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Monday, 06 October 2008
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Feature
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Written by Jeff Ignatius
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Colin
Beavan's thought was hardly unusual. Most of us have wondered
whether all our accumulated belongings and technology make our lives
better.
"We're
consuming way too much stuff as a civilization," Beavan said. "And
we have an idea that's because we need all these things. When
people tend to talk about living environmentally, they tend to think
of depriving ourselves. The question became in our year: Would we be
less happy or more happy? Would we actually find that there were some
greater satisfactions than consuming resources to be had? And if that
was the case - which it was in our case - might it be possible
for our culture to design itself in such a way so that it uses fewer
resources but also gives us happier lives?"
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Feature
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Written by Jeff Ignatius
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Consider
these quotes from two climate scientists:
"In
our models, it's difficult to understand how a 1-degree Fahrenheit
warmer sea can spawn the ... rather significant increase that we've
seen in Category 4 and 5 hurricanes. Therefore, we can't put it all
together. ... But the notion that a warmer Earth could cause more
hurricanes, certainly that would be predicted by the climate
scientists."
"Yet
how can a barely discernible, 1-degree increase in the recorded
global mean temperature since the late 19th Century possibly gain
public acceptance as the source of recent weather catastrophes? And
how can it translate into unlikely claims about future catastrophes?"
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Words from the Editor
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Written by Kathleen McCarthy
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Make
no mistake, the $700-billion request from the Bush administration
including Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chair
Ben Bernanke, is very much a bailout of Wall Street first and
foremost. The tactics used here are familiar ones. Create shock and
fear, and amplify it by fast-tracking legislative action. Create a
profound sense of urgency, coupled with vague but absolute solutions
with no time for verification or alternatives. Threaten the core
security of every citizen to justify, and obtain approval for, the
transfer of power being sought. In this case, the request is an
unprecedented transfer of power to the U.S. treasurer's office,
with virtually no oversight, regulatory control, or checks and
balances of any kind.
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Theatre
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Written by Mike Schulz
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Thirty
years after the group's inception, executive director June
Podagrosi remembers the moment that she and her husband, Victor,
embarked on the project that would become Child's Play Touring
Theatre, the professional, Chicago-based organization dedicated to
producing stage works for children, written by
children. Moreover, she
remembers the frog and the hillbilly that inspired them.
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Music
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Written by Jeff Ignatius
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Alex
Riggen and Nick Pompou will perform their first public show as Murnau
on Saturday at East Moline's Mixtapes, but the duo's ambitions
are already clear.
Based
in Morrison, Illinois, the band is named for the expressionist
silent-film director F.W. Murnau (who made Nosferatu
and Sunrise),
and in addition to a trio of demos it has already recorded a score
for the 1929 surrealistic classic short Un
Chien Andalou as part of an
EP with the single "We March on." The songs for a full-length
have been written, the drums are recorded, and the album should be
released next year, Riggen said last week.
"We've
just always focused on recording and releasing ... to a wide audience
[on the Web] rather than finding shows," he said. "We just like
to write."
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Movies
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Written by Mike Schulz
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Last
October, Moline-based filmmakers Kelly and Tammy Rundle debuted their
documentary Lost Nation: The
Ioway, a 53-minute
exploration of the Native Americans for whom the state of Iowa was
named. And if you were one of the lucky ones who saw this Fourth Wall
Films production at its October 11 premiere in Des Moines, its
October 21 engagement at the Putnam Museum & IMAX Theatre, or its
subsequent screenings throughout the Midwest, you likely already know
that it's something special - a fantastically informative,
beautifully constructed, and (not for nothing) thoroughly enjoyable
piece of work.
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Music
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Written by Daytrotter
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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This
should not be taken as anything other than an inquiry from a
discouraged person. We here at Daytrotter.com would like to know if
the general Quad Cities public cares if we present shows here in
town. We have the opportunity to host more and more shows here, with
some of the best bands in the country, but have been turning them
down because we can't afford to do them with the small draws that
we've been getting. We want to help build this music scene up to
what it could potentially be.
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Movies
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Written by Mike Schulz
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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With
credits including Do the Right Thing, Clockers, Get on the Bus, 4
Little Girls, 25th Hour, and the landmark documentary When the
Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts, Spike Lee has made more
great films over the past 20 years, perhaps, than any other American
director. (And that list doesn't include the Spike Lee joints that
are merely very good, among them Jungle Fever, The Original
Kings of Comedy, and Inside Man.) But when Lee's movies
go wrong, they tend to go shockingly, stunningly wrong, and for at
least its opening half hour, the director's new Miracle at St.
Anna seems poised to topple Girl 6, Bamboozled, and the
execrable Summer of Sam as the most misguided and embarrassing
work of the director's career.
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Guest Commentary
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Written by Bradley Harrington
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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Last week, I discussed the manner in which the federal government of
the United States has taken over our economy, manipulated our money
and credit, and turned our once-free nation into a second-class
"welfare" state headed towards authoritarian dictatorship -
and how our two major-party political candidates, McCain and Obama,
are powerless to stop this advance due to the fact that they helped
create it.
Are you mad as hell? You need to be;
any citizen left in this country who doesn't have the soul of a slave
ought to be screaming bloody murder.
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Politics
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Written by Rich Miller
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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The
polling results I've seen from both sides of the debate say a
plurality of you will vote for a state constitutional convention this
November.
The
numbers still aren't there yet. The question on the fall ballot
must either be supported by 60 percent of those who vote on the
issue, or by at least half of all those voting in the election
itself. Still, it's getting there.
I'm
one of those who supports a constitutional convention. And after 18
years of covering Illinois politics, I am not only convinced that a
convention is necessary; I also believe I have a duty to tell you
why.
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Letters To The Editor
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Written by Administrator
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Wednesday, 01 October 2008 |
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For
the bailout bill, public opinion is running anywhere from 100 to 1 to
300 to 1 or more against passing this bill, according to sources on
Capitol Hill. Given the massive size of this package, the fact that
it rewards the guilty on Wall Street and does nothing to address the
cause, that anger is fully justified.
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