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Thursday, August 11, 2005 Edition
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| Cover
Story: Cranking it up |
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Will Des Moines' investment and
interest in its local music scene
pay off?
by Michael Swanger
From
the construction of the Simon
Estes Amphitheater and the implementation
of a summer music series there,
to the formation of the city's
first live music commission and
recent discussions about building
yet another amphitheater, the
city of Des Moines has turned
up its interest and investment
in the local live music scene
in recent years. City officials
cite numerous reasons for their
interest in fostering Des Moines'
creative economy, including economic
development, youth retention and
quality-of-life issues. But whether
it's allowing promoters to provide
the content needed to fill the
infrastructure the city has provided,
re-examining its ordinances, or
building better venues, if city
officials are to help Des Moines'
live music scene thrive, some
insiders say it will have to do
a better job of working with the
music community to establish the
kind of public-private partnerships
that can benefit both sides. >>
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| Jon Gaskell:
Big thinking |
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More school is the only way to compete
globally
Gov. Tom Vilsack's idea to have an
expanded school year is big thinking
at its best. It should be his swan song.
And although he has no idea what a so-called
longer year might look like, says it's
up to legislators to take the ball and
run with it and says he doesn't have
all the answers, he's sure asked one
hell of a question: How are our children
going to compete globally when nations
around the world are promoting educational
systems that make ours inferior? >>
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| Civic
Skinny: Credit where not due |
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Successful meth bill 'everyone's' idea
The anti-meth bill that Gov. Tom Vilsack
signed was part of his administration's
policy on dealing with what was slowly
but surely becoming Iowa's biggest health
issue. Yet, despite the amount of infighting
that took place this past winter at
the statehouse over how the bill would
look, it seems like everyone and their
mother is taking credit for Iowa's overnight-success
story when it comes to battling the
scourge. "The best one is Chris
Rants," said a top Democrat, who
helped law enforcement and Attorney
General Tom Miller help Vilsack with
the push for the tightest restrictions
in the country. "He sent out his
newsletter that read, 'Our anti-meth
bill was a common-sense solution that
punished those in society who wish to
harm others and themselves with this
awful, disgusting drug.' Now, correct
me if I'm wrong, but isn't this the
same guy who fought the governor on
limiting the amount of pseudoephedrine
you can buy because he's such a huge
allergy sufferer (Rants also has had
his share of large checks from pseudoephedrine
manufacturers and grocery store and
convenience stores)? Just goes to show
you, a really good idea belongs to everybody."
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| Food
Dude : Flarah's: The post-Younkers Tea
Room |
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By Jim Duncan
CVFDude@aol.com
It's
tempting to describe the closing of
Younkers Tea Room with Margaret Mitchell
clichs: the end of an era; the
passing of a way of life; etc. Frankly
though, Joni Mitchell better explains
the last days of the grand old downtown
ballroom: "Don't it always seem
to go, that you don't know what you
got till it's gone?" >>
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| City
Sounds : |
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By Michael Swanger
michael@dmcityview.com
Versatility, perhaps
more so than just his guitar playing
or electrifying showmanship, may
be the reason for Buddy Guy's
popularity and induction into
the Blues and Rock 'n' Roll halls
of fame. It's what jumpstarted
his career as a bass-yielding
session player for Chess Records
in 1957, propelled him to become
a headlining guitarist in the
'60s, enabled him to work with
Junior Wells during the '70s and
'80s and helped him crossover
to mainstream audiences during
the '90s with his fiery brand
of blues-rock. >>more
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