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Archive | April, 2011

Saturday is “Love Your Park Day”

April 14, 2011

parksSaturday is “Love Your Park Day” in Philadelphia. For most of us, I suspect that every day is love your park day, but this one is official. That means that volunteers are needed.

Volunteers are needed at Clark Park from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Projects include cleaning the peripheral areas of the park to get them ready for spring and putting mulch around tree bases, beginning with the trees near the shuffleboard court at 45th and Chester. If weather permits, park benches will get a coat of sealant.

Help is also needed at Malcolm X. Park for a general clean-up from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and at Barkan Park (50th & Spruce) from 10 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Volunteers are also needed at Cedar Park from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. to help with the park gardens. Bring clippers and cutting shears if you have them. Other tools will be provided.

 

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Crazy about manga

April 14, 2011

mangaEvery couple of weeks a small room in the Lucien E. Blackwell West Philadelphia Regional Library at 52nd and Sansom is converted into a shrine to the Japanese comic art genre of manga. Teens and ‘tweens (10-12 year-olds) stop by to talk manga, draw manga, read manga and even listen to music about manga.

Manga, which in Japan is read by all segments of society, has swept through this generation of American kids in Harry Potter-like fashion.

“It appeals to a wide range of what you’re looking for,” said Shaunda, a Philadelphia High School for Girls student. “If you’re looking for fantasy, they have fantasy. They’re got action and lots of romance.”

Librarians have welcomed the interest in manga and have dedicated more money to bolster library collections.

“Some of the stories are kind of fantastic,” said Blackwell librarian Jeanne Hamann.

She added that kids who grew up with Pokemon were sort of “primed” for manga.

Hamann also said interest in manga has opened a window into Japanese culture for many.

That was certainly evident at this week’s Manga Cafe. As fans sat at table drawing, reading and talking manga, Japanese music played in the background. Kids leafed through Japanese magazines and Japanese food was served.

See the slideshow below for a better look at the Manga Cafe.

 

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A detailed look at how the school might sell off its buildings

April 12, 2011

Thanks to West Philly writer Patrick Kerkstra‘s piece on the development news website Plan Philly we know a lot more of how the closing and possible sale of schools may go.

The School District of Philadelphia plans to shutter up to 50 buildings. The district plans to announce in October which buildings will go. Communities have begun bracing for not only the closing of their school, but the possible resale of longtime community centerpieces.

This is where Kerkstra picks up the story with a detailed look at the district “adaptive reuse” policy (see document below). Schools could be sold to developers, non-profits or faith-based groups.

Kerkstra writes:

Unlike the existing policy, where the district’s goal is “to achieve the maximum market rate value in the sale” of property, the proposed new rules would offer discounts of up to 25 percent off the market value for would-be educational buyers, such as a charter school. Non-profits and community service providers – a faith-based charity, for instance, or a CDC – would be eligible for discounts of up to 15 percent, at the district’s discretion.

Click here for the rest of the story.
Proposed Adaptive Reuse Policy for Public Comment

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Groundbreaking polo team featured on CBS Evening News

April 12, 2011

Here’s a piece from the CBS Evening News last night on brothers Kareem and Daymar Rosser and their friend Brandon Reese from the Cowtown/Work to Ride polo team, which won the 42nd annual USPA National Interscholastic Championship tournament last month.

The three young men, all West Philly natives, were the first African American team ever to win the title.

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Curio cast to show us another side of Hamlet

April 12, 2011

curioThe Curio Theatre Company is gearing up for another performance. This time West Philly’s own theater will tackle Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, an absurd, tragicomedic twist on Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

We see Hamlet’s story unfold through the eyes of the courtiers and spies Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, two minor characters from the original work. But in this story Rosencrantz invents the hamburger and discovers gravity.

Liz Carlson directs the play, which features Eric Scotolati, CJ Keller and Brian McCann.

A recent post on the Curio Theatre blog describes the preparations for the run, which begins this week with a series of previews:

“It’s been an absolute inspiration to see Eric Scotolati, CJ Keller and Brian McCann work tirelessly to achieve the seeming effortlessness of Tom Stoppard’s rapier sharp wit; they’re at work when the rest of the cast comes in at the assigned time, and they remain at work when the rest of the cast leaves at the end of the night, perfecting every nuance and giving each movement the specificity it needs.”

Previews will run Thursday, Friday and Saturday this week. Performances begin at 8 p.m. each night.

The show opens on Friday, April 22 at 8 p.m.

For a complete schedule of the run, check the Curio website here.

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Go West! photos

April 11, 2011

art

For those who couldn’t make it out to the Go West! Fest on Saturday, VIX Emporium (5009 Baltimore Ave.) has provided a Flickr set. Thanks VIX.

 

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