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Articles from July 2007

Yes, they can

A recent BBC News report presented the following interchange from a classroom...


Africa's Darfur

The ongoing suffering of Sudan’s Darfur region...


As good as our word

What if we would have gone to war with Hitler...


07/29/07 LEFT/RIGHT: I've got your benchmarks

I’ve got your benchmarks
By Stephanie Ramage

On July 18, at the height of the Senate debate over beginning a troop withdrawal from Iraq within 120 days, National Public Radio interviewed former Secretary of State Colin Powell.


07/29/07 NEWS3: More money per minute

More money per minute
Minimum wage hike takes effect
By Colby Dunn

Time is money—it’s an adage that’s been thrown around by ambitious business people for years. But now, time is going to mean considerably more money for low-wage workers around the country.


07/29/07 NEWS2: Riding out the storm

Riding the storm out
Congressional committee investigates mutiny at the National Hurricane Center
By Mark Woolsey

With the pending reassignment of the director of the National Hurricane Center after an unprecedented mutiny, some may have thought the resulting personnel hurricane had blown itself out. But testimony on Capitol Hill paints the opposite picture. Now the tempest may accelerate to a Category 5, swirling around officials of the National Weather Service and parent agency the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


07/29/07 NEWS1: Bully!


Bully!
Georgia schools try new ways to fight an old problem
By Diane Loupe

With most metro area schools starting classes again within the next month, a lot of parents and kids are worried about a problem as
old as school itself: bullying. It’s especially common in middle school and may be far more dangerous than many would think.


07/29/07 A&E ALEAD: D'oh! The Humanity!

D’oh! The Humanity!
‘Simpsons’ movie can’t live up to its own hype
BY KEVIN FOREST MOREAU

Unless you’ve been living under a rock—and, really, even then—it’s been impossible to escape the incessant buildup to “The Simpsons Movie.” No bomb squads were called out to investigate strange-looking advertisements, as was the case earlier this year when a marketing plan for the “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” movie went horribly awry. Still, between a ubiquitous TV commercial, various 7-Eleven convenience stores transforming into Kwik-E-Marts and Homer Simpson delivering the opening monologue on “The Tonight Show” last week, the 20th Century Fox PR machine has been working overtime to place the movie front and center in the public consciousness.


07/29/07 A&E: Festivals and Happenings

Festivals and Happenings

Back to School with the Braves

Celebrate the upcoming end of summer—for the kids, anyway—with an evening of baseball. The Braves will host Back to School Night on Thurs., Aug. 2, as they take on the Houston Astros at Turner Field. Tickets for outfield seats and upper box seats only $3 for kids 14 and under. Kids can participate in a pre-game parade around the ballfield and visit the Braves museum for free. Children that attend will get a Braves tomahawk. The game starts at 7:35 p.m. 404-522-7630. www.Braves.com/Summer.


07/29/07 FOOD, DISH: Heat wave

Heat Wave
Temperatures are rising in the kitchen and cooling off with fresh and fabulous cocktails
By Kirsten Ott

Pull up a stool, blokes and birds (that’s British for beer lovers of all sexes). TAP, Midtown’s new gastropub, from the gents who brought you Trois, Piebar, One Midtown Kitchen and Two Urban Licks, has concocted a beer club and they’re recruiting new members. Not since we sported Members Only jackets have we felt this cool. Sign up at TAP to gain coveted access to more than 40 globe-trotting beers, become a member of the TAP Taster’s Society and be notified of secret handshakes, news and the like. For more information, call 404-347-2220 or visit www.tapat1180.com.


07/29/07 QUICK, ITK: Fly the Coop

Fly the Coop
All roads lead to Anderson
By Caren West

I cannot remember the last time I went on a real vacation. You know, when you go some place solely for enjoyment with no other purpose than taking a break from your daily existence in order to have fun and perhaps get a little R&R. Any sort of work, even checking in with the office, is not permitted. Sadly, the concept of vacationing has become completely foreign to me. All of my trips center around business or family, so even if I am gallivanting around Vegas or watching my little sis tie the knot in Mexico, I am somehow required to be there—so it’s not really the same.


Sunday + 6

SP's picks of the week


Radar

COOL SUMMER


07/29/07 LIFE, TRAVEL: Everything’s Bigger in Texas

Everything’s Bigger in Texas
The Sunday Paper pays a visit to Western wine country
By Suzanne Wright

Around these parts, wine aficionados sport faded jeans, dusty boots and big belt buckles. I’ve traveled 988 miles to attend the 27th annual San Antonio Express-News Wine Festival, a monumental three-day affair featuring an abundance of regional vintners and 450 wines from Australia, Italy, Bulgaria, Chile and California. However worldly the offerings are, I’ve set my sights on uncorking the local flavors and roping in some of the region’s best sights.


07/29/07 LIFELEAD: Party like a rock star

Party like a rock star
Atlanta’s 10 sexiest nightspots
By Kirsten Ott

Atlanta’s nightlife is growing up. After the demise of Buckhead’s status as the dance capital of the South, our club scene has swelled to new levels of posh sophistication, though we still know how to get down and dirty on the dance floor. The days of drinking to oblivion haven’t left us just yet—and probably never will, as pretty young college-age things continue to flock to the remaining Buckhead bars—but money-maker shakers have matured from dancing on the bar to simply dancing near the bar.


07/29/07 LIFE, COMMITTED: Beaming with pride

Beaming With Pride

Every time Micah burps, Jimmy and I just about fall all over ourselves blubbering with pride. I haven’t felt this level of euphoria since the time I accepted a joint from at a Pink Floyd concert in the 1990s. Yes, this instinctual release of tiny air bubbles makes our collective hearts swell as big as the bangs of a 1980 Texas beauty pageant finalist. And that’s just when he burps once; with two burps, we behave as if we have been entrusted with a child prodigy.


07/29/07 LIFE, BACHELOR: Cry me a river

Cry Me a River

“When did guys start acting so girly, and why are we dating them?” my West Coast friend S. wailed during one of our recent catch-up gab-fests.


07/29/07 LIFE, HEALTH: Calming Concerns: Hair Loss in Women

Calming Concerns: Hair Loss in Women

Q I’m a woman in my mid-40s, and I’m concerned about rapid hair loss. I see hair in the shower drain almost every morning. I went through some periods of this after each of my children was born, but this time it’s not stopping. I’ve heard of female pattern baldness. Could this be what’s happening to me?


07/29/07 A&E, MOVIE: Delivering an action-packed story

Delivering an action-packed story
Director Paul Greengrass talks about ‘Bourne Ultimatum’
BY BERT OSBORNE

Jason Bourne, the amnesiac CIA operative played by Matt Damon in “The Bourne Identity” (2002) and “The Bourne Supremacy” (2004), finally sees in the light in “The Bourne Ultimatum,” the third (and presumably final) installment in a series of movies based on the Robert Ludlum novels. Shot on location in New York, London, Paris, Berlin, Madrid and Tangier–and featuring all the thrilling action sequences we’ve come to expect from the franchise–the film reunites Damon with previous “Bourne” co-stars Julia Stiles and Joan Allen, in addition to introducing a few new shady characters (played by David Strathairn, Scott Glenn, Albert Finney and others).


07/29/07 A&E, ARTS: Wicked ways

Wicked ways
Life’s a blast for ‘Oz’ witch
BY RACHAEL MASON

To the people of Oz, the Wicked Witch of the West is a menace. But Jane Blass believes she’s just misunderstood. “She’s lonely and she thinks people don’t like her,” she says.


Delta Moon, Brandi Carlile

Soundcheck

Delta Moon
“Clear Blue Flame”
(Jumping Jack)
4 stars

Churning through two female vocalists in the past two albums sure doesn’t help the consistency of a band fronted by a woman singer. So guitarist/songwriters Mark Johnson and Tom Gray ditch the attractive front person for the first time on their new release.


07/29/07 FOODLEAD: Cold as ice

Cold as Ice
Modern Gentlemen take on Pinky and Reyka Vodka and Sterling Caviar
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod

“Vodka … caviar … more rock ’n’ roll!” So shouts the Soviet trade representatives from the fictional “Soft Drink Secretariat” in the classic 1961 Billy Wilder Cold War farce, “One, Two, Three” during a meeting with Coca-Cola rep C.R. MacNamara (James Cagney) at an East Berlin nightclub. Soon, in a famous scene, MacNamara’s sexy blonde secretary (Liselotte Pulver) seductively dances on the tabletop in a slinky polka-dot dress, while one of the reps bangs his shoe against the table (á la Khrushchev) to the beat of the music. Can quality vodka and caviar really be so jubilant? Absolutely.


07/29/07 FOOD, BLOCK: Fresh catch

Fresh Catch
A major seafood supplier gives SP the lowdown on shrimp
By Suzanne Wright

Bill Demmond, chief operating officer and seafood enthusiast, just celebrated his 25th anniversary with Inland Seafood. Inland is the Southeast’s largest fresh seafood processor and among the top five in the United States. Shrimp is their No. 1 selling product.


07/29/07 SPORTS3: Learning a new trade

Learning a new trade
Former soccer star settles in as Silverbacks women’s coach
BY JASON CHATRAW

On an unseasonably cool July evening, Keith Jones stalks the sidelines of an Atlanta Silverbacks women’s game, studying the field, ready to give direction when needed. It’s a sight that takes some getting used to: Most of the fans in the stands may not be aware of it, but it wasn’t that long ago that Jones was a star in what is arguably soccer’s best professional association, the English Premier League.


07/29/07 SPORTS2: Five more years

Five more years
Franco returns to the ATL, with an eye on the long term
BY JASON CHATRAW

Julio Franco sits at the kitchen bar, polishing off the last few bites of a Saturday morning breakfast. It's hard not to notice the sculpted biceps protruding from his skin-tight shirt. It's also hard not to notice the green tea he sips from an espresso shot cup. “This stuff has the best antioxidants,” he explains.


07/29/07 SPORTSLEAD: Shooting Blanks

Shooting Blanks
Vick not the only one making wrong decisions
BY ADAM KROHN

Arthur Blank really thought the NFL was like Home Depot. He thought he could just walk in and build an organization from scratch. There’s one problem with that theory: The Falcons weren’t at square one. In fact, under the leadership of Dan Reeves, they were at the cusp of a championship. But Reeves wasn’t the owner; he was just a “football guy.” Had he succeeded at his goal of bringing a championship to Atlanta, it wouldn’t have been under Blank’s leadership. So he had to go.


07/22/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Don't abandon Iraq

Don’t abandon Iraq
By Stephanie Ramage

I recently met a Korean War veteran who explained to me that the Korean War was never won because no peace agreement was secured. What we achieved was an armistice, which is why we still have troops on the North Korean border.


07/22/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Beyond crepes and victims

Beyond crepes and victims
By Bob Zaslavsky

In its latest draft of course criteria, which will go into effect July 1, 2008, the Georgia Department of Education’s foreign language recommendation is not, strictly speaking, a requirement and it is both inadequate and demeaning. Continuing our discussion from last week, anything less than three years (a two-year basic course followed by one year of literature study) is less than what a student needs to achieve genuine mastery of another language. The goal of studying another language—just as with English—is the understanding of another culture, and no understanding of a culture can develop without a feel for that culture’s literature.


God save America — from itself

I get much of my news from friends who spend more time than I do checking political and religious blogs...

 


07/22/07 NEWS3: Execution delayed

Execution delayed
Board agrees to consider new evidence
By Stephanie Ramage

On July 16, the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles granted a 90-day stay of execution to Troy Anthony Davis who was scheduled to die by lethal injection on July 17.


07/22/07 NEWS2: Landing NBAF

Landing NBAF
Georgia makes final cut for center aimed at animal-to-human diseases
By Colby D. Dunn

Mississippi, Kansas, Texas, North Carolina, Georgia. These are the five contenders left fighting for the National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility, or NBAF, and as the field continues to narrow, the competition is getting tight.


07/22/07 NEW1: Out of bounds

Out of bounds
Reeling from a federal indictment, Atlanta reconsiders its love affair with NFL superstar Michael Vick
By Kevin Moreau and Stephanie Ramage

Following the July 17 news of Michael Vick’s indictment on a federal conspiracy charge for his alleged role in a multi-state dogfighting ring run from his Virginia home, the Atlanta Falcons quarterback’s name is on everyone’s lips. It’s nearly impossible to turn on the TV or the radio without hearing it, or to sit down in a bar or restaurant without the guy behind you outlining Vick’s litany of lapses of judgment. You can’t go anywhere in Atlanta without being bombarded by the constant chatter about jail time and possible trade scenarios or the gruesome details of the dogfighting charges.


07/22/07 SPORTSLEAD: The honeymoon's over

The honeymoon’s over
Indicted and underperforming, Vick’s lost his appeal
BY JASON CHATRAW

I don’t know if I ever really fell in love with Michael Vick as the Falcons’ quarterback, but I certainly was in like with him. He razzled and dazzled us all: leaping over defenders, vanishing in the grasp of a linebacker, racing for the end zone. He turned my weekly Maalox moment with the Falcons into an ice cream Sunday treat. But when the feds indicted Vick on three counts related to dogfighting, I was reaching for the Maalox bottle again.


07/22/07 LIFE, COMMITTED: Getting Back To Normal—Whatever That Is

Getting Back To Normal—Whatever That Is
By Lisa Baron

I probably sent the wrong message when I registered for Brooke Shield’s postpartum opus “Down Came the Rain,” but I never had a baby before, so I wanted to be prepared for all postpartum possibilities. We are not only the proud parents of baby Micah; we also are the proud owners of loads and loads of books full of facts, figures and calculations on how to raise a normal baby. Most of the information I learned about pregnancy and caring for a baby come from these books, as well as the experiences of other mothers. The only problem is that the baby isn’t reading the books. He doesn’t know that at seven weeks he is supposed to be noticeably enthralled with hands and intrigued by his feet. As far as he’s concerned, it’s hard enough work lifting his floppy head off his tummy-time mat while two giant heads are drooling all over his every move. And I know just how he feels: I’ve been trying to keep up with the supposed “normal” schedule since I got pregnant—even when my body and/or my mind just weren’t ready.
 


07/22/07 QUICK, ITK: Marching To the Beat of My Own Theme

Marching To the Beat of My Own Theme
By Caren West

I often work with my headphones on to drown out all the distractions around me. With as many as five dogs running around the office and phones ringing off the hook all the time, far too often 8 a.m. turns into 8 p.m. Instead of sitting on my couch watching HBO’s “John from Cincinnati” (my new obsession) courtesy of my TiVo, I find myself still at the office looking at number four on my to-do list of 400.


In the cards

A baseball card aficionado collects his thoughts


07/22/07 A&E Lead: Strong hold

Strong hold
‘Hairspray’ remake charms viewers with song and dance
By Rachael Mason

It’s impossible not to compare “Hairspray” with the original 1988 movie, directed by John Waters. That film inspired the stage version of “Hairspray” and the popularity of it led to the new movie.


07/22/07 LIFE, TRAVEL: Coasting by

Coasting By
A Nantucket escape evokes quiet repose in any season
By Suzanne Wright

Euphemistically, you could call the plane “petite.” Counting the one next to the pilot, Cape Air’s flight from Boston to Nantucket has nine seats. At check-in, I am asked to weigh my purse (7 lbs) and provide my own weight. (I hope the agents know everyone fudges and add 20 percent to the aggregate total.) It’s an absolutely gorgeous fall day when we take off, heading straight for the skyline and then rising over the red brick buildings that shape the skyline. The plane is mostly windows, so the view of the coastline is superb. When we land, 35 minutes later, the small airport reminds me of the one on the TV show “Wings.”


07/22/07 LIFELEAD: Water works

Water Works
Lessons in water-skiing produce more than just balance
By Hope S. Philbrick

The first time I attempted to water ski I was 13 years old. I plunged into Grand Traverse Bay after watching my father’s friend’s 17-year-old son—upon whom I had a huge crush—skip gracefully across the waves. “It’s easy,” Dad said,, tossing me the towrope while he sat dry in the speedboat. “Just stand up as the boat gets going.” It looked fun, and, as a strong swimmer, I wasn’t afraid of the water. I most hoped to impress Scott, whose job it would be to watch me while our fathers drove and alert them if I fell; I imagined that if I was able to hold his gaze long enough, I could make him fall in love with me.


07/22/07 SPORTS 2: The quiet man

The quiet man
Braves veteran Edgar Renteria leads by example
By Michael Mahan

Atlanta Braves shortstop Edgar Renteria knows what it’s like to be adored and idolized. After driving in the winning run in the bottom of the 11th inning in the seventh game of the 1997 World Series, he was knighted and named Man of the Year in his native Colombia. He also knows what it's like to be vilified, dubbed “Edgar Rent-an-Error” by members of the Boston tabloid media after leading the Major Leagues in errors during his only season with the Red Sox in 2005.


07/22/07 SPORTS: Get real!


Get real!
Hollywood welcomes Beckham to America, but soccer's status won't change
BY ADAM KROHN

European football in America? ROFL, like, whatever! The sport is so irrelevant in this country that we invented our own football, as if to correct such a ridiculous game! In America, football means war (on the field, of course, but I’ll get to that later). It means fighting in the trenches and knocking your opponent out cold to gain that precious inch for a first down—not a bunch of Vlade Divac-like crybabies laying on the ground faking injuries while everyone else runs around in circles trying to kick a ball through a net. In fact, on the priority list of American sports fans, “soccer,” as it’s called here, ranks comfortably below professional bowling.


07/22/07 QUICK: Radar

RADAR

Putting the “art” in “party”
It’s not every day you see crowds packing an art gallery to overflowing, with folks spilling into the street. But that was exactly the sight at the Bill Lowe Gallery’s 18th anniversary bash on July 13. Patrons were treated to complimentary cocktails, special dance performances and the debut of two eye-catching exhibits: “Painters,” featuring works by Brett Osborn, Richard Currier, Rose Freyuth-Fraizer and Aleksander Balos; and “Shadowdance,” an “exploration of form in photography” by regional photographer Keiko Guest. That’s dancers Rikki McKinney and Liz LeGrande, above, bending over backwards to entertain the crowd. Get it? Oh, we slay ourselves …


07/22/07 A&E, MUSIC: Soundcheck

Wall of Voodoo
“Call of the West”
(I.R.S. Records)

Recently, I dusted off and played my 25-year-old vinyl copy of “Call of the West” in advance of Wall of Voodoo founder Stan Ridgway’s July 27 show celebrating its silver anniversary. The L.A. band’s sophomore release is best known for the iconic “Mexican Radio,” a not entirely representative fluke hit that has become Ridgway’s arty albatross, aided enormously by MTV’s constant play of its bizarre yet eye-catching video. Even though it was the band’s breakthrough, the project became the singer-songwriter’s swan song with the band he started. Ridgway then moved on to an intermittently successful solo career.


07/22/07 A&E, MOVIE: Strange bedfellows

Strange bedfellows
‘Chuck & Larry’ depicts fake couple, but offers real laughs
By Steve Warren

Deception swings both ways in movies about gays and straights pretending to be the opposite of what they are. Consider films like “The Gay Deceivers” (1969), “Victor/Victoria” (1982), “La Cage aux Folles” (1978) and its American remake “The Birdcage” (1996). The aim seems to be to figure out what a mass, mainstream audience is ready for, and give it to them, with comedy being the spoonful of sugar that helps a message of tolerance go down. After the success of “Brokeback Mountain” you’d think Hollywood would throw caution to the winds, but so far, that isn’t the case.


07/22/07 LIFE, HEALTH: Smart Legs: Microprocessors aid in mobility and stability

Smart Legs: Microprocessors aid in mobility and stability

Q: I have a prosthetic leg, but have heard that Mayo Clinic is testing a computerized “smart” leg. Please tell me more about it.

A: The term “smart” leg refers to a group of prosthetic-knee devices with imbedded microprocessors that sense the appropriate way to respond to the demands placed on the prosthesis. When walking, your knee bends and needs mobility as the foot swings forward. Then, stability is required as the foot is placed on the ground and the other foot swings through. Microprocessor-controlled knees make that adjustment without effort from the patient. The same adjustments occur when the patient is going down stairs, walking on a changing slope or other circumstances that require alternating stability and mobility. Mechanical knees don’t make that adjustment, requiring the patient to look down and consciously adjust foot and body position based on ground conditions.


07/22/07 FOOD, WS: Swiss Army Bar

Swiss Army Bar
Smash, Stick & Crush with Tools of the Booze Trade
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod

Too often, bright young city-dwellers live in cool pads replete with an imported coffee maker that can brew caffeinated nectar, LCD-everything and Wi-Fi availability at every square inch. While a broadband connection can offer the fruits of knowledge (liberal arts or carnal), it can’t fix a drink. Alas, given the call to cocktails, many peer past the hanging phalanx of copper pans, open the utility cabinet and find barely a serviceable cocktail shaker. Mon dieu. What happens when a recipe calls for muddled fruit, sexy garnishes or crushed ice? For those who are still straining mixed drinks through the spaghetti colander and stirring gin martinis with a spatula handle, below is a primer on three of the most absent bar tools.


07/22/07 FOODLEAD: Milking it

Milking it
Flat Creek Lodge opens Georgia’s second artisan dairy
By Hope S. Philbrick

Small family dairy farms dot the landscape in Europe and New England, while for many years Georgia could claim only one such enterprise: Sweet Grass Dairy in Thomasville. But Flat Creek Lodge, a hunting and fishing resort and spa in Southeast Georgia, celebrated the official opening of its micro-dairy June 9, making it the state’s second licensed artisanal cheese producer.


In the zone

Local college student dishes on popular diet delivery plan


07/22/07 LIFE, BACHELOR: Age of Love: It Ain’t What It Used 2 B

Age of Love: It Ain’t What It Used 2 B
By Blane Bachelor

“¿Que pasa?” the message would read over my sea-green cell phone, usually around 3 a.m. Translation: “Can I come over?”


07/22/07 A&E, THEATER: Notes from the past

Notes from the past
Musical revues spotlight retro tunes
BY BERT OSBORNE

Heaven only knows what ART Station artistic director David Thomas sees in playwright Roger Bean. It’s sad enough that audiences keep eating up Bean’s particular brand of dim-witted musical revue—which typically uses stock period caricatures and flimsy plot gimmicks to bridge the gaps in a concert of golden oldies from this or that bygone era.



07/15/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Georgia’s school requirements: Some improvement, but more is needed

Georgia’s school requirements: Some improvement, but more is needed
By Bob Zaslavsky

The Georgia Department of Education has posted a draft of a plan (Rule 160-4-2-.48) to toughen the requirements—effective July 1, 2008—for high school graduation. The purpose of the plan is to prepare all students equally for college or the workplace in recognition that the workplace—today more than ever before—needs individuals who are prepared for college-level work, even if they have no immediate, post-high school intent to attend college.


07/15/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Praise For Those Who Saved Us!

Praise For Those Who Saved Us!
by Silas Von Haessler

It is bittersweet for me to write this. On one hand, it is a privilege for me, in the year 2107, to sing the praises of those who sang for us so long ago. On the other, I am forced to confront the fact that my own great-great-grandfather Eric Von Haessler was one of those wretched writers who foolishly denied the impending holocaust of global warming in article after article for this very publication a hundred years ago.


07/15/07 LEFT/RIGHT: A different kind of faith

A different kind of faith
By Stephanie Ramage

We are creating a warrior caste in this country. And this division can be chalked up in part to a growing number of American civilians who might be said to lack a belief in ideals, according to Robert D. Kaplan, who says such “moral hardiness” is pro forma for a majority of the soldiers charged with protecting that populace.


07/15/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Hard-Learned Lessons

Hard-Learned Lessons
By Mark Douglas

Common sense says that if you want someone to learn a lesson, they need to be allowed to face the consequences of their actions. Unfortunately, this makes some lessons difficult to learn, especially in democracies. And nowhere is this more evident than in civilian control of the military, where the consequences of military actions are often shouldered by persons who did not initiate those actions—partly because the initiators are out of office and partly because they didn’t have to shoulder weapons while they were in office.


07/15/07 NEWS4: Antidepressant contamination

Antidepressant contamination
Our happiness is killing our fish and frogs
By Colby Dunn

Prozac. Paxil. Zoloft. Lexapro. Wellbutrin. Cymbalta. We hear about them constantly. And all of us probably know at least 10 people that are on one of them—and maybe even more according to a recently released CDC study that names antidepressants the No. 1, prescribed drug class in the country. More than 118 million people are throwing back these so-called happy pills, and often to life-changing effect. But not everyone is jumping for joy at the antidepressant revolution. In fact, some fish and frogs are finding it difficult to jump at all, due to antidepressant exposure.


07/15/07 NEWS3: Paying for pavement

Paying for pavement
By Mark Woolsey

It might be the best case of “voodoo economics” since the 1980 presidential campaign—and it comes with a liberal helping of asphalt. Cash for new roads—and no new taxes?


07/15/07 NEWS2: Dead or alive?

Dead or alive?
Execution set for Tuesday
By Stephanie Ramage

By the time you read this, Troy Anthony Davis may be dead. As The Sunday Paper went to press, Davis was scheduled to be executed on Tuesday, July 17 at 7 p.m. for the 1989 murder of off-duty Savannah police officer Mark Allen MacPhail.


07/15/07 NEWS1: What is an American?

What is an American?
Immigration debate reveals patriotism—and nationalism
By Stephanie Ramage

On May 18, 1941, as Americans debated whether they should allow themselves to be pulled into “Europe’s war”—the conflict that would become World War II—and castigated President Franklin Delano Roosevelt for his unilateral decision to ship arms to the British, Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes gave a speech in New York's Central Park.


07/15/07 FOODLEAD: A tale of two Decaturs

A tale of two Decaturs
Brick Store, Palate offer a study in contrasts—and similarities
By Katie Kelly Bell

Decatur is in the throes of a marvelous renaissance. Decayed parking lots and somnolent streets have given way to Greenwich Village-style boutiques, shops and markets. Old (the Brick Store Pub) and new (the Palate Wine Bar) alike are increasingly contributing to Decatur’s renewed status as a dining destination. Deciding to compare and contrast these two poles of the Decatur dining and drinking experience, I expect good old pub grub at Brick Store and a typically posh experience at the Palate—in essence, a study in contrasts.


Pela, Tim McGraw

Soundcheck

Pela
“Anytown Graffiti”
(Great Society)

“Pela is an American rock & roll band,” the band’s typically exaggerated press release proclaims. Then why does this sound like the Cure’s Robert Smith leading a “War”-era U2?


07/15/07 SPORTS: Charging forward

Charging forward
“Dizzy” Daniel Antoniuk right where he needs to be
BY JASON CHATRAW

There he was, squirming around on the field after taking the brunt of a hard foul from a hard-charging FC Dallas player late in the game. Daniel Antoniuk, or “Dizzy Daniel” as his brothers affectionately named him, tried to keep the blood from gushing out of his mouth as he thrashed about. Yet in his moment of agony, the high-energy forward for the Atlanta Silverbacks put his cleats into the perpetrator. Writhing in pain, Antoniuk looked up to see an official standing over him, ejecting him with a red card.


07/15/07 SPORTSTALK: Strikeout

Strikeout
The All-Star game should count—for nothing
By Adam Krohn

Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig can be considered a moron for many reasons. He didn’t do his part to prevent the strike of ’94. Then there’s his stern position regarding Pete Rose’s permanent ban from the game (while simultaneously lifting the ban on George Steinbrenner), and his soft stance in the ’90s on steroid use. On top of all that, he just looks the part.


07/15/07 SPORTSLEAD: Infield of dreams

Infield of dreams
Dangerous trek yields happy ending for Yunel Escobar
By Jason Chatraw

Yunel Escobar is smiling. And it’s not the kind of fake smile a player puts on for the fans as he descends into the tunnel behind the Braves’ dugout. No, this one is authentic, as evidenced by the fact that it remains on his face long after any fan could possibly see it. Escobar is genuinely happy to be here, in this moment.


07/15/07 LIFE LEAD: Catching the glow

Catching the glow
The right wedding photographer adds luster to that special day
By Julie Douglas

Photographer David Christensen and his wife Paula have built a wedding photography business around building relationships with their clients in order to capture the most important moments of their lives. “We’re unobtrusive, but they know that we are there in those stressful moments as well as those exhilarating moments,” says Christensen, whose arresting, journalistic images are by turns passionate, touching and ethereal. The Sunday Paper recently spoke to Christensen about his influences and philosophy.


07/15/07 LIFE, TRAVEL: Sea lions and iguanas and tortoises—oh my!

Sea lions and iguanas and tortoises—oh my!
SP explores the Galapagos Islands
BY JANICE MCDONALD

Just mention the name “Galapagos” and it sounds so far away. In reality, this intriguing chain of islands off the coast of Ecuador is just a short hop from Atlanta. The route takes us through Quito and on to the island of Baltra, one of only five inhabited islands among the 19 that make up the archipelago. Once on Baltra, we board the Legend for a four-day cruise of the islands.


07/15/07 QUICK: Sunday + 6

Sunday + 6

SUN 15
GET A NEW LOOK: What’s better than art that hangs on your wall? Art you can wear everywhere, of course. THE WEARABLE ART EVENT: SKIRTS, featuring skirts created by local designers, takes place today from 3–5 p.m. at Maestro’s Event Facility in Castleberry Hill. The event includes wine and food for a mere $20. 404-822-9829. www.wearableartevent.com.


07/15/07 QUICK: Radar

Radar
Our lucky day

Last Saturday, you may recall, was 7/7/07—widely hyped as the luckiest day of the year. It was certainly lucky for us, dear readers, as The Sunday Paper wrangled its way into an ultra-exclusive reception for Atlanta rap king T.I. at the Louis Vuitton store at Lenox. The bash was in honor of his new album “T.I. vs. T.I.P.,” which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart its first week.


07/15/07 QUICK, ITK: Doing the thing I could not do

Doing the thing I could not do
By Caren West

Eleanor Roosevelt said, “You must do the thing you think you cannot do.” As a quote junkie (I’m sure you’ve noticed), Eleanor’s fine words of encouragement have always resonated with me. In fact, I have a lovely little card with her words of wisdom staring back at me every time I walk out of my bathroom.


07/15/07 A&E, MUSIC: Punk Rock Parenting 101

Punk Rock Parenting 101
Jim Lindberg of Pennywise juggles rebellion and fatherhood
By Rob O’Connor

As lead singer for the band Pennywise, Jim Lindberg encourages audience members to question authority. But as a “Punk Rock Dad”—the title of his new book of advice, observations and anecdotes—Lindberg isn’t as keen on his own kids forming an alliance to overthrow dad. In his book, Lindberg lays out his musings in a simple, unpretentious style that fully admits the paradoxes and contradictions of being forever filled with youthful rebellion and wanting your kids to do the right thing and go to bed on time. The Sunday Paper caught up with the singer—whose band hits Atlanta with the Warped Tour this week—to discuss that balancing act and aging gracefully in the punk-rock arena.


07/15/07 A&E, MOVIE: Pump up the volume

Pump up the volume
Engaging ‘Talk to Me’ suffers from distortion
By Steve Warren

They say if you remember the ’60s, you weren’t there. Some people associated with “Talk to Me,” which depicts a ’60s radio station, do remember—or at least have done their research. This movie nails the cars, the clothes and the hairstyles of the time, and it features lots of clips of the people of the day: Martin Luther King Jr., LBJ, Johnny Carson. Plus, its soundtrack of R&B oldies fits in quite well.


07/15/07 LIFE, HEALTH: MEDICAL EDGE FROM MAYO CLINIC

MEDICAL EDGE FROM MAYO CLINIC
DIABETES: EATING RIGHT DESPITE OBSTACLES

Q. I’m a 33-year-old man who was diagnosed with diabetes in 2001. I live and work in an institution where I’m limited to cafeteria food that is high in carbs. My A1C test levels have been between 9.0 and 10.5 percent for the last year. How can I maintain a healthy lifestyle to get my blood-sugar levels under control?


07/15/07 FOOD, WS: Bon Anniversaire, Bordeaux

Bon Anniversaire, Bordeaux
Tasting vintage First Growth wines
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod

In 1982, Dwight Clark made “the Catch” as the 49ers beat Dallas in the NFC title game, British heir Prince William was born, and John Belushi shuffled off this mortal coil. “Cats” and “ET The Extra-Terrestrial” opened, and John Hinckley Jr. was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the shooting of President Reagan. It was quite a year.


07/15/07 FOOD, BLOCK: It's a snap

It’s a snap
Mother-daughter team bakes cookies to fight cancer
By Suzanne Wright

Laura Stachler and her daughter Susan are the team behind Susansnaps, which markets gourmet gingersnap cookies as the perfect gift for patients and families of those battling cancer—as well as for birthdays and other occasions. Laura Stachler, whose gourmet specialty shop Laura’s Divine Desserts produces up to 15,000 of the cookies per week, talked with The Sunday Paper about how Susansnaps came to be.


07/15/07 LIFE, COMMITTED: Appeasing the night nurse is a tricky business

Appeasing the night nurse is a tricky business
By Lisa Baron

This motherhood thing, so far at least, is working out pretty well. I’ve only wanted to flee the country twice. My friends all say that I’m doing really well. In fact, one of them even said I seem “more sane” than she expected, which as I took as very high compliment. Another said I was “less hysterical” than she was as a first-time mother. Another girlfriend even described my parenting as “unusually calm.”


07/15/07 A&E, THEATER: Open to interpretation

Open to interpretation
‘Power Plays’ leave much up to the audience
BY BERT OSBORNE

Observing Christmas in July may sound enticing, but where was Christopher Durang’s “Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge” when we really needed it—last winter, as a reprieve from all the more traditional holiday fare?


07/15/07 A&E LEAD: The neverending story

The neverending story
‘Order of the Phoenix’ for true Potterheads only
By Steve Warren

“Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” is for hardcore fans—those who have followed the series from the beginning, probably on the page as well as the screen.


Shooting for success

Al Horford eager to prove he’s the right choice


07/08/07 NEWS: No hay day

No hay day
Record drought levels threaten Georgia cattle farms
By Colby Dunn

Heat rises in undulating waves off blistering pavement. Scorched brown grass cracks underfoot on front lawns. Dust billows in enormous clouds under the tines of plows. And throughout Georgia, news meteorologists flash rueful smiles as they warn of searing summer temperatures with no relief in sight.


07/08/07 QUICK: RADAR

Radar

Star-spangled banners were waving and bombs were bursting in air last Wednesday as thousands of Atlantans celebrated our independence at the 4th of July Celebration at Centennial Olympic Park. The fireworks display, courtesy of Hi-Tech FX, was breathtaking and impeccable, as usual. And when they weren’t “ooh”-ing and “aah”-ing over the pyrotechnic spectacle, the huddled masses were grooving to a lineup of energetic live music. Left: Master Sgt. Regina Coonrod of Max Impact, the United States Air Force Band’s pop/rock group, whips the crowd into a frenzy. Right: “American Idol” Season Two champ Ruben Studdard orders a few hot dogs. Just kidding, Roo—you’re looking great. (You’re cool if we call you Roo, right?)


07/08/07 NEWS: Love American Style

Love American Style
What a long, strange trip it’s been since ‘67
By Stephanie Ramage

Romantic love has suffered a demotion following the wars of the sexes in recent decades,” wrote Christina Nehring, author of “Women in Love: A Feminist Defense of Romance” in the July 2005 issue of The Atlantic. “With the result that we have forgotten it is the source of some of our civilization’s greatest acts of heroism and genius.”
Indeed, since 1967’s “Summer of Love”—which celebrates its 40th anniversary this summer—when the war between the sexes went undercover and burst into open combat, the great human romance has sped up considerably.


07/08/07 NEWS: Our vanishing wilderness

Our vanishing wilderness
The coexistence of squirrels on crack and super beavers.
By Josh Clark

Humans’ international tendency to urbanize—to live in cities—is perhaps the biggest challenge to the natural global environment, and the urbanization that centers on Atlanta is certainly no exception. Just the sheer congregation of humans exponentially compounds the inevitable impact we have on an environment. Roads and fences fragment habitats, buildings simply level them, and the waste we generate makes it difficult for species of flora and fauna to thrive alongside us.


07/08/07 NEWS: More killings than killers

More killings than killers
More Georgians die by suicide than homicide
By Diane Loupe

If she had come home a half-hour earlier that day, maybe Diane Petro could have stopped her daughter. She’d talked to the 17-year-old on the phone and learned that Lisa had been in an argument with a friend at school. She assumed she would continue the conversation with Lisa when she got home.


07/08/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Still Debating Health Care

Still Debating Health Care
By Mark Douglas

Several months ago, I tried to clear out some of the rhetorical underbrush that obstructs helpful debates about health care in the United States.


07/08/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Immigration reform

Immigration reform
By Stephanie Ramage

How could anyone love this country? Its defining architectural element is shopping centers all built along the same lines—those that are not tawdry and overbearing are so pretentious as to be laughable. And walking by these malls, usually in the road as opposed to on the sidewalk designed for that purpose, are droves of young men who wear their pants in a way that suggests they’re suffering from a venereal disease.


07/08/07 LEFT/RIGHT: He's done

He’s done
By Eric Von Haessler

The overwhelming defeat of the immigration bill backed by the president may have been a good or bad thing, depending on where you sit on the question of border control. Without this legislation, the nation sticks with the status quo, but the fallout of the vote has a consequence that goes far beyond the shouting match of immigration. The most lasting effect of the U.S. Senate’s un-voted-upon border bill is that it marks the unofficial end of the Bush presidency.


07/08/07 LEFT/RIGHT: Whatever happened to the Dept. of Education?

Whatever happened to the Dept. of Education?
By Bob Zaslavsky

In a recent Washington Post guest op-ed column (June 9), Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings took her stand against national education standards and a national uniform testing apparatus.


07/08/07 A&E, THEATER: All over the map

All over the map
Georgia Shakespeare productions vary in tone, effectiveness
BY BERT OSBORNE

If nothing else, at least the next time somebody asks for a show of hands from people who’ve ever seen “Pericles,” we’ll be able to add ours to the few that sprung up among the crowded opening-night audience of Georgia Shakespeare’s version. One of the Bard’s most obscure and rarely produced works (scholars have always debated how much of the play he even wrote), “Pericles” is all over the map and wildly uneven—both in terms of Shakespeare’s narrative scope and artistic director Richard Garner’s theatrical tone. Act I ends with the breathless visual images of a storm-tossed sea (waves of parachute fabric, beautifully lit by Liz Lee). Act II begins in a bawdy brothel (with zany blaxploitation-era costumes by Sydney Roberts) that seems like it belongs in the group’s concurrent staging of Carlo Goldoni’s commedia dell’arte classic “The Servant of Two Masters.”


07/08/07 QUICK, ITK: Bending it like Beckham

Bending it like Beckham
By Caren West

The Fourth of July is a bizzaro holiday, especially this year. Having a holiday fall on Wednesday throws the whole week out of whack. Not that I don’t appreciate and value my independence in every way, shape and form, but taking the time to plan fun activities for Independence Day just disappeared into the black hole recesses of my mind.


07/08/07 LIFE LEAD: Embrace your inner-sponge

Embrace your inner-sponge
Ten 100 percent free things
By Julie Douglas

Who doesn’t get a thrill receiving something for free? After all, there’s not much in the world these days that doesn’t require that you lay down some coin. And while sunsets and sunrises will always be gratis, thanks to Mother Nature, sometimes the empty-pocketed and the frugal-minded need a little more stimulus. The Sunday Paper put on its freeloading thinking cap while checking under the staff couch for change, and came up with a few free-worthy options for your summer-sponging pleasure.


07/08/07 LIFE, TRAVEL: The road to Serenbe

The road to Serenbe
Becoming a summer escape artist
By Hope S. Philbrick

Have you ever gone on vacation and imagined what it would be like to live there? Do real obstacles, like your need to earn a living, thwart the fantasy? Great news: If after spending time at the Inn at Serenbe you happen to fall in love with the area, you can purchase a place to live in the Community at Serenbe—and since it’s located just 32 miles south of downtown Atlanta, odds are that you can keep the job you’ve already got.


07/08/07 SPORTS LEAD: A dominant force

A dominant Force
Georgia’s arena football heroes gunning for a second shot at national title
BY EARLE MCDONALD

The year was 2005. A decade had come and gone since the Braves won the World Series. The Thrashers were still an upstart franchise, and the Falcons and Hawks—well, you know that story. But that same year, the Georgia Force brought Atlanta to within three points of a championship at Arena Bowl XIX. The team had recently been acquired by Arthur Blank as a complement to the Falcons, it had a fiery new head coach, and Atlanta had a winning team to cheer for.


07/08/07 A&E, MUSIC: Soundcheck

Jason Isbell
“Sirens of the Ditch”
(New West)

After several years of playing third wheel in the Drive-By Truckers to Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley, Jason Isbell takes the driver’s seat with maturity and confidence on his solo debut. Clearly, Isbell’s creativity wasn’t satisfied with a handful of contributions to each Truckers album, so it’s no shock that he’s the sole writer on these eleven tracks. It’s encouraging that the band’s sturdy rhythm section (drummer Brad Morgan and bassist Shonna Tucker) and co-producer Hood contribute, since it seems the split was truly amicable. But it also means that “Sirens of the Ditch” isn’t all that far removed from the established DBT sound.


Wedding smasher

Dreary comedy should get its ‘License’ revoked


07/08/07 HEALTH: Stress and the stomach

STRESS AND THE STOMACH
MEDICAL EDGE FROM MAYO CLINIC

Q. I am a 48-year old woman who has the sudden onset (within a half-hour) of uncontrollable watery diarrhea after eating in restaurants. I’m trying to narrow down the cause and believe it’s either greasy foods or the lettuce in salad bars. I’ve eaten at the same restaurants and eaten the same foods, but sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn’t. I’m to the point where I’m afraid to eat out. What could be causing this embarrassing problem?


07/08/07 FOOD, WS: Juniper Jive

Juniper Jive
On Hendrick’s and the state of gin
By Jason Tesauro and Phineas Mollod

They say Hendrick's Gin is “loved by a tiny handful of people across the world,” and that seems about right. Indeed, beyond the typical spirits, the home bar invariably houses one or two odd birds, hidden potable gems opened for special guests. Thus, the next time you visit your urbane pal with the cool specs—while the thirsty bub asks for tonic and is offered the mixing gin—wink at the squat Hendrick’s bottle on the shelf and revel in something unique. Hendrick’s is a small batch gin, redolent of rose and cucumber with a softer, citrusy finish that takes the ordinary gin-hound on a side path to the left of traditional London Dry gins.


Where's the score?

Perhaps under the can of WD40 stored next to the tomatoes


07/08/07 FOOD LEAD: Seek and you shall find

Seek and you shall find
Pacific Kitchen brings the ocean to Atlanta
By Katie K. Bell

Walk into Pacific Kitchen and you can feel the love, right down to the well-worn floorboards.


07/08/07 FOOD, BLOCK: To market, to market

To market, to market
By Suzanne Wright

Located on quaint Carroll Street, just up from Agave and Carroll Street Café, Cabbagetown Market and Little’s Grill is a neighborhood grocery, grill and deli featuring baked goods, gourmet products, local meats, cheeses, breads and produce. The Sunday Paper recently bellied up to its counter and spoke with co-owners Maria Locke and Lisa Hanson about community, good eats and recycling the store’s frying oil for fuel.


07/08/07 LIFE, COMMITTED: Me, the baby and a stroller

Me, the baby and a stroller
One-handed BlackBerry communication and other new mom skills
By Lisa Baron

About three weeks after Micah was born, I got a brave streak and decided to take him with me to the mall. I needed to get out of the house and he needed (although Jimmy disagreed) a mobile for the crib that he doesn’t even sleep in yet—we were still doing the bassinet-by-the-bed routine. I thought I could completely handle taking a nine-pound person on a 45-minute excursion. At the time, it seemed reasonable.


07/08/07 A&E LEAD: Metal edge

Metal edge
Michael Bay discusses ‘Transformers’—and his dream indie project
BY BERT OSBORNE

To a resume of action-packed blockbusters that already includes “Bad Boys,” “The Rock,” “Armageddon” and “Pearl Harbor,” hotshot director Michael Bay now adds “Transformers.” He’s already bracing himself for skeptical jokes about making a film inspired by a line of Hasbro toys—good and bad robots that turn into tanks, jets and 18-wheelers. A rabid cult following has been keeping close tabs online throughout the production, objecting to every little thing, like adding human characters to the story (played by Shia LaBeouf, Josh Duhamel, John Turturro, Jon Voight and others).


Immigration? No problem

The point that’s gone unnoticed in the immigration debate


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