
Pittsburgh City Council will return to a packed agenda when its summer break ends
“When we return, we have a hefty schedule,” President Theresa Kail-Smith said at the last council meeting before break.
“When we return, we have a hefty schedule,” President Theresa Kail-Smith said at the last council meeting before break.
The strategic plan follows the agency’s 25-year development plan and rebranding by changing its name from Port Authority to Pittsburgh Regional Transit.
The Southern rock trio has the slot right before Willie Nelson at the Outlaw Music Festival at Star Lake on Sunday.
Season two of “Secret Celebrity Renovation” premieres Friday on CBS.
They may not attract the $150 million that the U.S. Senate contest is likely to cost, but the pair of races for Congress in Western Pennsylvania — especially for U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb’s seat — won’t be cheap.
Pittsburgh Regional Transit’s contracts with manufacturers Gillig and New Flyer could allow it to replace more than have its fleet of 720 over five years.
With only a few months until Election Day, experts are beginning to emphasize Gen Z’s outsized and undeniable role in Pennsylvania politics.
Cele’s swift action in Soweto has been sorely lacking in other townships plagued by gun violence for years
Читать дальше...Crossing guards are "integral to the school community and keeping kids safe," a union official said.
The Cook County state’s attorney’s office has seen significant attrition and turnover in the COVID era, leaving courtrooms understaffed at the same time prosecutors dealt with a case backlog and a series of violent summers.
As new coronavirus variants dominate COVID-19 cases in Chicago, researchers said they were able to detect the presence of the omicron BA.2 subvariant two weeks before it showed up in an individual clinical COVID test by using tampons planted in sewers around the city.
Life-form that reddens Senegal’s Lac Rose: five letters.
A meeting between an administrator and student activists—who are pushing for medication-abortion access on campus—is heavy on frustration, modest on progress, and light on breaths of gratitude.
“ ‘I’ve refreshed the page a hundred times,’ she said. ‘What do I think is going to change?’ ”
Gerald Murnane’s new novel, billed as his last, surveys the rest of his output.
The author discusses “You Tell Me,” her story from the latest issue of the magazine.
Julia Whelan chats (in her friendly-firm timbre) about narrating other people’s books (“Gone Girl”) as well as her own forthcoming novel (“Thank You for Listening”), and about how audio narrators can get snubbed on pay.
Two tech-minded brothers are testing the market on themselves.
Poetry by Rae Armantrout: “What passes / for nowhere?”
“Resistance,” “Paul Laurence Dunbar,” “Chinatown,” and “Bitter Orange Tree.”
New cartoons from the magazine.