AltWeeklies Wire

Wall Street's Crisis is a Crisis of Valuesnew

A system based solely on profit can't help but produce the results we are now witnessing.
East Bay Express  |  Jay Youngdahl  |  10-15-2008  |  Economy

Sheriff Joe Arpaio's Jails Lose National Accreditationnew

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio's jail accreditation was terminated last month -- even as he awaited a federal court ruling that could take his jails out of his control.
Phoenix New Times  |  John Dickerson  |  10-15-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Stop the Bleeding: A Plan to Bail Out Scared Homeowners

Governments are bailout banks in exchange for equity stakes in their ownership. Why not offer the same deal to troubled homeowners -- let them stay in their homes in exchange for a piece of their deeds?
Maui Time  |  Ted Rall  |  10-14-2008  |  Economy

Inside The Johns Hopkins Psilocybin Studiesnew

The study's conclusion -- that psychedelic drugs offer the potential for profound, transformative, and long-lasting positive changes in properly prepared individuals -- may herald a revival in the study of altered states of consciousness.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Michael M. Hughes  |  10-14-2008  |  Drugs

The Lost Cats of Poverty Gulchnew

Felines and their owners struggle to survive along Seattle's wildest corridor.
Seattle Weekly  |  Mike Seely  |  10-14-2008  |  Animal Issues

Dallas Independent School District is in the Holenew

Teachers get axed and parents fret as Dallas' school leaders scramble to cover a budget hole.
Dallas Observer  |  Jim Schutze and Robert Wilonsky  |  10-14-2008  |  Education

Is there Natural Gas Beneath Dallas County?new

Drillers -- and cities -- are betting Barnett Shale riches are headed Dallas' way.
Dallas Observer  |  Pablo Lastra  |  10-14-2008  |  Environment

How We Break Our Promise to Protect Asylum-Seekersnew

Secrecy is an essential part of America's promise to refugees. Sometimes, though, secrets leak out. Especially for those refugees the government decides to send back home. In Peter's case, it began with a mere paperwork error.
Westword  |  Lisa Rab  |  10-14-2008  |  Immigration

Nonprofits in a No-Profit Economynew

As the Dow takes a dive, Chicago con­temporary arts group Renaissance Society works on its first endowment.
Chicago Reader  |  Deanna Isaacs  |  10-14-2008  |  Economy

Friend and Foes of Illegal Immigrants Deal with the Delugenew

As the number of undocumented immigrants in this country continues to grow, so does the volume of the debate over how to fix the problem. The controversy has no clear end in view, or even likely to come into view for a long time.
Fort Worth Weekly  |  Eric Griffey  |  10-10-2008  |  Immigration

The Strange and Disturbing Trial of Anand Jonnew

Even in its quietest moments, the Jon case is a volatile fable of rape, ambitious but naïve girls, the rag trade and feral male vanity. It is a trial junkie's dream. Inexplicably, the proceedings have so far garnered little media attention.
L.A. Weekly  |  Steven Mikulan  |  10-10-2008  |  Crime & Justice

Don't Believe the Digital TV Hypenew

The transition to digital was supposed to revolutionize free TV. So what's with the high-def reruns?
Sacramento News & Review  |  Cosmo Garvin  |  10-09-2008  |  Media

How Deregulation Led to the Current Bank Collapsenew

In 2000, Sen. Phil Gramm attached a rider to an appropriations bill to deregulate derivatives trading and other complicated financial instruments like collateral debt obligations. This was the effective nail in the coffin for the FDR-era Glass-Steagall Act, which was created to prevent a repeat of the crash of 1929.
Charleston City Paper  |  D.A. Smith  |  10-09-2008  |  Economy

Tucson Lifeguards Take Skills and Goodwill to Indianew

Financed by its own fundraisers and car washes, the 15-member Swim India team will fan across that country's southern reaches, teaching everything from basic safety-and-rescue techniques to CPR in orphanages and schools.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  10-09-2008  |  International

Charges Against Border Activist are Mysteriously Droppednew

As the judicial dust settles in the Kathryn Ferguson case, one thing has become abundantly clear: This crude affair amounts to little more than a shameful, low-brow, law-enforcement bullying, followed by an appalling lack of accountability from the U.S. Attorney's Office.
Tucson Weekly  |  Tim Vanderpool  |  10-09-2008  |  Immigration

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