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'Voices of Autism' explains the silence Print E-mail
By Harper Barnes, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 July 2008 )
autism100.jpgPeople with autism, teachers of children with autism, families of people with autism: They all tell their stories and help people understand a syndrome that seems to be growing in the United States.
 
Letters from Iraq: Lessons in quartertones and the setting sun Print E-mail
By Marc Thayer, special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 July 2008 )

marcthayer100.jpgIn his fourth letter to Beacon readers from Kurdistan in northern Iraq, St. Louis Symphony outreach director Marc Thayer reports on progress toward a concert by the students. He also takes us up into the mountains to watch a sunset and up the down staircases in a government bureaucracy, demonstrating that the more things are culturally different, the more they are, across the world, pretty much the same.

 

 
NICK'S LIST of books and movies - July 14 Print E-mail
By Nick Otten, Special to the Platform   
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 July 2008 )

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This week Nick Otten travels to China -- with Marco Polo and with Moying Li to the Cultural Revolution. Then he heads into the more foreign lands of superheroes and science fiction.

 
Bastille Day marked in Soulard, Maplewood Print E-mail
By Amelia Flood, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 10 July 2008 )
bastille100.jpgSome of the traditional French areas don't go all out for Bastille Day. Ste. Genevieve's Jour de Fete is in August, as is the Festival of the Little Hills in St. Charles. But Soulard, which seems to find many reasons to party, and Maplewood will provide opportunities to celebrate. Meanwhile, the Chatillon-DeMenil Mansion wil host a more sedate affair.
 
Letters from Iraq: Baklava and Bartok Print E-mail
By Marc Thayer, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 July 2008 )
marcthayer100.jpgIn this his third letter from Iraq, St. Louis Symphony Orchestra executive Marc Thayer tells of the revival of neighborhoods (some very pricey), of new restaurants and night spots and of a lavish luncheon in the home of one of the young Iraqi musicians with whom he is working in Suleimanya, a city in the Kurdish Autonomous Region near the border of Iran and Iraq. 
 
St. Louis tradition: The Muny Print E-mail
By Amanda King, Beacon intern   
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 09 July 2008 )

muny100banner2008.jpg"Meet me at the Muny" is more than a slogan in St. Louis. Generations have worked on the musicals and enjoyed them from seats that were inherited.

Photo by Rachel Heidenry | Beacon intern 

 
Financier, cultural figure announce engagement: Wachovia vows support for Symphony Print E-mail
By Robert W. Duffy   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 July 2008 )

wachovia47logo.jpgslso57logo.jpg Wachovia Securities and the St. Louis Symphony Society enter into a three-year arrangement, bringing two major players in the St. Louis establishment into a relationship with potential rewards for both.

 
Janis Ian: Surviving her life Print E-mail
By John R. Killacky, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Tuesday, 08 July 2008 )
ian100autobiography.jpgJanis Ian has gone from teen sensation to exhasted seclusion to Grammy winner to abused spouse and has emerged with her strength and music intact. John Killacky, who produced her recent KETC-sponsored Live from Grand Center concert, talks about her autobiography and her amazing life.
 
Letters from Iraq: Views from the mountainside and from the music stand Print E-mail
By Marc Thayer, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Thursday, 31 July 2008 )

St. Louis Symphony Orchestra executive Marc Thayer viewed his host city in Kurdistan from a lofty distance, but most of his time is spent in classes and conversations with the enthusiastic young Iraqi musicians who've come to him and his colleagues for lessons and coaching. This is the second in a series of dispatches from marcthayer100.jpgKurdish Autonomous Region of northern Iraq. 

 
NICK'S LIST of books and movies - July 7 Print E-mail
By Nick Otten, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Monday, 07 July 2008 )

riskinscreenplays.jpg

Looking for a laugh-out-loud evening's worth of entertainment? Nick Otten takes a look at screwball comedies and the screenplay that launched the classic "It Happened One Night."

 

 

 
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Results 45 - 55 of 184

Editors' Picks

  • Books
    • Want to feel better about your own writing? Check out the new entries in the Bulwer-Lytton fiction contest. As the site notes, this is were www means wretched writers welcome.

    • The Orwell Diaries presents George Orwell's daily diary entries in blog format. You can follow along and read the author's thoughts, 70 years to the day after he first recorded them. | Orwell Prize

    • Palestinians mourn death of poet and author Mahmoud Darwish, described by Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas as a hero of his people. The influential cultural figure died at 67 following open-heart surgery in Houston on Saturday.| BBC

    • The British espionage thriller is a staple of summer reading. But what about books about British spies? Here's a pick of five from former MI5 director-general Stella Rimington. | Wall Street Journal

  • Music
    • Come to "Nine Shades of Blue: Reflections on the Blues," a jazz concert by the Webster University jazz faculty at 7 p.m., Sept. 8, at the Winifred Moore Auditorium, 470 E. Lockwood Ave. For information, call 314-968-7128.

    • As part of the Japanese Festival , enjoy music for Harp and Violin with the Watanabe Due at 6:30, Aug. 30 at Shoenberg Auditorium of the Missoouri Botanical Garden.

    • Grant's Farm will host Wednesday night concerts through Oct. 1. It's a 7 p.m. start time for The Blazin’ Bluegrass in the Bauernhof series.  Aug. 27 it's  Arlington; Sept. 3 - David Davis and The Warrior River Boys; Sept. 10 - Special Consensus; Sept. 17 - Grass Pack; Sept. 24 - Cumberland Gap; Oct. 1 - The Wells Family. Concerts are free; parking is $10.

    • New Music Circle presents the 27-piece Vinny Golia Large Ensemble at 7:30 p.m., Sept. 27 at the Webster University Webster Community Music School 534 Garden Ave. Admission: $15, $7 students  New Music Circle has assembled a 27-piece group of top local and national talent for the concert. 

  • Theater/Dance
    • The Repertory Theater for St. Louis opens its mainstage season with  Frost/Nixon Sept. 3-28. For curtain times and tickets call 314-968-4925 or visit www.repstl.org .

    • The Black Rep will bring "Sarafina" back to St. Louis for performances at 7 p.m. Sept. 3, 4 and 11; 8 p.m. Sept. 5, 6, 12 and 13; and 3 p.m. Sept. 7 and 14 at the Edison Theatre at Washington University. It will also be performed at the Orthwein Theatre at Mary Institute & St. Louis Country Day School Sept. 19-21.

    • St. Louis Shakespeare performs "King Lear: at the Grandel Theatre,  one block north of the Fox Theatre across from Powell Hall. 8 p.m. August 15, 16, 22, 23; 2 p.m. August 17 & 24 and 7:30 p.m. August 21. Tickets can be ordered through Metrotix.com .

    • Colin Donnell, who added Perchik in "Fiddler on the Roof" to his Muny roles, started his musical career at Kirkwood High School and is heading to Broadway this fall to take on the role of D'Arcy in the "Pride and Prejudice" musical. | Webster-Kirkwood Times

       

 
  • Neighborhoods
    • Check out new club, The Trade (3515 Chouteau, enter at rear), and support the Melanoma Research Foundation, from 5 p.m. to 3 a.m. Sept. 15. $5 minimum suggested donation will get you into the first annual Hoosier Games, including washers and wiffle ball. Music and food will also be available.

    • The Gateway Cup bicycle race starts under the lights in Lafayette Square on Friday. On Saturday morning, the race kicks off a new addition:  a 1-mile figure-8 course from The Schlafly Tap Room. Racing is on The Hill Sunday and in the U-City Loop on Monday Info: www.gatewaycup.com

    • Head to downtown St. Louis for the Hispanic Festival Inc . The festivities take place from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sept. 5 & 6 and from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Sept. 7.

    • Zoo news: Dinoroarus has been extended through Sept. 30. See 16 life-size animatronic dinosaurs that move, roar and spit in a walk-through exhibit in River's Edge.  $3 per person,  $1.50 for Zoo Friends.

  • Visual Arts
    • The Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts' Des Lee Gallery – 1627 Washington Ave. -  will present “Bold Strokes and Finesse: The Stage Designs of John Ezell.”  The exhibit of this acclaimed theater designer's work will open with a reception for the artist from 6-8 p.m., Sept. 11, and will be on view through Nov. 22.

    • Your last chance to see "The Immediate Touch: German, Austrian and Swiss Drawings from St. Louis Collections, 1946–2007" is Sept. 7 at the St. Louis Art Museum.

    • “Nervous Laughter” exhibit at phd gallery opens with a artists' reception from 7-10 p.m. Sept. 6. The show, which runs trough Oct. 17, features works that use humor to address dark and complex topics. phd gallery, 2300 Cherokee Street, is open from noon to 4 p.m. Thursday through Sunday.

    • We didn't know what category to put this in, but figured this had to have a visual element. As the release says, its "An Extra Frisky Edition of Lola van Ella's Burlesque Showcase." Door opens at 5 p.m. and show goes from 8 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Sept. 6 at Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Ave. $20 gets you BBQ, live music and burlesque.

  • Movies/TV
    • Janis Ian: Live From Grand Center, a one-woman concert featuring Grammy Award-winning singer/composer Janis Ian (“At Seventeen”) and produced by St. Louis public television station KETC/Channel 9, will be distributed nationally in October by the National Educational Telecommunications Association. The television special combines a retrospective of Ian’s hits with her most recent compositions.

    • See Metropolis -- a state-of-the-art digital restoration with the original 1927 orchestral score by Gottfried Huppertz -- at 8 p.m. Sept. 5 - 7 at Moore Auditorium as part of the Webster University Film Series

    • See A Killer Bargain at 7 p.m. Sept. 30 in the Moore Auditorium as part of the Webster University International Year of Human Rights Film Series . As this is also part of the regular Webster film series, there is a charge for all but Webster University students.

    • Dying to Tell the Story airs at 7 p.m. Sept. 9 in the Moore Auditorium as part of the Webster University International Year of Human Rights Film Series . From $6 to free for Webster University students..

Video from Iraq

Read Marc Thayer's letters from Iraq

Voices

  • Beacon Columnists

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    Are college presidents who are proposing a national discussion of lowering the drinking age slackers or realists? Do fatality numbers so a correlation between a lower drinking age and more deaths or are other factors at play. M.W. Guzy puts the issue in perspective.

  • Editorial Cartoons

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    Nothing like a convention to sharpen the pencils of editorial cartoonists. From the contrast between Biden and Obama to the steadfastness of Hillary Clinton suports, Mike Thompson, Scott Stantis, John Sherffius, Gary Markstein and Chris Britt have plenty to say.

  • Law Scoop

    The Obama campaign claims that Ed Martin's anti-Obama group violates federal election law.  Election law experts say that the group may violate the law, but that federal election authorities won't do anything about it until after the election. 

  • U.S. Elections Picks

    John McCain should resist temptation and not select Joe Lieberman as his running mate. | Robert Novak, townhall.com

The Lens

  • mickey100mouse.png

    Who's the leader of the club that sues for excess use?


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Beacon staff reporter Robert Joiner is now in Denver and will travel to Minneapolis-St. Paul to bring you news that matters from both conventions. The Beacon will also have blogging contributors inside both meetings.

See all our convention coverage in one convenient place.

 

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The Beacon, through Helium.com, invites writers to respond to questions we pose on timely topics. Winning articles appear in the Beacon. 

To see the latest winner, read "Reduce the stigma of reporting medical errors "   

Our next topic: Read "Nearly naked in the St. Louis night" and write about your impression of St. Louis. For details, visit Helium.

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Visit our special section to read coverage of this issue, watch Channel 9's stories and access resources to find help.

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