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The Principal Matter
Teachers said Principal Gil Cho was dictatorial. Students said he manhandled them. The school district said he was doing a good job.
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He's No Angel
They once called him a savior who helped people in need. Today, Edwin Parada is accused of taking money from Latinos unfamiliar with real estate laws.
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Nonconformity Still Reigns!
The top eccentrics of San Francisco, and that's saying something.
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A Time to Kill
The SPCA is struggling to finance a new hospital, and one way to save money is to speed up euthanasia.
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State of the Cart
Join us as we map the street food scene and find out why there aren't more vendors in this most food-involved and temperate of cities.
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Village Voice
At JFK, Erhan Yildirim clears corpses for takeoff.
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Clouds In Fog
Published on April 30, 2008
Looming, delicate, billowed clouds howl through the work of Gale Antokal at her new exhibit, "No Vanishing Point." With these large-scale chalk pastels on paper, the artist continues her habit of producing epic, washy images, now taking them a step closer to complete abstraction. Some of Antokal's pieces look like old photographs snapped out a moving car's window the kind children in backseats with Polaroids used to be so fond of taking. A low angle, a blurry tree, and a lowlit sky recall moments preceding the inevitable, eternal question: "Are we there yet?" But we love those clouds. What do you see in them? How did she capture them? Is their promised rain welcome, or ruinous? Antokal's previous work focused on leaving, with its motifs of people carrying luggage and tilting pigeon swarms. She seems to be paring down, which is generally a good sign among visual artists, though we're sad to hear that her signature inclusion of ash and flour as pigments isn't repeated here.
May 1-June 14, 2008