AltWeeklies Wire

Richard Celeste Reflects on His Years as Colorado College Presidentnew

Richard Celeste was a young graduate of Yale when offered an opportunity of a lifetime: special assistant to the U.S. ambassador to India. He knew nothing about India, but the door opened and he stepped through it.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Chet Hardin  |  04-12-2011  |  Education

Could a Nuclear Meltdown Happen in South Louisiana?new

The nuclear disaster that continues to unfold at Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant raises questions about safety in south Louisiana, a hurricane-prone region powered by three nuclear reactors in the state and neighboring Mississippi.
Gambit  |  Julien Gorbach  |  04-12-2011  |  Environment

Zero Salary for Congress

The Maximum wage for Congress, the president and other high-ranking elected representatives should be set at the lowest pay received by an American citizen.
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  04-11-2011  |  Commentary

Cary Ann Hearst Charms National Public Radionew

The real story: A friend of hers that she met in Charleston years ago now works at NPR, and he suggested the singer/songwriter for the show. An e-mail later and Hearst was on the air on April 3, talking about her dog, Townes Van Zandt, and life after her song "Hell's Bells" appeared on an episode of True Blood last summer.
Charleston City Paper  |  Susan Cohen  |  04-11-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Tracing the Genesis and Evolution of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Centernew

Linked to a history that stretches almost all the way to the city's incorporation in 1886, the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center offers a lot of ground to recap. And often it's hilly terrain, fluctuating with the comings and goings of many of the era's major regional players.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Bryce Crawford  |  04-11-2011  |  Art

Anamanaguchi Plays Original Tunes in the Key of NESnew

At the four-piece band's service is a hacked 1985 Nintendo console, which allows it to summon those buttery-smooth synth notes and modulated keyboards that sound like guitars. This mimicry is augmented by live drums, bass, and rhythm guitar, achieving a pleasing sonic balance.
East Bay Express  |  Nate Seltenrich  |  04-11-2011  |  Reviews

The Way Things Weren't: Oregon Trail Odyssey 'Meek's Cutoff' is Just Plain Odd

Kelly Reichardt's minimalist cinema-of-the-inane hits a painfully low ebb with an anti-western lacking any sign of a narrative arc.
City Pulse  |  Cole Smithey  |  04-11-2011  |  Reviews

Lamenting Lithuania with Ruta Sepetysnew

Inspired by her own father's childhood experiences, Sepetys' debut novel Between Shades of Gray tells the tale of a Lithuanian teen deported over the Arctic Circle to Siberia in 1941.
East Bay Express  |  Anneli Rufus  |  04-11-2011  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Slavery Was the Pivotal Issue for Charleston's 'Mercury'new

At the dawn of the Civil War, the editors at the Charleston Mercury were incensed.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  04-11-2011  |  History

Remembering the Other Civil War ... the One We are Still Fightingnew

Have we grown up enough to see our history more accurately and fairly? Will we continue to hide from our past? Are we ready to face that other civil war, the one that still divides us, the one that we read about in our newspapers every day? Will that war ever be over?
Charleston City Paper  |  Will Moredock  |  04-11-2011  |  Commentary

Rep. Tim Scott Losing Redistricting Lotterynew

If there is a drawback to being a Congressional member, it's that the campaign never stops. Voters weigh your political fate every two years, so the next campaign officially begins the day after you're elected.
Charleston City Paper  |  Greg Hambrick  |  04-11-2011  |  Policy Issues

Is Net Neutrality Doomed to Failure?new

The debate over net neutrality hasn't gotten much smarter since 2006, when Ted Stevens, of Alaska, opposed the Net Neutrality Act by infamously declaring that the Internet was "a series of tubes" -- but it has intensified along predictable partisan fault lines.
Boston Phoenix  |  Carly Carioli  |  04-11-2011  |  Tech

'Curveball' Tells the Story of Toni Stone, the First Female Negro League Baseball Playernew

Stone's life and career -- from neighborhood pickup game to cross-country barnstorming to obscurity in retirement -- are aptly recounted in Martha Ackmann's Curveball: The Remarkable Story of Toni Stone, the First Woman to Play Professional Baseball in the Negro League.
Metro Times  |  Sandra Svoboda  |  04-11-2011  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Baltimore's Vinny Vegas Makes Normal the New Weirdnew

The band makes a slightly off-kilter normal that doesn't quite gel with the anarchic, nu-punk, and defiantly experimental sounds with which the City That Bleeds is often associated.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Raymond Cummings  |  04-11-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Rise and Uncertain Future of 'Pirate' Radio in Bostonnew

If there's any hope for unlicensed stations to go legit, it's the Local Community Radio Act, passed by Congress in December after a 10-year campaign by proponents of hyper-local radio. However, details of how the legislation will be administrated are still hazy. And some experts say the measure comes too late, and with too little backbone.
Boston Phoenix  |  Chris Faraone  |  04-11-2011  |  Media

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