The Death and Life of Great American Newspapers
Posted on 27. Nov, 2009 by Abe in Features
Ink and newsprint, in the past century, have dominated the exchange of information and broke groundbreaking stories about war, corruption and injustice. In a sense, newspapers and their physical forms contain our collective memory and consciousness, and it is in this sense that many of us feel a loss for print media.
This Is Not Lonely Planet: A Guide to Seoul’s Underground
Posted on 25. Nov, 2009 by Dafne Lee in Features, Travel
Although I have lived in Seoul, South Korea my entire life, I do not fully belong to it. I’d rather think that I have been living along the flow of underground culture in Seoul. There is no coherency to Korean underground culture, but people tend to generalize it as “indie.” These anecdotes are about “indie” [...]
Holy Water
Posted on 25. Nov, 2009 by Gray Beltran in Features
Everywhere they kept dying. Thousands of the birds’ corpses lay scattered around the huge flat lake—and thousands more washed ashore each day. The birds had been behaving strangely in the months before, with a small number of them dying near the south end of the water.
