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St Louis Magazine
» August 2007
August 2007
Lead Story
The Visionary
Raj Apte forges into the dark, researching gene therapies that could someday prevent blindness.
Raj Apte forges into the dark, researching gene therapies that could someday prevent blindness.
By Jeannette Cooperman
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Issue Archive
A Perfect Brainstorm
Booming Before the Boom
Losing the War
Another Casualty in the Lawn Wars
Perspective - In Stitches
Lip Service
Truce Almighty
Waterlogged
The Book Bind
H2Omigod!
Doggie Bagged
Ray of Light
Lori Chalupny
Things We Love
Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!
The Projectionist
Old Dog, New Tricks
Uncannily Midwestern
Trumpet Italiano
Review - Aya Sofia
Food for Thought - Local Harvest Grocery
Kitchen Q&A - Coby Arzola
Frugal Foodie - The Original Soup Man
First Look - Oceano Bistro
Uncommon Knowledge - Dr. Patricia Monteleone
Gandalf & The Outlaws
Most people choose sides. Not Jack Larrison. His bar's a world all its own.
By Jeannette Cooperman
Any Port in the Storm?
Charles Klotzer's St. Louis Journalism Review has been taking on water for years. As the public's interest—and the paper's money—ebbs, will the ship go down with its captain?
By D.J. Wilson
The Missionary
The Reverend J.D. Clark has built a tight-knit congregation at his storefront church in North St. Louis. Is the neighborhood strong enough to sustain it?
By Katie Pelech
Web Exclusive: A Match Made in Med School
Susan Mackinnon and Alec Patterson—our August 2007 cover subjects—have blazed remarkable paths since they began their medical careers in their native Canada more than 30 years ago.
By Emily Freeman
Flashback - 1914
The Pleasure Principals
St. Louis architects figure out how to seduce jaded travelers into joy, everywhere from Six Flags to the Grand Canyon to the Pyramids at Giza
By Jeannette Cooperman
String Theory
South City's Geoffrey Seitz might sell you a violin from his shop. Then again, he might not
By Chris King
A Once & Future Doc
Without Borders
The Pre-Pandemic Puzzle
In 1969, a St. Louis teenager died with mysterious symptoms. Almost 20 years later, scientists realized that his might have been the first AIDS-related death in the United States
By W. Pate McMichael
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