National Features

  • Phoenix New Times
    Canine Crusaders

    That drug-sniffing dog up ahead? He may not be your best friend.

    By Ray Stern
  • Broward-Palm Beach New Times
    The Muscle Men

    Thanks to a string of Florida "anti-aging clinics," baseball's steroid scandal isn't limited to superstars.

    By Michael J. Mooney
  • Miami New Times
    Picked On

    Farm workers earn nada in America's green-bean capital.

    By Janine Zeitlin
  • Village Voice
    "Why I'm No Longer a Brain-Dead Liberal"

    An election-season essay from one of America's greatest playwrights.

    By David Mamet

Gumbo Limbo
Cajun queen: I suggest Michael Renner pay a return visit to Graham's Grill on a Wednesday evening, when there's live music ["Ragin' Cajun," September 15]. An amiable guy plays a respectable steel drum, plus synthesizer and what-have-you, and happy-hour drink prices are extended during the time he's there. I think the music goes from 6 to 9 p.m. Like the food, the music is perhaps not truly outstanding, but it's enjoyable and I always feel like I'm at a very cheerful party. I invariably leave feeling better than I did when I arrived, which is hard to beat.
Barb Margulis
Kirkwood

Cajun spleen: It sounds like Michael Renner had a much nicer experience than we did the two times we went to Graham's Grill. The first time they were out of crawfish étouffée. The second time they "lost" our reservations and we were stuck sitting in the area you mentioned -- right next to the musicians. Needless to say, that kept our conversation to a minimum. That night they were out of red beans and rice. Seriously. Both times the service was less than stellar as well. Maybe they knew you were a restaurant critic.
Ericka Brewer
St. Louis

Tall Tale
High praise: Very nice article by Mike Seely about the Hansbrough brothers ["Tallboys," September 1]. The family background was spot on. I've known Gene since grade school and Tami since junior high. I was at Mizzou with Gene in the mid-'70s. He was a pickup-ball legend at Brewer Fieldhouse before I arrived, while I was at Mizzou and after I left. He is generally recognized as playing more pickup ball than anyone else in Mizzou history, undergrad, med school and residency.

That and the fact that he won the Big Eight indoor high jump in '72 and the outdoor in '73 are the only things you didn't mention. Of course, not many people remember. Extremely good work.
James A.(Alfia) Hobbs
Poplar Bluff

Burke's Works
Not everybody loves Raymond: I am a survivor! From age nine through age sixteen I was under the absolute control of a homosexual priest [Malcolm Gay, "Immaculate Deception," August 25]. Together we did everything one can imagine that a man and boy can do. After many years of psychosis, I went to the chancery office to tell them my story. That was a waste of time.

Gay Ray is the worst example of an archbishop I can imagine. Burke is such an egomaniac, he is not going to have any priests left to follow him because he is leading them down a path which will destroy the church.
Name withheld by request
Florissant

Wicked ways: For all those "anonymous" priests who are selling their eternal souls to belong to some unnamed American secular "church" and who choose to anonymously persecute good, holy and faithful Archbishop Burke, I have a warning:

Read Ezekiel 3:17-20 -- you may be "anonymous" here on earth, but God will be waiting for you after your deaths.
Darla Meyers
Hudson, Wisconsin

Requiescat in pace: We have no proof but believe my son, who committed suicide in 1984, was one of those abused by Michael McGrath. And of course he was often reassigned. I hope you can publish the names of all the abusers.
Name withheld by request
Florissant

A rare and telling tale: I can't imagine all the research required to put this type of article together. Malcolm Gay's hard work is appreciated. Even though the victims' statements are disturbing to read, they are key to understanding the true scope of the clergy abuse problem. It is rare to read a true and documented account of a bishop's response to victims' allegations, and very telling.
Kim Fischer
Crystal City

Pet Corner
Doing an Elliott Davis: I can't believe what Unreal said about Randy Grim's successful effort to change the city pet ordinances to include the word "guardian" as opposed to just "owner" ["Doggie Style, August 25]. A few years ago, when you were still a true alternative paper, you did a cover story on Grim and his noble Stray Rescue program. Now you're trying to do an Elliott Davis on him?

When I worked for the state of Missouri in the late '80s and we only had one computer for the whole office, I used to joke that 50 percent of government time is spent waiting for Liquid Paper to dry. They waste time anyway, constantly, so why not get them to do something that makes a positive point?

Was it a waste of city time and taxpayer money to change the ordinance? A geology professor I studied under lived out in the country and had a community of feral cats in his barn to keep the mice down. Whenever he found a dead one, he'd just toss it over the fence. This guy taught a great course, stressing how endangered some of the troglodytic species are, but his callous attitude toward other animals made him hard to respect.

Riverfront Times Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff