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Ivy Cooper is the Beacon visual arts reviewer and a professor of art at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

Review: Looking at 60s Cyprus, learning about today

In Visual Arts

8:02 am on Wed, 02.22.12

Christodoulos Panayiotou’s “One Thousand and One Days” at the Contemporary provokes reflection on power and representation — how one authority figure represents the will of a constituency or how a public face of authority is constructed.

Review: Variety and exuberance at Bruno David

8:24 pm on Sun, 02.19.12

The show at Bruno David Gallery features Judy Pfaff in - surprise - less-than supersized works, Carmon Colangelo in an exuberant, if skeptical, look at Orlando and a Jill Downen  signature meditation on bodies and architecture.

Review: Works by Hartung, Aran are sadly magical

In Visual Arts

5:00 pm on Sun, 01.29.12

The works by New York based Tommy Hartung and Uri Aran on view at White Flag Projects give an idea of the artists' unusual working relationship. They're not exactly collaborators. Rather, the sensibilities, interests and outlook of one artist

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Conference of American nuns will mull response to Vatican charges

In Nation

7:55 am on Fri, 08.03.12

Meeting in St. Louis next week, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious will have its first opportunity as an assembled group to consider what to do after the Vatican issued a mandate for change this spring. It calls on the conference to reorganize and more strictly observe church teachings.

The 'free' Zoo

In Commentary

7:51 am on Tue, 05.22.12

When a family of four goes to the St. Louis Zoo, they can be forgiven for not knowing it will cost them $60, $72 if they park. If they can't pay, the alternative is to tell the kids they can't do what kids do at the zoo.

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Missouri train collision, rail safety issues cited at Senate hearing

In Nation

4:20 am on Thu, 06.20.13

A U.S. Senate panel probing rail safety issues heard testimony Wednesday about last month's collision of two freight trains in southeast Missouri, which injured seven people, caused a diesel car to burst into flames, collapsed part of a highway overpass used by 500 cars a day, and caused $11 million in damages.

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Innovation and entrepreneurial activity are on the rise in St. Louis, especially in bioscience, technology and alternative energy. The Beacon's InnovationSTL section focuses on the people who are part of this wave, what they're doing and how this is shaping our future. To many St. Louisans, this wave is not yet visible. InnovationSTL aims to change that. We welcome you to share your knowledge, learn more about this vibrant trend and discuss its impact.

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A spate of shootings: Who's in charge here?

In Commentary

4:12 am on Thu, 06.20.13

Even though statistics say that violent crime is down, summer in St. Louis is getting off to a bloody start. The former homicide detective says he believes the numbers, but also thinks some modern changes limit police ability to take control.

World's best to take on U.S. best in St. Louis

In On Chess

6:54 am on Wed, 06.19.13

The Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Saint Louis will bring in four of the world’s top-10 chess players for the strongest-ever tournament on U.S. soil. This September matchup will feature Hikaru Nakamura and Gata Kamsky -- America’s top-two players -- as well as Norway’s Magnus Carlsen and Armenia’s Levon Aronian – the world’s top-two.

Nation should learn from mine workers

In Commentary

6:53 am on Wed, 06.19.13

When the mining company filed for bankruptcy, 22,000 workers and retirees lost their earned and negotiated benefits and joined the nearly 50 million Americans without health insurance. The cost of treating the uninsured adds to insurance and health costs for everyone.

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