What’s in a nameplate?
In Ballard, a new branch Seattle Public Library is a showcase of eco-efficient architecture.
Aggrieved ‘knuckle-draggers’ and newsroom ‘elitists’ tear Seattle’s Newspaper Guild apart.
Alleged theft and tampering by state patrol chemist may have jeopardized thousands of drug cases.
The mayor uses government to aid his re-election bid.
City law fails to protect tenants’ rights.
Send listings two weeks in advance to info@seattleweekly.com. Community Monorail Meetings Join your fellow citizens and several City Council members…
Irreconcilable differences seem to have scotched the former love affair between this town’s would-be progressive politicians and the Green Party…
The writing’s on the wall
Fresh Air! Geov Parrish’s article made me smile [“Al Franken’s Sense,” May 4]. Geov is a straight-shootin’ truth-teller, armed with…
Back in March, a citywide poll showed voters supporting a housing levy that would add nearly $50 to their annual…
MAYBE IT WAS the depiction of a Jewish nursing-home manager as a terrorist in a turban-but self-proclaimed journalist Paul Trummel…
The Times publisher says he might pull the plug on the joint operating agreement.
Leo (July 23–Aug. 22)This week is going to suck. Not because anything bad will happen, per se. Quite the opposite;…
Nov. 16-22, 2005
Down-to-Earth Dispatches If only the dailies here would emulate Seattle Weekly‘s down-to-flesh-and-anguish reporting, as in your “Dispatches From the Quagmire”…
Kudos to Steve Lohse [“Wreck of the Martle,” June 16]. I was absolutely riveted by the story and could not…
True tales of bizarre hookups prove that love is everywhere.
Tracking the trends: What we see isn’t necessarily what we want—or get.
Hatcheries scientists want to restock vanishing bottomfish. Some of their colleagues fear a salmon-style disaster.
