Short Takes: News From All Over
August 23, 2007
August, 2007
Staff Utne.com
How Do You Defend a Failing State?
By Katherine Wheeler, Foreign Policy
Foreign Policy and the Fund for Peace recently released their 2007 Failed States Index, ranking 177 countries to determine the most unstable governments in the world. Correspondent Katherine Wheeler then hit the pavement of Washington's Embassy Row to find out how countries such as Pakistan and Zimbabwe felt about earning the dishonor of being labeled a 'failed state.' The ambassadors' reactions range from defensive to disappointed and can be viewed on Foreign Policy's website. -- Bennett Gordon
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3954
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...
CubaKeeps Traditional Chinese Culture Alive
By Ying Ying Joyce Choi, New America Media
Before Castro's nationalization plans ushered foreigners toward Cuba's exits, Havana was? home to a vibrant Chinatown that spanned 44 blocks. Now, the dwindled community is being kept alive largely through the efforts of 74-year-old newspaperman Guillermo Chiu. Chiu's four-page biweekly Kwong Wah Po survives on government funding, news reprints, and martial-arts fiction. Using movable type and traditional Chinese characters, Chiu needs about 20 minutes to lay out a single 150-word article. His painstaking work has preserved a relic of Cuba's multiethnic past and a Chinese language rendered old-fashioned in more modern times. -- Eric Kelsey
http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=a88b5ebf2f77a27a453d6c27d8d37fd4
Life Before Air Conditioning
By Miss Cellania, Mental_Floss
Mental_Floss runs through some of the low-tech strategies Americans used to beat the heat during pre-air-conditioning times. Instead of staying inside, people would hang out on their porches or sleep on their fire escapes. Or they built their homes underground. Now that's cool. -- Brendan Mackie
http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/7424
Ponca Tribe Proceeds with Lawsuits over Carbon Black Pollution
By Brian Daffron, Indian Country Today
The Ponca tribe of northeastern Oklahoma is suing the Continental Carbon Company over pollution from a nearby plant that produces carbon black -- a substance used in making tires, hoses, and ink. In a two-part series for Indian Country Today, Brian Daffron details allegations that the plant's pollution has degraded property (one family has laid black tile in their home to mask the soot); harmed the health of the area's residents (many children are asthmatic); and eroded the cultural value the Ponca place on the environment. -- Eric Kelsey
http://www.indiancountry.com/content.cfm?id=1096415550