Vol. 17, No. 41
The Carnegie Science Center unveils Bodies ... The Exhibition ... but what are you seeing?
By Bill O'Driscoll
A Tough Row to Hoe
Four beginning organic farmers plow through, plant and harvest their first season in Natrona Heights.
School board members squabble over minority inclusion
By Chris Young
Complaint against police idling
Murky future for Lawton's racially-tinged allegations about a traffic stop
By Melissa Meinzer
Going through the Motions: October 3 and 8, 2007
By Charlie Deitch
Muriel's
By Angelique Bamberg and Jason Roth
Kirk Nesset's short stories shine in the Drue Heinz-winning Paradise Road.
For Now
Punk vets Teddy Duchamp's Army reunite for benefit show
By Manny Theiner
The Twilight Sad leaves Gooski's wanting more
By Aaron Jentzen
Icelandic punks I Adapt play the Roboto Project
By Andy Mulkerin
Czech rebels Uz Jsme Doma play Garfield Artworks
Brooklyn's Grizzly Bear performs at the Warhol
By Matt Siffert
Behind a new album, comedian Steven Wright plays Pittsburgh for the first time in five years.
In Service
By Ted Hoover
Top Girls
By Gordon Spencer
Oh Dad, Poor Dad ...
By Robert Isenberg
Three Sisters
The August Wilson Center launches a new festival for black artists.
By Lissa Brennan
Australia's Circus Oz goes somewhere over the rainbow.
The Gullah/Geechee Nation's Queen Quet and local performers stage a show about a unique slice of African-American heritage.
David and Layla
By Harry Kloman
The Heartbreak Kid
By Al Hoff
Acclaimed dancer Bill Shannon and film essayist Roger Beebe screen their work.
Letters to the Editor: Oct 10 - 17
Savage Love
By Dan Savage
Remedial Math
College loans are a mess. Privatizing them would be worse
By Chris Potter
Pittsburgh n'@
Yinz keep bloggin'
A Conversation with Millie Gregor and Jajean Morgan
Pitching Relief
New Pirates GM has to sell us, and his bosses, on smarter ball.
By Jody DiPerna
This Just In: October 10 - 17
By Frances Sansig Monahan
Oct. 11 Mayoral Debate Transcript
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
Dave and Andy's says goodbye, Construction Junction turns 25 with wine, and more Pittsburgh food news