April 2007

Apr 1-30, 2007 / Vol. 15 / No. 4

No Fear

What do Al Gore, Nora Ephron, Jane Goodall, and Ariana Huffington have in common? They’re all afraid.

Juried Hanging

For “Photowork ’07,” Barrett Art Center’s 20th annual national juried photography exhibition, the Poughkeepsie gallery’s director, Laurie Strange, gave juror Asher Miller the freedom to select works not based on any particular theme or genre.

Stretching and Falling

We are accustomed to stretching our physical bodies. Similarly, it is important to stretch our consciousness if we want to maintain a healthy, vital, and enthusiastic spirit.

Horse Tales

Hippotherapy literally means “treatment with the help of the horse. The idea of seeking aid for human ailments from horses began in Germany, Switzerland, and Austria in the 1960s.

Homegrown Heroes

Many of our most commonly used lawn care techniques and supplies are out of sync with our native ecological system. However there are species in our backyards that we’ve been conditioned to exterminate that may be beautiful from a different perspective.

Colors of the Spectrum

Autism has become a national crisis. It is the fastest-growing disability in the United States, affecting one in every 150 children. Diagnoses of autism are increasing at the startling rate of 10 to 17 percent per year.

Beinhart’s Body Politic

The attorney general takes an oath to uphold the constitution and execute the law. When controversial matters come up, his role, traditionally, is often to be the guy who says, “We can’t do that, it’s against the law.”

Lessons From Legends

Prior to the Homespun Tapes’ there hadn’t really been any way to learn how to play folk music other than by transcribing it by ear from old 78s or by getting enlightenment firsthand.

Things Fall Apart

Think of how often we seem to revel in the image of our own destruction. We seem, as a culture, to have fully embraced what Freud identified as the “death drive,” the erotics of Thanatos.

Spice of Life

Suruchi, which is Sanskrit for good taste, or, more literally, “good interest,” features a menu that is largely inspired by the vegetarian cuisine of southern India.

Short Takes

Whether they’re writing about military realities, queer identity, land use issues up- and downriver, or that iconoclastic bride of Christ, these five local authors are helping to break new ground.

On the Cover

Fionn Reilly’s _Ryners Lane_. The place is Middlesex, and it’s the focal point of Reilly’s latest show, “Middlesex: Mundane Photographs from Metroland,” a series of photos that represent his relationship with a familiar place, where mundane, circa 1930s London rooftops glisten in the daylight.


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