AltWeeklies Wire

Photos from the Frontnew

Combat photographer and Air Force veteran Stacy Pearsall is part of the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art's inside look at the War on Terror.
Charleston City Paper  |  John Stoehr  |  01-28-2009  |  Art

Hollygrove Market & Farm Plans to Change the Way New Orleans Loves Foodnew

A New Orleans farm will operate as a training ground for backyard gardeners in the Hollygrove neighborhood. For now, the farm operates as a weekly market hub for backyard growers, community gardeners, urban microfarmers and rural farmers to sell healthy and affordable food, previously a rare commodity in the neighborhood.
Gambit  |  Alex Woodward  |  01-28-2009  |  Food+Drink

We're Off to See the Wizard: 48 Hours Covering Obama's Inaugurationnew

Attending the Inauguration was an epic of sorts — a journey from home through obstacles and barriers toward some ultimate confrontation with fate. You don’t just skip ahead to the end of a quest — you struggle to reach it and hope that it brings the resolution you wanted from it.
C-Ville Weekly  |  Brendan Fitzgerald  |  01-28-2009  |  Art

Precision Dance In the Age of Obamanew

Ten step teams converged to compete for $1,500 in total prize money, with proceeds going towards a local scholarship fund. The evening was billed as a celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Barack Obama, and our new President’s name was emblazoned on everything from pins to scarves.
C-Ville Weekly  |  J. Tobias Beard  |  01-28-2009  |  Performance

Some People Are Born Freaks; Jim Hall Turned Himself Into Onenew

Retired city planner Jim Hall is no less shocking on the streets of Baltimore than what the Romans encountered during their first failed invasion of the British Isles in the 1st century A.D. The Picts merely painted themselves blue for battle. Hall has inked himself blue for life.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Charles Cohen  |  01-27-2009  |  Culture

Just Married: A Justice of the Peace Finds Justice and Peacenew

Why did I expect campiness from gay couples? Just ignorance, I guess. Gay, straight, young, old, rich, poor, all the soon-to-be and newlywed couples I've known in my bumpy little life have one thing in common: They're in love.
New Haven Advocate  |  Todd Lyon  |  01-27-2009  |  Culture

Money: The Root of All Evilnew

There is one big difference between the Great Depression and 2009. Back then, too many people had too little money. Today, we have the more complicated, almost existential dilemma of too many people having too much money. The caveat: This is not real money.
New Haven Advocate  |  Alan Bisbort  |  01-27-2009  |  Commentary

Drexel Prof Has Some Concrete Answers About How the Pyramids Were Builtnew

Michel Barsoum says the theories that modern science have devised to explain the construction of Egypt's Great Pyramids are wrong. Barsoum's theory, naturally, has been treated as heresy in the world of Egyptology.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Patrick Rapa  |  01-27-2009  |  History

Working Stiff: Amy Stein's 'Domesticated'new

As human domesticity presses onward and communities sprawl further into undeveloped regions, the wildlife in those regions runs out of places to remain wild. Think of it as the gentrification of nature. Photographer Amy Stein sees it less as coexistence, and more as entrapment.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  John Vettese  |  01-27-2009  |  Art

You Can't Take It with You: Philadelphia Artists Explore the Transience of Naturenew

Most outdoor art installations are built with permanence in mind, the point being to work with materials that can stand the ravages of time and weather. In curating "Ephemerality" at Philadelphia's Schuylkill Center, Zoë Cohen had the opposite in mind.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  01-27-2009  |  Art

We Are What They Eat?new

If Obama can blend green, healthy policies with the symbolism of actual green, healthy living, it could the greatest thing since chocolate met peanut butter.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Amy Z. Quinn  |  01-27-2009  |  Food+Drink

Homebrewers Find Washington State Laws a Bit Prohibitivenew

Homebrewer Jerome Seipp can't bring his beer to a wedding or even the barbecue next door, as state law allows homebrewers to transport only one gallon out of their house.
Seattle Weekly  |  Laura Onstot  |  01-26-2009  |  Food+Drink

A Pro Gambler's Guide to Gaming the Super Bowlnew

Professional gambler "Noah" knows how the average bettor can make a mint on the big game. Only he's no average bettor.
Seattle Weekly  |  Damon Agnos  |  01-26-2009  |  Sports

How Boutique Booze Could Help Change the Lives of Poor Farmersnew

When restaurateur Jean-Denis Courtin decided to make his own vodka, he wanted it to be not only original but also "all natural, fair trade, and additive free." In the mountains of South America, he found a way to have it all.
Chicago Reader  |  Julia Thiel  |  01-26-2009  |  Food+Drink

It’s Good to Be the King’s Election Lawyernew

Chicago attorney Michael Dorf has thrown his hat in the ring for the job of head honcho at the National Endowment for the Arts. Here are his killer qualifications: from the time Barack Obama began his run against Bobby Rush for Congress in 1999 through Obama’s election to the U.S. Senate in 2004, Dorf was his election lawyer.
Chicago Reader  |  Deanna Isaacs  |  01-26-2009  |  Art

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