• Issue Archive for the Week of
  • Oct 29 - Nov 4, 2008
  • Vol. 39, No. 44

Arts

  • By Any Other Name

    Bruce Checefsky Shows Camera-less Photography At Shaheen Gallery
  • He's Still The One

    Actors' Summit Brings Nixon Back In Time For Election Day

Calendar

  • Get Out!

    The Seinfeld Bus, The Cavs Season, And Plenty Of Halloween Frights Top This Week's Event Picks

Dining

  • Staging Area

    Bricco Is A Good Place To Begin - Or End - An Evening At The Theater

Film

  • No Nude Tale To Tell

    Laughs Are Hard To Come By In Kevin Smith's Zack And Miri Make A Porno

News

  • Not Over Yet

    Obama Has Fdr's Gifts Of Oratory And Pragmatism, But Can He Restore The Nation?

Music

  • Teenage Wasteland

    The Academy Is … Recalls Its High-school Years
  • A Formula For Fun

    Glass Harp Reunites For A Roots Of American Music Benefit
  • Amy Ray

    Singer-songwriter
  • Marc Broussard

    In spiritual terms, it can be agreed that everyone has a soul. In musical terms, having soul isn't so universal. Soul might be relatively intangible as a physical property, but it doesn't require an inordinate amount of listening time to determine if an artist has it. On their worst days, under the most challenging circumstances, people like Ray Charles, Otis Redding, Al Green and Marvin Gaye emanated soul like the sun churns out heat and light.

Freestyle

  • Ghost Town

    Believe In Cleveland's Restless Dead
  • Rags And Riches

    Fans Read Too Much Into Lebron And Pavlik's Wardrobes

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