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March 18 -  March 24, 2004 * Vol. 14, No. 12

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

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Cast your ballot in the 2004 Metro Pulse Best of Knoxville Readers' Poll!



Cumberland Avenue Revisited
A four-decade look at the Knoxville music scene
On sale now!

I am Seeking
Zip/Postal code



High on a Mountaintop
The practice of stripping whole mountains of their coal is moving into Tennessee, and the result is the dumping of millions of tons of “spoil” into valleys and watersheds. It has lots of people worried. Joe Tarr talks to some of them and to state and federal regulators about mining and reclamation methods and their consequences.

Citybeat
The quest for a new Knox County Public Library is put in present perspective by Jack Neely, and Joe Tarr stops the clock with a Time, Date, Place set downtown among veterinary students last weekend.
Plus: Seven Days, Meet your City, and Knoxville Found.

Joe Sullivan ponders and praises the collaborative attitude between city and county governments in Insights, Barry Henderson calls for a bigger view of transportation needs south of the river in Editor’s Corner, and Jack Neely tacks some odds and ends together in Secret History.


A Smokeless Bonfire
Composting is a cheap and fascinating way to gain good garden fertilizer. The process has captivated Jack Neely, who recounts its surprising joys and joyful surprises as only a veteran observer of garbage decomposition can describe them.


Music
James Fellenbaum by Steve Row
The Features by Leslie Wylie

Pulp
By Jeanne McDonald.

Movie Guru
Jack Neely reviews Hidalgo.

Restaurant Rover
Hugh Jeter reviews Cha Cha.

Snarls by Scott McNutt

Sports by Tony Basilio

CALENDAR * MOVIES

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trees have been saved by this website.

Knoxville has unusually pretty sunsets. I wonder why that is.