EmailEmail
PrintPrint
Multimedia Index: 2006
Sunday, December 31, 2006

 
 
 
Photo journals

Daily photo journal
Steelers
Penguins
Pirates

 
 
 

These stories were produced by Post-Gazette journalists (and some by readers) roaming the region and beyond to capture events in images, sounds and words. Click the pictures to view each multimedia package.

Presentations, including video, slideshows and audio supplements to online stories, may take several minutes to download over a dial-up connection. A toolkit is available for browser plug-ins to view these packages.

If you have a story idea especially suited for multimedia coverage, please let us know.

If you're looking for the current index, it's here.

Dec. 22, 2006 ~ Video: A citizen's holiday salute to the troops in Iraq


OPINION / PERSPECTIVES: The war in Iraq became a lot more personal for Westmoreland County singer/songwriter Mary Deschamps when her nephew began serving as a soldier there in September. Ms. Deschamps wanted to send him a special Christmas message, so she wrote a song, "When You Come Home." With the help of family and friends the tune became a multimedia presentation for a Nov. 25 benefit for the Casino Theatre in Vandergrift. "It was dark and I could see the white Kleenexes going in the audience," she said. Based on that reaction, Ms. Deschamps offered to share this presentation with the Post-Gazette, so it could reach a wider audience. She hopes that Internet audience will include her nephew, Samuel Fischer, who is still stationed in Iraq with Troop 298 of the Pennsylvania National Guard.

Video By Mary Deschamps

Dec. 21, 2006 ~ Audio: Dennis Roddy's Journal / Immigration


PODCAST: Dennis Roddy is well known to Western Pennsylvanians as a writer and columnist, covering everything from national politics to the quiet lives lived anonymously by those around him. For the past eight years, he has turned his attention to his back yard, to the small apartment where new friends -- immigrants from the former Yugoslavia -- built a new life and a new identity as Americans. Reaching deep into his friendship with Nikola Drasinover and his family, Roddy uses his unique blend of narrative, interviews and natural sound to tell the story of a family's transformation and what it has meant to him.

Audio By Dennis Roddy

Dec. 17, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Gliding on ice in the dark


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: PPG Plaza is awash in lights and laughter these days. People are drawn to The Rink, where they can glide on ice while listening to holiday music and enjoying the magical feel of downtown Pittsburgh at night. In this presentation, Post-Gazette photographer Steve Mellon captures the sights and sounds of The Rink on a typical Saturday evening.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon

Dec. 15, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Teaching the testers


LOCAL NEWS: Yesterday afternoon eight men and women boldly chugged beers and drank hard alcohol for two hours as police stood by. Some became quite animated. Others were silent. One by one they lined up to have their blood alcohol levels checked. After the eight people were certified as being legally intoxicated class began. Six groups of officers from municipal and university police departments were learning how to properly conduct standardized field sobriety tests at the Pittsburgh Police Training Academy. The volunteer drunks added a note of realism as officers struggled to repeat memorized directions for tests with names like Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus. The volunteer drinkers included civilians and off-duty police officers. None were allowed to drive before or after the class.

Slideshow By Rebecca Droke

Dec. 10, 2006 ~ Video: A Florentine artist in Pittsburgh


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Fabrizio Gerbino moved to Stowe from Florence, Italy, three years ago with his American wife, Cynthia, and son Gabriele. The artist has been attracting attention here after being juried into the 95th and 96th Annual Exhibitions of the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh. He was invited to exhibit in the "Pittsburgh's Best" exhibition of last summer's Three Rivers Arts Festival. And his solo exhibition, "Tria Prima," is at the 5151 Penn gallery in Garfield through Dec. 29. The solo exhibition showcases Mr. Gerbino's exacting and engaging paintings, which are mostly hung on an intimate level with the viewer. One wall, however, displays "portal" paintings -- inspired by the burned facade of a church in Florence that Gerbino witnessed a decade ago. This presentation explores Mr. Gerbino's work and his move to the Pittsburgh area.

Video By Annie O'Neill

Related story

Art Review: International artist Fabrizio Gerbino merges the past with a modern sensibility

Dec. 9, 2006 ~ Video: Walking through an indoor tropical forest


ARCHITECTURE: As the wintry wind whips through the East End of Pittsburgh, visitors may find refuge from the Arctic outdoors with a virtual visit to Thailand in the new Tropical Forest room at Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. Post-Gazette architecture critic Patricia Lowry created this video tour of the room in the final days of construction of what is now the largest room at Phipps. The top half of the exhibit is wild and forested. Closer to ground level are a botanist's field station and a healer's hut. A village area on the floor of the conservatory has a formal garden. But that's only part of the story. This video also explores the Tropical Forest room's cutting-edge environmentally friendly design.

Video By Patricia Lowry

Related content

Video: A green room for a tropical forest

Review: Phipps adds lush forest to collection

Dec. 7, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The jazz scene


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: When jazz was the popular music in this country, fans dropped their record player needles on stacks of acetate and vinyl disks, and packed the clubs at night. Pittsburgh was the birthplace of many talented musicians, including drummer Kenny Clarke, trumpet player Roy Eldridge, bassist Ray Brown and pianist Mary Lou Williams. Composer Billy Strayhorn graduated from high school in Pittsburgh. In Pittsburgh, jazz is still packing in fans with national acts and standing-room-only local jam sessions. In this presentation, jazz afficianado and Post-Gazette assistant managing editor for photography Larry Roberts takes viewers on a tour of the Pittsburgh jazz scene.

Slideshow By Larry Roberts

Nov. 24, 2006 ~ Video: Small schools deliver big at Heinz Field


HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL: Eight high school football teams appeared on the big stage -- Heinz Field, home of the Steelers -- to play for a WPIAL championship. The difference between home field and Heinz Field was largest for the two Class A teams, the Clairton Bears and the Rochester Rams. Fans spread across the lower levels of the stadium, eager to see a game between the two undefeated teams. Rochester was the Post-Gazette's No. 1 WPIAL Class A team and Clairton No. 2 since preseason. Fans and players took the venue in stride -- they aren't exactly strangers to the stadium. This is the second time in three years Clairton and Rochester have met there in the final.

Video By Curt Chandler

Related story

Clairton wins Class A football championship, 16-13

Nov. 22, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Freedom for Ryan


HEALTH: At Edinboro University, Ryan Ballou is blending in with the other students. And that makes him happy. At Avonworth High School, Ballou was the only student in a wheelchair, and he stood out. At Edinboro, he's one of several students with mobility issues. Ballou, 19, was born with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. On his own for the first time in his life, he's enjoying his independence -- and being part of the crowd. Sometimes, he says, it's like other students don't even notice the wheelchair. In this presentation Ballou discusses the joys and challenges of his first semester at college.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Gretchen McKay

Related stories

Settling in: A freshman with muscular dystrophy adjusts to college life at Edinboro
First day in the dorm is tough for any freshman, including Ryan Ballou (includes second slideshow)

Nov. 19, 2006 ~ Slideshow: China, old and new


BUSINESS: Last September Post-Gazette business writer Dan Fitzpatrick spent three weeks traveling through China on a World Affairs Journalism Fellowship administered by the International Center for Journalists. Mr. Fitzpatrick discovered China is undergoing a dramatic transformation -- socially, politically and most of all economically. He searched to find what role are Pittsburghers are playing. In this presentation, Mr. Fitzpatrick provides insight into the economic superpower in words and pictures.

Slideshow By Dan Fitzpatrick and Lizabeth Gray

Index to stories and audio

China: The Wild, Wild East

Nov. 20, 2006 ~ Video: Ebenezer Baptist rises from the ashes


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: The members of Ebenezer Baptist returned to Wylie Avenue yesterday, wearing their Sunday finest to celebrate the reopening of the 131-year-old church, two years after the original building was destroyed by fire. The Rev. J.V. Alfred Winsett, Ebenezer's minister for the last 33 years, presided over a service welcoming visiting clergy and the return of 1,000 members temporarily exiled to other churches. The gray stone church has been replaced by a $7 million red stone building that embraces the future while honoring the church's storied past, including the sacrifice of the two firemen who died on March 13, 2004. The Pittsburgh firefighters will be remembered at a 3 p.m. memorial service on Sunday Dec. 3, 2006.

Video By Annie O'Neill

Related story

Ebenezer Baptist Church reborn after fire

Nov. 19, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Great place to chill


LOCAL: Post-Gazette photographer Robin Rombach documents the first "plunge" made by two young polar bears in their new environment at the PPG Aquarium at the Pittsburgh Zoo. The polar bear exhibit officially debuts Wednesday morning. Visitors may also view the polar bears on Thanksgiving Day, when the zoo will remain open, and Friday, when visitors are invited to help the polar bears celebrate their second birthdays.

Slideshow By Robin Rombach, Lizabeth Gray and Anita Srikameswaran

Related story

Zoo's new polar bears dive right into their Water's Edge habitat

Nov. 19, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Rich in Wright


ARCHITECTURE: Two houses built by architect Frank Lloyd Wright for Buffalo businessman Darwin Martin and his sister, Delta Barton, are being restored in this Lake Erie port city. The renovations are part of a big push in recent years by the Rust Belt city to restore its architectural and landscape legacy. Post-Gazette architecture critic Patricia Lowery takes viewers on a tour of the two Frank Lloyd Wright landmarks. The Martin home features an open floor plan that flows from room to room and Graycliff, on Lake Erie, has a water feature and cantilevered roofline that are a precursor of work that will be familiar to Pittsburghers who have toured Fallingwater.

Slideshow By Patricia Lowry and Curt Chandler

Related stories

Restoring a Wright: Buffalo resurrects its architectural heritage
A rewarding visit to America's only Arts and Crafts colony

Nov. 19, 2006 ~ Video: How to carve a turkey


FOOD: Omni William Penn Hotel executive chef Jacky Francois has carved turkeys on both sides of the Atlantic. In this video Mr. Francois joins Post-Gazette food editor Amy Schaarsmith to discuss the different techniques for cutting dark meat and white meat from a Thanksgiving turkey, how to store meat and dressing, and where to find the tastiest tidbits on the big bird. The demonstration takes place in the Terrace Room at the Omni William Penn Hotel, Downtown.

Video By Curt Chandler and Lizabeth Gray

Related story

Gracefully carve your Thanksgiving turkey

Nov. 12, 2006 ~ Video: Afro-American Music Institute Boys' Choir


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: They run. They fidget with their glasses. They squirm. They slouch. They call Choirmaster James Johnson "Uncle James," but he is more like Master Sgt. He restores order. "Sit down. Shut up," he yells to the sons of bankers, nurses and people who don't have jobs. If that does not work, he doles out push-ups. On some weeks, he makes the choir's Billy Eckstines and Erroll Garners of the future duck walk down the hall. In rehearsal, the young men stretch their voices and their minds. And something magical happens.

Video By Annie O'Neill

Related story

Boys choir is about raising voices and more

Nov. 10, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Veterans voices at the WWII Memorial


LOCAL NEWS: Jim Hilts' dad wanted to see the national World War II Memorial in Washington, D.C., but he died before it was dedicated. The Coraopolis businessman knew there are many other aging vets who want to see the memorial, too. So he chartered a bus and organized a day trip in early November to get 43 of them there. The bus riders included former military personnel from Coraopolis, Moon, Sewickley, the Neville Island area, Glassport and Washington County. And the vets can't stop talking about it. Mr. Hilts plans to go again, and hopes others might organize trips for vets in other areas.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related story

For 43 WWII veterans, a day to appreciate

Nov. 6, 2006 ~ Video: A day at The Swamp with the Garfield Gators


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: The Pittsburgh Steelers, Pitt Panthers and Penn State Nittany Lions all lost games over the weekend, but it was a picture of success for another Western Pennsylvania football powerhouse. The Garfield Gators qualified teams in four of five age groups for Sunday's Allegheny County Midget Foootball championships at Cupples Stadium on the South Side. Gator Saturdays are an institution in the Pittsburgh neighborhood. The sun has barely begun to rise before players carrying helmets and shoulder pads begin walking up Hillcrest Street to The Swamp, an appropriately squishy field next to Fort Pitt Accelerated Learning Academy. The crisp fall air is punctuated by the smell of barbecue cooking next to the concession stand.

Video By Curt Chandler

Related content

Reporters from the Post-Gazette's documentary project, City Shots, followed the Garfield Gators through the 2001 season, producing stories that focused on the team from the perspective of the coach, the ref and players on the big team.

Oct. 31, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Making of the mask


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Trick or treat is for kids. Once you grow up, most of the fun of Halloween is in pushing the limits from scary to grotesque. Post-Gazette staff reporter Dan Majors wanted something a little bit different to wear for Halloween this year. He wanted a mask of himself. So Mr. Majors visited Specter Studios in Sharpsburg, where he had his head molded, cast in clay and turned into a grimacing Dan Majors' mask.

Slideshow By Andy Starnes, Bill Wade, Dan Majors and Lizabeth Gray

Related story

Wearable art comes alive this time of year

Oct. 29, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Culinary alchemy


RESTAURANTS: Food for thought, the incorporation of molecular gastronomy by a cutting-edge chef has come to Pittsburgh. Chef Kevin Sousa is thinking outside the plate and breaking all the rules in the lab/kitchen of the Bigelow Grille at the Doubletree Hotel, Downtown. Inspired by famous Spanish chef Ferran Adria, Mr. Sousa has rearranged flavors, temperatures and textures and added aromas and humor to provide diners with a food adventure that is as fun as a trip to Disney World.

Slideshow By Douglass Oster and Steve Mellon

Related story

A revolution in the kitchen

Oct. 26, 2006 ~ Video: The creative work environment


BUSINESS: Video games during work hours, all-day slot car races, a pirate ship and a tree house. Who allows these things at the office? At Davison Design in O'Hara, the boss does. In fact, he pays for it. George M. Davison says that after listening to ideas from his employees he brought in a special effects expert and invested millions of dollars to create Inventionland, a designer's utopia that would make Walt Disney proud.

Video By Curt Chandler

Related story

With a pirate ship, cave and tree house as offices, these designers may never come home

Oct. 24, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Big Sal and Little Sal


LIFESTYLE: Salvatore Bondi, now 54, was "Little Sal" growing up in the city's Brookline neighborhood, because his father was "Big Sal" -- Salvatore Bondi of Sal's Barber Shop on Brookline Boulevard. Big Sal opened the shop in his father-in-law's former fruit market in 1945. As a boy, Little Sal would come downstairs and sweep for his Dad. He never cut hair there, but as he got older, he gravitated into the trade. Soon after he graduated from the barber college in 1973, he headed to Los Angeles, where he eventually opened his own salon, Capelli, in Westwood, near the UCLA campus. He and his wife would visit on holidays, but he never thought about moving back until 2001, when he started renovating his Dad's building. When it was time last year to sign another five-year lease on his salon, he opted to sell it to women who worked there, and he headed home. He wanted to work with his Dad.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related story

Father and son work side by side in Brookline

Oct. 20, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Flugtag? Or, was that really a flying pancake I just saw?


LIFESTYLE: Stacy "Chicky" Cicchitello and her teammates prepare "Mount Jamima," an aircraft built to resemble a flying stack of pancakes, for the Red Bull Flugtag at Baltimore's Inner Harbor. Red Bull, young people may know, is a caffeinated energy drink. Flugtag (pronounced FLOOG-tog), German people may know, is "flying day." The Austrian company that makes the drink has held more than 35 of these zany "freeflight" competitions. They're more like free-fall competitions, as most of the craft tend to plummet off the elevated flight deck straight into the body of water below. "I'm just going to have to get over my fear of crashing and just do it," says the courageous Ms. Cicchitello, 25, of Squirrel Hill.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related stories

It's a bird ... it's a plane ... it's a pancake!
'Mount Jamima' falls flat in zany Baltimore airshow

Oct. 12, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The art of Louis Comfort Tifany


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Louis Comfort Tiffany is most famous for his stained glass windows, which can be found across the world and in many Pittsburgh neighborhoods. People also know his lamps, too, but many are unaware that he created mosaics, vases, jewelry, metalwork and desk sets. This beautiful work never went on public display, because it was snapped up by wealthy tycoons sought the best in home furnishings during the industrial revolution. That will change when the traveling exhibition "Louis Comfort Tiffany: Artist for the Ages," opens Sunday at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Oakland.

Slideshow By Marylynne Pitz and Curt Chandler

Related stories

Gilded glass: Carnegie exhibition sheds light on the works of Louis Comfort Tiffany
The Tiffany Tour: Where to find his work locally

Oct. 2, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Covering the big story -- The attacks of 9/11


LOCAL NEWS: Journalists cover a wide variety of subjects, but the big story is easy to spot. It's the event that's so big, people recalling it years later remember where they were and what they were doing when it happened. Alyssa Cwanger was in class at the University of Pennsylvania two when jetliners slammed into the World Trade Center towers in New York City. Shocked students were sent home from class. A third plane struck the Pentagon, and then a fourth plane, United Flight 93, crashed into a Somerset County field as its passengers fought with terrorists. In this presentation, Ms. Cwanger shares images made over the past five years while covering her big story.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Curt Chandler

Related content

Photo Journal: Remembering Flight 93, 9/11/2006
Special Report: Forty lives, one destiny on Flight 93, Oct. 28, 2001
Photo Journal: More pictures by Alyssa Cwanger

Oct. 1, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Robert J. Pavuchak, photojournalist


LOCAL NEWS: Photojournalist Robert J. Pavuchak has been a fixture on the Pittsburgh news scene for some 40 years. His favorite subjects were everyday people, especially in the lesser known corners of Washington County, which he photographed for many years. Whether his subject was the governor or a kid with a balloon, he worked equally hard to bring their stories into the newspaper. Mr. Pavuchak retired last week. This multimedia presentation is a tribute his years of prize-winning work in Southwestern Pennsylvania.

Slideshow By Curt Chandler

Related content

A gallery of pictures by Robert J. Pavuchak

Oct. 1, 2006 ~ Slideshow: An evening with the Pittsburgh Banjo Club


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Pittsburgh was one of the centers of the banjo craze that spread across the United States in roaring 20s. An echo of the fun-time music of that era emerges each time the door opens Wednesday evenings at Allegheny Elks Lodge #339 on the North Side. That's when the Pittsburgh Banjo Club rents the lodge for a two hour public rehearsal. Anyone can attend. Food and drink are available. Dancing is optional. The sing-a-long is epidemic. Everyone in the audience and on the stage seems to be having a good time.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Curt Chandler

Related story

Strummin' on the ol' banjo

Sept. 10, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Taken from the depths


MINE SAFETY: As the United States confronted mine disasters in West Virginia and Kentucky this year, Mexico's only coal mining region dealt with its own, one that killed 65 men and earned the distinction of being that country's worst coal mining accident in a generation.

The lives of many were changed forever by that one day. Yet they still wait for their loved ones to come home to them.

Ruben Martinez, a coal miner for 15 years, wrote of his experiences in a song called "Carbon y mas carbon," which translated into English, means "Coal and more coal." The song can be heard in this presentation.

Slideshow By Annie O'Neill and Jerome Sherman

Related story

Mexico's Mine Crisis: 'We want our loved ones'

Sept. 8, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Final farewell to Mayor O'Connor


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Pittsburgh buried its mayor yesterday. Bob O'Connor's blunt charm and unpretentious manner lifted him from Greenfield to the mayor's office. Pittsburghers turned out by the thousands, lining streets with signs of thanks and grief, and crowding into the Roman Catholic cathedral for a funeral that was by turns poignant and playful. Brought to church in a horse-drawn hearse and prayed over by more than two dozen priests, Mr. O'Connor took a tour of his city one last time. A mile-long cortege spun through Oakland, Downtown, Greenfield, Squirrel Hill, and on to Hazelwood before the mayor was laid in the earth of Calvary Cemetery.

Slideshow Produced by Steve Mellon

Video

Celebrating the memory of Mayor O'Connor Sept. 8, 2006
A farewell to the mayor Sept. 7, 2006

Related stories

Pittsburgh says goodbye to fallen mayor
Across Pittsburgh, thousands turn out to wish O'Connor farewell
Celebration, catharsis meet at Heinz Field
Photo Journal of Mayor O'Connor's final journey
Index to coverage of Mayor O'Connor

Sept. 7, 2006 ~ Slideshow: McKeesport's Helen Richey is lost in history


LIFESTYLE: McKeesport native Helen Richey was the first female commercial airline pilot in the United States. She set records for endurance and speed. She was the first woman sworn in to pilot airmail and also one of the first female flight instructors. But unlike her famous friend Amelia Earhart, Miss Richey's legacy seems to have escaped the history books. But the McKeesport Heritage Center will soon have a new movie to teach visitors about the aviator Amelia Earhart dubbed the best female pilot she knew. "The Helen Richey Story, the Pride of McKeesport" is scheduled to be shown Oct. 8.

Slideshow By Curt Chandler

Related story

Historic McKeesport aviator to be profiled in documentary

Sept. 5, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Labor Day parade dedicated to Mayor O'Connor


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: This year's annual Labor Day Parade not only celebrated the labor movement, it also honored the late Mayor Bob O'Connor, who lay in state at the City-County Building until last night. As the parade route passed in front of the City-County Building, union members and marching bands alike fell silent to honor and remember the fallen mayor inside. Along the side of the parade route, many spoke of the loss that the city has suffered and of the man who came to be known as "everybody's mayor."

Slideshow By Steve Mellon

Video

A Labor Day tribute to Mayor O'Connor

Related stories

Pittsburgh says goodbye to fallen mayor
Across Pittsburgh, thousands turn out to wish O'Connor farewell
Celebration, catharsis meet at Heinz Field
Photo Journal of Mayor O'Connor's final journey

Sept. 4, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Mayor lies in state


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Hundreds of Pittsburghers filed through the great hallway in the City-County Building yesterday to pay their respects to the late Mayor Bob O'Connor. The mourners, some wearing their Sunday best and others wrapped in the comfort of their Steelers sweatshirts and jeans, each paused for a moment alongside the late mayor's flag-draped coffin before turning to express prayers, shared sadness and best wishes to his widow, Judy, and O'Connor family members. The procession began promptly at noon with a playing by the Greater Pittsburgh Police Pipes and Drums corps. and through the night.

Slideshow By Matt Freed and Annie O'Neill

Video

Bidding Mayor O'Connor goodbye

Related story

A saddened city pays its respects

August 16, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The show must go on


HEALTH: Entertainer Gorman Lowe was a fixture in the Pittsburgh theater scene until Type II diabetes caused his kidneys to fail seven years ago. For a time, he wasn't healthy enough to meet the demanding schedules of rehearsals and performances. But thrice-weekly dialysis treatments and dramatic weight loss have given his acting career a second chance. Mr. Lowe is appearing in "The Wild, Wacky, Wonderful World of Gorman Lowe," a two-act cabaret that opened about three weeks ago at the Greentree Holiday Inn's dinner theater.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Anita Srikameswaran

Related story

A real trouper: Actor's back on the boards, with intermissions for dialysis

August 9, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Yo Pittsburgh


LIFESTYLE: The graffiti on the wall says "Spin City." The room is called the Spinning studio. The participants are members of YoPittsburgh and their technique bears only scant resemblance to what their grandparents may have attempted during the yo-yo fad of the '50s. In this multimedia presentation, teenage members of YoPittsburgh demonstrate yo-yo tricks like the forkmount and the magic triangle. Just don't ask them to "Walk the Dog."

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related story

YoPittsburgh members prepare to strut their stuff at world yo-yo contest

Steelers Training Camp, July and August, 2006

Audio slideshows and video reports from the Steelers Training Camp at St. Vincent College in Latrobe:

Audio Slideshow: Preseason Game One at Arizona
(Aug. 13, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Preparing for Arizona
(Aug. 11, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Camp marches on
(Aug. 9, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Week two begins
(Aug. 8, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Big Ben @ Camp
(Aug. 6, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Goal-line drills
(Aug. 3, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Heating Up
(Aug. 1, 2006)
First peek for the fans
(July 31, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Drills begin
(July 31, 2006)
Audio Slideshow: Sprint Day
(July 30, 2006)

Related gallery

Steelers Photo Journal: Steelers Training Camp 2006

August 6, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Double Happiness


LIFESTYLE: Garbed in flaming red robes and eye-catching headpieces, Christine Cheung and Justin Ging yesterday bowed first to the Heaven and Earth, next to their parents and then to each other, thereby marrying in a traditional Chinese ceremony. More than 100 guests attended the wedding, held at the Mandarin Gourmet Chinese Restaurant, Downtown. The bride's mother, Rossana Cheung, of Murrysville, said it's been at least three decades since such a ceremony has been performed in Pittsburgh.

Slideshow By Lake Fong

Related story

Couple exchange vows during elaborate Chinese wedding

August 2, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A friend in his corner


SPORTS: Larry Chisholm and Randy Castriota couldn't be more different. Larry is an ex-convict who spent almost 40 of his 60 years in jail, a once-promising boxer who became a drug dealer and pimp in the Hill District. Randy is a scrap metal entrepreneur who was named Rotarian of the Year, a Brookline native who got his work ethic from strict but loving parents. The black Muslim ex-con and white Catholic businessman who grew up in different worlds in the 1950s would change each other's lives when Larry walked into Randy's office and asked to rent an apartment.

Slideshow By Martha Rial

Related story

Ex-con works toward opening boxing gym with businessman's help

July 19, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A half century of nurturing creativity


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Fifty years ago, the Chatham College Music and Art Day Camp was started as an experiment. Founders Mihail and Kay Stolarevsky hoped to provide training for young musicians of all kinds while allowing others to explore art forms. Since then, more than 20,000 young people have benefited from the couple's dream. After Mihail passed away in 1974, his wife, Kay Stolarevsky, took over as director. She stepped down in 1991 but stays active in the camp today as an adviser. This summer nearly 300 children from pre-kindergarten through eighth grade have flocked to the hilltop campus in Shadyside to dabble in hip-hop, create cartoons or learn the classics on a harp.

Slideshow By Martha Rial

Related story

Music and arts day camp celebrating 50 years of creativity

All-Star Week, July 7-12, 2006

The Pittsburgh scene the week of the All-Star Game at PNC Park was documented in a series of videos:

Vodcast: All-Star Week comes to an end with an exciting game
(July 12, 2006)
Video: A red carpet ride to the big game
(July 11, 2006)
Video: Paddling for souvenirs
(July 11, 2006)
Vodcast: The All-Stars meet the press
(July 10, 2006)
Phil Garner press conference highlights
(July 10, 2006)
Ozzie Guillen press conference highlights
(July 10, 2006)
Freddy Sanchez comments on being an All-Star
(July 10, 2006)
Jason Bay comments on being an All-Star
(July 10, 2006)
Kids learn what's inside a baseball
(July 10, 2006)
It's bombs away for MLB mascots in FanFest Home Run Derby
(July 9, 2006)
Vodcast: All-Star focus shifts toward PNC Park
(July 9, 2006)
Vodcast: All-Star focus shifts toward PNC Park
(July 9, 2006)
Singing 'Take Me Out to the Ball Game,' FanFest-style
(July 8, 2006)
The All-Star Week spotlight shines on Forbes Field
(July 8, 2006)
Vodcast: Opening day for the All-Star FanFest
(July 7, 2006)

July 10, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A home on the rivers


HOMES: Jay and Lisa Schaffner live in a home that is 112 feet long and 24 feet wide. It was built in 1936, burned in the 1980s, renovated in the '90s and was purchased by the couple last year. It's named the Winnie Mae. Oh yes, and it floats. The Schaffners narrate a tour of their home on the waters in this multimedia presentation. The Schaffners and the Winnie Mae were profiled in the Great Places section of July's Seen magazine supplement distributed in home-delivered print editions of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Patricia Sheridan

June 21, 2006 ~ Animated graphic: How to make a home run splash


ALL-STAR GAME: To paraphrase a line from the Godfather, sluggers at the 22nd Annual Home Run Derby will be trying to get Mr. Baseball to sleep with the fishes. Each year one of the most anticipated events of the All-Star weekend is the Home Run Derby. Sponsored by Century 21, the event will be held at 8 p.m., July 10 at PNC Park and will be televised nationally on ESPN. The churning waters of the Allegheny beyond the outfield fence provide a dramatic backdrop if not an inviting target for players to splash down their proverbial rocket launches. This interactive graphic shows how far a player will have to hit a ball to make a splash at the All-Star Game.

Animation By Dan Marsula, Bill Pliske and James Hilston

Related story

Year-by-year Home Run Derby results

June 18, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Their hearts belong to Dad


LIFESTYLE: Some people memorialize their fathers with a poem or a prayer -- some by leaving a big tip for grouchy folks who need a ray of sunshine in their life. We asked our readers how they honored their fathers, particularly on this day, and the answers were as inventive as they were touching. From singing a favorite Mills Brothers tune to introducing a grandson to a statue, their personal tributes help keep the essence of their fathers alive. This presentation captures some of their tributes on a day when fatherhood takes center stage.

Slideshow By Annie O'Neill and Cristina Rouvalis

Related story

Their hearts belong to dad

June 15, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The roses of Renzie Park


GARDENING: It's not well known, even though it's the second biggest in Pennsylvania, and right now, it's near full bloom: The rose garden in Renziehausen Park in McKeesport. The public garden and arboretum, started in 1938 in what locals call Renzie Park, has more than 1,800 roses of various varieties in some 40 beds, plus large plantings of perennials and a water garden. That means a lot of work for members of the Garden Club of McKeesport and the Pittsburgh Rose Society, who in the last 15 years have brought it back to gorgeous. Volunteers from all over the region gather on Wednesday mornings to prune, weed, deadhead and weed some more.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

June 14, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A stroke of fashion


FASHION: Up and down the streets of the Hill District, everyone knows Jorge Myers as a folk artist and one-man beautification crew. People thought he was either crazy or a genius when he began cleaning up abandoned buildings in 1999, boarding up the windows and doors with wood, plastering them with with his paintings, fashioning collages out of found objects in his neighborhood: old horseshoes, a rusting pitchfork, a refrigerator grill. But the buildings he decorated were razed to make way for senior housing and other developments. Mr. Myers needed a new canvas. He said, "I started looking at people as canvases." He was inspired to start painting their clothing. He has a new clothing line called "Why Not." This presentation offers a glimpse into his creative world, opening with Mr. Myers sounding a few notes on the trumpet he is learning to play and sharing his painting technique with readers by using a sheet of glass as a canvas.

Slideshow By Annie O'Neill

Related story

A stroke of fashion: Hill District artist uses clothing for canvas

June 13, 2006 ~ Slideshow: HollyBurgh


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: On June 4 in Los Angeles, as twice before in New York, more than 200 former Pittsburghers in the showbiz industry turned out to give testimony to their affection for their heritage. It was an opportunity to meet old friends, to discover how few degrees of separation there are among Pittsburghers, even those who have never met, and to sing the "Mister Rogers" theme song, "Won't You Be My Neighbor." The organizers were curious to see who and how many would turn up. The film and TV industries that dominate Los Angeles are notoriously star-driven. Just as it takes a name above the title to get a Hollywood project off the ground, wouldn't Angelenos decide to come only when they heard that one of the A-list expats had signed on? As it turned out, no worry. That's not the Pittsburgh ethic. As one after another of the expats noted, taking in the crowd pouring in under the palms, Pittsburghers are real folk. Debra Levine, daughter of one-time KDKA Radio personality Mike Levine, proved a prophet in her RSVP: "This will be the most condensed gathering of real people in the city of Los Angeles."

Slideshow By John Beale, Christopher Rawson and Curt Chandler

Related stories

West Coast showbiz folk fondly recall Pittsburgh roots
Who's who in the showbiz photo

June 12, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A fond farewell


LOCAL NEWS: Bishop Donald Wuerl scanned the audience yesterday at St. Paul Cathedral and saw the the governor, local Congressional leaders, tthe mayor, the chief county executive, representatives from each of the 214 parishes in the six-county diocese and his housekeeper. "My joy this afternoon in this Mass with you is in the opportunity to say to you who have been so much a part of my efforts to serve the church, 'thank you,'" he said.

Slideshow By Bob Donaldson, Robin Rombach and Curt Chandler

Related story

Pittsburgh bishop bids adieu to parishioners, friends

June 11, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A new look at the Boy King


TRAVEL: "Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs" features more than 130 treasures from Tut's and other royal tombs, including some that have never before left Egypt. Fifty of the objects come directly from the young pharaoh's tomb, which was raided shortly after he was buried and then hastily resealed. They include a small wood and ebony chair with lion paw legs he likely used as his royal seat, a falcon collar of sheet gold that was wrapped around the neck of his mummy, and a golden ceremonial dagger and sheath that was meant to protect him in the afterlife. Close to 1 million visitors are expected to see the exhibit while it's in Chicago for its seven-month run. David Foster, project manager for exhibitions at the Field Museum in Chicago, provides an insider's view.

Slideshow By Gretchen McKay and Curt Chandler

Related stories

Chicago's Field Museum displays treasures of golden age of pharaohs
Before and after Tut, indulge in Chicago's other treasures

June 5, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Smiling past 50 / AARP's Real People Model Search comes to Pittsburgh


FASHION: Gloria Rogers is proud of her appearance and her age -- "74-and-a-half, and no facelifts," she says. So one recent morning, she put on some fashionable clothes and walked to Pittsburgh's Point State Park to participate in a national search for models over the age of 50. "I'm a ham from way back," she says. Ms. Rogers was the first of several Pittsburgh seniors to take part in the "Faces of 50+ Real People Model Search." At stake was a chance to be chosen to model for future editions of AARP: The Magazine. See and listen to Ms. Rogers and other aspiring models tell their stories in this presentation.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related story

'Faces of 50+ Real People Model Search' starts here

May 31, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A stroll on Lorigan Street


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Bloomfield's reputation as Pittsbugh's Little Italy is as strong as anywhere on Lorigan Street. The small enclave is just a couple blocks below Liberty Avenue. Recently Lorigan Street has attracted new people who claim different roots, but this is a place where what used to be counts. If you want to know what's what, ask Isadore Sanchioli. For more than eight decades, this has been Izzy's world.

Slideshow By Diana Nelson Jones and Lake Fong

Related story

Life on Bloomfield's Lorigan Street

May 31, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A house with history


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Anna Wagner was born into German immigrant family and lived for more than a century in and near Johnstown. Most of her 102 years were spent in the same house. She and the building survived the Great Johnstown Flood on May 31, 1889. The house also survived a being moved to make a larger back yard and later, a fire. This Saturday its doors will be opened to the public as a museum to immigrant working class life. The Post-Gazette toured the house in advance for this report with curator and historian Dan Ingram.

Slideshow By Marylynne Pitz and Darrell Sapp

Related story

Johnstown honors immigrants with house museum

May 31, 2006 ~ Video: The sleepy cabbie


HEALTH AND SCIENCE: Jamie Marlowe can still remember looking at the mangled remains of the car owned by his company, Yellow Cab of Huntington, W.Va., The driver never worked for Yellow Cab again, but his accident has become a permanent fixture on the Internet under the title "Sleepy Cabbie." The incident was captured by a DriveCam camera, including the driver's miraculous scratch-free survival after he is flung partially through a back window. DriveCam is used by several cab companies because it not only can monitor drivers but can record assaults on them.

Video by DriveCam and Story by Mark Roth

Related story

Eye on the road: New devices alert drowsy drivers when it's time to pull off

May 29, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A remembrance day, down under


WORLD NEWS: The U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Jim Nicholson, was so impressed by the outpouring of community spirit when he saw the the Australian celebration of Anzac Day for the first time last month that he told the Sydney Morning Herald he'd like to take the tradition home to America. This year, the streets of Sydney were jammed with 100,000 people who watched 20,000 paraders. The numbers remain strong because service medals, uniforms and banners are passed from generation to generation. As aging veterans become too feeble -- or die -- their sons, daughters and grandchildren don the medals and march for them.

Slideshow By V.W.H. Campbell Jr. and Curt Chandler

May 25, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Retirement is for old people


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Sixty years ago today, Dr. David M. Flom hung out a shingle on Ward Street in Oakland. It's where he used to do most of his work, a place where he said he has "touched thousands and thousands of lives." He's touching fewer lives these days, working four- to six-hour days three days a week. But at the age of 88 he has not lost the love he found six decades ago for his profession. Dr. Flom earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Pittsburgh, by working before sunrise at a produce shop and going to school during the day. When he opened his private practice in Oakland the Pittsburgh neighborhood was not the medical megaplex that it is today. There was only one other general practitioner in Oakland and he passed away shortly after Dr. Flom's office opened in 1946.

Slideshow By Annie O'Neill and Jim McKinnon

May 21, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Art of Taxidermy


SCIENCE: More than a century ago, the founders of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History borrowed, then bought thousands of mounted creatures and hired a line of distinguished taxidermists who've had huge hands in shaping the institution into what it is today. That legacy is highlighted in "Stuffed Animals: The Art and Science of Taxidermy," which opens today at the Oakland institution. "The idea is to show the progression from the era of stuffing ... to where they actually made art," says Stephen Rogers. He works as collection manager of the museum's Bird as well as Reptiles & Amphibians sections. But he is a leading expert in the field of taxidermy, which means "movement of the skin." He coined his own term to personify his passion for it: "Taxidermologist."

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related story

Art Preview: Taxidermy exhibit shows science through the ages

May 21, 2006 ~ Audio: People moved to help often become heroes


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: David Meekin was being crushed under his wrecked car until a group of motorists who had never met before stopped at the scene of the late-night accident last month. Two women, a man and five children rocked the car off Mr. Meekin and pulled him to safety. Danita Jones, of Lincoln-Larimer, and Kristin Williams, of Friendship, talked about their decision to stop and get involved.

Audio and photos by Alyssa Cwanger, story by Ryan Haggerty

May 18, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Beauty is in the eye of the beholder


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Art teacher Carol Skinger wanted students at Grandview Elementary to see the neighborhood around their school in a different way. So she made digital photos of buildings in the Allentown section of Pittsburgh, converted the images to black and white, then asked her students to pick a building and add color. Join eight fifth-graders and Ms. Skinger as they take a walking tour of Warrington, past the store fronts displayed in the artwork.

Slideshow By Annie O'Neill and Diana Nelson Jones

Related story

Students add some vivid art to Allentown business district's architecture

May 15, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Essie's songs


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Essie Hill, at 86, is a living landmark at Central Baptist Church in the Hill District, and she is known by congregations for whom she has been a guest soloist. But outside those venues, her name does not resonate, and it should. In the 1960s, Mrs. Hill soloed on two bills with Mahalia Jackson at Forbes Field and has traveled with quartets and choirs through the years, but her solos and her concerts had tapered off before the release of her first CD of 11 songs last year, "Essie Hill Sings Songs of the Gospel." Most of the songs have never been recorded or listed for copyright, said Mani Stokes, a blues guitarist and accompanist at Central Baptist, "which makes them priceless."

Slideshow By Steve Mellon, Jim Mendenhall and Diana Nelson Jones

Related story

At age 86, gospel singer expands legacy with her first CD

May 14, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Mother, daughter, best friends


LIFESTYLE: There are best friends, and then there are mothers and daughters who are best friends. Four sets of moms and daughters who share this bond sat down with the Post-Gazette recently to describe what makes their relationships so special. This show also includes links to written profiles of the four sets of mothers and daughters.

Slideshow By Steve Mellon and Mackenzie Carpenter

Related story

Mothers and daughters with the deepest connection

May 9, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Director


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: A chapter in Western Pennsylvania high school musical history came to a close last week as the curtain fell on the final performance of "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" at Schenley High School. After 35 years in the director's chair, Roger Babusci took his final bow. He staged his first show in 1972. Eleven years later Schenley's cast presented "Ain't Misbehavin'" at the governor's mansion when Mr. Babusci was named Pennsylvania's Teacher of the Year. After 40 years in the Pittsburgh public schools, Mr. B is retiring.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger, Christopher Rawson and Marylynne Pitz

Related stories

Stage Review: Schenley's 'Dreamcoat' a great fit
Slideshow: Bringing 'Dreamcoat' to the stage
Final curtain call: Mr. B, director of Schenley High plays, has been energizing students since the '70s

May 9, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Bringing 'Dreamcoat' to the stage


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: Schenley students sent off "Mr. B," teacher and director Roger Babusci, in style last week with an exuberant production of "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat." Mr. Babusci retires from the school district this year, but not before Schenley's dancers perfomed with joy and abandon, creating an electric community event out of a jaunty cartoon of a show.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Christopher Rawson

Related stories

Slideshow: The Director
Stage Review: Schenley's 'Dreamcoat' a great fit
Final curtain call: Mr. B, director of Schenley High plays, has been energizing students since the '70s

May 8, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Medical history in art


SCIENCE: Curator Louise Lippincott discusses Jules Adler's painting, "Transfusion of a Goat's Blood," a 51-inch tall and 77-inch wide oil on canvas, hanging at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Oakland. A French physician, Simon Bernheim, commissioned this painting of himself transfusing blood from a goat into a young woman.

Slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger

Related story

1892 painting illustrates odd links among animals, art & medicine

May 8, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Helping jailed moms cope


LOCAL: Women sent to jail face an especially bleak reality in which they can lose everything, including children and home, says Vernetta Byrd, program coordinator with Lydia's Place, a nonprofit group that helps female inmates at the Allegehny County Jail. In this presentation, Ms. Byrd provides an insider's persepctive to scenes captured by the Post-Gazette's Martha Rial as she documented the lives of women participating in the program.

Slideshow By Martha Rial

Related content

More pictures by Martha Rial to accompany this story in the daily photo journal
Day One: When mom's behind bars / A life of alcohol and drugs has robbed Michelle Minko of a normal life with her children.
More pictures by Martha Rial documenting the experience of Michelle Minko.

May 4, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Sago Mine hearings, Day Two


LOCAL: Four months ago the families of 12 miners thought their loved ones had miraculously survived an underground explosion in West Virginia's Sago Mine. Their celebration ended abruptly as the truth emerged. All but one of the 13 men working underground had perished. Yesterday the families listened as two members of the underground rescue team choked back tears and explained how the wrong message may have gotten out. The hearings also included debate on the possible causes and force of the Sago Mine explosion.

Slideshow By Martha Rial, Dennis Roddy and Steve Twedt

Related stories

Sago Mine rescuers sorry for 'heartache'
Analysis shows Sago blast was too strong for seals

May 3, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Sago Mine hearings, Day One


LOCAL: Questions about safety inspections, emergency breathing units, and what happened when lightning hit a tree dominated the first day of a hearing into the Sago Mine disaster, where the families of the 12 coal miners who died were given the rare opportunity to interrogate mining company officials. More than 100 people attended the daylong public session in the gymnasium of West Virginia Wesleyan College. Questions from the miners' families were sometimes emotional, sometimes angry, making the first day of the hearings part memorial, part fact-finding mission.

Slideshow By Martha Rial, Dennis Roddy and Steve Twedt

Related stories

Families of miners demand answers at hearing on Sago mine explosion
Did lightning bolt cause Sago Mine disaster?
Families of Sago miners share grief and frustration at hearing

May 1, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Learning to Garden / Planting in peat pots


GARDENING: This is the fourth installment of a series of audio slideshows by the Post-Gazette's Backyard Gardener Douglass Oster to provide instruction on the basics of gardening. This presentation covers how to start seeds in peat pots. This is a great way to start seeds early that don't like to be transplanted.

Slideshow By Douglass Oster and Andy Starnes

April 30, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Prom 2006 from gown to tux


FASHION: High school proms are a $2.7 billion industry in the U.S. And even that eye-popping number may not fully express the importance placed on this single event as a lifetime memory. Post-Gazette fashion editor LaMont Jones showcases the hot prom trends from hair styles to party shoes.

Slideshow By LaMont Jones

Related story

Despite the expense, popularity of prom night explodes

April 25, 2006 ~ Video: Preschool Prom


CITY NEIGHBORHOODS: It was hard to tell who was having more fun, the kids or the adults, during last week's 1st Annual Preschool Prom at Brightside Academy on Smithfield Street, Downtown. Eric Johnson, assistant director of the day care center, said staff and children have spent the last two weeks preparing for the prom, which featured formal portraits, candy baskets, a romp/dance in the gym and one last chance for the kids to wear their Easter finery.

Video By Curt Chandler

April 23, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Word, on the Street


CITY NEIGHBORHOODS: Four street preachers are taking their faith, Bibles and a megaphone to some of the toughest streets in Pittsburgh. Their goal is to save their fellow man, one soul at a time. Photojournalist John Beale and reporter Erv Dyer followed them through the Hill District and Homewood to produce this report.

Audio slideshow By John Beale

Related story

Street preachers are seeking to bring a message of salvation to troubled neighborhoods

April 21, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Dozens left homeless by fire


NEIGHBORHOODS EAST: Families who were forced from their apartments by a fire at the Cambridge Square Apartments in Monroeville might have to leave their temporary hotel dwellings as well. The fire caused more than $1 million in damage. Four firefighters and two residents sustained minor injuries. Nine families were among more than a dozen displaced by a fire in a 28-unit section of the apartment complex off Mosside Boulevard in Monroeville. They were placed in a nearby motel by the Red Cross, but those rooms are being used this weekend by people attending a comic book convention. Reporter Jim McKinnon provides an update on the plight of the displaced residents.

Audio slideshow By Jim McKinnon, Alyssa Cwanger, John Beale and Steve Mellon

Related stories

School rushes to help Monroeville fire victims
Blaze guts Monroeville apartments

April 17, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Learning to Garden / Thinning and hardening off seedlings


GARDENING: This is the second installment of a series of audio slideshows by the Post-Gazette's Backyard Gardener to provide instruction on the basics of gardening. This presentation covers how to divide seedlings started indoors and prepare them for outdoor planting.

Audio slideshow By Douglass Oster and Andy Starnes

Related content
Part One: Starting from Seed
The Backyard Gardener with Doug Oster

April 16, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Keeping the Faith / The Believers


WORLD NEWS: Christians living in the Old City of Jerusalem continue to worship at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. It is considered to be the main shrine of Christianity, as it is built on the site believed to be where Christ was crucified, buried and resurrected. But the number of Christians living in the Holy Land is declining, as they find it increasingly difficult to earn a living or even access the sites upon which their faith is built.

Audio slideshow By Martha Rial

Project Index

The community of Arab Christians is dwindling in the Holy Land

April 16, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Keeping the Faith / The Forgotten


WORLD NEWS: Tens of thousands of Arab Christians began leaving their homes in Palestine in 1948 when Israel became a state. The outflow of Christians from the Holy Land has continued in response to decades of violence and economic disruption in the area. The result is that in Biblically significant towns, such as Bethlehem, the Christian community is battle-scarred, economically bereft -- and dwindling.

Audio slideshow By Martha Rial

Project Index

The community of Arab Christians is dwindling in the Holy Land

April 16, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Keeping the Faith / The Village of Taybeh, West Bank


WORLD NEWS: Taybeh is the last all-Christian village on the West Bank. The 4th-century Saint George Greek Orthodox Church there lies in ruins. Recently, members of 14 extended families were forced to flee from their homes after a dispute with a nearby Muslim community flared into the arson of seven homes. So it is no surprise that Christians with the means to leave have scattered to places like Finland, Sweden, Jordan and the United States. Ihab Fakir, 22, is moving to Miamai, Fla. "I can't stay any longer," he said. "There's no good future."

Audio slideshow By Martha Rial

Project Index

The community of Arab Christians is dwindling in the Holy Land

April 13, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Small cast makes big 'Sound of Music'


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: Robinson Township Christian School is a little school with big ambition. Only a few years into its school musicals, RTCS has staged a captivating production of "The Sound of Music." The play wasn't as small as you'd expect physically, either. The entire school, K-12, has about 140 pupils, fewer than three dozen in high school. But even using the occasional sixth-grader in an adult role, RTCS recruited a capable cast of 25 and ample crew.

Audio slideshow By V.W.H. Campbell Jr. and Christopher Rawson

Related stories

Stage Review: Tiny school puts on big show with 'Music'
All the latest news on high school musicals

April 13, 2006 ~ Slideshow: A Plum delightful 'Dolly'


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: Stylish period costumes, a standout orchestra and a cast of 70 helped Plum High School fill its vast airplane-hangar of an auditorium with an enthusiastic production of "Hello, Dolly!" Presiding over the comic story was that consummate meddler, Dolly Gallagher Levi, played with strong stage presence by Ashleigh Yuska. Vocally, her interpretation of the famous Broadway role leaned more toward a Barbra Streisand-like schemer than the sunnier Carol Channing. Providing a rock solid immovable object to her irresistible force was Ken Linamen as Horace Vandergelder, the famous half-a-millionaire.

Audio slideshow By Alyssa Cwanger and Christopher Rawson

Related stories

Stage Review: Plum High School brings energy to 'Dolly'
All the latest news on high school musicals

April 11, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Vendor


PIRATES: For many fans, Tom Congdon may be as much a part of the ballpark experience as the players on the field at PNC Park. The beer vendor known as TC seems to know everyone. And if he doesn't, he's willing to say hello, especially to a fan thirsting for a cold frosty brew. What most fans probably don't know is the amount of time TC takes each gameday. His regimen includes rigorous stretching and the head-to-toe application of eucalyptus-based arthritis pain relief ointment. His preparation yesterday began more than three hours before the ceremonial first pitch. TC wanted to be ready for Opening Day.

Audio slideshow By John Beale and Curt Chandler

Related stories

Home opener leaves crowd stuck between love and heartbreak
Another miserable home opener adds to Pirates' woes

April 9, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Gathering Places


NEIGHBORHOODS / CITY: Those coffee shops sprouting up in Pittsburgh's neighborhoods are doing more than just providing a caffeine buzz and hip places for artists to hang out. Some say coffeehouses like Carson Street's Beehive and The Vault in Brighton Heights help bring new economic vitality to a community. Those quirky shops, it seems, may encourage other investment.

Audio slideshow By Diana Nelson Jones and Steve Mellon

Related stories

Boom and buzz: Can a coffeehouse save the neighborhood?

April 6, 2006 ~ Slideshow: 'Wonderful Town' a crowd-pleaser


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: "Wonderful Town" is all about the allure of mid-century Manhattan, with a vintage Leonard Bernstein score and Comden and Green lyrics on the side. The comic plot centers on two sisters, hopeful newcomers from Ohio. You don't do the show unless you have actors for those roles, and as long-time director Glen Richey explains in an interview on this slide show, he knew that he did in the persons of Nicole Dohoda and Lauren Sarazen. But as these pictures prove, there's a lot more to "Wonderful Town" than just those two.

Audio slideshow by Alyssa Cwanger and Christopher Rawson

Related story

Stage Review: Classic 'Wonderful Town' leaves North Hills audience upbeat

March 30, 2006 ~ Slideshow: 'Pippin" a song of youth


HIGH SCHOOL MUSICALS: Swirling choreography and custom stage drops added to the sense of being in a fantasy neverland as the South Park High School Drama Club staged "Pippin," a musical not usually tackled by teens. What has sometimes been thought a sappy post-1960s period piece proved a natural for high school students, depicting a medieval Everyboy searching for the meaning of life, certainly a theme of interest to students just starting their own life's journey. Under the direction of Michael E. Moats, with some colorful set decoration and swirling choreography by Shaun J. Rolly, the result was a visual feast and a telling parable of idealistic aspiration and realistic accommodation, told by an enthusiastic cast of 39.

Audio slideshow by Alyssa Cwanger and Christopher Rawson

Related story

Stage Review: South Park's 'Pippin' carries out theme of adolescent trials

March 29, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The art of Japanese plants


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: The drawings are elegant, refined, tasteful, gorgeous, or as the Japanese would say, Yuuga. They are works of art that deserve a wider showing than just among gardening enthusiasts, says James White, curator of the Hunt Institute of Botanical Documentation at Carnegie Mellon University. Yuuga is also the name of the current exhibit of contemporary Japanese botanical drawings on display at the institute through June 30. Mr. White says Japan easily ranks in the top six countries to actively promote the genre of botanical art. The exhibition includes 43 works by 33 Japanese artists. Most were donated to the institute's permanent collection by the artists.

Audio slideshow by Douglass Oster and Steve Mellon

March 28, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Is the curtain falling on 'Veronica's Veil?'


THEATER: "Veronica's Veil" is a passion play -- a reenactment of the story of Christ's crucifiction and resurrection. It's also the passion of the members of the cast, many from extended families who have enthusiastically contributed talent, time and sweat to keep the show alive for 87 years. Performances have occasionally been cancelled by severe weather, but season after season the show has gone on. Until now.

Audio slideshow by John Beale

Related story

Financial problems postpone 'Veronica's Veil' until June

March 27, 2006 ~ Video: Comedian Gab Bonesso


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: From the spiked crown of her jet black hair to the soles of her green Chuck Taylors, Pittsburgh's Gab Bonesso radiates jagged wit and irreverent attitude as she offers her take on Steelers etiquette. Her latest self-promotional extravaganza is "Monkeys vs. Robots," four nights of comedy that have nothing to do with either. The event features Bonesso and three New York City comedians. "People say I'm the 'high-energy' comic," Bonesso says. "I'm very manic on stage."

Video by Curt Chandler

Related story

Comedy preview: Four nights of 'Monkeys vs. Robots' put Gab Bonesso in the spotlight

March 24, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Music Lady


HEALTH: A melody rises above the beeping of monitors in a room at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. It might be Bach or it might be "Baby Beluga in the Deep Blue Sea." Either way, it means that music therapist Debbie Benkovitz is making her rounds today. Depending on the child and the situation, she uses music to perk them up or calm them down. She figures out the mood of the patient, plays music to match it, then moves the music in the direction that the hospital staff wants the child to go. "It's absolutely amazing," said Autumn Lord, 23, a registered nurse at Children's Hospital for two years. "I think it's just like medicine. She's basically one of our medicines for getting kids to calm down. She's wonderful."

Audio slideshow by Annie O'Neill

Related story

Music therapist strikes a chord at Children's Hospital

March 24, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Rep. Murtha views high tech anti-IED detectors


NATION: U.S. Rep. John Murtha, a 17-term Congressional veteran from a solidly Democratic Western Pennsylvania district based in Johnstown, has played a dual role in the debate on Iraq. Using his credentials as a veteran he has supported U.S. soldiers in general while criticizing the way President Bush has conducted military operations there. It's a stance that's drawn him both criticism and praise. Both roles were in full display yesterday as Rep. Murtha toured the Indiana, Pa., offices of MobilVox, a company that has designed a mobile computing system that would allow soldiers to database items found along roadsides and compare the results to previous surveys of the area, using a real-time wireless connection.

Audio slideshow by V.W.H. Campbell Jr. and Curt Chandler

Related profile

Murtha commands spotlight over Iraq policy

March 22, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Queens of Pain


LIFESTYLE: This winter, a trio of local women decided to start a Pittsburgh league in the up-and-coming, rock-and-rollin' world of all-girl, flat track roller derby. More than 60 women from all over the region came out to be part of the Steel City Derby Demons. The Post-Gazette's Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr. attended their recent first practices and survived to put together this slideshow of what it's all about, complete with music by one organizer's punk-rock band, the Motorpsychos.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related stories:

Rink leaders bond while starting roller derby league
Roller derby is really a blast from the past

March 20, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Ode to Spring


NEIGHBORHOODS NORTH: Four years ago, Post-Gazette photographer Bob Donaldson began documenting the changes to a treet that he saw each day as he drove to work north of Pittsburgh. Last year he expanded this personal project to include a second tree. Today we celebrate the first day of spring with a look back at the trees, the surrounding landscape and the changing of the seasons. The soundtrack for this presentation is from a performance of "...Bye Blackbird" by New York City tenor sax player Chaim "Chase" Roberts.

Audio slideshow by Bob Donaldson

March 17, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Wearin' of the Grin


LIFESTYLE: Some people love a parade. Jimmy Donnelly lives for one -- the St. Patrick's Day Parade that winds each spring through Downtown Pittsburgh. Mr. Donnelly's enthusiasm for the holiday is infectious. Dressed in green, with a broad smile on his face, the diminutive 84-year-old is the life of the party as he marches in the parade.

Audio slideshow by John Beale

March 17, 2006 ~ Slideshow: St. Patrick's Day, Savannah style


TRAVEL: The largest St. Patrick's Day parade in the U.S. steps off in New York City each spring. But the city that lays claim to having the second largest celebration may be a bit further south than many people suspect. It's Savannah, Georgia. The parade is the capstone to a week-long celebration. And although it features hundreds of parade units from across the country, green ber, green hats and the occasional green poodle, what the parade is really famous for is kissing.

Audio slideshow by V.W.H. Campbell Jr. and Curt Chandler

March 15, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Echoes of a Disaster


LOCAL: Fed by extraordinary snow melt and rain, Pittsburgh's ice-filled three rivers crested at the Point on March 18, 1936, at the highest mark since anyone has kept track: Just over 46 feet. The Allegheny and Monongahela rivers were converging near Smithfield Street, leaving Downtown under as much as 15 feet of water. In this presentation, two flood survivors share their memories of the event, still vivid 70 years later.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Bob Batz Jr.

Related stories

Pittsburgh's Flood of Memories: St. Patrick's Day 1936
Boy survived flood -- and hat pin

March 13, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Starting from seed


GARDENING: This is the first installment of a series of audio slideshows by the Post-Gazette's Backyard Gardener to provide instruction on the basics of gardening. In this presentation, gardeners are taught how to start plants from seed.

Audio slideshow by Douglass Oster and Matt Freed.

March 05, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Wrestler


PSU SPORTS: Penn State wrestler Rohan Murphy is a marvel of physical conditioning. He curls 45 pound barbells with ease. He can bench press 290 pounds. Last fall he ascended a ski slope using only his bare hands. Not that he had a choice. Murphy has no legs.

Audio slideshow by John Beale.

Related story: Going to the mat for what he loves

March 05, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Romance, creativity and ballet


DANCE: British choreographer Derek Deane travels the world setting ballets -- "Sleeping Beauty" in Croatia, "The Nutcracker" in Japan and the upcoming "Anything Goes" for Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre. No matter where this journeyman artist heads, no matter what ballet he stages, there is always an underlying thread of romance that permeates the very nature of ballet. With his new Cole Porter work, Deane is bringing it to the fore. This presentation explores the process used to create "I've Got You Under My Skin," a duet for PBT dancers Kumiko Tsuji and Daesuke Takeuchi -- who happen to be a couple both onstage and off.

Audio slideshow by Martha Rial, Annie O'Neill and Jane Vranish.

Related story: Dance Preview: Ballroom ballets / PBT plans swingin' tributes to Sinatra and Porter

March 05, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Making Bread


FOOD: In our Do It Yourself series, we bring you practical, step-by-step, illustrated lessons in essential -- and in our grab-and-go world, increasingly forgotten -- cooking skills that will impress your family, inspire your friends and make you feel like the most competent cook on the planet. Making bread is the first audio slideshow of this occasional series. Next up: making sushi.

Audio slideshow by Lake Fong, Steve Mellon and Amy Schaarsmith.

Related story: Making homemade bread, step by step

March 03, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Passing the Vibe


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: Blues musicians Paul Rishell and Annie Raines were the conduit for good vibrations last Sunday during an intimate performance at a house concert in the East End of Pitsburgh. Their audience of 30 people was in sharp contrast to the previous night, when they played at the Carnegie Lecture Hall before several hundred fans. Both concerts were sponsored by Calliope, the Pittsburgh folk music society. Sunday's performance was at the Shadyside home of Phil and Slu Smith. In the Smith's living room, Calliope board president Ray Werner said the evening wouldn't include passing a hat for contributions. Instead, he said the artists were looking to "pass the vibe" of the folk and roots music the organization seeks to preserve.

Audio slideshow in video formats by Annie O'Neill.

Related content: Pictures and more audio from the concert may be found in the Feb. 27, 2006 photo journal

March 01, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Bringing back the Beaux Arts Ball


LIFESTYLE: In its early years, the Beaux Arts Ball at Carnegie Mellon University exuded ambition, what with the dean himself dressed as Charlemagne, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. Then again, would you expect anything less imaginative from a school whose artistic alumni include Steven Bochco, Ted Danson, Josh Groban, Cherry Jones, Rob Marshall, Andy Warhol and Patrick Wilson? Images from a century of CMU's Beaux Arts Ball with narration provided by Nikki Delhomme, a 22-year-old senior from Texas who is studying costume design.

Audio slideshow in video formats by Annie O'Neill.

Feb. 26, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Mountaintop Trouble


ENVIRONMENT: From his tiny home atop a mountain in Boone County, W.Va., Larry Gibson has a stark view of what he calls the destruction of a way of life. He's surrounded by mountains that have been bulldozed and blasted by companies wanting valuable veins of coal. Such mining techniques are ruining the state's legendary landscape and forcing mountain people to change the way their families have lived for generations. Maria Gunnoe, who lives in the small space between two mountains not far away, agrees. She says it's easy to feel powerless in a state where "coal is king." In this audio slideshow, the two talk about their strong connection to the land and what it's like to see that land change dramatically in just a few years.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon.

Related story: In West Virginia, citizens battle against the mining companies carving off their mountaintops

Feb. 22, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Photos capture mill town era


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: People noticed Richard Snodgrass when he hauled his large wooden view camera to West Aliquippa, stood behind a tripod, ducked his head under a black hood and began taking photographs in the fall of 1977. Now, everyone can see what Snodgrass was really up to because 80 of his photographs have been gathered in an exhibition titled "AfterImage: Mill Life Remembered" at the Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center in the Strip District.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon.

Feb. 20, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Pennsylvania's Land of Lincolns


REGION: Dozens of relatives of the 16th president rest in an obscure Fayette County cemetery, while the family maintains a mostly quiet Western Pennsylvania presence. Ralph Lincoln's relationship to the 16th U.S. president is far removed and complicated, but he can break it down for you by going in three directions, backwards, sideways and forwards. Honest.

Audio slideshow by Bob Batz Jr. and Steve Mellon.

Feb. 17, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Students bring Shakespeare's works to life


THEATER: For a week, more than 950 students, grades 4-12, crowded into the O'Reilly Theater to emote, declaim, invent and strut their stuff for teams of judges in the Pittsburgh Public Theater's 12th annual Shakespeare Monologue and Scene Contest. Thirty-three students doing seven scenes and 17 monologues were invited back for the Feb. 13 finals, attended by an avid crowd of more than 400. Ten contestants received prizes.

Audio slideshow by Lake Fong and Annie O'Neill.

Related story: 12th Annual Shakespeare Monologue and Scene Contest winners chosen

Feb. 08, 2006 ~ Slideshow: The Steelers' Super Bowl Victory Parade


STEELERS: An estimated quarter million Steelers fans streamed into Downtown Pittsburgh yesterday to be part of the victory parade and rally to honor the Super Bowl champions and their 21-10 victory over the Seattle Seahawks in Detroit. This slide show captures the high energy of the teeming multitudes and the Steelers themselves in a community celebration that will be a long-remembered close to a storied season.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon.

Related story: 250,000 pack Downtown to cheer the champion Steelers

Related content: Complete Super Bowl multimedia index, including video features.

Feb. 07, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Images from a Super Day (Steelers win Super Bowl XL)


STEELERS: The Steelers' 21-10 victory over the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl XL was a victory on many levels. It was one for The Bus, allowing Jerome Bettis to retire after achieving the ultimate team goal in profession football. It was one for the coach, who finally shook the rep that he can't win the big one. It was a victory for the quarterback, who became the youngest signal-caller in NFL history to win the world championship. It was a victory for the receiver, long noted for his ferociousness as a blocker, but now recognized for his complete game, as Super Bowl MVP. And finally, it was a victory for the fans.

Slideshow by the Post-Gazette photo staff.

Related story: A riveting run to glory

Related content: Complete Super Bowl multimedia index, including video features.

Feb. 03, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Gloomy Browns fans prepare for a Steelers Super Bowl


STEELERS: The Steelers' success is causing a lot of pain in one nearby city -- Cleveland. If there's anything a diehard Cleveland fan cherishes more than a Browns' win, it's a Pittsburgh loss. They're stomping on Terrible Towels in Cleveland and telling Pittsburgh jokes. What else is there to do when their favorite team fails to make the playoffs (snicker) again?

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Doug Oster.

Related content: Complete Super Bowl multimedia index, including video features.

Jan. 24, 2006 ~ Slideshow: Mario Lemieux / A career in words and pictures


PENGUINS: For the second time in his Hall of Fame career, Penguins center Mario Lemieux has announced his retirement as a player in the NHL. In an emotional press conference at Mellon Arena, Lemieux, 40, said he could no longer play at the level he was used to in a league dominated by young, fast players. He is the No. 7 scorer in NHL history, with 690 goals and 1,033 assists in 915 career games. Lemieux had seven goals and 15 assists in 26 games this season. His career was highlighted by the Penguins' Stanley Cup-winning seasons in 1991 and 1992. He led Team Canada to Olympic gold in 2004 and to the 2004 world championship.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Annie O'Neill.

Related story: Lemieux retires, this time for good

Jan. 21, 2006 ~ The Steelerettes / Memories of a bygone era


STEELERS: Four decades ago, a group of young women from Pittsburgh made sports history when they became professional football's first cheerleaders. The Steelerettes made their debut in 1961, and for nearly a decade brought color and spirit to games played by mostly losing Steelers teams. They cheered from the sidelines at Pitt Stadium because the Steelers had no other home. But the cheerleaders were all students at what was then Robert Morris Junior College (now Robert Morris University.) They wore knee-length skirts and, in their first season, hardhats. The Steelerettes ended their run after the 1969-70 season, but these days several members continue to get together, to share stories and memories.

Audio slideshow by Annie O'Neill and Steve Mellon.

Jan. 16, 2006 ~ Documenting the intersection of art and audience


ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: William D. Wade is a working artist whose photographs have been exhibited nationally. He has one of six solo exhibitions presently on display at the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts. Mr. Wade is a photojournalist for the Post-Gazette as well, a job in which he uses images to tell stories. He experiences the convergence of art and real life on a daily basis. His pictures at the Center for the Arts document in particular the intersection of art and audience. He shares some of the insight developed through years of observation and contemplation.

Audio slideshow by William D. Wade, Curt Chandler and Steve Mellon.

Jan. 1, 2006 ~ Will "The Bus" stop here?


STEELERS: On New Year's Day running back Jerome Bettis burst out of the players tunnel at Heinz Field to the roar of the crowd. With the team's playoff hopes on the line, Bettis scored three touchdowns to lead Pittsburgh to a 35-21 victory over the Detroit Lions and a playoff game against the Cincinnati Bengals. The game was bittersweet for the veteran back, however. It may be his last game before the home crowd.

Audio slideshow by Annie O'Neill and Steve Mellon.

Dec. 30, 2005 ~ Auld Lang Syne, Pittsburgh style


LOCAL: This weekend people throughout Pittsburgh will raise a toast to the new year and sing one of the world's most-recognized songs, "Auld Lang Syne." The tune is a centuries-old Scottish ditty, passed down through the generations and penned into prominence by poet Robert Burns in the late 1700s. Part of the song's appeal is the opportunity for singers to leave their personal stamp on the performance. This feature examines the origins of the song, its appeal and the way it is sung by a variety of Pittsburghers, including the people pictured at left: top, South Side performance artist and torch singer Phat Man Dee; center, East Pittsburgh hip-hop artists and brothers Adam and Benjamin Powell; and bottom, "Pittsburgh's Tartan Tenor" Robert Murdoch.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Annie O'Neill.

.
.
.

.
.

Dec. 24, 2005 ~ Christmas at the Allegheny County Jail


LOCAL: Holiday tunes play at low volume from a boom box beside a decorated tree as eight men in well-worn red jumpsuits stand at folding tables. Each wears a waterproof ID bracelet on his arm and a name-tag sticker on his chest. They engage in steady conversation as they stuff large envelopes stamped with Christmas greetings. In Room 1165, volunteer elves are at work, packaging gifts for about 2,500 of their fellow inmates expected to spend the holidays at the Allegheny County Jail.

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Annie O'Neill.

Related story: A little something for Christmas in the cell block

Nov. 27, 2005 ~ Pittsburghers on Broadway


THEATER: It's an article of faith that Pittsburgh contributes far more than its demographic share to the national show business talent pool, and that you can hardly turn around in the New York theater community without bumping into a Pittsburgher. To celebrate this connection, 238 people claiming show business lives and Pittsburgh roots crowded onto a traffic island Nov. 16 on Broadway in Times Square. They were there to celebrate their pride in Pittsburgh. The Post-Gazette sponsored the reunion, in the style of its similar Nov. 16, 1994, gathering of 205 Pittsburghers on the same spot, to honor Pittsburgh talent and tell these expatriates that their hometown cares about them in what can be difficult livelihoods, especially for those on the lowest rungs of a steep and slippery ladder.
The main story (Pittsburgh on Broadway: A reunion at Times Square) features still photos and audio from the photo session and a follow-up party at Sardi's.
An index to people in the group photo (Pittsburgh on Broadway: Who's Who) features video profiles of several participants.
A story on people who work in New York theater but couldn't make the picture (Pittsburgh on Broadway: Regards, and regrets) contains an additional photo with audio.

Photos, video and audio by Curt Chandler.
Stories by Christopher Rawson

Nov. 11, 2005 ~ Duty Calls


LOCAL: About 20 active members of the color guard of the Korean War Veterans of Western Pennsylvania, Matthew B. Ridgway Chapter, may be found in cemeteries, sometimes two and three times a week, carrying out the rituals of military honor for fellow veterans. The veterans' sacrifice "is often forgotten by the nation," color guard member Skip Niedergal said during one recent eulogy. "We Korean War veterans are here today to make sure [this veteran] is not a forgotten veteran."

Audio slideshow by Steve Mellon and Annie O'Neill.

Related story: The bonds of service endure for Western Pa. vets

Summer, 2005 ~ Following in Katrina's Wake


NATION: As part of its coverage of the devastation across the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and its sister paper, The Blade of Toledo, Ohio, dispatched reporters George J. Tanber and Tim McNulty and photographers Martha Rial and Lake Fong to chronicle the physical and human scale of the catastrophe. Highlights from their collective report are presented in this interactive gallery of images from the stricken communities.

Slideshow of photos by Martha Rial and Lake Fong, produced by Bill Pliske.


Multimedia toolbox

Flash player is required for most audio slideshows. Videos are generally available in two formats, as Windows Media files and as QuickTime movies.

First published on December 31, 2006 at 12:00 am
Post-Gazette.com appreciates your comments on these stories and ideas for future multimedia projects. Send us your feedback here.
Featured Homes
Featured Rentals