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Article Archive

Vol 25 Issue 1220
Published 4/21/2004 through 4/27/2004

Downtown Renaissance, Again (Cover Story)
Can condos and entertainment venues make a neighborhood out of the city's core?

If You Lived Here,You'd Be Downtown By Now (Cover Story)
Demographics, interest rates, and shrinking office rentals make for a downtown residential boom.

Open Season (Cover Story)
Times are tough for downtown office rentals.

Q: When is a Mall Not Really a Mall? A: When It's Block E (Cover Story)

Fables of the Reconstruction (News)
A Coalition memo reveals that even true believers see the seeds of civil war in the occupation of Iraq.

Bras, Bards, and the Pleasure of the Found (Jim Walsh)
When life gives you lemons, make collages

Viewmaster
Sun's set.

Hate the Playoffs, Love the Game? (Hang Time)
God created the world in six days, so why does it take eight weeks to pick an NBA champion: A City Pages dialogue

Outhustled (Hang Time)
The Wolves leave their game in Minnesota.

The Beauty of Ugly (Hang Time)
The Wolves suffocate Denver with a capital D.

Burger Meisters (Dish)
Of undeterrable German shepherds and buttered bison.

The Barbarian Invasions (Arts Feature)
An anthropologist's journey from a porn booth to the Mongolian steppes.

"We Can't Be Stopped!" (Music)
The Plastic Constellations discuss manpiles, drinking games, and the best spring break ever.

How You Say Le Rock 'n' Roll? (Music)
The crystalline beauty of Air's 'Talkie Walkie' doesn't get lost in translation.

Do That Clappity-Clap Thing! (I'm All Ears)
Putting our hands together for the Pixies, Mirah, and Stellastarr*

Almost Famous (Film)
You'll be relieved to hear that Mayor of the Sunset Strip isn't about Robert Evans or Arnold Schwarzenegger, but Rodney Bingenheimer.

The Man Comes Around Again (Film)
An old genre is back to judge the living and the dead.

Interpreter of Maladies (Theater)
Playwright Julia Cho gives one woman a world's worth of troubles.

Touch Me, I'm Sick (TV)
Quirkiness proves contagious on 'Kingdom Hospital'.

The Talking Mule (Books)
Following the white line from Colombia to your corner.

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