May 9, 2011
This is the Mac Daddy of West Philly porch sales. Actually, it’s more of a warehouse sale. The organization Penn Moves is once again collecting all of the stuff departing Penn students would otherwise leave behind – on the sidewalk or in the dump – and selling it for charity.
OK sure, so there might be too many mouse pads and God knows how many pairs of Uggs, but there could always be a hidden gem behind that tiny little refrigerator.
This year the sale will be from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on June 4 at a warehouse Penn owns at 3401 Grey’s Ferry Ave (see map below). You can get in for a sneak peak at 8 a.m. for $5.
Goodwill Industries International Inc. will handle the sorting and transportation of the myriad items students donate, which range from cocktail dresses to cocktail sauce and coffee makers to coffee tables. One striking image at last year’s sale at the Class of 1923 Arena was a wall of microwaves.
All the proceeds from the sale go to Goodwill. Last year that was $22,000.
Penn Moves will collect items through May 18 near college houses and through May 31 at Sansom Place (3600 Chestnut St.)
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May 9, 2011

Penn’s student move-out began Saturday and will continue through May 18. The key days to keep in mind are Tuesday and Wednesday, May 10 and 11, when Spruce Street will be closed between 34th and 38th Streets from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Penn Public Safety says that authorized vehicles (parents etc.) will be allowed to access Spruce Street at 38th and must exit Spruce at 34th.
The Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia reminded us that bikes will have access down Spruce on Tuesday and Wednesday.
April 30, 2011
Don’t forget about the Parent Infant Center plant sale today from… well, now until 3 p.m. If you ordered ahead of time, you can pick up your plants. If you didn’t order ahead, browsing possibilities still exist.
The sale is at the church at 42nd and Spruce.
April 28, 2011
A public discussion on race and racism at the University of Pennsylvania has emerged in recent days following an opinion piece in the Daily Pennsylvanian last week from a black student who was the victim of racial slurs by drunk white students.
The first line of student Christopher Abreu’s piece is perhaps the most damning for the university. He writes:
I’m no stranger to racism. Being a minority, it comes with the territory. However, because of a recent experience, I cannot in good faith recommend that minorities come to Penn.
City Paper expanded the story today and raised the issue of how Penn students deal with their surroundings in majority black West Philadelphia. The article doesn’t really dig too deeply into relations between students and the community. Any thoughts? Leave a comment below.
April 27, 2011
Residents are invited to attend a meeting tonight to provide input on a proposal that would legalize outdoor cafe-style seating at restaurants along Baltimore Avenue.
Several businesses currently have outdoor seating, including the Gold Standard Cafe and Dock Street Brewing Co., but there has been no formal approval of the seating. The current city ordinance requires each business to apply for seating separately. The Baltimore Avenue Business Association, which represents a variety of establishments, is seeking an ordinance that would allow several businesses to apply together. These businesses include Elena’s Soul, Aksum, Gojjo, Gold Standard Cafe, Dock Street Brewing Co. and others.
Tonight’s meeting is a chance for residents who live near Baltimore Avenue to voice concerns about the approval of outdoor seating. The meeting is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. on the second floor of Elena’s Soul (4912 Baltimore Ave.)
April 25, 2011
The Philadelphia Inquirer includes a story today on changes in Philadelphia’s black population, which for the first time “clearly outnumbers” all other ethnic or racial groups. But the population is shifting, with large gains in population in places like the lower Northeast and Southwest, but losses here in West Philadelphia, the Northwest part of the city and in neighborhoods around Center City.
Whites leaving the city is the key factor in the increased percentage of blacks, the Inquirer reports. Middle-class blacks leaving the city for the suburbs is a related trend. The black population in the Pennsylvania suburbs increased 26 percent since 2000.
About 21 percent of the city’s population is now Asian and Hispanic.
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