Vol. 25, No. 44
Death Man Walking
Dozens of patients died on nurse Richard Williams' watch, but he was never charged. Did authorities do too little, too late?
By Allie Johnson
Grave Losses
Lax laws and uncaring bureaucrats cause Missouri to erase another prehistoric mound
By Jeannette Batz
He Got Game
Bill Laurie has a basketball jones that won't go away. Who cares whether it makes economic sense?
By D.J. Wilson
We Deserve Better
Letters from the week of October 31, 2001
Is There a Certain Physical Type You Look for in a Potential Partner?
Week of October 31, 2001
By Wm. Stage
Look Who Didn't Trust the Feds
A blast from the past in the war on terrorism
By Ray Hartmann
Hatchet Job
The Black Panel proves that rock criticism is a science, not an art
By Paul Friswold
Chronic Town
Afroman's hit ode to chemical stimulation has him high on life in Mississippi
By Stephen Lemons
Judgment Day
Our intrepid reporter gets herself in a jam
By René Spencer Saller
Lo Faber Band
Wednesday, Nov. 7; Cicero's
By Lee Abraham
Kevin Gordon
Thursday, Nov. 1; Off Broadway
By Roy Kasten
David Sánchez Quintet
Wednesday-Saturday, Oct. 31-Nov. 3; Jazz at the Bistro
By Terry Perkins
Garbage
beautifulgarbage (Almo Sounds/Interscope)
By Niles Baranowski
Sounds Around Town
October 31, 2001
Kicks and Grins
Take a short nostalgia trip down the Mother Road for an enjoyable meal
By Joe Bonwich
Rolling Carr
Local favorite Bryan Carr is at the helm of yet another new restaurant
Boo Who?
Monsters, Inc. opens the door to a world so good it's scary
By Robert Wilonsky
A Savoir to Savor
A French New Wave veteran proves he's still nimble and vital
By Andy Klein
Film Openings
Openings for the week of October 31, 2001
Series/Festivals
Film series for the week of October 31, 2001
You Can Dance
Choreographer David Dorfman makes the unlikeliest of toes twinkle
By Deborah Cottin
Rubber Cement
Three exhibits honoring architect Tadao Ando shine a light on the man who designed the new Pulitzer museum
By Ivy Schroeder
Paper Moon
Origami superstar Takaaki Kihara folds under pressure
By Byron Kerman
Heaven Sent
A simple story about God and power is transformed into a revelation by the Rep's Studio Theatre
By Brian Hohlfeld
Hell of a Long Day
24 has been the most talked-about show of the season and for all the wrong reasons