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In This Issue:
The American Hotel, foot of Ferry Street, as a center of life at the Towpath, a now vanished neighborhood.
By bucking his party and entering the race for Erie County Clerk, Mickey Kearns has set up some interesting tensions and consequences.
Author and former state senator returns to his favorite subject: how to reform Albany.
A powerhouse ensemble prepares to celebrate its first CD release at Pausa Art House.
At Nina Freudenheim Gallery, a photographic exhibit offers a “status report” of the Rwandan genocide of the mid-1990s.
In a loft overlooking downtown Buffalo, a group of young writers record a pre-apocalyptic summit set in the year 2666 to discuss solutions to the problem of the Earth’s inhabitability for an episode of their podcast, This Buffalonian Life
Literary news and recommendations written by the editors of Peach Mag.
Stay in the Loop with this week’s LGBT happenings in Western New York presented by Loop Magazine!
Frantz goes back to 1919, the year after the end of World War I, to explore the grief of a young German woman whose Francophile fiancé died in the trenches.
Land of Mine, a Danish nominee for the best foreign film Oscar, is about reciprocal inhumanity and dire challenges to compassion and conscience.
This is a detail from an installation piece at Indigo Art Gallery by Bethany Krull and Jesse Walp.
Why taxes need to be on the table as Erie County lawmakers consider future budgets.
Ukrainians will gather in Buffalo in April to celebrate the musical heritage Stalin tried to murder.
What happens when a right-wing radio station invents a controversy in a small town.