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March 20 - March 26, 2003 * Vol. 13, No. 12

Ear to the Ground
Eye on the Scene
Letters
News of the Weird
Archives
Calendar
MetroBlab
PulseCam

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Home & Garden
Jack Neely describes the wonders of the Howell Nursery, Scott McNutt gets color conscious in a different way, and Adrienne Martini scrapes together the facts on the faddish phenomenon that is scrapbooking.

Citybeat
Betty Bean takes a look at how Sequoyah Hills dwellers are up in arms over the emergence of a religious cult on their perimeter, and Mike Gibson recounts how an attack by thugs leaves a young man severely injured and his friends wondering how best to react.
Plus: Seven Days, Meet your City, and Knoxville Found.

Joe Sullivan has doubts about the city's and county's ability to absorb state financial cuts without raising taxes in Insights, Attica Scott finds the anti-war movement's been exclusionarily white in Color Conscious, and Jack Neely recalls what (in blazes) was the Imperial in Secret History.


Learning the Ropes
Chris Wohlwend talks to regional wrestler J.R. Star Dog to find out what kind of training it takes before a neophyte combatant is ready for a rumble in the ring.

From working in a local restaurant 15 years ago to winning a Grammy this year for producing records for the likes of the Foo Fighters, former Knoxvillian Nick Raskulinecz has come a long way, baby. Mike Gibson reports on what a long, strange trip it's been in the Music Feature. Heather Joyner finds promise in Brad Treadaway's photos of India, now on display at the Tomato Head, in Artbeat. Up with White Stripe; down with Cursive and Throwing Muses, in Platters. Are the United States and Europe really on the brink of a break-up? Massimo Pigliucci answers in Rationally Speaking.

CALENDAR * MOVIES

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