AltWeeklies Wire

Santa Cruz Elder Abuse Case Goes Nationalnew

Last week, Congress heard James "Pops" Lee's story in a short documentary film prepared by the Elder Justice Now campaign, a partnership of the National Council on Aging and WITNESS, a human rights video documentary group, in an effort to push the passage of the so-called Elder Abuse Justice Act
Good Times Santa Cruz  |  Jessica Lussenhop  |  11-02-2009  |  Crime & Justice

Texas GOP Shifts Even Further Right with New Chair Cathie Adamsnew

Call us crazy, but for a party in desperate need of new leadership, is Adams really the best they have? After all, she was one of the loudest voices during the Republicans scare campaign against President Obama's speech to students. "This is eerily like Hitler's youth movement," Adams wrote in a September 5 e-mail to fellow Republicans.
Dallas Observer  |  Sam Merten  |  11-02-2009  |  Politics

Nirvana: Back in 'Bleach'new

The first Nirvana album was probably the last one you heard, but it marks a critical chapter in Seattle music history. It's worth going back to for a fresh -- or first -- listen, even two decades after the fact and long after grunge was laid to rest.
Seattle Weekly  |  Chris Kornelis  |  11-02-2009  |  Music

Stephen Harper's Colombia Free-Trade Cover-Upnew

In 2008, the House of Commons Standing Committee on International Trade issued a report calling for an independent human rights impact assessment before any free-trade deal with Colombia was signed. But Canada's prime minister beat the committee to the punch by announcing that an agreement had already been reached.
NOW Magazine  |  Andrew Cash  |  11-02-2009  |  Politics

Inside Chicago's Shadow Budgetnew

The Daley administration commands an off-the-books kitty of taxpayer money equivalent to a sixth of the official city budget. Now we've got documents that show what they want to do with it.
Chicago Reader  |  Ben Joravsky and Mick Dumke  |  11-02-2009  |  Politics

The Vignettes in 'Act of God' are a Random as Lightning Bolts Themselvesnew

Jennifer Baichwal skips from Canada to France to Mexico, never explaining who her subjects are or arguing why their near-death experiences should be linked. It's just a haphazard travelogue of terror, like 33 Short Films About Glenn Gould Being Struck by Lightning.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian Miller  |  11-02-2009  |  Reviews

Academia Under Attack ... by Zombiesnew

Humans vs. Zombies, an internationally played complicated role-playing tag game that can go on for weeks at a time, is bigger than ever these days. One local university recently mistook the game for real life.
Boston Phoenix  |  Alexis Hauk  |  10-30-2009  |  Culture

Boston City Council Hopefuls Get Candid During “Speed Candidating” Eventnew

The eight remaining at-large City Council candidates have shaken more hands and kissed more behinds than anyone probably should in swine-flu season. When they first embarked on the campaign trail, however, they surely didn't imagine they’d have to get this intimate.
Boston Phoenix  |  Chris Faraone  |  10-30-2009  |  Politics

University of Vermont Faces a Decline in Body Donationsnew

The declining number of donors may be related to the cost associated with giving one's body to medical science. Although UVM absorbs nearly all the expenses, transportation costs are still incurred by the next of kin. In tough economic times, that expense may be too much for some Vermonters to shoulder.
Seven Days  |  Ken Picard  |  10-30-2009  |  Science

'Coco Before Chanel' Needs a Stylistnew

If only Audrey Tatou could have summoned a little more fire to melt the glacial pace of this ambitious biopic.
INDY Week  |  Laura Boyes  |  10-30-2009  |  Reviews

Michael Chabon Discusses Children and Popular Culturenew

Chabon is the jack-of-all-trades of contemporary literature. His literate, humorous, elegiac books include everything from a Pulitzer Prize winner about comic book creators to an alternate-world mystery in a Jewish free state. Now he's got a new collection of essays, Manhood for Amateurs: The Pleasures and Regrets of a Husband, Father and Son.
INDY Week  |  Zack Smith  |  10-30-2009  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

Broasted Squash Carries the Harvest into Winternew

Home food at its comfiest, winter squash has taken a new center stage in cooking with local flavors and ingredients because it's available all winter at the markets. Recipes abound -- a cursory Google search turned up 70-plus recipes, many of them similar. Here's one for Broasted Winter Squash.
INDY Week  |  Sheryl Cornett  |  10-30-2009  |  Food+Drink

Dead Sexy: 'Girls and Corpses,' a Magazinenew

Girls and Corpses began online before also going to print, parodying Maxim, Cosmopolitan and other sexed-up lifestyle magazines. Instead of a pretty girl posing suggestively with a bottle of shampoo, you'll see her nuzzling a remarkably authentic fake corpse. It's transfixing. You don't know what to look at first, or whether to laugh or cry or vomit.
L.A. Weekly  |  Gendy Alimurung  |  10-30-2009  |  Media

Tears of a Clown: On the Glenn Beck Phenomenonnew

The ex-Top 40 disc jockey, recovering drug addict and alcoholic, convert to Mormonism and the National Rifle Association, is American popular culture at its most incomprehensibly weird and offensive. He's also a huge success, a hit, a phenomenon -- a star.
INDY Week  |  Hal Crowther  |  10-30-2009  |  Media

The Nurses' 'Apple's Acre' is Instantly Invigoratingnew

On paper, the Nurses' formula sounds a shade of awful: hootenanny percussion, two guys singing in layered high-pitched caterwauls, and plinking pianos topped with synthesizers. But what music ever sounds good on paper?
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  10-29-2009  |  Reviews

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