Vol. 18, No. 12
A big Cultural Trust development project is on hold, but the smart design principles it embodies highlight an intriguing Heinz Architectural Center exhibit.
By Charles Rosenblum
Urban Living, at Wood Street Galleries, pointedly de-emphasizes the human presence.
By Savannah Guz
Taking Our Best Shot
Weighing the Democratic primary at a local bar
By Chris Potter
Snuffed Films: Incredibly Strange Video closing
By Melissa Meinzer
How Key Is the Keystone State?
The race may matter more, and less, than campaigns believe
By Charlie Deitch
Protest: Cage Fight
POG preparing for war anniversary with marches, cages
By Marty Levine
LGBT: U.S. invasion has made life worse for Iraqi LGBT community
The Race Race
How bigoted is Pennsylvania, really?
Neighborhoods: North Siders spar over homeless population
Vote of Confidence?
Will our voting machines let us down April 22?
Politics: Shields wants Oklahoma legislator to resign over anti-gay remarks
The Modern Cafe
By Colleen Van Tassell
Pittsburgh Chop House
By Angelique Bamberg and Jason Roth
Local cartoonist Ed Piskor's new graphic novel explores the world of the hacker.
By Bill O'Driscoll
Progressive jazz locals Cap Gun Quartet + 4 and Thoth Trio release CDs this week
By Mike Shanley
R.E.M. Tribute Night at Brillobox
By Aaron Jentzen
U.K. vets New Model Army lay siege to 31st Street Pub
Reunited dub-punks The Slits play The Warhol Museum
By Manny Theiner
Local post-rockers In the Wake of Giants to play WPTS fest at Pitt
A Number
By Michelle Pilecki
Horton Hears a Who
Dr. Seuss' big-hearted elephant makes his big-screen debut in this animated family feature
By Al Hoff
Le Doulos
A re-release of the 1962 French noir crime classic
Bonneville
A predictable road movie has some sightseeing, few insights
British Advertising Awards
The winning British television ads from 2007 offer laughs and a gut-punch or two.
Drillbit Taylor
It's hard to root for the nerds-kick-ass comedy
Savage Love
By Dan Savage
Identity Crisis
Stakes are high in the Pennsylvania primary
Letters to the Editor: March 19 - 26
This Just In: March 19 - 26
By Frances Sansig Monahan
By Mars Johnson
Pittsburgh’s street trees are free upon request. So why do they often go to the city’s wealthiest residents?
By James Paul
Sophie Masloff seldom talked about her childhood. Were seedy family ties the reason?
By David S. Rotenstein
Mrs. Soffel was a cougar who might still haunt The Shiloh Gastro, pining for her Biddle brothers boy toy
By Rachel Wilkinson
The cassette-tape comeback has reached Pittsburgh's record stores
By Ethan Beck