What wrong with you? You are so off you game. What happen to the good Dategirl??? Find Her Please!KwameWhy yes, Kwame, I agree. I have… Continue reading
The corset makes a comeback.
Ron Sims and Paul Schell are trying to save us from the worst of Sound Transit. But they're getting run over.
Is tax increment financing corporate welfare, or a boost for poor neighborhoods?
Christine Gregoire has stared down big tobacco and the feds who run Hanford. Can she lead the state?
I know I'm supposed to be worried about Roy Horn, but I can't stop thinking of the tiger. Ever since Montecore, the 7-year-old white tiger,… Continue reading
Researchers wonder whether same-sex couples are up to the commitment.
SEATTLE WEEKLY COLUMNIST Geov Parrish sat down this summer for an in-depth interview with the headline-generating, semi-disgraced initiative king Tim Eyman, back in the news… Continue reading
Best Career for an Adopted Kid
In Ballard, a new branch Seattle Public Library is a showcase of eco-efficient architecture.
ANOTHER YEAR, another wallow in journalistic retrospection. Sure as bowl games and supersales follow the holidays, so does another annual rite of excess: journalistic reviews… Continue reading
Minutes turn into days at the county's 911 unit.
Boeing 767s flew with flaws, claim whistle-blowers.
Unfortunately, reports of the monorail's demise are greatly exaggerated.
Can't Say 'No'I want to thank you for Philip Dawdy's fine article on downtown Seattle facing up to its future ["Time to Grow Up," Aug.… Continue reading
Mayor Greg Nickels says a taller, denser downtown is inevitable, even desirable. But critics like Peter Steinbrueck say bigger isn't better unless you do it right.
It's easy to dislike a plan to close schools, but who's got a better idea to save $20 million? Possibly lots of people.
A decision would determine whether Seattle stays a two-newspaper town.
From a Jan. 7 memo by Seattle Times Publisher Frank Blethen, in which he assesses 2002 and explains the locally owned paper's finances. The Times… Continue reading