Most Popular
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
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Cock and Awe
St. Louis pickup artists rule the roost.
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
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Dora Magrath was blessed with a beautiful voice. She's gone, but you can still hear it.
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Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week (13)
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor (3)
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory. (3)
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Red Alert: Everything they really don't want you to know about those pesky traffic-light cameras (13)
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A to Z (2)
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Thousand Dollar Baby: By day Jamie O'Hare studies for a master's in social work. Her night job is anything but.
-
Cock and Awe
St. Louis pickup artists rule the roost.
-
Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
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All In A Name
Did the Post-Dispatch deliberately give its new blog the same title as the competition?
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"Birds of a Feather" Feature: Map of St. Louis Bail Bond Agencies
03:00PM 04/16/08 -
AdOne Media CEO Jim Neumann Files for Bankruptcy
08:46AM 04/16/08 -
Death Cab for Cutie, Narrow Stairs Review: A First Listen, Track-By-Track Analysis
05:03PM 04/17/08 -
Mac Lethal at Atomic Cowboy Tonight, Thursday, April 17
04:07PM 04/17/08 -
Mike Johnson Taking Over Sofia Bistro Space
01:33PM 04/17/08 -
The Next Chapter of the Red Saga: Beso Mexican Restaurant
11:03AM 04/17/08
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National Features
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Seattle Weekly
Back from Iraq
Camaraderie is in short supply between today's soldiers and older vets.
By Nina Shapiro -
Village Voice
Scientology 's Celebrity Defector
TV star Jason Beghe reveals secrets of the controversial church.
By Tony Ortega -
The Pitch
Spirited Away
Can't get a Catholic exorcism in Kansas City? James Vivian is here to help.
By Peter Rugg
Was it Colonel Mustard or Professor Plum who killed MLK?
Published: April 16, 2008
FEATURE, APRIL 3, 2008
Colonel Mustard or Professor Plum?
'Cause it sure wasn't Raoul: I would suggest that readers look at the House Select Committee on Assassinations report on the St. Louis connection to a conspiracy [Ellis E. Conklin's story, "The Assassin's Brother,"] and then determine if it is all made-up nonsense as John Larry Ray contends. "Raoul" and his payments are a cover for the $10,000 or so Ray needed to stay on the lam for fourteen months, which coincidentally followed the July '67 robbery of a bank in Alton, which was likely pulled off by James and John Ray. It is much more plausible that John Sutherland's money and John Kauffman's connections to crime would be behind money given to Ray than some shadowy "Raoul" figure, who no one has ever seen.
DVSDen, via the Internet
FEATURE, MARCH 27, 2008
Christian Nationalists Need Not Apply
Same goes for Republicans: [In regard to Kathleen McLaughlin's story, "Hot Contender," about Sarah Steelman]: We need another Republican "Ann Coulter" wannabe, with anti-gay and anti-reproductive rights mentality, like we need to go invade another country. The only thing the Republicans do right in their right-thinking ways is convince the poor and middle-class citizens that their party really is not elitist and white Christian nationalists. I have pondered how my family can even be mostly Republican when the platform of the Republican Party is to give more power to the wealthy, big business and other government agencies. The ONLY thing I agree with the Republicans on (and reluctantly) is the right to bear arms. If it wasn't for average Americans having arms, the Republican-led government would have installed martial law more than once. We already have a "shadow government" under Bush and Cheney. What we need are more center and left-of-center viable parties like the Green Party. Please don't waste space in your paper validating any more white Christian nationalists and/or Republicans.
Rodney Cook, via the Internet
STAGE, MARCH 27, 2008
Shallow Review
Dennis missed the point: Dennis Brown's review of the Repertory Theatre's production of Ella, "One's Sighs Fitz All," was correct in describing the "evocative delight" of the music, but less so when he complained of a "shallow script" that "rarely gets to the heart of the matter." I found much depth as Tina Fabrique, as Ella Fitzgerald, expressed the regrets and triumphs of the decisions that make a life. She shared the pain of rejection, and she rejoiced at having her son in the audience (so well that it seemed he was really there). Judging by the cheers and tears of the rest of the audience, they also "got it." Dennis, however, missed it, but then he also wrote that "Fitzgerald's beloved older sister died," missing an important plot point. The sister was younger, the child of Ella's mother and stepfather (who didn't "mess with her because she was his own"), a "little bitty thing" trying to protect her big sister. Missing something this basic indicates that one might miss much more, including the depth of a piece.
Mary Garrett, St. Peters








I see that The RFT ignored the worldwide anti-scientology protests yet again. Is it too much trouble for your publication to send a writer/photographer 3 blocks down the street from your office?
I'm a bit dumbfounded as to why RFT completely ignores this issue. This seems a perfect article for your paper. You have young cyber hooligans with their own subculture and language vs a large established powerful organization. The anonymous protesters are an exotic and photogenic bunch with their Guy Fawkes masks. All protest plans are made on public internet sites (http://cosstl.lumak.net/) and anonymous is eager for an interview. This would be such an interesting and EASY story for RFT to cover. Why don't you?
I can understand to some extent the main stream media ignoring this story but not the RFT. This controversy is almost custom made for your publication yet you self impose some sort of news blackout concerning it. I cannot express my disappointment in your paper over this inexplicable editorial decision.
Comment by w smith — April 17, 2008 @ 09:43PM