From the Stacks: April 14, 2006
April 14, 2006
April 2006
Staff Utne.com
Utne receives some 1,200 magazines, newsletters, journals,
weeklies, and zines. Add in hundreds of books, CDs, and DVDs, and
it's a flood of media that lines the walls of our library and piles
high on our desks. All the ideas, people, and stories inspire
lively daily chatter, but they can't all fit into our bimonthly
magazine. So we share the gems here in our weekly editions of 'From
the Stacks.' Check in every Friday for the freshest highlights of
the independent and alternative media.
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The quarterly magazine of the
Wisconsin Academy of
Sciences, Arts and Letters sports a new name with the Spring
2006 issue:
Wisconsin
People & Ideas. Editor Joan Fischer says the old title
-- Wisconsin Academy Review -- was widely considered 'dry
and daunting' and didn't accurately impart the accessible content.
The magazine has been academicspeak-free in the five years I've
seen it regularly, running articles of interest to general readers,
even ones outside Wisconsin. The new issue features a ten-page
article about Ho-Chunk photographer Tom Jones, with eleven of his
photo portraits, four depicting his grandfather, Jim Funmaker Sr.
It also includes an ongoing 'In My Words' section of reader-written
pieces, this time focusing on childbirth. -- Chris
Dodge
Bulb,
a British magazine named
one
of the best new titles of 2005 by Utne, lives up to
its label in the newly arrived ninth issue (April/May). Seventy
percent of the articles were penned by writers who aren't old
enough to rent a car from many companies, but when they do reach
the standard 25-year mark, you won't see them tooling down Oxford
Street in gas-guzzling Land Rovers, as illustrated in the article
'Oh, SUVs... How I Hate You.' Contributing to the green theme is an
interview with Bjork, the amateur 'spokesperson for
nature'/musician, who defends the 'velvety black silt mountains'
and 'delicate crystal streams' of her native Iceland. Three percent
of the country 'will have disappeared under water' with the
completion of the Karajnukar project, which plans to build 'an
enormous hydroelectric dam... to service the US owned Alcoa
aluminum plant.' -- Kristen Mueller
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