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Archive | October, 2013

Fresh produce, dairy and more with Winter Harvest

October 23, 2013

turnipHere’s a good option for those who want access to locally grown fresh produce during the winter and spring months, when most CSAs are not operating. Winter Harvest is a buying club that works with regional producers and offers delivery locations in West Philadelphia. Membership is free and all you have to do is fill out an application online. After that you order what you want on a biweekly basis for weekly deliveries. You can choose a prepaid option, where a weekly amount is withdrawn from your account, or pay-as-you-go. And you can choose to order a little, a lot, or not at all as each week rolls along.

Currently, Winter Harvest has two West Philly drop-off/pick-up locations – in Spruce Hill (see more details below) and in Overbrook (near Drexel Rd. and City Ave) – and deliveries of fresh produce, dairy, eggs, poultry, flour, coffee, meats, cheeses and more start in November and go on through April.

For our Spruce Hill neighbors, the first ordering window opens on Friday, Oct. 25, with the first delivery on Thursday, Nov. 7. Pick-ups on Thursdays will be at 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the Spruce Hill delivery site, at a house near Melville and Locust intersection, with “after hours” pick-up nearby. More details about the pick-up locations are available after registration.

For more information about Winter Harvest and to sign up, click here.

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New biking group holding info session tomorrow

October 22, 2013

BikecollectiveA new voice in support of more and better biking has been added. The University Bike Collective is holding its first information session tomorrow (Wednesday, Oct 23), according to the group’s Facebook page. The info session, “powered by pizza,” will be held at the University of Pennsylvania’s Meyerson Hall, B6 (210 S. 34th St.) beginning at 12:30 p.m. and interested folks outside of the Penn community are also invited.

The University Bike Collective will introduce their plans for the year, including fun social rides to explore the city, research and advocacy efforts, and workshops. Susan Dannenberg of the Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia will share updates on the latest in Philadelphia bike advocacy.

Come to the session if you:

 Are looking for fun bike-related events, avec free pizza;
• Want to see more bike lanes and bike parking.
• Ever thought about biking in Philly, but you’re not sure how to get started.
• Interested in perfecting the art of layering clothes to avoid over-sweating on your ride to class.

For more information and to RSVP, visit the event’s Facebook page.

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Free Community Night/Open House at Penn Museum on Wednesday, Oct 23

October 22, 2013

Artifact Lab Tour

You can visit the Artifact Lab, learn more about conserving Egyptian mummies and meet a conservator during Penn Museum’s Open House on Wednesday. (Photo courtesy Penn Museum)

 

On Wednesday, Oct 23, Penn Museum is opening its doors to community members of all ages during a free Community Night and Open House. There will be opportunities to get behind the scenes, meet the curators and staff, and enjoy music, dance and storytelling. There will also be gallery tours and a mummy workshop. Want more? How about Egyptian hieroglyph and Mesopotamian cuneiform classes? Also, arts and crafts for the whole family where you can make African masks, Chinese lanterns and Brazilian tambourines.

The event starts at 5 p.m. with the Highlights Tour and goes on until 8 p.m. Check out this page for more information on the scheduled activities and have fun!

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Meeting tonight on District plan to evaluate schools

October 22, 2013

Officials from the School District of Philadelphia will meet with community members today to discuss a new way of gauging success at public schools. The meeting will take place at West Philadelphia High School (4901 Chestnut St) beginning at 5:30 p.m.

District officials are asking for feedback on its new “school performance framework,” which will replace previous, often controversial, methods of evaluating schools. The goal, according to the District’s website, is to “develop and implement a new measure of school performance in order to hold all District and charter schools to the same high standards of performance, equity and safety.”

Many parents contend that these evaluation methods are a better measure of poverty than school performance as it compares schools with vastly different resources. The District faced opposition over the summer during public meetings on a plan to evaluate schools and issue performance “report cards.”

The meeting is scheduled to run until 7:30 p.m. and Superintendent William Hite will lead the discussion.

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City tiring of burned-out building at 46th and Spruce

October 21, 2013

4536 spruce sign

 

A notice has appeared on the burned-out building at the corner of 46th and Spruce Streets. It says that the Department of Licences and Inspections has determined the building to be “a blighting influence” and issued a violation notice to the owner, Transition to Independent Living Inc. L & I ordered the building owner to secure all the windows with “windows that have frames and glazing.”

It’s been almost three years since the building located at 4534 Spruce Street, the former home to the Transition to Independent Living Center, was damaged in a fire (more about it here). A quick search of the L & I database returned information that a permit was issued to demolish the building and erect a two-story structure to be used as a rooming house with 22 bedrooms and one care workers’ unit. However, the permit was appealed in the Zoning Board of Adjustments in January 2012 and since then there hasn’t been any progress made with the project.

There have been no signs of renovation or demolition work so far and it seems that the building is slowly decaying. West Philly Local tried to contact the owners recently as there were reports of workers spotted by the building, but our calls haven’t been returned.

On the upside … if you like street art, the building has been used as a canvas for a couple of years now.

4536 building

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Help make a doc about a West Philly legend

October 21, 2013

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Tyrell Biggs (in the white t-shirt) still schools young Philly boxers in the finer points of the sweet science at a gym in the basement of the Shepard Recreation Center near 57th and Haverford.


 

Tyrell Biggs was one of those dudes who may have hit his prime too early.

He was a starting forward on that legendary West Philadelphia High School basketball team that won a state record 68 straight games on its way to Public League and City titles in 1976-1978.

A few years later, as an amateur boxer, he won gold at the U.S. National Boxing Championships. In 1982 he won the amateur World Championships in Munich. Two years later his path to professional boxing was clear after he won gold in the super heavyweight division at the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, beating future champ Lennox Lewis on his way to the title. He won his first 15 pro fights and got a shot at the title in 1987 but lost in a seventh-round TKO to Mike Tyson.

All by age 27.

For Tyrell Biggs boxing was a way up in life, as it still is for many kids in the city. But like many young people who get a lot of money at a young age, Biggs battled drug and alcohol addiction during much of his adult life. He is the subject of a feature documentary that you can help make happen called Whatever Happened to Tyrell Biggs? (see video below).

Here’s the plot outline for the documentary, which is being produced by Lunchbox Communications (the crew that made Digital Dharma):

“In 1984, US Olympic super heavyweight gold medalist Tyrell Biggs is hailed as the second coming of Muhammad Ali. What should have been the dream launch of an international boxing legend in reality, marked the beginning of a long period of misfortunes, both in and out of the ring. This feature biopic explores one man’s fall from grace into the depths of despair that pushes him to vanish. Living in that territory in between fame and failure, Biggs confronts a struggle that lives within us all.” A good chunk of the production of this film is already complete, but the production team needs some help getting this important story about someone born and raised in West Philly.

 

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