Short Takes: News From All Over
January 25, 2007
January 2007
Staff Utne.com
Maps of War
By Maps of War
Skip the dusty historical tomes and view 5,000 years of history in just 90 seconds. The website Maps of War offers animated flash cartographies of the histories of religion, imperialism, and the United States at war. Though the site doesn't focus on narrative explication, the maps do, in their simplicity, offer a greater context to the current war in Iraq. The site also features a map of a secret CIA prison and the US army's strategy to capture the Iraqi city of Fallujah. -- Bennett Gordon
http://www.mapsofwar.com
RELATED ARTICLES
Paid political ads have become the dominant source of election information on local news shows...
The lies that we are paying for...
Our Webmaster steers you to 15 Web sites that could shake the world...
Y2K Links Web Specials Archives Recommended Y2k Link Resources ? News and Opinion Sites ? Federal G...
Find Toxic Wastelands Via Google Earth
By Anne Broache, CNET News.com
Radiation sites and hazardous waste storage facilities aren't the normal fare for maps. But the Environmental Protection Agency is hoping the likes of Google Earth and Microsoft Virtual Earth will start incorporating such toxic locales into their popular online mapping applications. The federal agency recently released on its website a file containing the names and locations of 1,600 sites on its Superfund National Priorities List, with plans to boost that number to 100,000 by the end of the year. The move aims at increasing public access and awareness. (Thanks, Governing.) -- Evelyn Hampton
http://news.com.com/Find+toxic+wastelands+via+Google+Earth/2100-1028_3-6150952.html
From Iraq to the Bronx
By James Fergusson, Mount Hope Monitor via Voices That Must Be Heard
New York City police are taking to higher ground with two surveillance towers originally created for the US Army in Iraq. Also used along the Mexican border to spot illegal immigrants, the $100,000 mobile hydraulic-lift tower -- dubbed 'SkyWatch' -- is outfitted with cameras, spotlights, and bulletproof windows. Despite privacy concerns from the New York Civil Liberties Union, a third manned tower will join the NYPD next month to give officers a bird's-eye view of busy districts in the Bronx. -- Jenna Fisher
http://www.indypressny.org/article.php3?ArticleID=3086