reputation for ethical haphazardness to being viewed as a lesser partner in federal law-enforcement huddles. Add to that a persisting stove-pipe management structure that straitjackets reform, and you'll find an agency that often seems more anchored in the past than the present.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  02-05-2009  |  Immigration

Death Threats Be Damned, an Undercover Cop Isn't Running Anymorenew

At 47, his house gone from an arsonist's match, his family badly shaken by their 3 a.m. escape, undercover cop Jay Dobyns is watching his back against outlaws sworn to kill him.
Tucson Weekly  |  Leo W, Banks  |  02-05-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

A Little-Known Website Is the Future of Transparency in American Governmentnew

While USAspending.gov brings transparency to government spending, government contractors seem to be in the dark that their information is available to anyone with a computer.
The Inlander  |  Nicholas Deshais  |  02-05-2009  |  Policy Issues

Or, The Whale's 'Light Poles and Pines'new

This glorious debut album by the San Francisco combo is perfect in its own right--rockin' contemporary alt-country feet planted firmly in the past and the future.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

Titus Andronicus's 'The Airing of Grievances'new

This is either the best band named for a Shakespeare play, or the best album name borrowed from a Seinfeld episode; either way, fans of manic, raucous jangle-pop should take heed.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

Wildly Accessible: Animal Collective's 'Merriweather Post Pavilion'new

This album's restrained approach creates something to warm up to, but its consistent beauty gives it serious legs.
Tucson Weekly  |  Michael Petitti  |  02-05-2009  |  Reviews

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