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Jonathan Springston, 05/10/2006
It’s difficult to talk about the leftist scene in Atlanta in the 1960's and 70's without someone bringing up The Great Speckled Bird, the leftist alternative newspaper which influenced so many minds of the time. But what was The Bird?
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Matthew Cardinale, 04/30/2006
Dozens of Atlanta’s leftists gathered for a preview of the stage version of Barbara Ehrenreich’s book, “Nickled and Dimed,” this evening, which was preceded by a panel discussion at The Five Spot on the living wage crisis.
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Michael Parenti, 03/19/2006
If we uncritically immerse ourselves in the cultural context of any society, seeing it only as it sees itself, then we are embracing the self-serving illusions it has of itself.
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Amie Williams, 02/22/2006
"Shipping Out: The Story of America's Seafaring Women" is a comprehensive, spirited look at the women of today who sail the seas for a living.
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Tim Mills, 01/31/2006
Adapted from a song by Florence Reece, UNION MINER’S WIFE. 1931 Harlan County, KY.
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Dawn Worthy, 12/07/2005
Cultures tend to encourage conformity. They fail to see the growth of society and population health is attained through diversity of mind and body. Family trees with limited branches don’t thrive (see the Hapsburgs). Our daughters must learn to sculpt their minds and appreciate their bodies.
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Remi Kanazi, 11/04/2005
A few nights ago I watched Palestinian folkloric dance and theatre performed by the Ibdaa dance troupe. The group is the third generation of dancers, consisting of ten boys and ten girls from the Dheisheh refugee camp in the West Bank.
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Karin S. Coddon, 10/27/2005
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(illustration by Victor Velez)
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At eleven o’clock on any weekday morning, Rancho El Camino, an equestrian academy, training and boarding facility, is an oasis of hooves, hay and calm amid the alarmingly overdeveloped and still-overdeveloping rolling hills just east of Del Mar.
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David Zirin, 10/13/2005
Sometimes an artist dies who has burrowed so deeply into our consciousness, we feel more than a tangible sense of loss; we feel pain...August Wilson gave me – and countless others – this gift of elemental insight. He challenged my conceptions of sports, the Black athletic experience, and how to understand these two aspects so central to our popular culture... Thank goodness we can cherish the body of work he left us.
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Thomas Riggins, 09/20/2005
Even though I would not call myself a "conservative," I have a great deal of respect for people who honestly hold well-thought-out conservative opinions... It must be disheartening to many conservatives to see the press give so much attention to self-proclaimed conservative "spokespersons," who once they open their mouths reveal themselves to be complete dunderheads.
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David Zirin, 04/26/2005
Edge of Sports brings to you our annual hoops award ceremony, the 2004-05 Micheal Rays. These awards are first and foremost a response to the numbingly predictable trophies handed out by the NBA.
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David Zirin, 04/11/2005
It's a perfect marriage," bleated DC City Council member Vincent Orange. He was not talking about Charles and Camilla, although the marriage in question is equally ugly.
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Steven Laffoley, 03/30/2005
On the recent second anniversary of the Iraq War, I was driving along Interstate 95 in the early afternoon, somewhere outside Bangor, Maine, when a cherry red SUV pulled into my lane.
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Manfred Idler, 03/17/2005
WHEN Tamara and Fiona Baur returned from Cuba last summer, several people asked why the solidarity brigade that they had worked with was called Olga Benario.
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Don Santina, 03/07/2005
The blues can rightfully be called the fountainhead of 20th Century pop music, out of which flowed jazz, swing, bop, rock, and – yes – country and western.
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Misha Berson, 01/26/2005
The first thing you notice in Capitol Hill Arts Center's production of "Waiting for Lefty" is the guy in a brown suit and felt hat lying on the floor of the theater, a tin cup by his side.
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Thomas Riggins, 01/24/2005
Thank the gods for the faux Christian Right! One of their hate groups, Focus on the Family, has uncovered a sinister [left wing?] plot to corrupt America’s youth.
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E. San Juan, Jr., 12/27/2004
Pablo Neruda has inspired the left cultural movements internationally. His mark cannot be underestimated.
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Sheila Gibbons, 12/27/2004
In "The Swan" and "Extreme Makeover," women undergo plastic surgery and public humiliation on TV in a supposed effort to feel better about themselves. It is the merchandising of self-worth and a big prime-time lie.
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Michael Moore, 12/09/2004
Vote online for Fahrenheit 9/11 for Favorite Film for the People's Choice Awards.
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