December 22, 2021 thru January 5, 2022 - Pittsburgh City Paper

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CELEBRATING 30 YEARS SERVING PITTSBURGH SINCE NOV. 6, 1991

4 Smithfield Street, Suite 1210 Pittsburgh, PA 15222 412.685.9009 E-MAIL info@pghcitypaper.com

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DEC. 22, 2021-JAN. 5, 2022 VOLUME 30 + ISSUE 51 Editor-In-Chief LISA CUNNINGHAM Director of Advertising JASMINE HUGHES Director of Operations KEVIN SHEPHERD Managing Editor RYAN DETO A&E Editor AMANDA WALTZ Staff Writer DANI JANAE Photographer/Videographer JARED WICKERHAM Editorial Designer LUCY CHEN Graphic Designer JEFF SCHRECKENGOST Digital Marketing Coordinator DARYA KHARABI Sales Representatives ZACK DURKIN, OWEN GABBEY Circulation Manager JEFF ENGBARTH Featured Contributors REGE BEHE, MIKE CANTON, LYNN CULLEN, TERENEH IDIA Interns TIA BAILEY, ISABELLA DIAZ, YASH MITTAL, JASON PHOX National Advertising Representative VMG ADVERTISING 1.888.278.9866 OR 1.212.475.2529 Publisher EAGLE MEDIA CORP.

GENERAL POLICIES: Contents copyrighted 2021 by Eagle Media Corp. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission of the publisher. The opinions expressed in Pittsburgh City Paper are those of the author and not necessarily of Eagle Media Corp. LETTER POLICY: Letters, or e-mails must be signed and include town and daytime phone number for confirmation. We may edit for length and clarity. DISTRIBUTION: Pittsburgh City Paper is published weekly by Eagle Media Corp. and is available free of charge at select distribution locations. One copy per reader; copies of past issues may be purchased for $3.00 each, payable in advance to Pittsburgh City Paper. FIRST CLASS MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS: Available for $250 per year (52 issues), $150 per half year (26 issues), or $32 per six weeks. For more information, visit pghcitypaper.com and click on the Subscribe tab.

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PITTSBURGH’S PEOPLE OF THE YEAR AWARDS

PITTSBURGHERS WHO MADE A DIFFERENCE IN 2021

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HIS YEAR WAS SUPPOSED TO BE EASIER THAN LAST. Vaccines arrived, COVID cases were supposed to slow down, businesses were supposed to all open back up. And, in some ways, things have been better than in 2020. (At least we’re not all trapped at home 24/7, right?) But, as we prepare to enter year three of the pandemic, there are so many of us still struggling, and it’s become even more important that we learn to celebrate every little win. Pittsburgh City Paper is honored to present this year’s People of the Year winners, all of whom we believe have given our city those necessary joys throughout 2021. Last year at this time, we highlighted a group who came together to distribute free protective masks for their community. This year, we’re celebrating an individual who is out on the streets every day helping to vaccinate the city’s homeless population. And while Black Lives Matter rallies were at the forefront of numerous winners’ causes last year, we have chosen an activist this year who helped to initiate conversations on race and further bring awareness to the Asian-American & Pacific Islander community. On the following pages, you’ll meet these winners and more. And soon, Ed Gainey, our 2020 choice for People of the Year for politics, will be named Pittsburgh’s first Black mayor. We can’t wait to see what this year’s winners will bring in 2022. — The editorial staff of Pittsburgh City Paper, this year’s People of the Year selection committee Lisa Cunningham, Ryan Deto, Amanda Waltz, Dani Janae, Jared Wickerham, Lucy Chen, and Darya Kharabi

4 Visual Art

14 Politics

6 Labor

16 Business

8 Theater

18 Literature

10 Health

20 Food & Drink

12 Music

22 Activism

PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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VEN IF YOU’VE NEVER HEARD OF JANEL YOUNG,

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chances are you’ve seen her work. Anyone who uses Yahoo likely saw the logo the Pittsburgh artist designed for the web service’s 2021 Black History Month campaign. But while Young has received recognition in the digital world, her work is better known in the real world, including a number of public murals she painted throughout Pittsburgh in the last year. Her work “Pathway to Joy” on Fort Duquesne Boulevard became the centerpiece for the Three Rivers Arts Festival, and she

painted her first two 3D murals as the inaugural artist for Walnut Capital of Bakery Square’s Community Public Art Program. She also used her art to address important issues — “Respect the Space,” a mural she painted at a Downtown bus stop, encourages public transit users to social distance from fellow passengers to help prevent the spread of COVID-19. Plus, she’s encouraging folks to read. Young was one of four artists commissioned to create a special edition library card for the 125th anniversary of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh.


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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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University of Pittsburgh faculty

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N OCTOBER, the higher education world

was rocked — in a good way — by the news that faculty members at the University of Pittsburgh officially voted in favor of unionizing. The announcement came after years of alleged anti-union efforts by the Pitt administration, legal challenges, and other setbacks threatened the union of Pitt faculty’s fight for what they cited as “higher wages, more academic freedom, and other needs.” The move marks a positive step to secure labor rights for workers at one of the largest

employers in Pittsburgh. In a press release, Tyler Bickford, an associate professor in the University of Pittsburgh’s English department, said, “Simply put, this will make Pitt a better institution. The result will be greater security for workers, better educational outcomes for students, and increased transparency across the university.” It also adds to the growing union efforts in Pittsburgh’s higher education scene, with Pitt faculty joining fellow professionals at Point Park University and Robert Morris University.


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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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.THEATER.

ONTEZE FREELAND seems to be everywhere

in the Pittsburgh theater scene. And recent developments demonstrate how his star has risen as a local actor, director, and playwright, with a background that includes working with Quantum Theatre, PICT, Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre Company, Prime Stage Theatre, and others. Freeland, a Baltimore native and Point Park University graduate, is currently serving as co-artistic director at South Side’s City Theatre. Throughout 2021, he has also consistently advocated for diverse creative voices in the city. In May, Freeland, who

MONTEZE FREELAND CITYTHEATRE.CULTURALDISTRICT.ORG/ BIOGRAPHY/MONTEZE-FREELAND

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is Black, helped form Pittsburgh Arts Administrators of Color to support arts administrators of color in the Greater Pittsburgh Area. “Arts makers bear a greater responsibility to our communities than ever before, and it will require collective work to break the barriers to equal access and foster an inherent culture of inclusivity,” said Freeland in a press release. And in October, New Hazlett Theater reopened with the premiere of Kalopsia The Musical, a show Freeland wrote the script and lyrics for that brought awareness to mental health stigma in the Black community.


NEWS

VOICES HEARD BY AMANDA WALTZ // AWALTZ@PGHCITYPAPER.COM

Tereneh Idia has tackled difficult topics, including racism, COVID-19, and body shaming, with blunt honesty and earnest passion. Now, her work has earned her a Pittsburgh Foundation award named after a respected local journalist. Idia is one of two winners of the 2021 Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism award, created to honor the legacy of the late Sally Kalson, who passed away from ovarian cancer in 2014. Kalson was a Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reporter and columnist who, according to a press release, “put the spotlight on injustice and wrote truth to power” over her 30-year career. Idia was chosen by a committee of advisors because, like Kalson, her City Paper Voices column “challenges Pittsburgh because she wants it to be better and knows it can be better.” Idia is splitting the award — which includes a $5,000 cash prize that will be shared between the two winners — with Pittsburgh Post-Gazette journalist Sean Hamill, whose investigative series on the Brighton Rehabilitation and Wellness Center showed how the Beaver County nursing home failed to protect its residents and employees from COVID-19. The facility is now under investigation by the Pa. Attorney General’s office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Since being launched in 2019, the Sally Kalson Courage in Journalism Award

Program reaches statewide to identify a broadcast, print, or online media journalist whose work embodies what Kalson was known for: “fearlessness, fortitude, and excellence in taking on issues of our time.” “This program is our small effort to encourage people to look for, and report stories that go against the grain, despite that they implicate powerful interests,” says Kalson’s surviving husband, Ed Feinstein, who serves on the award committee along with Mila Sanina of PublicSource, attorney Amy Ginensky, investigative reporter James Steele, and Post-Gazette columnist Tony Norman. Also serving on the committee is Andy Conte, director of Point Park University’s Center for Media Innovation. Conte spoke to Idia’s win, saying, “I think Sally would see a fellow traveler in Tereneh’s work.” Born and raised in Pittsburgh, Idia graduated from Drexel University LeBow College of Business. As a Rotary International Ambassadorial Scholar, she received her Masters in Science in Fashion Design from Kenyatta University and started her career in fashion as an educator, including teaching at Parsons School for Design in New York City and as a visiting scholar on global fashion at Yale - National University of Singapore. Idia has won numerous awards in the past, including back-to-back Golden Quill awards from the Press Club of Western Pennsylvania for Excellence in Written

Journalism, Daily for Columns/Blogs. She was named Best Column (aka the Billy Manes Award) by the 2020 Association of Alternative Newsmedia and as one of the winners of the Pittsburgh Black Media Federation’s 32nd annual Robert L. Vann Media Awards. Her multi-award winning CP column adds to a number of projects, both writing and non-writing related, Idia has done over the years. In addition to Voices, she writes the CP Clothes Make column, interviewing Pittsburgh artists, business owners, and others about their personal style. She also runs Idia’Dega, a global fashion collective for which she travels and works with African and Indigenous women artisans, including those of the Olorgesailie Maasai tribe in Kenya, and of the Oneida Indian Nation in New York. Idia also recruits Pittsburgh artists to create designs for TripleAAAnimals, a series of fake sports teams that pay homage to local wildlife and the city’s distinct neighborhoods. The ever-expanding design collection can now be found on clothing, tote bags, and other items. As for her writing, Idia feels validated, to some degree, by her Kalson award win. “I so often feel like I’m writing into a void,” says Idia. “Sometimes I feel like what I’m writing doesn’t have an impact. This recognition brings me hope that people are reading my columns and are gaining recognition of issues faced by Black residents.”

Tereneh Idia

PHOTO (BOTTOM): RANDY OLSON

Sean Hamill

Follow a&e editor Amanda Waltz on Twitter @AWaltzCP

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RADPass.org PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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.HEALTH.

DR. JIM WITHERS STREETMEDICINE.ORG

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HE PAST YEAR has not been easy

for those without housing. Those experiencing homelessness have been at higher risk to contract COVID19, and housing protections have mostly come to an end. Dr. Jim Withers, the founder of Pittsburgh Mercy’s Operation Safety Net, has been providing health care for people experiencing homelessness for over 20 years. And while that work has always felt necessary, this past year showed Withers’ dedication even during one of the world’s worst health crises. He

spends hours with his patients, and his commitment throughout the pandemic to make sure the city’s homeless population is vaccinated has been something to behold. As he wrote on his blog at the start of the pandemic, “These are the times that reveal the sacred calling of health care.” Withers answered that call, and appears dedicated to do so in perpetuity. After being named a CNN Hero in 2015, he said, “The real heroes are our brothers and sisters who suffer while we stand by and judge them from a distance.”

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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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.MUSIC.

HUNY INSTAGRAM.COM/HUNYROCKS

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N YEARS PAST, Pittsburghers might have

known sarah huny young’s work best as a photographer and artist. She’s received numerous recognitions and grants for her portraits celebrating Black women and LGBTQ communities. Last year, young also helped to create the PGH Artists Emergency Fund to help the local arts community who relied on income from gig performances recover from the pandemic. But in 2021, her work as a DJ and event producer under the moniker HUNY was what really shone. As vaccines were distributed and venues started opening ttheir heir doors, HUNY hit the ground running, planning and hosting events almost immediately. HUNY can often be found at Spirit or at COBRA with a fire set and dressed to the nines. She’s one of the names behind Most Beautifullest, a Black, queer, and femme-led DJ collective here in the city. It’s a prime example of HUNY always making a point to lift up other Black femme DJs and artists trying to get in the door, which also always results in a one-of-akind party.

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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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HE STEEL CITY saw significant progres-

sive happenings in 2021: successful ballot initiatives to ban no-knock warrants in Pittsburgh and to limit solitary confinement in the Allegheny County Jail; five local judges elected on campaigns to reshape an unjust criminal justice system; a new effort formed to build progressive power within the old-school Allegheny County Democratic Committee; and, state Rep. Summer Lee (D-Swissvale) launched her campaign for Congress. And there was one Pittsburgher who played a part in them all. Ross Tedder is an organizer for UNITE PAC, a political group working to get authentically progressive candidates elected in Southwestern Pennsylvania. His work there has been notable, but he also helped with the yeoman’s task of collecting thousands of signatures for the successful ballot initiatives. Before assisting Lee in her campaign launch, the Whitehall native played a hand in the launch of the Allegheny County Independent Democratic Committee. Tedder’s work ethic has been impressive and his ethos is clear: One progressive victory down, and it’s time to move on and build up the next one. CP PHOTO: JARED WICKERHAM

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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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.BUSINESS.

ARGYLE STUDIO POPUPARGYLE.COM

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and chain stores and restaurants, mother and daughter duo Christine and Brigette Bethea brought a refreshing new addition to Oakland’s business district in 2021. Argyle Studio, their pop-up store with items from over 30 local artists and makers, launched in May and provided a source of visibility and income for working artists whose finances took a hit during the pandemic. The shop offers a wide selection of offerings including handmade ceramics, arts and prints, pet items, and fashion and jewelry, and almost 100% of the sales go directly to its vendors. Argyle also makes a point to showcase artists from a variety of ages and backgrounds. Brigette and Christine, who are Black, want the shop to be “multigenerational” and a place where all “races, ethnicities, and cultures” can feel comfortable shopping and showcasing their work. As of July 2021, 50% of Argyle’s vendors identified as BIPOC, and the shop also features work from members of the LGBTQ community.

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Christine and Brigette Bethea, owners of Argyle Studio

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Thank you, Argyle Studios, for making the Pittsburgh Innnovation District more dynamic, accessible, and vibrant. Your commitment to showcasing the work of local creators hasn’t just made our city stronger, but it’s helped the artists who live here as well. Pittsburgh has always been about what’s next. Next is now community-engaged retail, local makers, and highlighting our region’s diverse talent. The Pittsburgh Innovation District applauds Argyle Studio for being at the forefront of this future. #NextHappensHere • www.pittsburgh-id.com PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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T’D BE DIFFICULT to find a year-end best of list

that Pittsburgh writer Brian Broome’s 2021 memoir Punch Me Up to the Gods wasn’t listed on. His debut book is a wonderful story chronicling his struggles with race, sexuality, addiction, and recovery. The book made it into Publisher’s Weekly’s Best 20 Books of 2021, The New York Times Book Review’s 100 Notable Books of 2021, and Powell’s Top 10 Audiobooks of 2021, the latter being especially significant because Broome recorded a large part of the audiobook himself. Yet the largest award of the year came this fall when he was crowned the winner of the Kirkus Prize in nonfiction, one of the most prestigious literary awards in the world, and one that came with a $50,000 prize. Broome, a writer who first gained notoriety locally with delightful tongue-in-cheek Facebook mini essays about his trips on public transit, has still kept his humility and humor through his newfound fame. (Seriously, read his Facebook page and you’re never going to want to delete your account.) CP PHOTO: JARED WICKERHAM

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PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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T’S HARD TO IMAGINE a new neighbor

being as welcomed and celebrated as quickly as Trace Brewing in Bloomfield. Opening in mid-2020 to take-out customers, long lines for the craft brewery started immediately. Yes, Trace was the first craft brewery to open in the neighborhood, and yes, demand for beer was especially high during the pandemic shutdowns. But something about

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CP PHOTO: JARED WICKERHAM

Trace Brewing staff in Bloomfield

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TRACE BREWING TRACEBLOOMFIELD.COM Trace’s emergence really resonated with Bloomfielders. Then, in 2021, Trace opened for dine-in service and things really took off. The brewery — a project between Dave Kushner, Brandon McCarthy, Zach Colton, and Katie Rado — continued its momentum and became a popular drinking destination. In addition to its daytime coffee offerings and rotating variety of beers, Trace also hosts

shows and events with local artists and drag performers. Its commitment to diversity in hiring, as well as partnering with Black and Latino-owned food trucks and businesses, has also made it an asset to the community. Housed in the former The Shop music venue, Trace’s spacious and modern decor, not to mention its pleasant patio, have Pittsburghers coming back each week.


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ACROSS 1. Wi-Fi provider 8. New York state prison 14. Pig’s location, idiomatically 15. Athlete with stones 16. 1970 hit with the lyric “I’m begging you please to come home” 17. Some government securities 18. “I wake up to THIS mess? I mean ... couldn’t he have used the plate I gave him?!” 20. Like goals not achieved 21. Beer with a high ABV 22. It’s sometimes bent or lent 25. Green sphere in a curry 26. Biblical Elysium 29. Caroline Biden, to Joe 31. Heavy hitter 33. Covered up the gray, say 34. “Is it too much to ask him to bring dishes back to the kitchen?” 38. Women’s college basketball coach VanDerveer 39. Name on a

controversial dossier 40. Outfit for some lady drivers 42. See 35-Down 43. “That feels very nice” 46. “I approve!” 47. Owl and Rabbit’s friend 49. Iraq’s main port city 51. “It’s going to take hours getting this grit out of the living room carpet!” 55. Relative of the frug or the twist 57. He played “the Ugly” in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 58. Burning 59. Simmons who was the United States’ first Black female immunologist 60. Command under the File menu 61. Guile

9. Underground Railroad conductor 10. Chicago broadsheet, for short, with “the” 11. “Until next time!” 12. Scar picture, e.g. 13. Pair in a razor? 19. Corkscrewshaped lock 23. Big diamonds 24. Some wines 27. Blue crew, for short 28. Post production? 30. Running but not moving 31. Take center stage 32. Squeezes (by) 34. Site with a “Craft

Supplies” section 35. With 42-Across, Picard’s catchphrase 36. Big name in acne medicine 37. Including the whole world 41. Country legend Yearwood 43. “Sucks, for sure” 44. Betel nut trees 45. Chops into pieces 48. Leaves off 50. Lion from Narnia 52. “___ if true” 53. Cote females 54. Everybody, in the sticks 55. Used to be 56. Copying, in the kitchen LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS

DOWN 1. Minor setback 2. Common soccer draw score 3. City on Puget Sound 4. Volleyball slam 5. In a refined manner 6. Dust Bowl drifter 7. Japanese turntable manufacturer 8. Throw a scene

PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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.ACTIVISM.

JASMINE CHO JASMINEMCHO.COM

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ASMINE CHO’S ACTIVISM has initiated

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conversations on race for years. As founder of online bakery Yummyholic and a self-declared “cookie activist,” she paints intricate portraits of Asian Americans with icing to give representation to the historically underrepresented community. The Los Angeles native, whose parents immigrated from South Korea, also penned a children’s book, Role Models Who Look Like Me: Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders Who Made History. But there was perhaps no greater need for her work than in 2021 after a mass shooting in Atlanta took the lives of four Asian women and two Asian men, following a large number of anti-Asian hate crimes across the country. After the shootings, Cho spoke at Pittsburgh’s Stop Asian Hate rally, was one of 100 women of color who shared their first encounter with racism to Oprah magazine, was a guest at the Pittsburgh Humanities Festival, and held cookie activism events throughout the year, including teaming up with Kidsburgh and Remake Learning for an “I Love You” Day, teaching guests how to design a cookie in honor of Mister Rogers.

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IN The Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: No. GD-21-070623. In re petition of Alicia Marie Foster and James Austin Scales for change of name to Alicia Marie Vervain and James Austin Vervain. To all persons interested: Notice is hereby given that an order of said Court authorized the filing of said petition and fixed the 10th day of January, 2022, at 9:30 a.m., as the time and the Motions Room, City-County Building, Pittsburgh, PA, as the place for a hearing, when and where all persons may show cause, if any they have, why said name should not be changed as prayed for

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1*55 $.6 61.$ "SFB 0O TJUF MBVOESZ 5XP QBTTFOHFS FMFWBUPST BOE POF GSFJHIU FMFWBUPS *OUFSDPN FOUSBODF "JS DPOEJUJPOJOH )BSEXPPE GMPPST 'VMMZ FRVJQQFE LJUDIFOT

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MORROWFIELD Rent: $620 - $1365 Bedrooms: 0 - 2

WENDOVER Rent: $550 - $1575 Bedrooms: 0 – 2

2715 Murray Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15217 412.682.7000 mozartrents.com Features:

5562 Hobart St Pittsburgh, PA 15217 412.682.7000 mozartrents.com Features:

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1*55 $.6 61.$ "SFB 0O TJUF MBVOESZ 5XP QBTTFOHFS FMFWBUPST *OUFSDPN FOUSBODF "JS DPOEJUJPOJOH )BSEXPPE GMPPST PS DBSQFU 'VMMZ FRVJQQFE LJUDIFOT

ADULT Hiring female swingers, call/text 412-513-5796

PERSONALS Female Companion wanted 30-40 y.o. Waist length hair and/or cornrows a PLUS PLUS! Permanent Position 724-223-0939 Wash. Co _______________________

LEGAL Need Help with Family Law? Can’t Afford a $5000 Retainer? Low Cost Legal Services- Pay As You Go- As low as $750-$1500Get Legal Help Now! Call 1-844-821-8249 Mon-Fri 7am to 4pm PCT (AAN CAN) https://www.familycourtdirect. com/?network=1

MISCELLANEOUS Guaranteed Life Insurance! (Ages 50 to 80). No medical exam. Affordable premiums never increase. Benefits never decrease. Policy will only be cancelled for non-payment. HOURS: M-F 9a-10p & Sat 11a-2p EST 1-888-386-0113 (Void NY) (AAN CAN)

OFFICIAL ADVERTISEMENT

Free confidential testing HIV • stD • hep c

THE BOARD OF PUBLIC EDUCATION of the SCHOOL DISTRICT OF PITTSBURGH

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed proposals shall be deposited at the Administration Building, Bellefield Entrance Lobby, 341 South Bellefield Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15213, on January 11, 2022, until 2:00 P.M., local prevailing time for:

PITTSBURGH KING PREK-8 ARLINGTON Rent: $665 - $2100 Bedrooms: 0 - 3

MASSAGE M2M Massage by Lee Lean Athletic Shape 24/7 • 412-628-1269

• Steam & Chilled Water Site Piping • General and Mechanical Primes

PITTSBURGH CHARTIERS ELEMENTARY (ECC) • Various Asphalt and Concrete Repairs • General Prime

PITTSBURGH WEST LIBERTY ELEMENTARY (K-5) • Various Asphalt and Concrete Repairs • General Prime

VARIOUS BUILDINGS

• Carbon Monoxide Detectors (Phase IV) • Mechanical and Electrical Primes

VARIOUS BUILDINGS

• Water Cooler Replacement (Phase 5) • Plumbing and Electrical Primes Project Manual and Drawings will be available for purchase on December 13, 2021, at Modern Reproductions (412-488-7700), 127 McKean Street, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15219 between 9:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M. The cost of the Project Manual Documents is non-refundable. Project details and dates are described in each project manual. We are an equal rights and opportunity school district.

Dr. Stacy Lane, D.O. • 412-515-0000

HELP HEal all WITH NO JUDGEMENT

your body & soul

are welcome

• ALL INSURANCES ACCEPTED • WALK INS WELCOME • tRANSPORATION PROGRAM • NO INSURANCE? WE CAN HELP North Shore - 127 Anderson Street - Suite 101 Timber Court Building, PIttsburgh, PA 15212 (412) 322-4151 washington, pa - 95 Leonard Avenue Suite 203, Washington PA 15301 • (724) 249-2517 beaver county - 2360 hospital drive Suite 1, aliquippa, pa 15001 • (724)707-1155 Erie - 3104 State Street, Erie, PA 16508 (814) 619-4009 Cleveland - 2323 Lee Rd. Cleveland, OH 44118 • (216) 350-1000

PITTSBURGH CITY PAPER DECEMBER 22, 2021 - JANUARY 5, 2022

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