Kulture
Come Back Angry
BY MICHAEL MANVILLE
Why would anyone shoot up a school?
03.24.2001 | SOCIETY
Faking It
BY HEATHER WOKUSCH
Heather Wakusch on why Americans can't talk straight about sex these days.
03.24.2001 | SOCIETY
How My Father Started Talking American
BY MATTHEW CALLAN
On St. Patrick's Day, everyone's a little bit Irish. Unless you were actually born in Ireland, as my father taught me by example.
03.10.2001 | CULTURE
Clinton's Next Step
BY MICHAEL MANVILLE
Mike Manville on why Bill Clinton should buy the Red Sox.
01.24.2001 | SOCIETY
Welcome to South Africa
BY MICHAEL LEE
On ganja, squats and police brutality in South Africa. Filmmaker Michael Lee reports.
12.19.2000 | SOCIETY
An Open Letter to Alex Rodriguez
BY MICHAEL MANVILLE
A-Rod can have his 250 million, Mike Manville just wants his 13 hours back.
12.18.2000 | SPORTS
Flavor of the Month
BY ADAM BULGER
An open letter to Maxim covergirl and middle-school classmate Tara Reid.
12.14.2000 | CULTURE
A Colombian Liver With Your Turkish Cornea?
BY LEONARDO CALCAGNO
Why use Third World children as prostitutes when you can just sell their organs? Leonardo Calcagno gives you one more reason to hate the new global economy.
11.30.2000 | SOCIETY
In Memoriam: Action Park
BY MATTHEW CALLAN
A loving review of Matthew Callan's days at Action Park, a death-happy amusement park in Jersey that defied both logic and the survival instinct.
11.22.2000 | CULTURE
Expat Prague Turns Grey
BY SY ANTONELLI
Ten years ago, the City of Destiny was a thriving destination for ambitious young slackers. Moving into 2001, expat Prague is bourgeois, tired and slightly grey. Sy Antonelli watched it happen.
11.20.2000 | CULTURE
In Serbia, Baseball Quietly Thrives Amid Tumult
BY ALEXANDER ZAITCHIK
During most of the last decade, baseball has survived--and even thrived--against the odds in Serbia. Alex Zaitchik reports on that interesting intersection of sports and politics.
11.16.2000 | CULTURE
Rage No More
BY DANIEL SHERMAN
Like Che in the jungles of Bolivia, Rage has met its end. Dan Sherman respectfully takes a retrospective spit on the warm grave.
10.23.2000 | CULTURE
Animal Behavior and Morphogenic Fields
BY DR. PAUL KAIL
One reason why creationism is still popular is because science has failed to plug the holes in its own version of events. Like much of science, the theory of evolution has massive detail in some parts, and huge question marks in others.
10.17.2000 | SOCIETY
Catch Olympic Fever and Nobody Gets Hurt!
BY MATTHEW CALLAN
It's Olympics time again. Cyanide, anyone?
09.16.2000 | CULTURE
Death Becomes Us: Why Americans Support Capital Punishment
BY MICHAEL MANVILLE
Alone among advanced industrial nations still practicing state sanctioned murder, the USA is heading for a long overdue identity crisis. Mike Manville holds up the mirror.
09.13.2000 | SOCIETY
Why I Don't Invest
BY ALEXANDER ZAITCHIK
If you're an investor, you probably aren't reading this. You're watching MSNBC. You also probably have tunnel vision. I know. I used to be one.
06.12.2000 | CULTURE
Ace Frehley Is My Copilot
BY ADAM BULGER
Rock and Roll all night, party every day. The hang over lasts decades, smells like grease paint and costs $19 to get into.
05.26.2000 | CULTURE
Roma in the Czech Republic: Resisting Denial
BY GWENDOLYN ALBERT
Euro-Jim Crow and racial violence are alive and well on the Old Continent. Gwendolyn Albert looks at the current plight of Gypsies in Central Europe and wonders what century we are in.
05.19.2000 | SOCIETY
Pork or Dead Pig?
BY DR. PAUL KAIL
Animal rights activist Paul Kail on the language of species domination, or Why we say "pork" and not "dead pig."
05.17.2000 | SOCIETY
Taking Animals Seriously
BY DR. PAUL KAIL
Animals can't write screeenplays, but then neither can most humans. Animal rights activist and neuroscientist Pail Kail explains why such comparisons aren't as crazy as they sound.
03.24.2000 | SOCIETY
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