Vol. 19, No. 49
44 Percent
Obama and Romney are tied in Eastern Washington; plus, a shake-up at the Downtown Spokane Partnership
By Joe O'Sullivan
The Cost of Reform
Three referendums would undo Idaho’s sweeping school reform
By Daniel Walters
Reaching Skyward
Will Spokane’s mystery hotel bring convention-goers?
The Middle Ground
Washington’s marijuana legalization effort is driving a wedge between pot activists
By Heidi Groover
Lessons of Antietam
The Civil War was the beginning of paying penance for America’s original sin — but the battle rages on
By Robert Herold
Trail Mix — 9.20.12
By Ted S. McGregor Jr.
If You Build It...
Pullman, Washington: home of lentils, football and a do-it-yourself indie rock scene
By Leah Sottile
Terror in the Night
An intimate peek into a dysfunctional bedroom and a worried mind
By Jordy Byrd
No Perry Mason
Best-selling author Scott Turow writes about lawyers — because he is one
By Matt Zambito
Story, Not Spectacle
How George Green resurrected the Lake City Playhouse through business savvy and back-to-basics theater
By E.J. Iannelli
2012 FALL ARTS PREVIEW — December
By Inlander Staff
First-Hand Accounts
An award-winning documentary takes you inside the West Bank
By Mike Bookey
Happy Hour and Video Games
The Spokane Symphony has been putting a hip, affordable face on a classic genre
2012 FALL ARTS PREVIEW — September
TV — Closing The Office
Northwest Original
You’ve heard of the Douglas Fir, but not the man who named it. The MAC would like to change that
Building Community
Katie Creyts is taking art out of the classroom and into the real world
By Carrie Scozzaro
2012 FALL ARTS PREVIEW — October
For Your Consideration — 9.20.12
Back in the Game
NxNW has a new CEO, a newly reinstated tax credit and a new(ish) interactive division and is looking to get “synergistic”
By Luke Baumgarten
The Carrot and the Stick
The reborn Spokane Poetry Slam is going to whip your poet ass into shape
2012 FALL ARTS PREVIEW — November
Lost in Translation?
Competing visions and questionable decisions have renewed debate over the identity of Spokane’s Japanese garden
UPDATE — The High Nooner
Big Dogs
Joey T’s does it Chicago style and doesn’t apologize for that
Dinner on a Stick
A new Greek cart in Moscow is raising the bar for street food possibilities
The Future, Rebooted
Hollywood manages to improve a ’90s Stallone flick, but just barely
By Ed Symkus
Bad Cop
Matthew McConaughey is coming back to relevancy with roles like this
New Old School
Lilac Linguistics are young kids with old souls
Hitting Reset
Communist Daughter finds new life in sobriety
By Ethan Maffey
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Immigrant communities and the nonprofits that help them prepare for a potential shift in immigration policy
By Victor Corral Martinez
Spokane Public Schools begins a new era, naming schools after a Holocaust survivor, a Japanese American teacher and a Chicano art professor
By Colton Rasanen
State law now allows for more traffic cameras. Spokane decides to dedicate its resulting revenue to new ideas.
By Eliza Billingham
NEWS BRIEFS: Pilot program finds repeat offenders in downtown Spokane
Sneak Peek Preview
Entree Food Newsletter
Weekend Countdown