Is Spokane making progress on homelessness — or caught in a Groundhog Day time loop?
By Daniel Walters
Spokane students demand gun reform; plus, Spokane wrestles with dwindling water resources, and Airway Heights seeks City Council applicants
Witnessing a stranger's kindness can lead to re-engagement with the world
By Inga Laurent
Readers respond to our cover story 'My Body, State's Choice?' (May 26, 2022) exploring what could happen if Roe v. Wade is overturned
Question of the Week
If you were a researcher, what would you study?
It was a week of good, bad and ugly around the world of weed
By Will Maupin
In Antoinette Nwandu's Pass Over, two Black men wonder if it's ever possible to reach the promised land
By E.J. Iannelli
Internationally celebrated ceramic artist Patti Warashina returns to city of her youth
By Carrie Scozzaro
Eight new summer 2022 shows to stream right now
By Bill Frost
Tokyo Vice is a good crime drama even if its story is exaggerated, local Benson brothers latest mural, and new music!
The Farm Chicks Show celebrates 20 years this weekend; here's our guide to even more local vintage shopping before or after
By Chey Scott
I Saw You
Week of June 2
Chef Ricky Webster adds lunch fare and expands his pastry purview at Morsel, a spinoff of Rind and Wheat
To-Go Box: South Hill’s new all-season spot; barbecue event From the Ashes returns + more
By Carrie Scozzaro and Madison Pearson
Fire Island offers up a potent cocktail of queer comedy and Austenian romance
By Seth Sommerfeld
Watcher is a methodical, unnerving psychological thriller
By Josh Bell
BaLonely's Norman Robbins sets out on fresh musical paths while fostering the Spokane music scene
University of Idaho looks at growing crops in the same field to better share nutrients like nitrogen
By Samantha Wohlfeil
New research at WSU could help doctors stop patients' diseases before they start
By Summer Sandstrom
How Black Panther can be a template for a psychologically sound civics education for kids
EWU is training the next generation of cybersecurity experts and helping local governments defend themselves from attacks
By Nate Sanford
A Gonzaga professor analyzed crowdsourced flycatcher songs to weigh in on an infamous birder debate
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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