Glimpses of China’s inner workings

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

The Beijing Olympics have come and gone, and despite all the wall-to-wall television coverage, I’m not sure I have a clearer view of China than I did before the Games began. “Business As Usual: New Video From China,” featuring the work of Cao Fei and Yang Fudong, now up at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, offers much more to chew on than the fluffy features about Chinese tumbling schools and monks who practice martial arts that aired during the Olympics.

Those were gauzy postcards home from bedazzled travelers. The three videos in “Business As Usual,” organized by the Arizona State University Art Museum, are stoked with ambiguity, angst, and sometimes hope. Yang’s two works, “Honey” and “City Lights,” and Fei’s triptych, “Whose Utopia,” focus on young Chinese people divorced from tradition by a new economy, hard at work but emotionally adrift.

It’s not that these people can’t find themselves; in Yang’s videos, at least, they don’t even know to look. His is the bleaker view. “Honey,” in particular, piquantly depicts an aimless though lushly beautiful roundelay in which a young woman garbed in fishnet stockings and fur stoles wanders the streets, smokes cigarettes, and plays cards with implacable young men in Mao suits. It’s as if all the young men’s sublimated sexual energy has burst forth in the form of this femme fatale to taunt them, and still they don’t act.

The comic “City Lights” features two identically dressed young office workers; their suits and ties signify that they’re part of China’s new middle class. One carries an umbrella; the other, shadowing the first, mimes carrying an umbrella. They do the same with a pistol, and then again dancing with a woman to the loud strains of a bossa nova.

Fei turns the factory into the backdrop for a fairy tale. Everyone has a dream, perhaps especially young people trapped in perennial drudgery, and in identifying the dreams of some of these workers, she saves them from faceless anonymity and restores their dignity.

The heart of the video is its second part, “Factory Fairytale,” in which individual workers act out their dreams on the factory floor: A man dances among the assembly benches, a ballet dancer pirouettes in wings and a tutu, a fellow strums his guitar. This passage ends mournfully, with a young woman gazing out of her dormitory window at rows and rows of other drab buildings.

Fei’s final chapter, “My Future Is Not a Dream,” features portraits of these people posing solemnly at work. An essay by co-curator Marilyn A. Zeitlin reveals that in China, even kings were not shown in portraits until the 18th century. Fei addresses a portion of China’s national identity, its historical focus on the greater good over individual aspiration, and here gives faces to the faceless masses.

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Libraries adapt as needs change

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

Your local library may soon start looking a lot more like a bookstore, with walls of best-selling books, big living room-style spaces with comfy couches and chairs, space for readings and classes, and even a coffee kiosk.

A big shift for libraries has popular books coming out from the shelves and showing their faces along with CDs, videos and games  on what some librarians call “power walls.”

In Charlotte County, some patrons are already seeing the kind of service Sarasota wants to offer.

Customers at the new mid-county library are encouraged to order online, pick up and check out by themselves. Common areas are open, inviting and bustling with activity. Quieter areas for study are away from the library’s center.

Last year, the county completed a five-year plan for library services that includes two new regional libraries in Punta Gorda and Englewood. Those libraries will include features like historical archives and museum pieces, said Angie Patteson, library manager for Charlotte.

The willingness to change among librarians came after surveys of patrons found that they rarely raved about the depth of a collection or its organization.

“They tend to come and spend time at a library where there are friendly people, some comfortable seating,” said Sarabeth Kalajian, who heads the library system for Sarasota County. “Maybe some aspect of the collection is important to them, but it’s mainly just their basic need for information.”

In the future, there will be fewer titles on display, but almost any book will be available through inter-library loan from across town or the globe. Sarasota patrons can already browse for books from the local collection online and order them for pickup at any branch.

Gone as well, for the most part, will be the Dewey Decimal System.

“This is a renegade trend in libraries to throw out Dewey and organize the collection in the way that people might logically find things,” Kalajian said.

Much like a bookstore, patrons will find a career development section, exercise, finance and self-help sections and areas full of cookbooks, art books or science books.

This new model for libraries is not new. In 1998, the Richmond Public Library in British Columbia opened its Ironwood Branch in a retail space. Librarian Cate McNeely, a recognized visionary in her field, instituted changes that make it seem more like a high-end bookstore. Overnight, it was the most popular branch and dubbed “The Library of the Future.”

“We are a gathering place with not a lot of rules,” Jeffrey said. “Bring a coffee, have a snack, browse, sit by the fireplace, watch the Beijing Olympics on one of our big-screen TVs, take your kids to our daily story time, fill up your shopping basket with good reads and head home to enjoy them.”

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Cowboys Cougars Game Figures To Be Fun

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

Oklahoma State doesn’t know much about Washington State, which is OK because Washington State doesn’t know much about itself.

Saturday’s game won’t exactly be sandlot ball, but there could be variances thereof.

“On our offense, that’s what we do,” Gundy said, “and we’ve got some guys who are pretty good at it.”

Starting quarterback Zac Robinson smiled at the mysterious trip to the Great Northwest, claiming he gets a kick out of the possibilities.

“Oh, absolutely. I think that’s a lot of fun,” Robinson said. “They’ve got tape on us, but we’ve got virtually nothing on them. They could come out and show a completely different look than what we’ve been practicing. That makes it kind of fun.”

In August, teams are far more concerned about executing their own stuff than what the other team might try to do.

Openers are closer to raw football than any game on the schedule. Just line up, snap the ball and let’s see who’s better.

“When it comes down to it, it’s about tackling, flying around and having fun while you’re out there,” Cowboys junior linebacker Andre Sexton said. “If you can go out there and tackle, it doesn’t really matter what plays they run. We have to go out there and find a way to stop them.”

The threat of the unknown exists every week to a certain degree, but OSU vs. WSU is beyond the norm.

The Cougars have a new head coach in Paul Wulff, a WSU graduate who spent the previous 15 seasons at Eastern Washington, the last eight as head coach.

The Cougars have a new co-defensive coordinators in Chris Ball, previously the secondary coach at Pittsburgh, and Jody Sears, who was Wulff’s defensive coordinator at Eastern Washington.

This meant the Cowboys studied the defensive schemes of three programs WSU, Pitt and Eastern Washington to prep for Saturday.

“Between the three of them, we’ve practiced quite a bit of stuff the last two months,” OSU co-offensive coordinator Gunter Brewer said. “Good thing we opened up with them because if we played them in the second game, we wouldn’t have had as much time to prepare for them.”

There also are unknowns with the Cowboys.

How good their defense will be has pretty much been an unknown this entire millennium.

Who will be calling OSU’s offensive plays wasn’t known until Monday’s media luncheon, when Gundy revealed he would be calling the shots, not Brewer or co-coordinator Trooper Taylor.

“It’s fun for me,” Gundy said. “The reason I’m involved more is because it’s what I like to do.”

Gundy has yet to choose between Alex Cate and Brandon Weeden for the backup quarterback and won’t do so until Saturday, if necessary.

Asked if he was playing mind games in not revealing who would call plays and the back-up quarterback, Gundy shrugged and said, “There’s nothing to hide, plus he (Wulff) doesn’t care who our backup quarterback is.”

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Torres could show mother superior

Sunday, August 17th, 2008

When her teenage “daughters” on the United States team get all giggly and goofy in their dorm at the Athletes’ Village, America’s swimming mom is tempted to tell them to pipe down and chill out. “Then I have to remind myself that I was once them,” Dara Torres says.

Everybody else does, though, and more than a few skeptics find it odd that a woman in a speed race can be faster than she was when she was half her age. Torres knew there would be whispers about her doping when she made her comeback, seven years after she won five medals in Sydney. So she volunteered for Project Believe, a rigorous US Anti-Doping Agency program that subjects Torres to frequent testing.

It also has made her a figure of fascination, if not awe, among her younger teammates, most of whom weren’t alive when Torres competed in her first Games. “She’s like a cool mom who wants to hang out and bond with the team,” says Christine Magnuson.

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