|
|
|
Articles from June 2007
Food | Friday, June 29, 2007
Kirk Waisner is the vice president of menu development at Popeyes Chicken and Biscuits...
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, June 28, 2007
The first thing I felt when I heard I was going to have a C-section was vindication...
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life, Health + Fitness | Wednesday, June 27, 2007
The FDA just approved a new birth control pill that stops a woman's period. Are there health risks associated with suppressing the normal menstruation process?
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 22, 2007
No Access
Georgia ranks 42 in nation for health care
By Colby Dunn
Sitting in Georgia’s waiting rooms are
people who may not visit another doctor for a year or more. Illness
will impact them more than the people sitting next to them, and they
are also more likely
to face chronic disease and be forced into bankruptcy by medical costs
than their waiting-room neighbors. Many of them have full-time jobs,
though they are often low-wage, and nearly all of them are U.S.
citizens. They are the medically uninsured. Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, June 22, 2007
Authenticity vs. hypocrisy
By Mark Douglas
Richard Rorty, who died
on June 8, was perhaps the most important American philosopher of the last 30 years, ever since the publication of
his groundbreaking book “Philosophy and the Mirror
of Nature” in 1979. He was also my teacher.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, June 22, 2007
Iran vs. Porn
By Eric Von Haessler
Well, this oughta wake up the Left.
Iran’s parliament recently passed a bill that legalizes the death
penalty for porn stars and those who produce and distribute the movies,
magazines and Web cam clips they appear in. Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 4
Opinion | Friday, June 22, 2007
Grade inflation
By Bob Zaslavsky
Recent reports from Pennsylvania and
Maryland have brought into the spotlight another of the many
deleterious phenomena that characterize our schools.
Read full article |
(1 ratings) | Comments: 0
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Special Events
Festivals and Happenings
Camp Sunshine
This summer marks the 25th anniversary of this Atlanta-based summer
camp for children with cancer. June 24-30 at Camp Twin Lakes. For more
information call 404-325-7979 or visit www.mycampsunshine.com.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 21, 2007
Bearing witness
‘Unembedded’ captures life in war-torn Iraq
BY NATALIE BENNETT
There are two sides to every story, as
the saying goes. But for many stories, there are far more. The national
touring exhibit “Unembedded: Four Independent Photojournalists on the
War in Iraq,” based on the book of the same name, goes beyond the
newspaper headlines and the political spin from both parties to capture
the horror, the destruction and the day-to-day life of modern-day Iraq
as seen by photographers Kael Alford, Thorne Anderson, Rita Leistner
and Ghaith Abdul-Ahad. The Sunday Paper recently caught up with
Alford—who gives a presentation entitled “State of War, State of
Grace,” at the Atlanta Photography Group Gallery at noon on Saturday,
June 30—to get her side of the story.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Sky painting
A pyro artist brings the works to the Fourth of July in Atlanta
Fireworks are almost as American as
apple pie and baseball. In fact, these eye candy explosives are usually
the backdrop to major league baseball games—a theatrical end to the
drama played out on the diamond. Hi-TechFx pyrotechnician and fireworks
artist Brian Panther recently designed the works for the NCAA Final
Four in Atlanta. His work will once again grace the city’s sky with a
display on the Fourth of July at Centennial Park. The Sunday Paper
recently spoke to Panther about his unusual career—one that has him
traveling to locations as far afield as Hong Kong. An occupational
hazard? He can’t listen to a song without designing fireworks for it.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, June 21, 2007
Radar
Would you like fries with that?
The Atlanta Botanical Garden was abuzz with excitement last Sunday as
it celebrated Father’s Day with the aptly titled event “Bluegrass and
Big Bugs.” There were plenty of activities for the whole family,
including lawn games, a “hissing cockroach petting zoo” (um … OK), arts
and crafts and something called a “Bugathlon.”
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, June 21, 2007
SUN 24
MAKE A SPLASH: Georgia native and New Orleans Saints defensive end Charles Grant’s BAYOU BLING celebrity weekend fundraiser winds up today with a CELEBRITY POOL PARTY
at the W Hotel at Perimeter Center at 3 p.m., and a MARDI GRAS SUNDAY
BASH later tonight at the Velvet Room. Proceeds benefit at-risk
inner-city youth in New Orleans, Atlanta and Grant’s hometown of
Colquitt, Ga. For more information: www.edge3m.com.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
Quick | Thursday, June 21, 2007
A little help from my friends
By Caren West
After writing last week’s column about
my father and our mutual appreciation of the “Wonder Years,” I couldn’t
get the Beatles song “With a Little Help From My Friends” out of my
head. As a result, I’ve been thinking a lot about my friends lately. I
have a number of tried and true friends, the kind that will take you to
the airport at the crack of dawn or help you move and barely complain.
And because of my chosen profession in public relations (or maybe it
chose me), I’ve had the good fortune to meet all kinds of characters,
from Tony Bennett to Tony Hawk, while racking up a large number of
fantastic acquaintances. I consider myself pretty damn lucky most days,
even when I have a song stuck in my head for almost a week.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 21, 2007
Cusack point blank
The ‘1408’ star on Stephen King, the supernatural and the F-word
BY BERT OSBORNE
John Cusack's new movie “1408” isn't
exactly a one-man show, but he does spend a majority of his time holed
up by himself in a creepy hotel room, reacting to a lot of
computer-generated special effects. Based on a Stephen King short
story, the film casts Cusack (“Say Anything,” “The Grifters,” “Being
John Malkovich,” “High Fidelity”) as the skeptical author of several
books about presumably haunted digs, who learns the hard way to believe
in the supernatural. Cusack, who turns 41 this week, discusses the
movie during a recent interview in Los Angeles.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Travel | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Serious lounging
The Sunday Paper takes a siesta in Grand Cayman
By Susan L. Meyers
It’s early morning, and as I lounge and
eat my bowl of Cheerios on the lanai at our condo on Seven Mile Beach,
the breeze blows through the coconut and mango trees below.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
A letter to Micah
By Lisa Baron
To my new baby—I need you to know that I
started watching out for you from the moment I saw the little pink line
on my e.p.t. home pregnancy test.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 2
Life | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Bling brothers, cougars and Betties: Your field guide to Atlanta’s dating scene
By Blane Bachelor
From Buckhead to Virginia Highland,
Atlanta’s rolling hills teem with various species of singles. But if
you’re new to town—summer is the height of moving season, after all—it
can be difficult to classify them in the wild. So I’ve created a handy
guide to the most prominent creatures in Atlanta’s dating environs.
Learn about their habits and habitats, and you just might snag one of
these fine specimens.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Health + Fitness | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
MEDICAL EDGE FROM MAYO CLINIC
NEW MOM REPORTS DIVERSE SYMPTOMS
Q. I had a baby seven months ago and suffer from postpartum
depression, so I’m on an antidepressant. I have other symptoms, as
well. I breastfed my son for only three weeks, yet at the moment I have
nipple pain. Also, my lymph nodes under my arms are sore and I have a
pain in my uterus. Can you please give me an idea of what all this is
about, or is it just my body going back to normal?
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Courage under fire
Suspenseful drama sports a low-key ‘Heart’
BY STEVE WARREN
“A Mighty Heart” has a couple of things
working against it. If you’ve seen “Missing” and “Harrison’s Flowers,”
you may feel you’ve seen it all before. And as is common with
authorized retellings of recent history, certain people are portrayed
as almost too saintly to be believed. Angelina Jolie’s Mariane Pearl is
the kind of person we all like to think we’d be under similar
circumstances, harboring no hatred for any nationality or religion for
what happens to her family.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Music | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Umphrey’s McGee
“The Bottom Half”
(Sci Fidelity)
Most so-called jam bands can play. And
play and play and play. In fact, it’s tough to get them to stop.
Members take off into the noodle-sphere, soloing for the sake of it
while leaving whatever song structure they started with to wilt in the
listener’s memory.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Spilling Rosa Mexicano’s Secrets
By Hope S. Philbrick
Award-winning chef Roberto Santibañez,
who serves as the culinary director of Rosa Mexicano, has just
published a new cookbook that spills many of the restaurant’s secrets:
“Rosa’s New Mexican Table” (Artisan/May 2007).
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
More than a decent backup
The future’s bright for star prospect Saltalamacchia
BY MICHAEL MAHAN
You’d think catcher Jarrod
Saltalamacchia would be feeling the pressure. After all, there are a
lot of expectations for the 22-year-old Atlanta Braves rookie to live
up to. He’s in the middle of his first full season in the major
leagues. His team’s in the middle of a pennant race. Oh, and the Braves
already have an all-star catcher in teammate Brian McCann.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Stark raving mad
New book tries too hard to slam Andruw
BY ADAM KROHN
ESPN senior baseball writer Jayson
Stark's book "The Stark Truth: The Most Overrated and Underrated
Players in Baseball History" hit bookstores earlier this month, and he
couldn’t resist writing something inflammatory to stir up sales. In the
book, Stark dubs some of the game's greatest athletes—including Nolan
Ryan, Sandy Koufax, Reggie Jackson and Lou Brock—as among the most
overrated players of all time.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
Food | Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Go fish: Salmon
With summer in full-throttle, it’s time
to look to the ocean for a bounty of heat-quenching options, in
particular, fresh water salmon. Besides being rich in omega-3, this
fish pairs with almost any sauce or vegetable and is an ideal companion
to white wines. And when it comes to avoiding super size meals, salmon
has a light touch, but still packs a wallop of flavor.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Friday, June 15, 2007
Festivals and Happenings
2007 Summer Shake
The Snake Nation Social Club hosts this party to benefit the Atlanta
History Center’s education outreach program. Features live music by the
Whigs. Tickets $75 in advance and $90 at the door. 7 p.m. Fri. June 22
on the lawn of the Swan House at the Atlanta History Center.
404-814-4016. www.atlantahistorycenter.com.
Bluegrass & Big Bugs
The Atlanta Botanical Garden’s fifth annual Father’s Day festival,
featuring crafts, old-fashioned games, bluegrass music and more,
surrounded by David Rogers’ “Big Bugs & Killer Plants” exhibit.
Noon Sun. June 17 at the Atlanta Botanical Garden. 404-876-5859. www.atlantabotanicalgarden.org.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Friday, June 15, 2007
Chocolate, beer and mojitoritas, oh my!
Hedonists, take note: Indulge for a
cause on June 21 for the seventh annual Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
fundraiser. This year the theme is—drum roll—chocolate. That’s right,
you are powerless. You cannot resist. Especially under the spell of
Chef Ron Eyster of Food 101, who, along with many of Atlanta’s finest
pastry chefs, will provide tastings of the serotonin-releasing
substance, legal in all 50 states. Sip chocolate martinis, chocolate
lager and chocolate espresso before indulging yet again—this time in a
full dinner buffet. Savage chocolate beasts should be soothed by
musical entertainment from Joanne and e’MuRj and the Jeni Michelson
Trio. The event also features a live auction, a cash bar and free valet
parking. The cost is $65 in advance and $75 at the door. All proceeds
benefit the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. For more information, call
404-325-6973 or visit www.chocolateforcf.org.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 15, 2007
Genarlow Wilson’s Reversal of Fortune
By Maynard Eaton
After a whirlwind week of emotional upheaval, Genarlow Wilson—the
ill-fated former Atlanta high school student whose 2005 conviction and
10-year prison sentence at age 17 for engaging in consensual oral sex
with a 15-year-old has garnered him national attention—cannot be
considered for release until a July 5 bond hearing before Douglas
County Superior Court Judge David T. Emerson.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, June 15, 2007
Get Sorbonnized
By Bob Zaslavsky
Farewell, Tony Blair. Bienvenu, Nicolas Sarkozy.
The United States may have a new lapdog in Europe, and in the most
surprising of places—France. Newly elected President Sarkozy recently
announced plans to reform French education, beginning
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Friday, June 15, 2007
More is better
By Stephanie Ramage
Last week, New York Times columnist Tom
Friedman, writing about a May 24 Muslim funeral procession in Iraq that
was attacked by a suicide bomber, ventured that “bin
Ladenism”—anti-American violence fueled by religious idealism—is dead.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
Opinion | Friday, June 15, 2007
Paris Envy
By Eric Von Haessler
Watching the ballad of Paris Hilton play out over the past few weeks
has been a blast, no doubt. Her fairy-tale world wrecked on the hard
rocks of reality—all televised and commented upon in real time, every
moment judged from a professional peanut gallery chock-full of pundits
who can’t really know why the hell they are there, or what the hell
they’re really talking about.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
Opinion | Friday, June 15, 2007
Is it possible to separate who you are from what you do?
Mark Douglas
In what some would construe as an attempt to court liberal favor,
President Bush has taken yet another swipe at Christians by nominating
James Holsinger as surgeon general.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 15, 2007
Fighting over the Winecoff
Legal battle continues over fate of notorious downtown hotel
By Josh Clark
Before it was engulfed in flames that
claimed the lives of more than 100 people in 1946, the Winecoff Hotel
was outfitted in marble, velvet and brass. It boasted a café and a bar
beloved by jet-setters and local reporters alike. And during
Prohibition, the main basement served as a speakeasy.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 15, 2007
Traffic ticket trauma
Sunday Paper column and letters result in audit for Atlanta city court
By
Stephanie Ramage
A 55-year-old Atlanta woman says she
spent several hours in jail one day in March because the Atlanta
Municipal Court failed to update the court’s hours on its automated
traffic ticket system. The opening time for traffic court was changed
last fall from 8 a.m. to 7 a.m. to accommodate police officers’
schedules, but the court’s automated phone system featured the old
court time for several months after the change.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, June 14, 2007
Sunday + 6
SUN 17
HANG WITH SOME REAL MEN: Sample up to 150 dishes, enjoy live music and rub elbows with a cornucopia of celebrities at REAL MEN COOK FOR CHARITY 2007 this afternoon at the Foundry at Puritan Mill. This annual Father's Day event celebrates the importance of fathers and family, with more than 100 "real men" dishing out delicious fare. Luminaries include KYLE MASSEY (“That’s So Raven,” “Cory in the House”), his brother CHRIS MASSEY (“Zoey 101”), MYRA J of the Tom Joyner Morning Show, WSB-TV’s JOVITA MOORE, ANDREW YOUNG, Congressman JOHN LEWIS and countless others. Proceeds benefit the Grass Roots Institute, Real Men Charities, the Lupus Foundation of America Georgia Chapter an the Giving Tree Adoption Resource Agency. 404-344-8496. www.realmencook.com. this afternoon at the Foundry at Puritan Mill. This annual Father’s Day event celebrates the importance of fathers and family, with more than 100 “real men” dishing out delicious dishes. Luminaries include
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Thursday, June 14, 2007
What would you think if I sang out of tune?
By Caren West
My father and I used to religiously
watch the “Wonder Years” together. To this day, I’m convinced that it’s
one of the all-time greatest television series ever created. I’m a
complete sucker for shows that center on the rites of passage—the
internal struggles that the Kevin Arnolds and Winnie Coppers in all of
us endured as we became adults. And although I love that show, what I
truly cherish are the times that I got to hunker down on the couch and
hang out with my dad, who also taught me to love the Beatles, Bob Dylan
and Creedence Clearwater Revival.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Thursday, June 14, 2007
Slam dunk
Chris Jackson takes an unlikely path to football success
BY EARLE MCDONALD
Chris Jackson’s is not the typical story of a football player dedicating his life to the game from an early age.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Thursday, June 14, 2007
It’s that time of year when restless children are shipped off to a variety of camps...
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, June 14, 2007
Summer on the Southside
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod
“[T]he waiter brought Fallow a vodka
Southside, and … complaining … about the condition of the mint, he
drank it and ordered another. He could remember nothing … his whole
body felt sore. [Awakened early the next morning], he crawled across
the carpet to the exploding telephone and lay down beside it.”
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 14, 2007
Get a clue: ‘Nancy Drew’ strictly for the kids
A cheaply-made franchise wannabe, “Nancy
Drew” would be a better fit for television, where the popularity of the
mystery series (do girls still read them?) would make it a viable
pilot. Emma Roberts, daughter of Eric and niece of Julia, plays the
eponymous girl detective, who starts by catching two burglars robbing
her church, negotiating their surrender with the D.A. and exiting via
the roof for no reason but to trigger a tepid action scene.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 14, 2007
Wilco
“Sky Blue Sky”
(Nonesuch)
This isn’t what was expected. Wilco added guitar whiz Nels Cline (whose
collaborators include Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Jane’s
Addiction’s Stephen Perkins) and their sound got quieter, more
conventional. “Sky Blue Sky” features plenty of short outbursts for
Cline to shine—the solos climaxing “Impossible Germany” and “Side With
the Seeds,” for example—but the overall sound of studio album No. 6 is
that of a modest alt-country band settling into a laid-back lite-FM,
soft-rock, someone-pass-the-Bread phase.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Steve almighty
Steve Carell on ‘Evan,’ ‘The Office’ and his meteoric career
BY BERT OSBORNE
Steve Carell has come a very long way in
the four short years since his breakout bit as newscaster Evan Baxter
in the 2003 Jim Carrey comedy “Bruce Almighty.” Supporting parts
quickly followed in a trio of movies with friend Will
Ferrell—“Anchorman,” “Melinda and Melinda,” “Bewitched”—before Carell
made a true name for himself in 2005, with the debut of his hit TV
sitcom “The Office” and the title role in the big-screen sleeper “The
40-Year-Old Virgin.” To top things off, last year’s “Little Miss
Sunshine” brought him some serious “indie cred.” He recently wrapped
the romantic comedy “Dan in Real Life” opposite Juliette Binoche, and
he’s currently shooting a film version of the satirical ’60s series
“Get Smart!”
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E, Theater | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Myth-understanding
‘Camelot’ causes some critical soul-searching
BY BERT OSBORNE
One need only walk into Aurora Theatre’s
fabulous new Lawrenceville facility to realize that Anthony Rodriguez
and Ann-Carol Pence—producing artistic director and associate producer,
respectively—are obviously doing something right. OK, so maybe I
haven’t felt that every Aurora show lives up to the troupe’s
self-proclaimed title as “Gwinnett’s first choice for professional
theatrical entertainment.” But imagine my surprise: No sooner was
Aurora opening the doors to its brand new theater than they were being
shut on me and the readers of the Sunday Paper.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Nothin’ but net
Who needs to drive all the way out to the nearest beach? Locals got
more than their share of sun, sand and toned bodies last weekend as the
AVP Crocs Tour Atlanta Open brought professional volleyball action to
Atlantic Station. Among the highlights: Former Olympians Misty
May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh (left) shared a borderline Cinemax moment
after defeating Tyra Turner and Rachel Wacholder in the women’s finals
for their seventh straight title. And the Atlanta skyline (right) made
a gorgeous backdrop, abetted by a largely cloudless sky.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Travel | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
The artisanal life
The Sunday Paper goes truffle-hunting in Umbria, Italy
By Hope S. Philbrick
You don’t have to be a sports fan to
understand team rivalry. But UGA v.UNC is nothing compared to the
rivalry between neighboring villages in Umbria, Italy. “I’m from
Bevagna,” explains tour guide Analita Polticchia as we navigate the
cobbled streets of her birthplace. “My husband is from Foligno. My
friends say, ‘Poor you, you married a foreigner!’” I’m astounded. After
all, the two villages are a mere five miles apart. She laughs and
explains that traditions endure in the walled medieval townships and
then demonstrates how she and her husband even pronounce certain words
differently; though I can’t speak Italian, the variation is distinct.
But when it comes to food, Umbrians put their differences aside and
celebrate flavor.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Do you feel lucky, punk—well, do ya?
An ode to a badass
By Blane Bachelor
My dad is an aeronautical engineer. His
favorite ice cream flavor is vanilla, and black pepper is about the
height of spice he can stand. I constantly admonish him for wearing his
cell phone on one of those heinous belt clips. Needless to say, I never
thought I’d see the day when I’d describe him as a badass.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 3
Health + Fitness | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Another good reason to exercise
Q. I understand that exercise raises the level of HDL in
the blood. Can you explain how this happens? I haven’t been able to
find the answer anywhere.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
KRS No. 1
Kevin Rathbun’s Steak stakes its claim
By Suzanne Wright
And then there were three: three great
restaurants under the creative stewardship of Atlanta’s favorite
adopted chef, Kevin Rathbun, that is.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
In season: Peaches
Take your strawberries, your rhubarbs,
your blueberries and your watermelon. When it comes to nature’s bounty,
we’ll take a perfectly ripe peach—the kind that when you bite into it,
releases a volcano’s worth of juices down your chin and hands, making
you feel like a sticky, dirty-faced little rugrat. And you don’t give a
damn because they’re that good. In fact, it’s about the only time of
the year that you’ll catch us humming, “Really love your peaches, want
to shake your tree.” Here’s where you can get your peach fix.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
A Force to be reckoned with
Blank’s other franchise is showing up the Dirty Birds
BY ADAM KROHN
Brace yourselves, sports fans, because
believe it or not, Atlanta has a team with a sure shot at bringing home
a football championship. They’ve clinched their division, own the
second-best record in the league and have perhaps the league’s most
accurate quarterback, with a QB rating of 133.8.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Second shot
Braves’ Peter Moylan finally gets a chance to shine
BY JASON CHATRAW
Last season, Braves reliever Peter
Moylan wasn't inviting anyone to watch him pitch. What with being
bounced back and forth between the major and minor leagues, he’d
practically racked up enough frequent-flier miles for a free flight
home to Australia. So he could be excused for not rushing to invite his
father to jump on a 17-hour flight to maybe see him play.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Friday, June 08, 2007

By Julie Douglas
Concentration of a Ritalin-deprived
tweenager? Check. Copious searches for cheap airfare to St. Thomas?
Check. Though the summer solstice is still a couple of weeks away, hot
weather is settling in and Atlanta is stripping down, tempting us to
pull out the pool gear and get out the road maps. We’ve rounded up a
few essential items—from footwear that’ll take off the pounds to Summer
of Love dresses—for you to stuff your beach bag with. Just don’t forget
the sunscreen.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 08, 2007
Sour grapes
Georgia’s wine fracas set to continue next legislative session
By Mark Woolsey
Georgians who find a nice local wine
while on vacation this summer should savor it—they may not be able to
have it shipped home.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 08, 2007
Prying eyes
Atlanta hospitals brace against camera phone privacy invasion
By Diane Loupe
You check into a hospital, see a doctor,
or place a relative in a nursing home. You assume that nobody will be
playing with your privacy. Think again. Privacy isn’t a given in a
medical setting. As recently reported by Wired magazine, a California
hospital fired nine employees in April for either taking or looking at
camera-phone photos of a patient’s X-ray. In another California
camera-phone case, a former respiratory therapist at a children’s
hospital faces felony charges over allegations that he took eight
photographs of two bedridden children using a cell phone.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Lost
A man who can’t talk goes missing at Hartsfield and here’s what happens…
By Josh Clark
The July 4th weekend is coming up, and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta
International Airport is preparing for one of the busiest travel
weekends of the year. Most passengers will be capable of keeping up
with their luggage and boarding the correct flight when their row is
called. But for some passengers with special needs this is an
impossibility. For these passengers, airlines and the airport itself
offer services to help them make the right flight, get to baggage claim
and meet the family members or friends who come to pick them up. But,
as one family recently found out, when the system designed to keep
passengers with special needs safe on their journeys fails, it fails
spectacularly.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 2
Opinion | Thursday, June 07, 2007
A cashier returns to Afghanistan
By Stephanie Ramage
Last summer, standing in line at the grocery store, I noticed my
cashier’s name and asked where she was from. “Afghanistan,” she said,
quietly enough that the next customer in line couldn’t hear.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Only in America
By Bob Zaslavsky
When my grandparents emigrated from
Russia to the United States in the second decade of the last century,
the phrase “Only in America” conjured visions of the limitless good and
opportunity that this country offered to those who assimilated, worked
hard and availed themselves of the American way of life. Indeed,
whenever one of my grandparents uttered the phrase “Only in America”
with respect to some American phenomenon, the phrase evoked the feeling
that the United States delivered even more than they had dreamed it
would. It was the ultimate expression of the have-nots that they, too,
could become haves. That the passport to have-dom in this country was
education pursued responsibly and diligently was impressed on my
parents by my grandparents, and by my parents in turn on me, with a
zealous vengeance. And I and other children of the children of
immigrants believed it just as zealously.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Those with Earmarks, Let Them Hear
By Mark DouglasIf you ran an organization that
emphasized long-term benefits and if the difference between you and
your competitors was based on your reputation, keeping in mind that you
could use some fresh income to do some good things—would you risk that
valuable reputation if it was to your immediate financial advantage to
do so?
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Opinion | Thursday, June 07, 2007
We fight, so they don’t have to
By Eric Von Haessler
Step right up, folks, and help yourself to the latest example of
America-bashing on the world stage. The newest international study to
condemn the United States is a doozie. Not only is it wrong, but it
also reveals the distorted priorities and the level of delusion that
inform the thinking of peaceniks worldwide.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 3
Quick | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Good news on tap
By Caren West
After a day of back-to-back client
meetings, I slipped into Estoria 97 for a quick bite and to put down my
thoughts while everything was still fresh in my mind. As I feverishly
jotted down notes and million dollar ideas over a $5 quesadilla, I kept
losing my focus thanks to the television hanging over the bar. CNN was
on and every time I glanced away from my notebook, I caught another
distracting headline out of the corner of my eye. Here are a few of the
more notable news items:
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Cattle call
For veteran actors and newcomers alike, the Unified Auditions offer a chance to show their stuff
BY BERT OSBORNE
What do you get when you take nearly 200
local actors, plus casting representatives from some 50 area theaters,
and then mix them together over the course of two days at the 14th
Street Playhouse? It’s no joke. It’s the Atlanta Coalition of
Performing Arts’ (ACPA) eighth annual Unified General Auditions, and
it’s fairly serious business.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Oceans apart
Lack of camaraderie stacks the odds against "Thirteen"
BY STEVE WARREN
It’s not easy to schedule a bunch of
big-time movie stars to work together. George Clooney, Brad Pitt and
Matt Damon are as hot as ever. Don Cheadle has moved up to the A-list
since the “Ocean’s” series started, and Bernie Mac had a hit TV show.
The logical solution for "Ocean's Thirteen" is to put all these busy
actors in the same story, but limit their scenes as a group.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Thursday, June 07, 2007
Hip-flipping dining and Dad’s day out
By Julie Douglas
If you’re making plans for Father’s
Day—the one day where Pop has bragging rights to your existence, even
if it wasn’t nearly as dramatic a contribution as Mom’s—show your
appreciation and steer clear of the rote offerings by checking out
Atlanta Botanical Garden’s “Bluegrass & Big Bugs.” On June 17, Dads
enjoy half-price admission, games for the kids, arts and crafts and, of
course, music. But what’s on the culinary front? Fried bugs. Yes,
really. Insect chef Ryan Cobb prepares protein like chocolate-covered
crickets in a cooking demonstration. Pair this with the carnivorous
“Killer Plants” on exhibit, and kids should be sufficiently
smitten—enough so that fathers can relax and listen to the Greater
Atlanta Bluegrass band. For more information, call 404-876-5859 or
visit www.atlantabotancialgarden.org.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
A+E | Thursday, June 07, 2007
In the club
Atlanta Shakespeare's 'Cabaret' delivers a real kick
BY BERT OSBORNE
Who knew Ellen McQueen could play the
bass? Or Lala Cochran the violin, Bethany Irby the keyboards or Jeffrey
Watkins the clarinet and the sax? All of these established local actors
crop up in Atlanta Shakespeare’s largely enlivened production of
“Cabaret,” the dark Kander and Ebb musical set in the bohemian
underworld of 1930s Berlin. What you may not notice right away is how,
when they aren’t playing their roles onstage, several of the cast
members take turns changing costumes, slipping into the orchestra loft
and picking up an instrument. In the show-show, for instance, McQueen
portrays the lonely, frumpy boarding-house owner Frau Schneider. But
the next thing you know, she’s in a sleek black wig and dress, with one
of those fancy cigarette holders in her mouth, plucking away on a bass.
Cool.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
A+E | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Festivals and Happenings
AVP Crocs Tour 2007
The pro beach volleyball tour returns to Atlanta. Through June10 at Atlantic Station. For more information, visit www.avp.com.
Findley Art Fair
Artist's market, farmer's market, live outdoor music and special
contests for dogs. Little Five Points retailers and specialty boutiques
feature special sales promotions. Sat. May 19 at Findley Plaza.
404-230-2884. www.littlefivepoints.net.
HOW Design Conference
Conference for graphic designers with workshops, free technology
training, a design resource center and more. June 10-13 at the Hyatt
Regency Atlanta. To register, visit www.howconference.com.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Radar
Yep, it's official …
School's out, the temperature's getting higher, the Virginia-Highland
neighborhood throws its annual Summerfest—it's summertime, all right.
At least it sure felt that way to Hope Linder (above left), who got her
playground on during last weekend's two-day blowout. The throngs who
milled about the giant street party's various vendor tents (center)—and
grooved to the music of Marc Broussard, Tyrone Wells, Drivin' N' Cryin'
and (above right) Pasadena—got into the seasonal spirit, as well. Guess
it's time to break out the old Sunday Paper Speedo. Or not.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Quick | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Sunday + 6
SUN 10
A SOFTSATIONAL EVENING: If, like us, you sat through
both hours of VH-1's recent "40 Most Softsational Soft-Rock Songs"
special, you're probably already in line for tonight's concert by
smooth '70s stalwarts CHICAGO AND AMERICA at Chastain
Park Amphitheatre. Expect a roster of old-school favorites from these
towering titans of mellow music. 404-249-6400. www.livenation.com.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Music | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Rush
"Snakes and Arrows"
(Atlantic)
Worshipped and ridiculed for their concept albums, mocked and emulated
for their virtuoso musicianship, Rush have played out their lengthy
career without compromise—to their audience’s undying pleasure and many
critics' discontent. Sure, they dabbled with synthesizers in the '80s,
drummer Neil Peart's lyrics often read as if they’ve been directly
lifted from a clinical psychology textbook and singer Geddy Lee used to
shriek in an upper register that made for some tough listening. And Bob
Dylan never made any tactical errors?
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life, Travel | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Waterfront property
The Sunday Paper heads to North Carolina’s Crystal Coast
By Hope S. Philbrick
Flexibility is a traveler’s most
important character trait. I was reminded of this on a recent trip to
the southern Outer Banks, known as the North Carolina Crystal Coast
when, after arriving at the airport, I learn that my travel companions
have brought their young children. I feign a smile, quickly forcing its
corners a bit higher: Instead of installing ourselves in a block of
hotel rooms, we’d be lodging in a rented beach house.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Life | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
War and marriage: A reality not-made-for-T.V.
By Blane Bachelor
“The Bachelor” is one of television’s
most nauseating reality shows, what with so many cat-fighting bimbos
blubbering their love for the lucky man-whore—all within an hour of
meeting him. I always try to resist watching, but every season I get
sucked into the sheer ridiculousness. This time around, however, I got
hooked for another reason: The fact that Ken-doll look-alike Andy
Baldwin is a military man.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Health + Fitness | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
The science of swimming
Big news for triathletes willing to make a pilgrimage
By Rebecca Friedlander
Tired of reaching T1 (the swim-tao-bike
transition of a triathlon) bedraggled and breathless instead of fresh
and focused for the next two legs of the race? Good news—help is here.
Well, not here in Atlanta, but available to those willing to make a
pilgrimage.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
A good dilemma to have
Tough decision for the Braves—what to do with Salty?
BY ADAM KROHN
There’s a new Braves catcher who's
making John Schuerholz’s life a lot harder than it needs to be. In
fact, his dazzling play has already forced the general manager to cut
one player (first baseman Craig Wilson) in favor of him. His name?
Jarrod Saltalamacchia.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Sports | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Net gains
Former GSU volleyball star pursues her dream
BY EARLE MCDONALD
The Association of Volleyball
Professionals' annual AVP Crocs Tour brings its share of star power to
town for this weekend's Atlanta Open at Atlantic Station. The
tournament's roster of athletes features former Olympians Kerri Walsh,
Misty May-Treanor and Holly McPeak. And then there's Karch Kiraly,
who's won the Atlanta tournament four times and nabbed a gold medal
during the 1996 Olympics here in Atlanta.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1
Sports | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Following his feet
Homegrown hero Warren Ukah pursues soccer with singular focus
BY JASON CHATRAW
When Warren Ukah receives a pass, he's
got one thing on his mind. He's not thinking about what move will evoke
a response from the crowd or what will be the best way to finish. His
focus is single in nature: What is the most efficient way to put the
soccer ball in the back of the net?
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 3
Food | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
ALPHABET SOUP
The Georgia Department of Human Resources makes the grade
By Adam Murphy
Are you ready for some alphabet soup?
Soon, it’ll be as easy as A, B, C to find out how your favorite
restaurant scored on its last health inspection. The Georgia Department
of Human Resources recently announced that every restaurant will
receive a letter grade in addition to their numerical score beginning
in December, with an A, B, C or U for unsatisfactory.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
By degrees
Evoking the sights, sounds and tastes of South African
By Hope S. Philbrick
Vacations usually end too soon—and have
a tragic way of retreating from memory as soon as you return to the
office. Hoping to recapture a recent trip to South Africa, I head to 10
Degrees South in Buckhead, which is billed on its Web site as “the only
restaurant of its kind in the U.S.A., specializing in South African
cuisine.” Newly educated in South African cuisine, my objective is to
verify the restaurant’s claim of authenticity. Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
Food | Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Never run-of-the-mill
By Suzanne Wright
Vincent Marra has been the executive
chef and managing director of the Houston Mill House since September
2004. Nestled in a historic home-turned-restaurant and special events
facility, the sylvan environs and gracious upscale dining room still
retain its 1920s Daisy Buchanan-like charm. The Sunday Paper spoke to
Marra about the Houston Mill House’s crab cakes and his family’s
restaurant lineage.
Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 0
News | Friday, June 01, 2007
Dirty money
The carbon offset market may mean big bucks, but can it heal the environment?
By Josh Clark
Last week, when President George Bush
called for a series of meetings this fall between the world’s largest
emitters of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, including the
U.S., China, India and some European countries, he made a point of
saying his administration does not support a global carbon-trading
program allowing countries to buy and sell carbon credits to meet
limits on carbon dioxide levels. He argued that standards in one
country are not necessarily applicable in another. What he was talking
about was carbon offsets—a topic that seems to be everywhere present
and hardly anywhere understood.Read full article |
(0 ratings) | Comments: 1