Print Edition
In This Issue:
Buffalo is not yet a “sanctuary city,” but your neighbors have your back nonetheless.
What would you do if the EPA commenced a radioactive waste cleanup next door to your property?
The year is 1964, and work is about to begin on the Main Place Renewal Project.
On February 5, 2017, 2,000 or so people gathered in Columbus Park, close to the Peace Bridge that links Buffalo to Canada, to express their love for and solidarity with their immigrant and refugee neighbors, many of whom feel theatened by the Trum
At Burning Books on February 8, the Buffalo Research Collective will teach you how to make power maps like this one.
At the Burchfield Penney, a tribute to an oft-neglected composer from the golden era of Buffalo’s avant garde.
John Bono is a photograper, cinematographer, media and installation artist, web designer, and programmer based in Buffalo. He received his BA (2010) and MFA (2014) in Media Study from UB.
The digital artist addresses discrimination and ethnicity in her exhibit at Squeaky Wheel.
Blue Sky Design and DIY BFLO want to help you to express your love.
The editors of the local online literary journal Peach offer their picks for the week.
In his new novel, George Saunders asks how we live, together and apart.
Stay in the Loop with this week’s LGBT happenings in Western New York presented by Loop Magazine!
The loveliest, most heartfelt movie Jim Jarmusch has made in more than three decades as a filmmaker
Ariel Aberg-Riger’s portrait of pioneering journalist Dorothy Thompson.
Ebony G. Patterson, Swag Swag Krew (from the Out and Bad series), currently on exhibit at the UB Art Gallery at the UB Center for the Arts.
Some Washington Democrats with whom we speak imagine that their internal struggle will be resolved soon, and that the Bernie Sanders “insurgents” will triumph over the Hillary Clinton “pragmatists.” Other Washington Democrats believe that the adve
Trump’s recent ban on immigrants and refugees represents a new wave of aberrations in American policy.