Issue Archive for the Week of
Jul 11 -
17,
2002
Vol. 11, No. 43
News
In the late '90s, Seattle voters were fed up with a city council that was too cozy with downtown retailers and developers. A slew of reform-minded candidates were elected to the city council as a result. Years later, what the hell happened to Seattle's pr
By Josh Feit
Sand Point offers Seattle artists space, venues, views and studios. But is that enough?
By Emily Hall
Georgetown's Industrial Coffee Hosts Political Campaign Kickoff
By Amy Jenniges
Undercover Activists Spoof the Seattle Times with Satirical Seattle Crimes
By Amy Jenniges
Bike Enthusiast Combs Town for Her Beloved Beach Cruiser
By Isolde Raftery
Cops Remove Activists' Political Yard Signs
By Amy Jenniges
Music
The Kills Keep Rock Bloody, Raw
By Jenny Tatone
PuffyAmiYumi's Pop Confections
By Kathleen Wilson
The Disappearing Act Comes Back
By Michael Alan Goldberg
That Inescapable Seattle "Sound"
By Jennifer Maerz
By Christopher DeLaurenti
Film
The Believer Offers a First: the Nazi Jew
By Sean Nelson
An Interview with Henry Bean
By Charles Mudede
Perdition Rules!
By Bradley Steinbacher
Spirals Obsess Kurozu-cho!
By Annie Wagner
Cover Art
Columns
I MAY BE A PROSTITUTE, BUT YOU'RE AN IDIOT
The Week in Review
By David Schmader
Not Dissing Chris
By Wm. Steven Humphrey
Bummers and Booty Calls
By Kathleen Wilson
Dan Loves Paul
By Dan Savage
Visual Art
The Secret Life of Tschotkes
By Emily Hall
Books
In the World with Al Burian
By Jennifer Maerz
Restaurants
In with the Old
By Min Liao
A Pavlovian Problem
By Emily Hall