Ancient lost cities stripped of treasure
LIMA, Peru -- An American explorer said an ancient, pre-Incan metropolis discovered by his father in Peru's remote cloud forest on an earlier expedition has been plundered by tomb robbers.
LIMA, Peru -- An American explorer said an ancient, pre-Incan metropolis discovered by his father in Peru's remote cloud forest on an earlier expedition has been plundered by tomb robbers.
In New Orleans, winding streets where revelers meandered, listening to jazz in the sticky heat, are now flooded with murky water. Some businesses and landmarks are submerged or damaged; others escaped the water but were ravaged by looters. Rescue workers are combing the waters in search of survivors, but a different kind of reckoning is also becoming clear. New Orleans is one of the most iconic cities in America, and some of the places and pieces that make it unique could be lost or looted.
Boxcar Books' art is as innovative as the store itself. The store enhanced its community-centered focus by featuring local artists on its walls. Local artists unveiled their work Friday night at the shop's art show opening -- an event from which everyone involved appeared to profit. Co-general coordinator Abbey Friedman said Boxcar shows "basically all local art" and does not charge for its space. Since artists do not have to pay to show their art there, Boxcar allows many artists an opportunity to put their work on display.
Far from the drab walls of museums, the Fourth Street Festival featured "living art" -- art made and sold by the actual artists. The tents, live music and smells of local food vendors added to the "alive and present" atmosphere of the festival. This year, the Fourth Street Festival is in its 29th year. It was started in 1976 by local potters to showcase southern Indiana's artistic talent. The potters chose Fourth Street because they admired its architecture and saw it as a growing and revitalizing area of downtown, said Dawn Adams, president of the Festival Committee and Bloomington resident.
VENICE, Italy -- A stellar American profile and heavy security distinguish this year's Venice Film Festival, which began Wednesday night with a martial arts extravaganza, Tsui Hark's "Seven Swords."
NEW YORK - Attempts to have library books removed from shelves increased by more than 20 percent in 2004 during the previous year, according to a new survey by the American Library Association. Three books with gay themes, including Maya Angelou's "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," were among the works most criticized.
BARTLETT, Ill. -- Walter S. Arnold was helping a monster break free of its stone prison. "This is actually a grotesque, not a gargoyle," the stone carver explained as he used a hydraulic lift to position the heavy figure of Indiana limestone. "Most people call them all gargoyles, but a gargoyle, technically, is a waterspout attached to a building. This guy's a freestanding figure, so he's a grotesque."
ANDERSON -- A 3-year-old girl stood on a small stool in the kitchen of her grandmother's house. She watched her grandmother prepare the meal. Eagerly, she waited for the hot skillet to cool some so her grandmother would let her cook. She learned to put a piece of cheese on a cracker and let it melt.
Bloomington residents should prepare for a night of "multi-sensory" experiences at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater. The members of the Salaam Middle Eastern Music Ensemble will hold their seventh annual Middle Eastern Gala at 7 p.m. to showcase Middle Eastern culture through food, music and dance.
Sally Gaskill is resigning as executive director of the Bloomington Area Arts Council after five years of service. Gaskill, whose tenure began in 2000, will step down Sept. 30, capping a successful term during which BAAC programs were greatly expanded and the council's massive debt was nearly erased.
Bloomington residents came together Wednesday night for what Mayor Mark Kruzan called the "absolute best use of a purple wall in the city of Bloomington."
The Mathers Museum is presenting an exhibit on materials that united people of most cultures, but rarely noticed. "Everyone wears shoes," said Ellen Sieber, curator of collections at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures.
Walking around the IU campus, students might overlook many things. They might not see the nearly transparent fish in the Jordan River, the pastel chalk scribbles on the sidewalks or the intricate stone chiseling on the Chemistry Building. It is virtually impossible, however, to fail to notice the campus's beauty.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Sudoku are deceptively simple-looking puzzles that require no math, spelling or language skills. Unlike crosswords, they don't require an extensive knowledge of trivia. They're logic, pure and simple. They're also addictive. Sudoku books -- pages and pages of grids with nothing more than numbers in boxes -- are selling so well they're quickly filling lists of best sellers.
BLAXSTA, Sweden - The pine and oak forests of Sweden are a world away from the sunny European river valleys known for their great wines. Yet merlot, chardonnay, cabernet and vidal blanc grapes are being cultivated just 500 miles south of the Arctic Circle, in a small vineyard nestled among glacial lakes and thick woodlands.
LONDON -- A gray-haired woman in a dark pantsuit strides across a New York street. Her image, filmed from afar, is barely in focus -- but it's unmistakably Greta Garbo.
With upwards of 400,000 books, 130,000 works of sheet music and seven million manuscripts, workers at the Lilly Library must rotate the large number of rare publications they display. John James Audubon's "Birds of America," however, remains in the foyer year-round.
NEW YORK -- It was a high-tech, pricey setting for what was once considered low-tech vandalism: Mackie speakers blasting rap while artists spray-painted graffiti on fake subway cars.
MIAMI -- Police had no suspects Sunday in the shooting of rap mogul Suge Knight at an MTV awards party - a typical development in the street-justice world of rap.