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Picnic, party & beer gardens: ‘Love Your Park’ events roundup

Posted on 16 May 2013 by WPL

This weekend there’s an opportunity to show your love for your local parks as many events are scheduled in the area as part of the “Love Your Park” week held citywide. Here are some details:

 

ThePorchBeerGardenThe Porch Beer Garden (The Porch at 30th Street Station)

Thursday & Friday (May 16 & 17), 3 – 8 p.m.

The Porch at 30th Street Station is hosting a two-day beer garden this Thursday and Friday. There will be live music by Perseverance Jazz Band (May 16), The Red Hot Ramblers (May 16), and Polkadelphia (May 17). Beer will be served by Bridgewater’s Pub and the following gourmet food trucks will show up at the event: The Cow and The Curd (battered fried cheese curds), Local 215 (locally sourced seasonal foods), and Sum Pig (gourmet comfort food). For more information, visit the event’s Facebook page.

 

parkPicnic in Cedar Park (50th & Baltimore)

Friday, May 17, 6 – 8 p.m.

Cedar Park is celebrating “Love Your Park” week with a community picnic. You can bring your own food or pick up a coupon for a “picnic special” you can redeem at Cedar Park area businesses, including The Gold Standard Cafe, Dock Street Brewery, Hibiscus Cafe, Little Baby’s Ice Cream and more. Click here for more details.

 

Barkan Park Clean-up (50th & Spruce)

Saturday, May 18, 2 – 4 p.m.

Show your love for Barkan Park this Saturday and help with clean-up, weeding, and planting. Tools and refreshments will be provided. For more information call Mark at 215-476-2983.

 

ClarkParkchairParty in Clark Park (43rd & Baltimore)

Saturday, May 18, 4 – 8 p.m.
The Friends of Clark Park are hosting a party in Clark Park in observance of “Love Your Park” week and everyone is invited. This free community event will include food, music, games and the park’s first Beer Garden. At the party enjoy performances by West Philly based Pakistani musician Umer Piracha, The Philadelphia Women’s Slavic Ensemble and On The Water. And here are the food vendors at the party: MiniTrini (gourmet Trinidadian food), The Cow and the Curd, Taco Angeleno (new West Philly based taco truck), and Lil’ Pop Shop. Beer will be served by Dock Street and actually will cost $5, but if you join The Friends of Clark Park at the event you will receive a free beer ticket and can buy the next beers for $3.

By the way, also on Saturday Clark Park “B” at 43rd and Chester will be hosting Uhuru Flea Market from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., so you can spend the whole day at the park, especially since the weather is expected to be nice and sunny.

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What’s the future of University City High? Forum today at 4 p.m.

Posted on 15 May 2013 by WPL

Neighbors, community leaders and experts are getting together this afternoon (at 4 p.m.) to discuss the future of University City High School that is slated for closure at the end of the 2013 school year along with 22 other Philadelphia schools. The school opened in 1973.

Strategies for the use of the building after the closure will also be discussed at the forum that will take place at Metropolitan Baptist Church, 3500 Baring St. The panelists include:

Councilwoman Jannie Blackwell

Algernong Allen, Baltimore Avenue Business Association

DeWayne Drummond, Mantua Civic Association

George Poulin, Powelton Village Civic Association

Emily Dowdall, Pew Charitable Trusts

Allan Domb, President Greater Philadelphia Association of Realtors

The discussion will be moderated by Solomon Jones of AxisPhilly and filmed by NBC 10.

To register please go to uchigh.eventbrite.com/ (registration closes at 3 p.m.)

 

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More parklets popping up in West Philly

Posted on 15 May 2013 by WPL

manakeesh parklet

Parklet at 45th and Walnut.

Three more parklets, public seating platforms that replace parking spots, are coming to the University City area this week. A new parklet was installed near Manakeesh Cafe on Walnut Street near 45th on Tuesday. Two parklets, with new design developed by Philadelphia’s Shift Space Design, are returning to their last year’s locations today and Thursday – on 44th Street near Spruce, across from Honest Tom’s and Lil’ Pop Shop, and on Locust Street near 40th, across from Ramen Bar and Keswick Cycle.

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Elementary school students, parents plan walkout to protest budget cuts

Posted on 14 May 2013 by Mike Lyons

SaveSchoolElementary school students from at least two West Philadelphia schools plan to walk out of their classrooms tomorrow (Wednesday, May 15) and travel with their parents to City Hall to protest the proposed school budget cuts.

Students and their parents from Powel Elementary and Penn Alexander will join parents and students from the C.W. Henry School in Mount Airy in leaving school tomorrow morning to travel to City Hall to protest the proposed cuts, which would eliminate guidance counselors, music programs, assistant principals, nurses and librarians at most schools in the city. District officials have asked the city for $60 million to help make up the $304 million budget shortfall. They have also requested funding from the state and for union concessions.

“Our goal is to have City Council provide the additional $60 million in funding to put counselors, secretaries and after-school clubs back in the schools,” said Robin Dominick, who is helping to organize the walkout at Powel. Dominick estimates 20-30 families will take part.

Participating students and parents from Powel plan to leave at about 10:15 a.m. on the trolley for City Hall, where they will join with parents and students from C.W. Henry at between 10:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. at the northwest corner of City Hall.

Students wrote letters to city officials in school this week detailing how the cuts will impact them personally. They plan to deliver the letters to City Council members tomorrow, Dominick said.

A small but growing group of students and parents from Penn Alexander is also planning to attend the rally.

Hundreds of high school students walked out of their schools on May 9 to rally at City Hall in opposition to the cuts.

More details about the proposed budget are available here.

Mike Lyons

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Reports of a female scammer, pickpocketing over weekend

Posted on 13 May 2013 by WPL

Some of our readers may remember a scam alert we published exactly two years ago of a young woman asking for money in the neighborhood because she said she had been abused by her husband and was looking for a domestic violence shelter. This past weekend we received another report of a female involved in the similar activity. Here’s what our reader, Elle, wrote:

“I got scammed big time by a woman who stopped me in the street (46th and Spruce) and asked me to help her find a domestic violence shelter. She had a really heartbreaking story about escaping from her abusive husband and she was trying to get to a “safety point.” I let her borrow my phone to call the hotline she said she’d been talking with earlier. After overhearing her conversation I ended up giving her (way too much) money to cover her fare to the safety point in the suburbs. I started getting suspicious after she left and checked the call log on my phone. None of the calls were longer than 10 seconds — she had been pretending to talk on the phone so I would overhear her plight and give her money. It’s a pretty despicable scam, but it worked really well.”

While the account we described in our post in 2011 hasn’t changed too much, this time the description of the woman is different. Elle said that it was “a middle aged white woman with dyed red hair, wearing a sweat suit.”

On Friday, May 10, a reader, Rachel, became a pickpocket victim at Honest Tom’s taco shop near 44th and Spruce. Rachel says that her wallet was stolen and that after talking to the owner, she discovered that she was “hit by a notorious West Philly pick pocket who is known by the alias ‘scarface’.” While we are waiting for a response to our police inquiry about this “well known” neighborhood thief, we wanted to alert other residents about this incident.

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Invert!, feminist-inspired circus and aerial arts show at the Rotunda May 16-18

Posted on 13 May 2013 by Annamarya Scaccia

Tangle-Rotunda2

Tangle founder Lauren Rile Smith with member Sarah Nicolazzo / Photo by Michael Ermilio

West Philly’s Tangle Movement Arts, the all-female circus arts company known for its wildly popular public showcase, tinycircus, is back with an all-new, full-length aerial dance show, Invert!, that’s sure to excite and inspire. The interdisciplinary piece debuts at the Sanctuary at the Rotunda, 4014 Walnut Street, on Thursday evening and runs through Saturday, May 18.

Apropos for today’s political climate, Invert! is a testament to female strength, using acrobatics, dance and theater, spoken word, and live music to dissect and exalt the female and queer experiences, as well as the connection between women—be it in “relationships of sex, friendship, support, or antagonism.” In exploring these motifs, members of the nine-woman cast will ascend and engulf the space of the Rotunda’s 40-foot ceilings, performing a “Cher-inspired” sequined trapeze solo, a “punk-rock” acrobatic duet, “drag-inspired diva fabulousness,” and live carpentry and cartwheels (complete with a cordless power drill!) in tribute to feminist icon Rosie the Riveter. The emotionally- and artistically-charged routine will also feature tango violin solos by Julliard musician Caeli Smith.

“Tangle was founded with the vision of creating feminist circus-theater, so female relationships and experiences have always been a central focus for our work. Our aerial dance is very physically intense as well as collaborative, so making shows about female strength and connections between women is just a natural extension of that process,” said Tangle founder Lauren Rile Smith, who’s “thrilled” to bring Invert! to West Philly. “It’s also a deliberate political commitment, however. In a world of media in which women—and their relationships—are frequently erased or flattened into jokes, we feel an essential need to represent a diverse range of female bodies, relationships, and capabilities.”

But it’s not only in theme in which Invert! celebrates both circus arts and queer history. According to Rile Smith, “invert” not only signifies circus arts’ basic vocabulary (“a body-upside-down”), it is also the 19th-century term used to label gender nonconformists. “In joining these two traditions, we promise an evening of upended expectations,” she told West Philly Local.

Tangle fans who can’t make it to Invert! will have a chance to see the two-year-old company in action when it presents its next tinycircus performance to the West Park Arts Fest at the School of the Future, 4021 Parkside Avenue, on June 18.

Annamarya Scaccia

Show Information

Tangle presents Invert!a spectacle of aerial dance and circus-theater.
Thursday, May 16 – Saturday, May 18
8:30 p.m.
The Sanctuary at the Rotunda
4014 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104.
Tickets: $10-15 (discounts for artists, students, seniors, and groups). Purchase at the door or online at http://invert.brownpapertickets.com/.

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