January 2011

January 2011

January 2011 Volume 36 Number 1 Features The Money Tree Who’s looking out for our city’s economic development? Quite an innovative bunch. By Eric Gunn Salaries, Inc. You know you want to know. Locals from school administrators to top docs to arts bigwigs share their wage. By Laurie A. Szpot Just for Laughs The year 2010 was wondrous in many ways, as our editorial cartoonist tongue-in-cheekily captures. By Stuart Carlson World Class Keith Tozer has led the Milwaukee Wave for 18 years. Which is why the intrepid soccer coach should have major street cred. Does he? By Doug Russell Departments…

January 2011
Volume 36
Number 1

Features
The Money Tree
Who’s
looking out for our city’s economic development? Quite an innovative bunch.
By Eric Gunn

Salaries, Inc.
You know you want to know. Locals from
school administrators to top docs to arts bigwigs share their wage.
By Laurie A.
Szpot

Just for Laughs
The year
2010 was wondrous in many ways, as our editorial cartoonist tongue-in-cheekily
captures.
By Stuart
Carlson

World Class
Keith Tozer
has led the Milwaukee Wave for 18 years. Which is why the intrepid soccer coach
should have major street cred. Does he?
By Doug Russell

Departments

Outfront
Building a
new economy.
Bruce Murphy

Mail
Feedback, in
the classic sense.

Events
Trombone
triumph, man verses metal, a Hitchcock comedy and risk-taking young thespians.

Insider
Demolishing
a house inst’ green, but this technique is. A puzzling woman and the reinvention
of our city.

First Person
This
artist’s paintings are tied to memory.

 ressroom
Readers’
reverence to Reiman pubs.

Reviews
A mechanical
bull, muckraker and rapper.

The Mil
Lawyers,
writers, musicians, B-listers.

Savvy
Fashion
What fictional
Daisy Buchanan might wear.

Shopping
Shapely
shape wear and craftsy creations.

Real estate
Hop to sell
to Generations X and Y.

Health
Modern
midwifery. Why this area of women’s health is growing.
By Julie
Sneider

Dining
Thai-namite—that’s
a restaurant, not an exclamation. And taco truck chic.
By Ann
Christenson

Endgame
Russ
Feingold’s lonely, daring stand on issues could both annoy and inspire.
By Bruce
Murphy