If Seattle is to remain at—or, at the very least, near—the forefront of the increasingly health-conscious U.S. food market, it’s…
Admirably serious and powerfully cast, this fate-heavy drama squeezes all the life out of death.
Interviewing Helen Thomas is sort of like preparing dinner for a world-renowned chef. It’s a tad intimidating. It’s hard to…
Weekend festival celebrates nonblockbusters.
For most progressives, this presidential election is not a choice between Al Gore and George W. Bush. It is a…
Our incoherent approach to alcohol.
Sen. Margarita Prentice is behind the controversial state crackdown on online gambling. But what kind of hand is she really playing?
Highlights—and otherwise—of the week’s calendar.
KATHY LEE’S NOT THE DARK SIDE?Having never been on a cruise, all I can envision is Kathy Lee belting out…
The politics of keeping a movement alive after the war.
How the discovery of a 9,000-year-old skeleton on the Columbia River may sink the land-bridge theory of North American settlement and has pitted science against Native American rights.
For those fighting gentrification downtown, enemies sometimes come disguised as friends.
Email your music listings at least eight days in advance of publication to: abonazelli@seattleweekly.com.Fax: 206-467-4377. Please, no phone calls. Wed…
SHANGHAI BABY by Wei Hui (Pocket Books, $24) YOU CAN’T BEAT this publicity with a stick: A beautiful, young author…
Critics charge too little is known about the health effects of the tear gas and pepper spray used by Seattle police during the WTO demonstrations.
ENGLISH-ONLY LAWS in Alabama. Sound Transit trains in the Rainier Valley. Legally they’ve ended up in the same camp and…
Sometimes you can actually infer a lot about a place by the sign that hangs outside, and that’s definitely the…
Dizzee Rascal and Run the Road catch us up with London’s grime scene.
An interview with Francois Girard and Don McKellar.
Coming back around to vinyl for holiday music.
