Vol 23 Issue 1108
Published 2/27/2002 through 3/5/2002
24 (Cover Story)
A day in the life of Twin Cities music—hour by hour.
Down to the Wire (City Beat)
Opponents of a new power line in the suburbs win one, and lose one.
Off Beat
Tipping Point, Smile When You Say That, Sid, and The First One's Always the Hardest.
Playing to Win (All the Rage)
Coleman, Wellstone, and the politics of purity.
Mountains out of Molehills (Hang Time)
Wally Szczerbiak, ESPN The Magazine, and team chemistry.
Just Kidding (Dish)
Bring the family or don't bring the family: that is the question. First Course, Bob's West Bank Pizza, Highland Grill
Hiroshima, Con Amore (Arts Feature)
Vital Forms reconsiders mid-century America's atomic animus.
Dog Day Afternoon (Music)
Three decades after their breakup, Slaughter & the Dogs are having their day.
Lazy Boy (Music)
The Bottle Rockets practice the art of not trying hard.
NORMAN BLAKE AND PETER OSTROUSHKO: Meeting on Southern Soil (CD Review)
RINOÇÉROSE: Music Kills Me (CD Review)
THE DB'S: Stands for deciBels/Repercussion (CD Review)
The Young and the Restless (Film)
"Women With Vision" Finds New Distaff Auteurs Getting Antsy.
War Movies are Hell (Film)
Three new films offer grueling tours of duty in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
The Clock Runs Backward (Theater)
With scripts by Kevin Kling and Lee Blessing, the Illusion and Guthrie Theaters go forward into the past.
Nothing But Net (Dance)
Internet2 cheats geography for Shapiro & Smith Dance Troupe.