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Archive | July, 2011

Looking for owners, police post photos from stolen cameras

July 20, 2011

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A photo from the memory card of a stolen camera. Anyone you know?

OK, it’s definitely embarrassing to have your family photos unknowingly put online. But in this case it might help you get your stolen camera back.

Police are still trying to track down the owners of a large cache of stolen goods seized during a raid of a clothing store recently near 52nd and Chestnut. Last week they invited robbery and burglary victims to the police headquarters at 55th and Pine to look over hundreds of cameras, cell phones and pieces of jewelry. Now the Southwest Division Burglary Task Force has posted things online, including photos taken off the memory cards of seized cameras in hopes that the camera owners might recognize them.

More photos from cameras as well as pictures of jewelry and other items are here.

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Large, full-service bike shop to open in August near 40th and Locust

July 20, 2011

One of the area’s best-known bicycle shops will open a location at the former Strikes Bowling Lounge (and an original Urban Outfitters store) at 4040 Locust St. later this summer.

Keswick Cycle will reportedly open the 4,000-square-foot store in late August, just as students start to return to the area en masse. The store, which will include bike and clothing sales and maintenance, will likely be the largest bike shop in West Philly.

The store will also include a studio to help elite riders and triathletes get fitted for bikes.

Keswick Cycle has been a neighborhood fixture in the Montgomery County suburb of Glenside since the 1930s and also operates a store in Cherry Hill, N.J.

 

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Friendly female pit bull found in Clark Park Monday morning

July 19, 2011

Brindle pit bull foundThis friendly brindle female pit bull was found in Clark Park early Monday morning.  Chain collar, no tag, maybe less than two years old.  If you think this is someone’s lost pooch contact Ed at motoedde [at] gmail.com or 267-237-6116.

Update: Ed was going to take the dog to Animal Control today since he hadn’t been able to find anyone to foster her.

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Stray tabby cat spotted near 47th & Hazel

July 19, 2011

Stray tabbyThis tabby has been hanging around the 4700 block of Hazel for the last couple of weeks. If you know him please contact Kathy at keisenberg [at] womenslawproject.org.

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The wild West Philadelphia Orchestra at Penn Museum on Wednesday for $5

July 19, 2011

West Philadelphia Orchestra
Photo from Westphiladelphiaorchestra.com.

As part of PM @ Penn Museum Summer Nights program, West Philadelphia Orchestra is performing tomorrow from 5:00-8:00 p.m. at the museum’s Trescher Garden.

Fourteen musicians playing a wide range of instruments, including trumpets, baritone horns, saxophone, sousaphone, clarinets, violins, and drums, create an interesting blend of Eastern European folk sound and jazz, punk, and soul.

Just a reminder: tickets for Penn Museum Summer Nights concert series are only $5 and include museum admission. For more information go here.

Check out a cool fan video of one of West Philadelphia Orchestra’s performances.

 

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West Philly photographer finds compassion in the unlikeliest of places

July 19, 2011

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Most of the prisoners incarcerated at the maximum security Louisiana State Penitentiary, commonly known as “Angola,” will die there. Some 70 percent of its more than 5,000 prisoners are serving life without the chance of parole. It’s a place renowned for violence and misery. But West Philly-based photographer Lori Waselchuk found behind its walls the very essence of humanity.

Waselchuk spent three years from 2007-2010 photographing inmates who took part in the prison’s hospice program. She watched men, many of whom were sent to prison for taking a life, help each other confront their own mortality.

“It was watching these men take a courageous step toward compassion and expressing their love for another person,” Waselchuk said while sitting outside her home on South Melville Street near Baltimore Avenue where she lives with her husband, Temple University professor Shenid Bhayroo, daughter Mira and son Zahli.

Waselchuk’s work at Angola has been collected in the book Grace Before Dying, just released this summer from Umbrage. Dozens of black-and-white photographs document men, some of whom have know each other for decades, helping each other die with dignity. The book includes an essay by Tulane University professor Lawrence N. Powell on Angola’s place in Louisiana history.

lori

A memory still vivid in Waselchuk’s mind is inmates massaging the hands and feet of their mentor from the prison carpentry shop as he lay dying of lung and liver cancer. She writes in the book’s preface:

“The physical contact between these men was new territory for all involved … It was a profound moment of grace, during which these men allowed themselves to break physical boundaries and accept physical expressions of friendship.”

Waselchuk also documented a group of inmates that makes quilts for each hospice patient, another expression of love that seems so paradoxical in a place like Angola.

The project grew out of a small magazine assignment for a Louisiana publication to photograph the hospice program. Waselchuk soon realized that what she was witnessing and photographing needed deeper exploration. She made several trips to Angola over the three years she worked on the project. And although the photographs are of a place a thousand miles from West Philly, their subject is universal.

“This has always been a statement on humanity and what’s possible in all of us,” said Waselchuk, whose work has appeared in Newsweek, The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times.

The hardcover book is available through the publisher for $39.95. But Waselchuk is offering a special deal for her neighbors: if you’re in West Philly she will sign the book and hand deliver it you. Write her at lori [at] loriwaselchukphotos.com.

This project is more than a book. Waselchuk’s photographs and the prison quilts are part of a traveling exhibit, which will be at Saint Joseph’s University in the fall. A scaled down version will be at the A-Space (4722 Baltimore Ave.) for one night in the future as well in a joint program with the West Philly-based organization Books Through Bars. We will have more details on both of those exhibitions later.

Waselchuk’s next project is on block captains in Philadelphia, a subject she became interested in while walking the city’s neighborhoods as a Census taker last year. She is looking to get in touch with block captains in the city. Write her at the above e-mail address.

 

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