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St Louis Magazine
» December 2007
December 2007
Lead Story
The 12 Days of Pampering
A dozen ways to end the year in head-to-toe heaven
A dozen ways to end the year in head-to-toe heaven
By Elizabeth Lewis, Christy Marshall and Allie Wieczorek
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Pulitzer 2.0
Oh, Tannen-Bomb!
Tony La Russa: The Trilogy!
The
Other
TomKat
Cool Runnings
Belly Up to The Bar
Things We Love
Unexpected Endorsement
The Nature of History
From Ball to Verse
Market Day
Dancing Without the Stars
Remembering the Black Wall
Cock-a-Doodle-D'oh!
Food for Thought - Booster's Café
Frugal Foodie - El Scorcho
First Look - Rasoi
Review - Sage
Kitchen Q&A - Hubert Keller
Uncommon Knowledge - Sam Malek
Crossroads
It’s been more than a decade since singer/songwriter Javier Mendoza had his first big break. Where’s he going—and where has he been?
By Geri L. Dreiling
The Second Death
In 2000, 15-year-old Vincent Greer was given a life sentence for shooting and killing his mother. His recent, mysterious death leaves more questions than ever for the father who lives on.
By Jeannette Cooperman
Shelf Life
One of St. Louis’ most eminent writers reflects on his seven-decade love affair with books and the 20,000-volume library in his University City home
By William H. Gass
100 People Who Shaped St. Louis
By Martha K. Baker, Margaret Bauer, Jeannette Cooperman, Bryan A. Hollerbach, Christy Marshall, Stefene Russell and Stephen Schenkenberg
Flashback - 1951
Windows, 1.0
Piecing It Together
In an interview shortly before her death, Cuesta Benberry explained her life's quest: gathering patterns, blocks of fabric and remnants of memory that would change the world's understanding of African-American quilts
A Conversation with Linda Henke
Maplewood-Richmond Heights' superintendent speaks on tough issues.
This Is What It Tastes Like
By Dave Lowry
This Is What It's Like
We asked nearly a dozen St. Louisans to recount for us their brushes with death, out-of-the-ordinary experiences, and extraordinary jobs. Here's what they told us.
Edited by Matthew Halverson
Enemy Lines
In Missouri during the American Civil War, the connections forged by family, church and neighborhood would be erased with a single question: Union or Secesh?
Web Exclusive: St. Louis History Quiz
By Margaret Bauer
And Have You Heard Of ... ?
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