What can you find in this week's Isthmus? Highlights from the latest issue follow:
- Amy Barrilleaux reports on Madison's racial divide and this year's school board races.
- Joe Tarr reports on the next steps for siting a permanent homeless day shelter.
- Joe Tarr conducts an exit interview with retiring Ald. Satya Rhodes-Conway.
- Marc Eisen breaks down what went wrong with BioLink.
- Bruce Murphy questions Paul Ryan's policy-wonk credentials.
- David Michael Miller examines how concert fliers and street kiosks have helped shape Madison's music, art and film scenes.
- Amelia Cook says Madison Theatre Guild's Rumors is absolutely hilarious.
- John W. Barker reviews the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra's concert with guest pianist Shai Wosner.
- Scott Gordon checks in with Preservation Hall Jazz Band, who'll perform at the Stoughton Opera House.
- Scott Gordon shares the latest details about the Make Music Madison festival.
- Joshua M. Miller interviews British singer-songwriter Bobby Long, set to play the Frequency.
- Jessica Steinhoff discusses community TV station WYOU's efforts to stay afloat.
- Dean Robbins is taken in by Jeremy Piven's turn-of-the-century con man in Masterpiece Classic's "Mr. Selfridge."
- Kenneth Burns admires the understated storytelling in Like Someone in Love, Abbas Kiarostami's new film about a Japanese college student who moonlights as a call girl, and Kimberley Jones says The Gatekeepers, a new documentary by Dror Moreh, is unsettling, but in a good way.
- André Darlington finds Chicago's Charlie Socher cooking eclectic American food in Mineral Point.
- Liz Merfeld talks to Radiant Fabrication's Nathan Patterson about making 3-D printing user-friendly.
- Tell All hears from a supporter of the Boy Scouts' "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays.
- Jason Joyce gives a hat-trick -- er, tip -- to Badger hockey.
- Bill Lueders reviews a new, locally published thesaurus of baseball terms, just in time for opening day.