Recent Blog Posts
Tue Jan 6, 5:08 PM
Tue Jan 6, 3:54 PM
Tue Jan 6, 11:41 AM
Tue Jan 6, 11:20 AM
Tue Jan 6, 11:00 AM
Tue Jan 6, 10:15 AM
No related articles found
National Features >
Village Voice
Our gossip columnist and noted fashion plate serves up a year's worth
of unforgettable images.
By Michael Musto
Phoenix New Times
Omar Call makes a pastime out of baiting Christians.
By Niki D'Andrea
Miami New Times
Lost art or horrible slaughter? It's all in the eye of the slayer.
By Natalie O'Neill
Adventures in the Polar North
Published on May 01, 2008 at 2:00am
The Northwest Passage! Lo, how she beckoned to men stout of heart and steely-willed, an icy temptress who no man might tame. To venture into those Arctic climes was to sound the depths of ones own bravery; for many a soul were taken into her embrace, there pressed gainst her frozen bosom, never again to be seen by his fellow man!
The Linda Hall Library (5109 Cherry Street, 816-363-4600) today exhibits for the curious and the scholarly Ice: A Victorian Romance a collection of books chronicling the quixotic and forbidding search for the Northwest Passage in the period from 1818 to 1860, though no man would survive the journey until the 1903 expedition of Norwegian Roald Amundsen. The exhibition offers illustrated volumes depicting the search for the missing Franklin expedition in 1845; gloriously illuminated maps; illustrated depictions of the Aurora Borealis, various Northern fauna and such geologic and meteorological phenomena as those few brave souls saw fit to circulate. Spaces are limited and reservations required; call 816-926-8772.
Thu., May 1, 2008