alibi online

Free Will AstrologyAlibi's Personals
 

california


news

The Daily Word in Israel, miracle Lobos, Nativity spats

Israel is prepared to send troops into Gaza, but would still prefer a diplomatic solution.

Alford’s Lobos snag a miracle 70-69 win over George Mason, head to the Pacific Jam tournament final against #23 UConn.

Fight over Nativity displays in California heading to court.

Twinkies will survive!

Some animals were in fact harmed in the making of The Hobbit.

Two APD officers under investigation for sexual misconduct.

Curiosity rover suggests that astronauts might be able to survive on Mars.

Bill Nye and Shia LeBeouf: A glorious combination.

Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez appear to be back together.

Nob Hill business owners will meet tonight to duke it out over food trucks.

The juice train.

Apparently the KC Chiefs killed a guy.

Gas prices drop in New Mexico, AAA shows state at below the national average (finally something we WANT to be below average!).

Hubble may have photographed its farthest galaxy yet.

If you are going to counterfeit bills, at least use the right president.

Ah, action figures.

    Flashback

    One of the Alibi’s earliest editors remembers the olden days.

    Lauri Sagle is an instructor of English at the University of Hawai’i and the recipient of the Chancellor’s Award for Teaching Excellence. She is a core contributor to the English department and an integral member of the women’s studies department. She left the Alibi on December 28, 1994.http://www.hawaii.edu/about/awards/hilo.php?award=sagle
    Lauri Sagle is an instructor of English at the University of Hawai’i and the recipient of the Chancellor’s Award for Teaching Excellence. She is a core contributor to the English department and an integral member of the women’s studies department. She left the Alibi on December 28, 1994.

    http://www.hawaii.edu/about/awards/hilo.php?award=sagle

    The early days of The Alibi, then known as NuCity (before a Chicago publication with a phonetically identical name threatened to rip out all of our editorial teeth), were the types of days that every flash-of-genius writer chortles over when he's being interviewed by Oprah about his sizzling debut novel, or every tech guru recalls as she laughingly characterizes her time spent paying her dues before the Big Brilliant Idea that Changed Technology ForEver. They were days of subsisting on Fred's bagels (since we mostly got paid in "bagel bucks" instead of cash); working (sometimes even crashing) in a hot office box with Department of Health condemnable carpet; and simply assuming, with the nearly impervious certainty of youth, that everything would get better, and that we'd have fun in the meantime.

    But since I was a bit older (a UNM grad student) than the whippersnappers (freshly minted University of Wisconsin alumni who'd graduated at age 14 after starting the now-famous Onion and who then bounded over to Albuquerque to launch NuCity), maybe my perviousness was perviouser because a couple of symbolic events shook my sense of admittedly weak professionalism.

    One came in the form of the "serious" debut of our politics issue. We'd worked hard on the format and content: local pols running for office had been profiled; corresponding election season events had been catalogued; illustrations had been applied to cleverly embellish the stories. I, as the Managing Editor/Editor, along with our Copy Editor at the time, had the last look through before giving the final approval. Perfect! So proud! So political! So grown up! Too bad about the blaring, mega-point headline that spelled the word "candidate" wrong, as we saw the next day before the issue inexorably hit the stands–a classic minor-major detail. The other folks at the paper who were psychologically healthier than I was just laughed it off, smoked a cigarette, and began laying out the next issue.

    The second event actually came before the first one chronologically, but it had bigger ramifications at the time. We were applying for membership in AAN, the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, and a group of us (Chris Johnson, Dan Scott, Landry? Dabney? O'Leary? Jonesy? Petersen?) had flown over to California with our precious offering–an issue that featured a solid, well-researched story by the inimitable Tim McGivern, illustrated by the swashbuckling Jason Waskey. We actually had to appear before a panel of AAN judges in an American Idol meets the North Korean Ministry of People's Security moment. And we were eviscerated. Bomblets like "juvenile" and "unprofessional" and "unworthy" were tossed about casually by people who were supposed to be cool! They had the word "alternative" in their dang title! Where was the encouragement, the pub invitation, the tender promise of mentorship? AAN was important since, through membership, we could use their big stories in our paper and they could pick up and circulate ours as well. It was the only time, to date, that a professional setback made me cry. One journalist in the judging group did attempt to defend us and spoke to us afterward as well. He was the lone African American on the panel and commended the diversity of our coverage. Chris and Dan lobbed a few choice expletives, laughed, said we'd be fine, and smoked some cigarettes.

    They were right. We eventually did make it into AAN, now operating under the expanded 21st identity of Association of Alternative Newsmedia. "Canidates," both in title and in practice, are long forgotten. (Although we did once have an interesting conversation with at-the-time New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson, which presaged his perpetual libertarian presence on the national ticket ... but that's another story.) So while most of us, past and present, may not be Oprah dazzlers or tech zillionistas, we probably have better carpet now, and the Alibi still laughs, spits out an expletive here and there, maybe smokes a cigarette when the spouse isn't looking, and publishes onward.

    V.20 No.10 | 3/10/2011
    Mike Watt

    Feature

    Punk Is Whatever We Made It to Be

    An interview with bassist Mike Watt

    Mike Watt's latest album, Hyphenated-Man, is not about the past. "It's kind of a meditation on me in middle age," he says.

    [ more >> ] Add a Comment [ permalink ]

    news

    Californians just say no to marijuana legalization

    It's official. Prop 19 failed. But supporters promise they'll be back in 2012.

    V.19 No.38 | 9/23/2010
     

    Talking Points

    A Soldier in the Drug War Switches Sides

    Conservative Judge James Gray was on the bench for 25 years in Orange County. He was a federal prosecutor and a Navy JAG before that. He ran for Congress as a Republican in the late ’90s and as a Libertarian for Senate a few years later.

    [ more >> ] View/Add Comments [ 21 ] [ permalink ]

    News

    The Daily Word 6.1.10: New Mexico Primary, Stylish Werewolves, The Other Fergie

    Get out there and vote in today’s primary!

    Tropical Storm Agatha makes a giant hole in Guatemala City.

    A woman who was hit by a car sues Google for faulty Google Map directions.

    Kids are wearing yellow contact lenses and fangs in schools these days.

    A new poll finds 46 percent of Americans suffer from debt stress.

    Sarah Ferguson, videotaped in a hotel attempting to sell access to her ex Prince Andrew, tells Oprah she was just drinking.

    The U.S. military withdraws from earthquake-ravaged Haiti today.

    24 miles of Louisiana coastline has been fouled due to the Gulf oil spill.

    A man shoots an employee and then himself at a North Carolina Target store.

    California is split in half when it comes to Arizona’s SB 1070.

    PNM wants a 21 percent rate hike on your electric bill.

    Worker bees swarm Wall Street on Memorial Day. Are they trying to tell us something?

    Moriarty may be the future site of a memorial for DWI victims.

      blog

      February 4th

       
       

      211– Roman Emperor Septimius Severus dies, leaving the Roman Empire in the hands of his two quarrelsome sons, Biggus Dickus and Naughtius Maximus.

      1703 – In Edo (Tokyo), 46 of the Forty-seven Ronin commit seppuku (ritual suicide) as recompense for avenging their master's death.

      LOL u r doin it rong.

      1789 – George Washington is unanimously elected as the first President of the United States by the U.S. Electoral College.

      1936 – Radium becomes the first radioactive element to be made synthetically.

      not the roller derby team. Is there one called radium girls?

      1974 – The Symbionese Liberation Army kidnaps Patty Hearst in Berkeley, California. Looks smashing in a beret.

      1983 - Singer Karen Carpenter died at her parent’s home in Los Angeles of heart failure caused by chronic anorexia nervosa, she was 32.

      For Nick

      1987 – Liberace went to the big piano in the sky at the age of 67, due to complications from AIDS.

      2004 - Mark Zuckerberg launched "Thefacebook"

      V.18 No.46 | 11/12/2009
       
      Eric Williams ericwphoto.com

      Feature

      Sweet Relief

      Chocolatier aims to make medical marijuana go down easy

      Scott Van Rixel's career in food started the day following his 12th birthday, with a dishwashing job at a Serbian fish fryery. "My mom and my dad would pick me up Friday night and make me strip down to my underwear outside because I stunk so bad of fish," he recalls. "It was miserable, but I loved it."

      [ more >> ] View/Add Comments [ 4 ] [ permalink ]

      Join our mailing list for exclusive info, the week's events and free stuff!
       

      • Select sidebar boxes to add below. You can also click and drag to rearrange the boxes; minimize, maximize and close using the little icons on each box. To re-add a box you closed, return to this menu.
      • Because you are not logged in, any changes you make to these boxes will vanish as soon as you click to another page. If you log in, the boxes will stick.
      • alibi.com
      • Latest Posts
      • Most Active Stories
      • Latest User Posts
      • Highest-Rated Posts
      • Most Active Users
      • Web Exclusives
      • Latest User Blogs
      • Latest Chowtown Reviews
      • Recent Rocksquawk Discussions
      • Recent Classifieds
      • This Week's Alibi Picks
      • Albuquerque
      • Duke City Fix
      • Albuquerque Beer Scene
      • What's Wrong With This Picture?
      • Reddit Albuquerque
      • ABQ Journal Metro
      • ABQrising
      • ABQ Journal Latest News
      • Del.icio.us Albuquerque
      • NM and the West
      • New Mexico FBIHOP
      • Democracy for New Mexico
      • Only in New Mexico
      • Mario Burgos
      • Democracy for New Mexico
      • High Country News
      • El Grito
      • NM Politics with Joe Monahan
      • Stephen W. Terrell's Web Log
      • The Net Is Vast and Infinite
      • Slashdot
      • Freedom to Tinker
      • Is there a feed that should be on this list? Tell us about it.
        "The Best is Yet to Come"
        "The Best is Yet to Come"6.22.2013