city suburban news 7_30_14 issue
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City Suburban News, Year 29, No. 46, July 30 - August 5, 2014. Free weekly community newspaper covering the Philadelphia/Main Line area.TRANSCRIPT
The soulful crooning andsophisticated sounds ofacclaimed vocalist Sean
Reilly, aka Sean Sinatra, returnsto Martins Run on Tuesday,August 19, to mesmerize resi-dents and visitors of the seniorliving community in Media.Widely known to be “just likeOl’ Blue Eyes,” Reilly will per-form a musical tribute to the mostcelebrated man in music, FrankSinatra.The free program featuring
“Sean Sinatra” includes a com-plimentary lunch with soup &salad, choice of entrées, anddelectable desserts. Seating islimited and reservations are re -quired. To reserve a spot for the10 a.m. show, call 610-353-7660,ext. 227.Sean Reilly’s interest in Sinatra
songs began as a child when hismother played recordings by thelegendary singer for him and hissiblings to help them fall asleep
at night. As he got older, he play -ed Sinatra records for himselfand his friends. In 2009, theWilmington, DE native won theFrank Sinatra Idol Contest heldat Frank Sinatra Park in Hoboken,NJ. Today, Reilly performs atcountry clubs, restaurants, and
private events. Among his ex -tensive repertoire are such clas-sic Sinatra tunes as My Way,That’s Life, Luck be a Lady, andNew York, New York. To learnmore about his performances,visit www.seansinatra.com.For more information about
Martins Run, call 610-353-7660or visit www.martinsrun.org.
DVOC turns up the heat in Augustwith George Bizet’s sultry operaCarmen, a story of passion too in -tense to survive, and the cas u altiesthat lay in its wake.
Carmen is part of a band of gypsies in Seville,Spain, who are smuggling weapons over themountains right under the noses of a localregiment of soldiers. Carmen quickly sets hereyes on Don Jose, a naïve soldier from a smalltown who finds her impossible to resist.Before Jose knows what’s happening, he has
deserted the army and joined up with the gyp-sies, just to stay close to Carmen. When a hand -some bullfighter comes to town and catchesCarmen’s eye Jose tries desperately to hold
on to her, but Carmen is fartoo independent to be con -trolled by anyone. There is no doubt that the
opera exudes sex appeal,but there is much more tothe story than that, accord -ing to Stage Director DorothyCardella. To Cardella, Carmenthe woman and the operaas a whole embody the be -
ginnings of the downfall ofnineteenth century bour-geois society, and the riseof the common man.“Gypsies, women, and the
working class posed thethreat of overwhelmingEuropean social order. Setagainst this bourgeois cen-tury, we see the violenceof the laborers, smugglingand prostitution. Anothercommon theme is men’s
defensiveness, or fear, of women. Hence, the‘femme fatale’ is born and, with a venge ance,extinguishes any one who comes near her,”Cardella writes in her program notes.Cardella adds that it is Carmen’s determi-
nation to live outside the control of a man thatis her doom. Carmen bucks the social normsof the day, driving Jose over the edge. “It isCarmen who pays the ultimate price, with herlife, for Don Jose’s identity crises,” Cardellawrites.Pianist Marja Kaisla will provide the accom -
paniment for DVOC’s production of Carmen.Kaisla is an active chamber musician, re citalistand concerto soloist on the international stage.
Dining at Ella’sAmerican Bistro
in WaynePage 11
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Year 29, No. 46 Celebrating 29 Years of Community News July 30 – August 5, 2014
Dining &EntertainmentPage 6 & 7
P H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S F A V O R I T E W E E K L Y
CITY SUBURBAN NEWSCITY SUBURBAN NEWSFFRREEEE
E-mail:[email protected]
Retrospective ofPainter Theresa
BernsteinPage 3
FIND YOURCOMMUNITYNEWS HERE!
Enjoy the soulful crooning andsophisticated sounds of
acclaimed vocalist Sean Reilly,aka Sean Sinatra, at MartinsRun on Tuesday, August 19.RSVP today to enjoy the free
program and lunch.
The cast of “Carmen”includes mezzo-sopranoRaffaella Lo Castro as
Carmen.
Local author Jon McGoran will debut his new book“Deadout,” the sequel to his ecological thriller “Drift” at the
Morris Arboretum on August 6, from 6 - 8 p.m. Jon willspeak about topics from the books – including food security,GMOs, and the collapse of honeybee populations – and willread from and sign copies of his new book. Also on handwill be representatives from local co-op, sustainability andbeekeeping organizations. Live music and free food anddrink samples will make the evening a true celebration.
OPERA COMPANY’S CA R M E NTURNS UP THE HEAT
Morris Arboretum to HostBook Launch for NewJon McGoran Thriller
On August 6, from 6 to 8 p.m. Morris Arboretum will behosting the launch event for Jon McGoran’s newestbook, Deadout, the sequel to his acclaimed ecological
thriller Drift, both from Forge Books. Expanding on Drift’s themesof organic farming and genetically modified foods, Deadoutalso explores Colony Collapse Disorder, which threatens theworld’s honeybee populations. This free event will feature sam-ples of local mead from Stonekeep Meadery, locally brewed
Sinatra ‘Wows’ Again at Martins Run with Acclaimed Vocal Artist Sean Reilly
See Meet Author Jon McGoran on page 4See DVOC’s Production of “Carmen” on page 6
Peace Center of Delaware County First-FridayFree Film Series
Friday, August 1, 2014, at 7 p.m., Peace Center of Delaware County,1001 Old Sproul Road, in Springfield, will show “The Iron Giant,” an ani-mated treat for the whole family with a message about love and trust inthe face of fear. (Animated, 1999, PG, 86 minutes, Directed by Brad Bird,with the voice talents of Jennifer Aniston, Harry Connick, Jr., and VinDiesel as the Iron Giant.) The film showing is part of Peace Center’s long-running First-Friday Free Large Screen Film Series. Doors open at 6:30p.m. for light refreshments. After film discussion. For information anddirections, http://www.delcopeacecenter.org/ or call 610-544-1818. Co-spon -sored by the Brandywine Peace Community.
Flapjack FundraiserSupport Women of Faith and Hope’s mission to encourage, enlighten andempower women about issues related to breast cancer in efforts to reducethe mortality rate through early detection by coming out to the organi-zation’s Applebee’s Flapjack Fundraiser on August 2, 2014, from 8 - 10a.m., on 323 Old York Road in Jenkintown. Tickets are $10 for adultsand $5 for children 12 and under. For information, call 215-424-4180 [email protected].
“Jazz Meets Chinese Food” The charismatically swinging All-Star Jazz Trio – pianist Andy Kahn,drummer Bruce Klauber and bassist Bruce Kaminsky – appear everyWednesday evening, beginning at 7:30 p.m., at Square on SquareRestaurant, 1905 Chestnut Street in Center City. Square, thought by manyto be as among the finest Chinese restaurants in the city, has a fullliquor license, but patrons are welcomed and invited to BYO. There isno cover or minimum and on-street parking in Center City is free after5 p.m. More details: 215-568-0088 or www.allstarjazz.net.
Library Night at Oakmont National PubThe Haverford Township Free Library (HTFL) will host Library Night atOakmont National Pub on Tuesday, August 5. The event is a fundrais-er for the Library. HTFL encourages supporters of the Library to come fora night of fun and food. Supporters can come any time between 5 p.m.and 9 p.m. that evening for dinner, drinks, and snacks. Inform your serv-er that you are a fan of the Library and a portion of your check will bedonated to HTFL. All funds raised will go toward supporting the Library’scollections, services and programs. The Oakmont National Pub is locat-ed at 31 East Eagle Road, Havertown, PA. The Library is located at 1601Darby Road, Havertown, PA. Forinformation, contact Mary Bear Shannonat 610-446-3082 ext. 216 or visit www.haverfordlibrary.org.
Cemetery TourFrom Shippen Lane to Gratz Street, Rittenhouse Square to Wayne Avenue,their namesake and extended family origins now rest at Laurel HillCemetery. Join for a twilight trip through Laurel Hill – Philadel phia’sultimate dead end – to learn more about how the roads upon which welive and travel earned their place on the map. The tour will take place onWednesday, August 6 at 6 p.m., departing from Laurel Hill Cemetery’sGatehouse entrance at 3822 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19132. Freeparking is located in the lot across the street from the Gatehouse. Thecost is $20/person; or $18/students and seniors. Reservations are sug-gested. Tickets can be purchased at the door, or in advance at 215-228-8200 or online at www.thelaurelhillcemetery.org.
All-Star Jazz Trio Performance The charismatically swinging All-Star Jazz Trio – pianist Andy Kahn,drummer Bruce Klauber, and bassist Bruce Kaminsky – will perform atChris’ Jazz Café’ for two shows, 8 p.m. and 10 p.m., on Friday, August 8.Chris’ is located on 1421 Sansom Street in Center City Philadelphia.Tickets are $15 and can be reserved in advance by calling 215-568-3131.For details, visit www.chrisjazzcafe.com.
Narberth Night at the PhilliesNarberth Night at The Phillies is Saturday August 9, during the 7:05Phillies game vs the Mets at Citizens Bank Park. This Narberth Com -munity Library fundraiser gives families the chance to join the friendsand neighbors at a Phillies Mets game, and experience Charlie Manuel’sinduction into the Phillies Wall of Fame prior to that night’s game. Cur -rent and former Phillies players who were part of Manuel’s managerial
career will participate in the ceremony to honor their former skipper.Among those players will be retired pitcher Roy Halladay. All NarberthNight at the Phillies participants will be sitting in the same section.Ticketholders are encouraged to join the group meeting at the NarberthTrain Station to travel down to the game by train. $20 tickets are avail-able at the Narberth Community Library, on Windsor Ave., and online at:http://nar.mclinc.org/. For information about tickets or possible travel bybus, call Harold Shalon at 610-664-5282.
6th Annual Service Car and Hearse Show Mohnton Professional Car Club (MPCC) welcomes owners of any and allhearses, ambulances, flower cars, limousines and other service vehiclesto participate in its 6th Annual Service Car and Hearse Show to appro-priately take place on the grounds of Laurel Hill Cemetery. Join aneclectic collection of rare cars that include FYNLRYD, a 1947 modifiedPontiac Superior, which is believed to be one of just two known streetrod hearses on the East Coast! Country music band, Friends with Murder(http://www.stereokiller.com/friendswithmurder), and high energy HardRock power trio, Somebody’s Circus (https://www.facebook.com/SomebodysCircus) will provide festive entertainment. MPCC’s 6th AnnualHearse and Professional Vehicle Show will take place on Saturday,August 9 at 10 a.m., rain or shine. Vehicles will be on display until 4p.m. Refreshments will be available. Visitors can enter through LaurelHill’s Gatehouse at 3822 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19132. Freepark ing is located in the lot across the street from the Gatehouse. Admis -sion to the event is FREE and open to the public. For information, phone215-228-8200 or visit www.thelaurelhillcemetery.org. Visit the MPCCFacebook page at http://www.facebook.com/mohntonprocars.
Brandywine Brings the BluesFor its first ever Blues concert, the Brandywine River Museum of Art hasinvited The Steve Cal’ Band to perform Friday, August 15. Philadel phianSteve Cal’ is a guitarist, singer and songwriter whose earliest Bluesinspirations were B.B. King and Muddy Waters. In 2013, Cal’ and hisband – Sandy Eldred on bass and Melinda Gervasio on drums – were thewinners of the Beta Hi-Fi Emerging Music Festival at World Cafe Live.The museum will open at 6 p.m.; The Steve Cal. Band performs at 7 p.m.at the Museum Courtyard. In the event of inclement weather, the concertwill be held inside. Cash bar; food available for purchase. Cost is $12;$10 for Brandywine members; $6 students until Aug. 13. After Aug. 13:$25, $20 Brandywine members; $10 students. Tickets are available athttp://www.brandywinemuseumshop.org/Events.aspx.
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Multiple Grammy Award winner and Rock and Roll Hall of Famelegend Neil Young will make his Kimmel Center debut on October8 & 9 at 8 p.m. with two Philadelphia performances in the historicAcademy of Music. Tickets for Neil Young will go on sale Friday,July 18 at 10 a.m. and will be available by calling 215-893-1999,online at www.kimmelcenter.org, at the Kimmel Center box office,Broad & Spruce Streets (open daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.).
Neil Young to Perform TwoExclusive Phila. Performances
Woodmere Art Museum presents “Theresa Bernstein: A Century in Art,” the first retro-spective exhibition dedicated to the work of Theresa Bernstein (1890–2002). “A Century
in Art” features more than fifty paintings and works on paper from an artist whose life andcareer spanned the century, and returns an erased woman artist to the public eye, prompt-ing new scholarship on this pioneering figure in American art. Organized by Gail Levin, Distinguished Professor of Art History, American Studies and
Women’s Studies at Baruch College and the Graduate Center of the City University of NewYork, the exhibition is on view July 26 through October 26, with a free open house Satur -day, September 13, 4 to 6 p.m., Woodmere Art Museum, 9201 Germantown Avenue, Phila del -phia, PA 19118.Bernstein’s dramatic paintings chronicled twentieth-century American life from the per-
spective of her experience as both a woman artist and a person of the Jewish faith. Herexpressive realism and penetrating depictions of urban life included formerly overlookedsubjects like immigrants, suffragettes and readers in the public library as well as images ofparks, music halls and wartime rallies. Bernstein achieved recognition early in her career,exhibiting regularly with the Ashcan painters. She was praised for “painting like a man,” aremark that demonstrates the gender biases she faced. In both her life and her paintings,prints and drawings, Bernstein reveals the major issues of her time.Born in 1890 in Cracow, Poland, Bernstein immigrated with her parents to the United
States and settled in Philadelphia when she was one year old. She later attended the Phila -del phia School of Design for Women (now Moore College of Art & Design) and studied at thePennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and under noted Philadelphia artist Daniel Garber.In 1912, Bernstein moved with her parents to New York City where she lived the rest of herlife. She exhibited with Robert Henri, John Sloan and other members of the Ashcan Schooland at many institutions and galleries throughout her career. Bernstein died in 2002, two weeksbefore her 112th birthday.“Theresa Bernstein: A Century in Art” is supported by the Robert Lehman Foundation,
the Klorfine Foundation, Harriet and Larry Weiss, and Lynne and Harold Honickman.Woodmere Art Museum is located at 9201 Germantown Ave. Admission to special exhi-
bitions is $10 for adults, $7 for seniors, and FREE for students, children and Museum mem-bers; exhibitions in the Founder’s Gallery and Helen Millard Children’s Gallery are FREE.(Woodmere offers free admission on Sundays, including all special exhibitions.) Museumhours are: Tuesday through Thursday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. - 8:45 p.m.; Saturday,10 a.m. - 6 p.m.; and Sunday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. For information, visit www.woodmereartmu-seum.org or call 215-247-0476.
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Woodmere Art Museum Presents FirstRetrospective of Philadelphia Painter
Theresa Bernstein
Theresa Bernstein,1890-2002, “The Immigrants,” 1923, oil on canvas, 40 x 50 in, Collectionof Thomas and Karen Buckley, part of the exhibition “Theresa Bernstein: A Century in Art”at Woodmere Art Museum July 26 to October 26. A free Open House Reception will be
held on Saturday, September 13, 2014, from 4 - 6 p.m.
Tri-State Jazz SocietyPresents Cynthia
Sayer and Her SparksFly Quartet
Cynthia Sayer and her Sparks FlyQuartet will play for Tri-State JazzSociety on Sunday, August 17, 2014,from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. This concertwill be at the Haddonfield UnitedMethodist Church, 29 Warwick Road,Haddonfield, NJ 08033. Half-priceadmission is $10, available for first-time attendees and members; gen-eral admission is $20. High schooland college students with IDs andchildren accompanied by a payingadult are free. Pay at the door; thereare no advance sales or reserva-tions. The church is about 15 min-utes from central Philadelphia viathe Ben Franklin Bridge. There’sfree parking. For info call 856-720-0232 or visit: www.tristatejazz.org.
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They are the serene images that bring uspeace in times of chaos: a reflection on the
water, the soft shadows cast on the forest floor,and the multicolored carpet of fallen autumnleaves. Artist Alex Losett captures these momentsin her exhibit “Rethinking Landscapes” at SaintJoseph’s University Gallery, which will be ondisplay Monday, August 18 through Friday,Sep tember 19. A reception will be held Thurs -day, September 4, from 6 - 8 p.m.Losett’s 12 oil paintings depict minimalist
representations of these moments of wonder.“Immersed in the constructed realities of a
culture neurotically obsessed with meaning,we become alienated from the importance ofour own experience,” says Losett. “Nature, how -ever, imposes no meaning on its observers.There is only presence, and we create our ownmeaning.”Exploring nature by painting landscapes in a
deceptively idyllic manner, Losett presents thenatural world as it is observed in the 21st cen-tury, forcing the viewer to question whether “pristine” vistas can be taken at face value. First inspired by thebeauty she found while hiking in the Delaware Water Gap, Losett returned years later to find that the areahad been devastated by an invasive insect.She found, however, that “the mossy rocks were still there,” says Losett. “The forest canopy still shaded
the pebbled streams in intricate patterns, and the naked branches still shimmered in the springtime light.”Drawing on this experience, Losett began work on “Rethinking Landscapes,” recording scenes in North eastern
Pennsylvania, which she says is “a region marked by many environmental and social concerns, includingfracking.”“Losett’s serene paintings bring to life the minute details of peaceful landscapes,” says Associate Gallery
Director Jeanne Bracy. “She is clearly adept at noticing every shadow and every nuance that make her piecesrealistic yet mystical. ‘Rethinking Landscapes’ allows the viewer to feel the solitude and quiet of the earth.”A resident of Philadelphia, Losett was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, where she received an M.F.A. from the
Repin Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, and later accepted a position as assistant professorof fine art before relocating to Calgary, Canada. There she earned an M.F.A. from the University of Calgary.After moving to Philadelphia, Losett refashioned herself as a freelance illustrator, creating designs for thePhiladelphia Museum of Art, the Franklin Institute and the Philadelphia Please Touch Museum. She has ex -hibited in Russia, Canada and the United States, and her work is included in both public and private collec-tions.Saint Joseph’s University Gallery is located in Merion Hall on the James J.
Maguire ’58 Campus at 355 N. Latches Lane in Merion Station, PA. A campusmap may be viewed online. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.- 7 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m. For information, call 610-660-1845 orvisit the gallery website at www.sju.edu/gallery.
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“Rethinking Landscapes” at SJU Gallery
“Blue Ridge,” 30 x 38 inches, oil on canvas.
honey beer from Iron hill Brewery, snacks from Weavers Way Co-op, and livemusic, as well as access to the Arboretum’s lovely grounds and an actualdemonstration beehive, and of course a reading and book-signing by JonMcGoran. Local beekeeping, sustainability, and co-op groups will also beon-hand with information about some of the topics and themes addressedin the book. Big Blue Marble Bookstore will handle onsite book sales.With its beautiful setting and facilities, support for natural horticulture,
and an active beekeeping program for over a quarter century, Morris Arbore -tum of the University of Pennsylvania is the ideal location for the launch.The Arboretum currently has 26 hives, educating hundreds of childreneach year and producing delicious “Morris Gold” honey, which will be avail -able at the launch event. “I read Drift in one day, non-stop,” said Robert R. Gutowski, Morris
Arboretum’s Director of Public Programs. “It’s just that kind of eco-noirthriller. We are really pleased to be hosting Jon McGoran’s release partyfor Deadout at the Morris Arboretum. The larger culture has yet to embracesustainability as a core value. Compelling storytelling like this will aug-ment our knowledge from science and history to encourage public policyand community action for food security and environmental protection.”Both Drift and Deadout combine serious issues with an entertaining
narrative. In a starred review, Publishers Weekly says, “McGoran impres-sively integrates concerns about genetically modified produce with anaction-filled storyline and fleshed-out characters…The disturbing, butscientifically plausible, secret at the heart of the bad guys’ schemes is anoriginal one, and McGoran makes the most of it.” McGoran has been writing about food and sustainability for over twen-
ty years, as communication director at Weavers Way Co-op and editor ofThe Shuttle newspaper, and later as editor in chief at Grid magazine. Dur -ing that time he has also been an advocate for urban agriculture, coopera -tive development, and labeling of genetically engineered foods. Writingas D. H. Dublin, he is the author of the forensic crime thrillers Freezer Burn,Blood Poison, and Body Trace, from Penguin Books. He is currently work-ing on the third book in the Drift series, which is due out in late 2015. Formore information, visit www.jonmcgoran.com.The Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania is located at
100 East Northwestern Avenue in the Chestnut Hill section of Phila del -phia. The 92-acre horticulture display garden features a spectacular col-lection of mature trees in a beautiful and colorful landscape. The Arboretumincludes numerous picturesque spots such as a formal rose garden, his-toric water features, a swan pond, and the only remaining freestandingfernery in North America. A permanent nationally award winning exhib-it, Out on a Limb – a Tree Adventure adds to Morris Arboretum’s allureby transporting visitors 50 feet up into the treetops on a canopy walkthat requires no climbing. Open weekdays 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. and weekends10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Open late on Wednesdays in June, July, and August until8 p.m. For information, visit www.morrisarboretum.org.
MEET AUTHOR JON MCGORANContinued from front page
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Long considered the birth-place of the American gar -
den, Philadelphia is famousfor its large concentration ofstun ning public and privategardens. But many peopledo not know that our regionis also one of the best placesto study horticulture, and thatone of the most venerablehorticulture schools in thecountry can be found righthere on the Main Line at theBarnes Arboretum in Merion. In 1940 Laura Barnes estab -
lished the Arboretum Schoolon her 12-acre private estate.A passionate plant collectorwith a keen interest in educa -tion, she added thousandsof plants to the landscape ofthe Barnes Arboretum through -out her lifetime, creating botha place of great beauty andan exceptional teaching col-lection. Today a public gar-den, the Barnes’s formal gar-dens, woodland area, and park-
like lawn are home to over 3000 woody plants, many quite rare. Roses, peonies, lilacs, and a superlative fern garden are afew of the collection highlights.From its inception 74 years ago, the program’s coursework was envisioned as a comprehensive and immersive horti-
culture education in which students attend classes one day a week for three years, studying the science, design, and mate-rials of horticulture. After completing the program, graduates have the background to be practicing horticulturists, gar-den designers, and landscape professionals, and many go on to make great contributions to the field.Although modernized to reflect current best practices and standards, the Horticulture Certificate Program at the Barnes
Arboretum continues to operate according to the vision and legacy of Laura Barnes. In each 28-week academic year, stu-dents learn from highly regarded scientists and practicing professionals. Subjects range from a variety of horticulture sci-ence classes to a series of integrated design, garden history, and landscape architecture courses. Students also gain amastery of the identification, usages, and culture of a wide palette of plant material, from annuals, perennials, and bulbs,to over 350 species of woody plants frequently encountered in the Mid-Atlantic region. The curriculum combines classroom teaching and lab work with hands-on experience using the grounds of the Barnes
Arboretum for project-based learning and field observation. Field trips throughout the Delaware Valley expose studentsto extraordinary private gardens and allow them to meet our region’s most talented amateur and professional horticul-turists.“One advantage of the program is that it manages to combine information from many different disciplines,” says student
Rebecca Conrad. “There’s a great deal of practical information, including knowledge about specific plants, but then weintegrate what we’ve learned into the design process.”The Horticulture Certificate Program at the Barnes Arboretum is now accepting students for the 2014-15 academic year
beginning in September. To learn more about the program, contact Horticulture Education and Programs Manager NicoleJuday at 215-278-7373 or go to www.barnesfoundation.org/education/horticulture. To register, call 215-278-7300.
World-Class Horticulture Training at the Barnes Arboretum
ReStore Montco of Habitat for Humanity of Montgomery County, PA (Norristown) is host-ing a hands on painting workshop on Thursday, August 7 at 11:30 a.m. and repeated
again on Saturday, August 16, at 11:30 a.m. The workshop will take place at ReStore Montcolocated on 533 Foundry Rd. in West Norriton. Darla DeMorrow, owner of HeartWork Organ -izing, will demonstrate techniques and supplies that can be used to paint many of the fur-niture items and other treasures just waiting to be transformed at ReStore Montco. Habitat for Humanity ReStores are a great place to find furniture. The items donated to
ReStore Montco are sturdy, but may not always fit with the current owner’s décor. ReStoreMontco is a mecca for thrifty homeowners who love bargain shopping for items to upcycleand makeover into chic home décor at a fraction of retail costs. Habitat for Humanity usesthe funds to support their mission to eliminate substandard housing issues in MontgomeryCounty.Darla DeMorrow, a long-time volunteer with Habitat for Humanity, is a professional orga-
nizer and home decorator who often shops thrift stores for quality pieces. A lot of thesepieces are better quality construction than similar items found in retail today. Features likeall-wood bodies, dovetail drawer boxes, and turned wood legs are what make a piece spe-cial. If the piece is in good structural shape, it can often be painted and perhaps modifiedslightly to fit right in with modern décor. Other times, a dash of retro style is exactly what’scalled for to spice up a bland room. Many people don’t want to take a project home without an idea of how they are going to
restore it. DeMorrow is going to offer participants the chance to learn and even, in somecases, try their hand at transforming some items from the ReStore of Montgomery County.She’ll cover the when, why and how of using: Latex paint, Spray paint, Chalk Paint® by AnnieSloane, Fabric paint, Mirror Finish by Rust-Oleum, which turns ordinary glass into a mir-rored surface. She’ll also demonstrate what modern graphic stencils are and how they areused on a variety of surfaces. Even hardware gets a turn, as she talks about ways to updateor restore some hardware using specialty finishes available in any craft store. Free registration is required by contacting Erika Reinhard, ReStore Montco Development
Coordinator at 610-278-7710 ext. 117 or at [email protected]. All supplies willbe provided, and special offers from ReStore Montco will be available for the day of the event.The workshops will take place at ReStore Montco located on 533 Foundry Rd. in West Norriton.
Painting Workshop at Habitat for HumanityReStore of Montgomery County
The Horticulture Certificate Program at the Barnes Arboretum is now accepting students forthe 2014-15 academic year beginning in September.
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The crown jewel of the 39th season of UpperDarby Summer Stage is its Mainstage pro -
duction, “Shrek The Musical,” proudly pre-sented on August 1, 2, 8 and 9 at the UpperDarby Performing Arts Center. The productionis a fresh and innovative approach to the classicDreamworks film featuring a terrific score of 19all-new songs, big laughs and great dancing. TheMainstage production is on-par withlocal professional productions andwill appeal to all who appreciateexceptional musical theater per-formances.
Performances will take place onAugust 1, 2, 8, and 9 at 7:30 p.m.with a matinee performanceon August 9 at 1:30 p.m.Tickets are $12 - $15 andmay be purchased atwww.udpac.org or bycalling the Box Office:610-622-1189. All showstake place at the UpperDarby Performing ArtsCenter, 601 N. LansdowneAvenue, Drexel Hill, PA.The facility is wheel-chair accessible andparking is free.
U p p e r D a r b ySum mer Stage’sM a i n s t a g eprogramo f f e r syoungadultsu p t othe age of28 the opportunity to collaborate in a professional atmos-phere while presenting audiences with top-notch produc-tions that include professional level sets, lighting, costumesand are accompanied by a live orchestra. “Stage Magazine”noted that “One of the things you can depend on with theUpper Darby Summer Stage (UDSS) productions is amazingproduction values.”
“Shrek” is the story of an ogre (Patrick Walsh of Aldan)who lives in a swamp, alone, and likes it. One day his homeis overrun with fairytale creatures, banished there by LordFarquaad (Chris Monaco of Wallingford). They plead withShrek to help them return to their homes in Duloc. He com-
plies and on his journey, Shrek encounters a talkingDonkey (Devon Fields of Upper Darby) who escorts him
to Duloc. Once there, Shrek makesa deal with Farquaad to res-cue a princess—in return,Shrek will get his swampback. Together Shrek andDonkey rescue Princess
Fiona (Meghan Dietzlerof Upper Darby) from
a fire-breathing drag-on (Ali Caiazzo of Hav -er town). As they alljourney back to Duloc,we discover the prin -cess has a secret.
Director Dawn Morn -ingstar is a 20+ year
veteran of Summer Stageand is involved with many
other regional theaters includingCity Theater Company, Mazeppa Pro -
ductions and Theatre Horizon. Last year she directed andchoreographed the Summer Stage premiere of “The LittleMermaid.” Morningstar holds a BFA in Dance and an MA inDance Movement Therapy. She is a licensed professionalcounselor and an assistant clinical professor at Drexel Uni -versity.
Morningstar said, “‘Shrek’ is a fractured fairy tale, in whichcharacters do not always appear as you think they might. Itis about looking at what is on the inside of a person and notalways judging a book by its cover. Overall, ‘Shrek’ is a cel-ebration of friendship and finding love in the most unusualplaces.”
Page 6 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS July 30 – August 5, 2014
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The cast includes mezzo-soprano Raffaella Lo Castro asCarmen, tenor Doug Rowland as Don Jose, bass-baritone JohnMiles as Escamillo, soprano Lauren Cohen as Michaela, sopra-no Meghan Cakalli as Frasquita, mezzo-soprano Emily Byrneas Mercedes, tenor David Price as Dancairo, tenor Tim Oliveras Remendado, tenor Kirk Walters as Morales, and bass RajaVaidya as Zuniga.
Performances of DVOC’s production of Carmen will takeplace on August 9, 13 & 16 at 8 p.m. at the Stage One Per -forming Arts Center. The opera will be performed in Frenchwith English supertitles.
Tickets are $18 for DVOC adult members and non-memberseniors; $20 for adult non-members; $15 for senior DVOC mem -bers and all students.
Stage One Performing Arts Center is located minutes fromthe Media exit off of Route 476. The facility is handicappedaccessible and climate controlled. Plenty of off-street park-ing is available. Many dining options to match almost anybudget can be found in Media on Baltimore Pike and on StateStreet, a few blocks from the theater.
For directions to Stage One, visit www.pacofdelco.org, orcall 610-565-2110.
More information about the Delaware Valley Opera Companycan be found at www.dvopera.org or by calling 215-725-4171.
DINING & ENTERTAINMENT
From left – ChrisMonaco of Wall -ingford as LordFarquaad, Devon
Fields of Upper Darbyas Donkey, Patrick Walsh
of Aldan as Shrek andMeghan Dietzler of Up -per Darby as PrincessFiona prepare for theirperformances in “ShrekThe Musical!” August1 - 9 at UD Summer Stage.Photo/Cate R. Paxson
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Mainstage at Upper Darby Summer Stage Presents“Shrek The Musical!”
The Broadway-style musical is a fresh, innovative approach to the Dreamworks film – August 1, 2, 8 and 9
D V O C ’ S P R O D U C T I O NO F “ C A R M E N ”
Continued from front page
By Jerry H. Bloom, Staff WriterOnstage
• Forrest Theatre, 1114 Walnut Street in Philadelphia, pre-sents The Book of Mormon, winner of nine Tony Awards in -cluding Best Musical, through September 14. The productionwill conduct a pre-show lottery at the box office, making alimited number of tickets available at $27 apiece. For ticketsor info, call 800-447-7400 or visit www.forrest-theatre.comor www.kimmelcenter.org/broadway.• Please Touch Museum®, Memorial Hall, Fairmount Park,
4231 Avenue of the Republic in Philadelphia, presents:— Thomas the Tank Engine, Saturday, August 16. Meet &
greets throughout the day.— Star Wars Day, Sunday, August 24, 12 - 3 p.m. in Hamil -
ton Hall. Meet your favorite Star Wars character.— Olivia the Pig Story Time and Meet & Greet, Monday,
August 25, 10:30 - 11:30 a.m. and 2 - 3 p.m. in Hamilton Hallto celebrate author Ian Falconer’s Birthday!For info, call 215-581-3181 or visit www.pleasetouchmuse-
um.org.Dining Around
• Di Bruno Brothers at The Franklin, 834 Chestnut Streetin Philadelphia, hosts Summer Salute, Saturday Tastings, fea-turing unlimited samples of Di Bruno Bros. products, as wellas free drinks and live entertainment through August, from11:30 a.m. until 2 p.m., following their commitment to offer-
ing complimentary samples of their many wares, a traditionthat began with Danny Di Bruno 75 years ago and continuestoday in all of their five retail locations. More info, call 267-519-3115 or visit www.dibruno.com. • Independence Beer Garden, 6th and Market Streets in
Philadelphia, is Chef Owner Michael Schulson’s newly open -ed 20,000-square-foot, all-American beer garden overlook-ing the Liberty Bell and Independence National HistoricalPark, featuring communal seating areas, two large bars, pic-nic tables, bright orange Adirondack chairs, fire pits, and anassortment of fun, interactive outdoor games, serving an all-day menu of barbecue-friendly summertime fare and a vastselection of all-American craft beers. Entertainment optionsrange from ping pong tables and table-top Jenga to a 10-footprojection television ideal for watching local and nationalsporting events, open daily at 11 a.m. throughout the sum-mer and the fall, will close for the winter, returning in spring2015. More info online at www.phlbeergarden.com.• Glenmorgan Bar & Grill, 593 East Lancaster Avenue in
The Radnor Hotel is grillin’ while guests do some chillin’,through September 6, offering Executive Chef Robert Williams’Three-Course Prix Fixe dinner menu of fresh favorites, everynight of the week for $35 per person with all draft beer halfprice during all three courses of the meal. For reservationsor info, call 610-341-3188 or visit www.glenmorgan.com.• Fitler Dining Room, 2201 Spruce Street in Philadelphia,
presents Executive Chef Rob Marzinsky’s Happy Hour Menuoffering bites and affordable drink specials that change reg-ularly. The Chef will frequently change the menu to offer sea-sonal ingredients and his own interpretations of classic snacks.Happy hour drinks specials include: Seasonal Sangria, servedwith summer berries, available for $5 per glass and $23 perpitcher and Tiger Lager cans for $3. Fitler Dining Room servesdinner nightly from 5 - 10 p.m., Sunday brunch from 11 a.m.to 3 p.m. For reservations or info, call 215-732-3331 or visitwww.fitlerdiningroom.com.
Special Event• No Dog Gets Left Behindwill host a Dog Days of Summer
Picnic at the North Penn VFW in Glenside, PA, Sunday,August 16 from 12 - 4 p.m. Bring your friends, kids, and petsout for a fun filled day while helping the charity bring homeanother Afghan dog to be reunited with a U.S. soldier herein the States. No Dog Gets Left Behind is taking its effortsone step further by arranging to have this dog trained tobecome a therapy dog for a veteran with PTSD. Learn moreonline at www.youcaring.com/nonprofits/save-a-dog-save-a-veteran/195955 or call Jen at [email protected].
E-mail releases two-weeks in advance of publicationdate to [email protected]. Follow paragraph
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July 30 – August 5, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 7
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O U T - A N D - A B O U T – Dining & Entertainment NewsGary Fitzgerald, Conductor/Arranger
Participants and Faculty of CelloSpeak’s 14th Annual CelloWorkshop for Adults will perform pieces by Bach, Wagner,
Mahler, Warlock, a cello version of the Orange Blossom Special.Plus special faculty arrangements for 16 virtuoso cellos ofDvorak’s “Rondo” and Stephenson’s “Souvenir de Seville.”
THOMAS GREAT HALL AT BRYN MAWR COLLEGE101 N. Merion Avenue, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010
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Cast of “Book of Morman” at Forrest Theatre throughSeptember 14.
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PECO is bringing music to the ears of Delaware Countyresidents by sponsoring a variety of summer concerts in
Bryn Mawr and Media throughout August. From a U2 trib-ute to American folk rock, these events offer fun for all ages.PECO supports the Bryn Mawr Twilight Concerts at 7 p.m.
each Saturday at the Bryn Mawr Gazebo (9 S. Bryn Mawr Ave.).Admission is a $12 donation per person. Concerts include:• August 2: David Wilcox with Danny Schmidt and Carrie
Elkin (folk rock).• August 9: Richard Shindell with Jonathan Doh (folk rock).
PECO also sponsors the Delaware County Music Festivalat Rose Tree Park in Media (1671 N. Providence Rd.). Allcon certs begin at 7:30 p.m., and admission is free. Concertsinclude:• August 1: British Invasion Tribute with songs from the
Beatles and more.
• August 9: Beautiful Day, a tribute to U2.• August 15: Blackthorn, modern Celtic rock.• August 16: First Ladies of Rock & Soul, hits from the
1960s.To learn more about PECO’s community support of the
arts, visit www.peco.com/community.
PECO Brings the Sounds of Summer to Delaware County in August
Franklin Square’s 8th Birthday PartyThursday, July 31, at 11 a.m. wish Franklin Square a happy birthdaywith cake cut by Ben Franklin, himself. FREE. Franklin Square is open10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays and 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Fri -days and Saturdays in July. Attractions are ticketed. For information,visit historicphiladelphia.org or call 215-629-4026.
Long before the first Swed -ish settlers, before William
Penn’s arrival, before therewas a United States of Amer -ica, the Lenape people livedand thrived in Philadelphia anda wide region that in cludedwhat is now eastern Pennsyl -vania, New Jersey, Delawareand southern New York. Thehistory and culture of theLenape Indians is an integralpart of this region.On Wednesday, August 13 at
1 p.m., members and friendsof the Lenape Nation of Penn -sylvania, who will be 13 daysinto a 17 day “Rising Nation”Delaware River journey bycanoe, take a slight detour tovisit the Penn Museum, 3260South Street in Phila del phia,inviting area neighbors, friends,organizations and families toparticipate at the signing ofthe Treaty of Renewed Friend -ship. Participants who chooseto sign indicate their supportof the Lenape Nation of Pennsyl -vania as partners and care-takers of their sacred home-land.The treaty signing program
– a once-every-four-year tra-dition that began in 2002 –begins with an opening prayer and the passing of the wampum, an Eastern Woodlands rit-ual that seals bonds of trust and responsibility. Wampum shell beads are sacred, and madefrom the shells of local waters. Strings and woven belts of wampum have been made forcenturies to commemorate treaties or historical events.In 2010, the Penn Museum accepted a string of wampum in recognition of its collabora-
tive work with Lenape peoples, including the 2008 exhibition “Fulfilling a Prophecy: The Pastand Present of the Lenape” in Pennsylvania (2008-2011) curated by then-University ofPennsylvania anthropology student Abigail Seldin with curators Robert Red Hawk Ruthand Shelley DePaul of the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvania. On August 13, the wampum willbe passed again to the Delaware Riverkeeper Network, an advocacy organization workingthroughout the Delaware River Watershed.“Native American Voices: The People—Here and Now,” a new-five year exhibition that
opened at the Penn Museum March 1, 2014, features voices and artifacts from Native Ameri -cans throughout North America. The Nanticoke Lenni Lenape community of Bridgeton,New Jersey is featured in the new exhibition, which challenges visitors to leave preconcep -tions behind, and explore issues and concerns of Native Americans living today.The public is invited to attend the ceremony, and sign the Treaty, available online and at
the event, if they so choose. In honor of the Treaty signing, the Museum’s Pepper Mill Caféfeatures a Native American-inspired lunch menu (entrees $7). The program is FREE with PennMuseum discounted summer admission: just $10 per person, and free to Penn Museum mem -bers, PennCard holders, U.S. military and their families, and children 5 and under. The PennMuseum is located at 3260 South Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (on Penn’s campus, across
from Franklin Field). Forgeneral information call215-898-4000. For grouptour information call215-746-8183.
Page 8 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS July 30 – August 5, 2014
This earlier Treaty of Renewed Brotherhood (since revisedto be Renewed Friendship) between the Lenape Indian Tribeand signers, was on view in the Penn Museum’s exhibition,“Fulfilling a Prophecy: The Past and Present of the Lenape
in Pennsylvania.” A new Treaty will be signed at theAugust 13, 2014 event.
Chief Shelley DePaul,Lenape Nation of Pennsyl -vania, center, offereda traditional Lenapeprayer in both Lenapeand in English, at thepublic opening of thePenn Museum's NativeAmerican Voices exhi-bition March 1, 2014.Standing with her, fromleft – are Vince Williams,Nanticoke Lenni LenapeTribe; Exhibition ContentAdvisor Tina Fragoso,a member of the Nanti -coke Lenni-Lenape Tribe
of Bridgeport, New Jersey; and at far right, Dr. Ann Dapice, a member of the Lenape Nation ofPennsylvania. Chief DePaul speaks at the Treaty event August 13.
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April 23 – April 29, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 9
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Headmaster John Nagl (standing, far left) and Cum Laude speaker Bill Fortenbaugh ’54 (standing, far right) with new inducteesinto The Haverford School’s Cum Laude Society (seated, from left) seniors Cory Fader, Dylan Henderson, Matthew Larson, HaramLee, John Zipf, Jonathan Paras, William Ye, Rudy Miller, Michael Solomon, R.J. Meiers, and Gregory Boyek; (standing) juniorsJackson Simon, Harry Bellwoar, Brendan Burns, Jake Pechet, Jackson Henderson, Manav Khandelwal, Jamie Leyden, NathanKidambi, Connor Atkins, Logan Atkins, and Jonathan Soslow.
Overbrook High School ReunionOverbrook High School Class of January 1959 will host its 55th year Reunion Luncheon on Saturday, May 17, 2014 at The Radnor Hotel.Call Diane Millmond Gottlieb, 636-812-2175 for information.
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Twenty-two Haverford School students were admitted into the Cum Laude Society during the 84th induction ceremo-ny on April 14, for which Dr. Bill Fortenbaugh ’54 was the featured speaker. Headmaster Dr. John Nagl was inducted
as The Haverford School’s chapter president.The Cum Laude Society, the School’s highest honor, is modeled on the college Phi Beta Kappa Society and honors aca-
demic excellence in secondary schools, selecting student members in their junior and senior years. To be elected to Cum Laude recognizes not only sustained superior academic achievement, but also demonstration of
good character, honor, and integrity in all aspects of school life.
Students Inducted into The Haverford School’s Cum Laude Chapter
� 2015 CAMP ISSUES:JAN. 14 & 28 • FEB. 11 & 25MARCH 18 & 25 • APRIL 15 & 22PLUS EVERY WEEK OF MAY & JUNE.
Pierce Lockett, a junior atArchbishop John Carroll
High School, has been recog-nized by Widener Universityand NBC 10, as a winner of theWidener University High SchoolLeadership Award.Lockett joins 134 students
from high schools in Pennsyl -vania, New Jersey and Dela -
ware who demonstrate cour -age and leadership withintheir communities. Studentswere selected for their abili-ties to stand up for what isright, address a wrong andmake a difference in their com -muni ties or schools.Lockett, a resident of Ardmore,
has spoken out on the use ofthe “r-word” in schools and
his community. He was nominated for the award by Joe Denelsbeck, principal at Arch -bishop Carroll.Winners were invited to a celebratory breakfast at the National Constitution Center on
March 20, as well as a leadership conference at Widener University this fall. Winners alsoreceive a scholarship of $20,000 over four years if they enroll at Widener University.
March 26 – April 1, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 11
Pierce Lockett, a junior atArchbishop John Carroll
High School, has been recog-nized by Widener Universityand NBC 10, as a winner ofthe Widener University HighSchool Leadership Award.
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GET READY FOR CAMPArchbishop John Carroll High School StudentWins Widener University Leadership Award
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O F PA AT TH E PE N N MU S E U MAugust 13 at 1 p.m. at The Penn Museum
Event Features Ceremonial Passing of the Wampum
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July 30 – August 5, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 9
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HE A L T H Y L I V I N G
The National Association of Town Watch (NATW), in part-nership with Lower Merion Community Watch, will host
the annual “National Night Out” (NNO) Festival in the Ruby’slot in Suburban Square in Ardmore on Tuesday, August 5from 6 to 9 p.m. Annually, over 3,000 guests enjoy live music, food, rides,
carousel, carnival games, LM Police, Fire and EMS exhibits,funnel cakes, NASCAR, roving entertainment, child finger-printing/video and home safety information. All those attending are asked to bring non-perishable goods
to benefit Eldernet’s Food Bank. Those who bring food willreceive a raffle ticket making them eligible for some greatprizes from Ardmore Toyota, 43 Cricket Bar and Restaurant,Republic Bank, Suburban Square and other local businesses.This year is the “31st Annual National Night Out” and will
involve over 37 million people from 16,000 communities acrossthe country from all 50 states, U.S. territories, Canadian cities,and military bases worldwide.National Night Out is the brainchild of Matt Peskin of
Wynnewood who created the event for NATW back in 1984.The event is designed to: (1) Heighten crime preventionawareness; (2) Generate support for, and participation in,
local anticrime programs; (3) Strengthen neighborhood spir-it and police-community partnerships, and; (4) Send a mes-sage to criminals that neighborhoods are organized and fight -ing back.“National Night Out is about neighbors and first respon-
ders coming together under positive circumstances to pro-mote community and safety,” Peskin said. Parking will be available throughout the Suburban Square
area. Visit www.nationalnightout.org to learn more aboutNational Night Out. For information on Lower Merion Commu -nity Watch visit www.LMCommunityWatch.org.
“N AT I O N A L N I G H T O U T ” F E S T I VA L T U E S D AY, A U G U S T 5Bring Non Perishable Food and Win Great Prizes!
The latest technology in breast mammography, DigitalBreast Tomosynthesis (also known as 3D Mammog raphy),
is now available to patients at each of the Main Line HealthBreast Centers at Lankenau Medical Center, Bryn MawrHospital, Paoli Hospital and Riddle Hospital. The cost willbe the same as a standard mammogram, which will continueto be offered to those patients who require 2D mammography.“3D mammography is recommended for women of all ages.
It has shown to be most valuable to women between 40 and50 years of age, those that have dense breast tissue and/orwomen with a personal history of breast cancer,” said EmmaSimpson, MD, interim system chair, Radiology. “It providesa clearer, more accurate view of the breast and allows ourradiologists to more effectively pinpoint the size, shape andlocation of any abnormalities. This can lead to better detec-tion and greater peace of mind for our patients.”The benefits of 3D mammography include:• Greater accuracy in pinpointing size, shape and location
of abnormalities.• Earlier detection of small breast cancers that may be
hidden during 2D mammography.• Greater likelihood of detecting multiple breast tumors,
which occur in 15% of breast cancer patients.For more information about 3D Mammography or to sched-
ule an appointment, call 484-580-1800 or visit www.mainline -health.org/imaging.
3D Mammography Now Availableto Main Line Health Patients
National Night Out in OCNJOn August 5, the Ocean City P.B.A. Local 61, presents NATIONAL NIGHTOUT, America’s Night Out Against Crime, 5 to 9 p.m. at the RichardGrimes Recreation Complex, 6th and Bay Ave. This is a free, family ori-ented, carnival style event that includes live music, food, dunk tanks, moonbouncers, interactive games, face painters and informational booths. Call609-525-9108.
Blood Drive at LibraryThe Haverford Township Free Library is proud to host the American RedCross for a blood drive on Monday, August 11, from 2 - 7 p.m. in theCommunity Room. The Red Cross urges you to make an appointmenttoday at www.redcrossblood.org or 1-800-RED-CROSS. The need is con-stant. The gratification is instant. Give blood. The Library is located at1601 Darby Road, Havertown, PA. For information, contact Mary BearShannon at 610-446-3082 ext. 216 or visit www.haverfordlibrary.org.
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First Person Arts’ seventh annual
First Person Festival of memoir
and documentary art, running
November 11 - 16 in Philadelphia,
will showcase works by local and
val features memoir readings
and author discussions, docu-
mentary film screenings,
performance art, experien-
tial tours, visual arts exhibi-
tions, music, competitions,
artist receptions and more.
First Person Arts Founder
and Executive Director Vicki
Solot says, “More than ever
before, this, our seventh
festival, expresses our vision
of a creative community—
one that is built on the
diversity and richness of
our experiences and knit
together through the stories
we share.”
On Sunday, November 16,
the Festival will present
“Relative History,” an event
featuring best-selling author
Daniel Mendelsohn and
Philadelphia-based author
Lise Funderburg, who have
both devoted years to dis-
secting the minutia of family
stories, framed by the grand
sweep of history. They will
read from and discuss their respective
memoirs with audience members.
Mendelsohn’s Lost: A Search for Six of Six
Million is a gripping account of six of his
own family members—Holocaust victims
John Scott, LVO
will perform a
free concert at the
Episcopal Academy
Thursday, Novem-
ber 20 at 7:30 p.m.
in Class of 1944
Chapel on Epis-
copal’s campus in
Newtown Square.
Admission is free
and all are welcome.
Scott, the Organ-
ist and Director of
Music at St. Thomas
Church in New York,
is recognized as one
of the most gifted
concert organists
in the world today.
Mr. Scott was long
associated with St.
Paul’s Cathedral in
London and served
as Organist and
Director of Music
at St. Paul’s for more
than two decades.
Among others,
Scott has performed at the wedding of Prince Charles and
Lady Diana in 1981, the National Service of Thanksgiving
for the Millennium, the 100th birthday celebration for the
Queen Mother, and the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty the
Queen of England. As a concert organist, Mr. Scott has
toured the world extensively and has performed with the
INSIDEYear 24, No. 10
Celebrating 24 Years of Community News!November 12 – November 18, 2008
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Photo/Matt Mendelsohn
John Scott, LVO will perform a free
concert at the Episcopal Academy
Thursday, November 20 at 7:30 p.m.
Best-selling author Daniel Mendelsohn will be appear at the
First Person Festival.
First Person Festival Features Works
by Renowned Artists
The Festival will present Relative History, an event featuring best-selling author
Daniel Mendelsohn and Philadelphia-based author Lise Funderburg
World-Class Organist to
Perform Free Concert
At Episcopal Academy on November 20
The Wellness
Community
Celebrates
Page 8
CITY SUBURBAN NEWSP H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S F A V O R I T E W E E K L Y
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PO Box 17, Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004610-667-6623 Fax: 610-667-6624 Email: [email protected]
There’s nothing like the excitement of preparing to welcome a new baby into the world.But along with joyous moments, there are also sometimes sad moments, where expec-
tant moms find out early on in their pregnancies that there is something seriously wrong,and that their babies will face fatal or life-limiting complications. It is here – in these diffi-cult times – that obstetric nurse Kathy Macagnone, B.S.N., RNC-OB, of Delaware CountyMemorial Hospital (DCMH), has found a special calling. Recognizing that these moms and families need extra support, Macagnone has devel-
oped a Perinatal Palliative Care Program at DCMH to help them through these difficult diag-noses. For moms who decide to continue their pregnancies, the Perinatal Palliative CareProgram at DCMH provides support through every step of the process. Maternity care isstill provided by the patients’ OB/GYNs or midwives, but the program provides an extralayer of support to help moms answer questions, and then plan accordingly.“It important for moms who are going through this to have someone to talk to so that
they understand their diagnoses and what plans they can make,” Macagnone says. Decidingwhat to do when faced with this situation is a very personal matter, and the nurses in thePerinatal Palliative Care Program can provide information and support to help patientsmove forward with whatever choice they make. If there’s a silver lining for parents, it’s inhelping them take control back and make informed decisions that honor their personalbeliefs and wishes for their families, Macagnone says. In November 2014, Macagnone will attend the 19th Biennial International Perinatal
Bereavement Conference in San Antonio, Texas, where she will present a poster about theDCMH program and share ideas and information with others in the health care community. “Crozer-Keystone’s maternity centers at both DCMH and Crozer-Chester Medical Center
take great pride in the services we provide, and we are always looking for ways to enhancethe experience for moms who entrust us with their care,” says Thomas Bader, M.D., chair-man of OB/GYN for Crozer-Keystone Health System. “The Perinatal Palliative Care Programat DCMH is a great example of how our providers go above and beyond to support ourpatients’ needs and offer that extra level of care that makes patients feel good about choos-ing us.” Macagnone notes that the idea for the program began several years ago, when she was
approached about a patient who had stopped care after finding out that her baby had alife-limiting condition. The mom then came back to DCMH for care much later in her preg-nancy, after coping with this diagnosis for months on her own. Since that time six womenhave been helped by the program. One of these moms was Julia Staniscia of Upper Darby,who delivered a beautiful baby boy, Elijah Gabriel, with the caring support of the DCMHstaff.Looking back today, Staniscia says that she “never in a million years” thought that her
genetic testing would come back positive for Trisomy 18—a serious and life-limiting genet-ic condition. “I was in shock,” she says. “I knew it was a moment that would change my lifeforever.”From the very moment she found out, she knew she wanted to meet her baby, and the
nurses in the palliative care program helped her do just that. Staniscia recalls that whenshe expressed her wishes, the nurses gave her a birth plan, and that “it mattered to them”what she wanted for her family and her baby.“They were already thinking ahead. I only thought about him,” she says of Elijah, who
made it to full term and was delivered by C-section at DCMH, weighing 3 lbs., 14 oz.Throughout her pregnancy up through the time that she was able to bring Elijah home
to her husband, Jose, and her children Nicholas and Joseph, the nurses in the palliativeprogram “had her back,” she recalls. “I really felt like royalty—like everything was handled.”The 25 days, 18 hours, and three minutes she and her family had with Elijah are moments
she will keep with her forever. She tears up when she talks about Elijah and the palliativecare she received at DCMH.“I don’t want his life to have been lived in vain,” she says, grateful for this opportunity to
share Elijah’s story with others. In addition to helping moms manage existing pregnancies, Macagnone notes that the pal-
liative program at DCMH can also provide guidance about subsequent pregnancies. “Some -times, moms who have experienced a loss are reluctant to return to the same hospital fora subsequent pregnancy, but that doesn’t seem to be the case for us,” Macagnone says.Two moms in the program have returned to deliver healthy babies at DCMH. Staniscia, whois now pregnant again and doing well, will be the third. She keeps in regular contact withMacagnone and will soon return to DCMH to deliver and meet her little girl, “Baby Hope.”“I wouldn’t go anywhere else,” she says.For information, call the Perinatal Bereavement Services line at DCMH at 610-394-4798.
For more information about the comprehensive maternity services provided at DCMH andCrozer-Chester Medical Center, call 1-855-CK-BABIES (1-855-252-2243) or visit http://4Ubaby.croz-erkeystone.org.
DCMH Program Helps Pregnant Moms Copewith Difficult Diagnoses
Temple University Hospital is the first hospital in Pennsylvania to offer an innovativeprocedure that improves long-term outcomes for patients undergoing endovascular
repair of thoracic aortic aneurysms (TEVAR). Using a spiral-shaped screw which is deliv-ered from inside the aorta, the Heli-FX™ Thoracic EndoAnchor System uses a special anchortechnology to secure stents to the wall of the aorta, preventing migration of the stent andproviding a leak-resistant seal between the stent and the aorta.“This is a fantastic clinical advance for patients at the Temple Heart and Vascular Insti -
tute because the system’s helical anchor technology addresses stent migration and endo -leaks, the two most common complications encountered during and after thoracic endo -vascular aortic aneurysm repair,” says Grayson H. Wheatley, III, MD, FACS, Associate Professorof Surgery at Temple University School of Medicine, and Director of Aortic & EndovascularSurgery at TUH. “In addition, this device will help our patients avoid future surgery thatwould have been necessary to correct migrated stents.”A thoracic aortic aneurysm is an enlarged and weakened section of the thoracic aorta,
which is the main artery carrying blood from the heart. Thoracic aortic aneurysms can belife-threatening if left untreated and, according to the Society for Vascular Surgery, theyaffect approximately 15,000 people in the United States each year.Until recent years, the traditional treatment approach for thoracic aortic aneurysms has
been open surgical repair. However, TEVAR has now become the new standard of care. TEVARinvolves using a minimally-invasive catheter-based system to deliver a stent to isolateblood flow from the aneurysm, thereby preventing potential rupture and death.The Heli-FX™ Thoracic EndoAnchor System enhances TEVAR by allowing surgeons to
deliver implantable, spiral-shaped screws through the catheter to the surgical site. Thosescrews lock the stent to the aortic vessel and are designed to provide enhanced seal andfixation that mimics the effects and stability achieved by hand-suturing during open surgi-cal repair of an aneurysm. The device can also be used to repair stents that have developedendoleaks, migrated, or are at risk of either of these complications.“We are pleased to be able to add this to the ever-expanding list of treatment options
available to patients at the Temple Heart and Vascular Institute,” adds Dr. Wheatley. “TheTemple Heart and Vascular Institute is home to a world-class healthcare team with the skills,expertise and technology necessary to treat the most complex of cardiovascular cases.This new device further distinguishes Temple as a healthcare destination for cardiovascu-lar care. ”Note: Dr. Grayson Wheatley is paid by Aptus Endosystems, which manufactures the Heli-
FX™ Thoracic EndoAnchor System, to provide expert educational instruction and trainingto other physicians in the appropriate use of the Heli-FX™ system.
Temple University Hospital Now ProvidingInnovative New Optionfor Patients with Thoracic Aortic Aneurysms
Each year the Wayne Art Center offers a series of creative and fun performances, artistdemonstrations and art workshops as a special treat to the center’s campers, their fam-
ilies, and the community. On Tuesday, August 5 & Tuesday, August 15, from 11:30 - 12:15 p.m. join Wayne Art
Center to welcome special guest Michele Haines of Spring Mill Café. A native of the Touraineregion of France, Michele was born in 1942 on the border of the Nazi Occupation and theVichy Regime. She has been a world traveler since the age of 19, and has a life-time of sto-ries to tell of her time as a foreign language teacher, civil rights activist who marched withDr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and Chef. Her restaurant, the Spring Mill Café opened in 1978.She will be visiting immediately following a month long culinary tour of Russia, so she willhave plenty of stories to share—both new & old! Suitable for ages 6 & up with adult.Please RSVP to [email protected] by Friday, August 1 & Friday, August 15.All Summer Entertainment Series programs are offered free and are open to the public.
The Wayne Art Center is located at 413 Maplewood Avenue in Wayne, PA 19087For information, or any of the center’s events or programs, visit www.wayneart.org, or
call 610-688-3553.
STORYTELL ING WITH TRAVEL ING CHEFMICHELE HAINES OF SPRING MILL CAFÉ
Addiction CounselingNarconon reminds families that abuse of addictive pharmaceutical drugs is on the rise. Learn to recognize thesigns of drug abuse and get your loved ones help if they are at risk. Call Narconon for a free brochure on thesigns of addiction for all types of drugs. Narconon also offers free assess ments and referrals. Call 800-431-1754 or visit www.DrugAbuseSolution.com.
EvEry WEEk F ind GrEat inFormat ion in
City Suburban nEWS!
July 30 – August 5, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 11
First Prize winner in MRAC’s 2013 Annual Juried Show,Eleanor Day, and her winning painting.
Pick Up Your Free Issue Each Week or Easily Read Our Issues Online at www.issuu/CitySuburbanNews.Call CITY SUBURBAN NEWS at 610-667-6623 for Great Rates and Advertising Ideas to Help Your Business or Organization!
Reach clients fRom city avenue to Wayne & Beyond!
By Jerry H. Bloom, Staff Writer
It was early evening, a few days before the arrival of ascheduled heat wave, and the fresh breeze was too much
to resist, so we never went inside the restaurant. Diana, a35-year veteran whose polished service was a perfect accom -paniment to Executive Chef, Jay Chadwick’s menu, welcomedus on Ella’s outside patio. Chef Jay’s credentials include working in the kitchens of
Le Bec Fin, George’s in Wayne, PA, Restaurant Alba in Malvern,PA and as a private chef doing home wine dinners. Hisbrother Daniel Chadwick, Ella’s GM, was the Bar Manager atGeorge’s and also worked at the famous Le Bec Fin in Phila -delphia. We began our meal with a taste of the Soup Du Jour ($8)
that was a creamy, chilled Vichyssoise, a wonderfully smooth
puree with a hint of potato and leeks. We next tried the Gulf Prawns ($15) for two extra large
grilled prawns with the heads intact, sharing the plate witha grilled Romaine heart in an anchovy butter sauce.Viking Village Scallops ($16) brought two perfectly seared
diver scallops atop a sauce of fresh sweet corn kernels, bacon,and cherry tomatoes – a must try dish. The evening’s special entrée was two three ounce pan-
seared black bass filets ($27) fresh-caught in the Atlantic,teamed with fingerling potatoes, carrots, and scallions, in apaprika and saffron aioli. The filets cooked perfectly withtheir crispy skin holding the tender fish together, toppingroasted carrots, and Yukon Gold potatoes.Chef Jay wanted us to try his Cavatelli ($12) made with
tender pasta, a sauce of cherry tomatoes, topped with goatcheese, and spiced with marjoram – a tasty dish.We ended our meal sharing a slice of the in-house pastry
chef’s lemon tart ($9) that came with a dollop of honey
crème fraiche – a tart lemony flavor to remember.Ella’s American Bistro, offering a full-service bar and com-
plete wine list by the bottle and glass, is located at 214Sugartown Road in the Devon Square Center, Wayne, PA.The venue is handicapped accessible with lots of free park-ing. For reservations or info, call 610-964-3552 or online visit
http://ellasamericanbistro.com.
Manayunk-Roxborough Art Center (MRAC) presents its6th Annual Juried Show for visual artists. Opening recep -
tion: Sunday, August 10, 2014 from noon to 3 p.m. The pub-lic is invited to partake of light refreshments and meet theartists. At 1:30 p.m., juror Moe Brooker will award 1st, 2ndand 3rd prizes of $250, $100 and $50, respectively, and vari-ous memorial awards. MRAC is located at 419 Green Lane(Rear), Philadelphia, PA 19128. Gallery hours are Saturdaysand Sundays (except holidays) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The6th Annual Juried Show closes Sunday, August 17 at 4 p.m.The competition is open to all artists 18 years of age and
over. Submissions will be accepted in the general categoriesof painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, mixed media,and digital art. All work must be original. Artwork must behand delivered to MRAC. Drop off dates at MRAC: Friday,August 1 – 5 to 7 p.m.; Saturday, August 2 – noon to 3 p.m.;Sunday, August 3 – noon to 3 p.m. All entries submittedmust be for sale with the sale price at exhibition to includeManayunk-Roxborough Art Center’s commission of 40% fornon-members or 30% for members. For a full prospectus, seewww.mrartcenter.org or telephone 215-482-3363 for infor-mation. Moe Brooker, who will judge the show, is a painter who
enjoys the challenges of various media. He has worked inoil, acrylic, pastel, oil pastels, oil stick and encaustic; bothseparately and together. He earned a BA in Painting in 1970and a MFA in Painting in 1972, both from Tyler School ofFine Arts, Temple University and subsequently taught therefor one year. Since then, Professor Brooker has taught at theUniversity of North Carolina, the Cleveland Art Institute,Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, College of Fine Arts,in the city of Tinjin (The People’s Republic of China), andthe Parson School of Design in New York City. He has had 36solo exhibits of his work at venues including the Ruth SiegelGallery in New York and the Sande Webster Gallery of Phila -delphia. He presently is a regular member and exhibitor ofthe June Kelly Gallery, New York City. He lives in Philadel phiawith his wife, Cheryl, who was Director of External Affairs atthe Philadelphia Museum of Art and is now retired. Admission to MRAC is free, donations are encouraged.
MRAC is a non-profit arts organization, supported in part bya grant from the Philadelphia Cultural Fund, generous con-tributions from Lumber Liquidators and East River bank,and through the volunteer efforts of its members.
Manayunk-Roxborough Art Center Presents 6th Annual Juried Show
Eastern State Penitentiary will host “Family Weekend: Pets in Prison” on Saturday andSunday, August 9 and 10 and again on September 27 and 28. The event, designed for
kids and adults of all ages, will feature interactive and educational activities all weekendlong. Visitors can learn about the role of animals throughout Eastern State’s history, meet(and adopt) shelter dogs from a local prison-training program, and participate in animal-themed activities.From 12 p.m. to 4 p.m., families can participate in an animal-themed scavenger hunt;
learn more about Eastern State Penitentiary’s most famous four-legged resident, Pep theDog; and learn about other animals throughout the prison's history. Some furry (and somecreepy-crawly) creatures once lived behind Eastern State Penitentiary’s walls. Some pris-oners kept pets in solitary confinement, and a colony of feral cats occupied the propertywhen the prison was abandoned. Officers once patrolled the grounds on horseback and keptGerman Shepherds for security.Beginning at 1 p.m. each day, Rob Rosa, Director of Operations for New Leash on Life USA,
a Pennsylvania prison dog training program, will speak to visitors about his experiencetraining dogs as an inmate at the State Correctional Institution at Graterford (SCIG), andhow it ultimately affected his life and career. This 15-minute presentation will be followedby a brief Q&A and will culminate in a dog training expo. Several dogs, trained by local in -
mates, will demonstrate for visitors the commands and tricks they have learned throughthe New Leash on Life USA program. Following the presentation, visitors to the historic site can meet the dogs and, if inter-
ested, can adopt any dogs that haven’t yet found homes. On Saturday, August 9, an addi-tional adoption meet-and-greet will take place in the entrance to the penitentiary at from12 p.m. to 1 p.m.All Family Weekend activities are included in standard admission. Regular daytime pro-
grams, including “The Voices of Eastern State” Audio Tour, guided Hands-On History tours,history exhibits, and artist installations, are also included in admission. Tickets are avail-able online at easternstate.org/tickets. Tickets are also available at the door, subject toavailability.For more information, visit www.newleashonlife-usa.org.Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site is located at 22nd Street and Fairmount Avenue,
just five blocks from the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Admission is $14 for adults, $12 forseniors, and $10 for students and children ages 7-12. (Not recommended for children underthe age of seven.)For information and schedules, the public should call 215-236-3300 or visit www.eastern-
state.org.
EASTERN STATE PENITENT IARY HOSTS “FAMILY WEEKEND: PETS IN PRISON”
GM Daniel Chadwick & Executive Chef Jay Chadwick atElla’s American Bistro in Wayne. Photos/ J. Bloom
Viking Village Scallops.
Gulf Prawns at Ella’s American Bistro in Wayne.
Dining Around at Ella’s American Bistro in Wayne
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Climate change is one of the most critical issues facing the world, experts say, yet thepeople who will be most affected by its impacts – today’s teenagers – are the least en -
gaged. A new initiative announced today seeks to bridge the gap by uniting Philadelphiapublic high school girls with their counterparts half a world away in a unique cultural, edu-cational and scientific exchange that will ultimately benefit a larger community.Building on more than 20 years of climate change research in Mongolia, the Academy of
Natural Sciences of Drexel University has established a unique partnership with the NationalMuseum of Mongolia in the nation’s capital of Ulaanbaatar. The partnership brings togetherteenage girls in Philadelphia and in Ulaanbaatar to explore their cultural heritages and howthey relate to climate change in their individual neighborhoods, cities and countries. Thestark differences in their schools, cities and cultures will serve to demonstrate that climatechange is a global issue.After intensive learning, training and online and social media exchanges starting in August,
the Academy and the National Museum will engage the program participants as museumExplainers, or amateur experts. These Explainers will share their newfound cultural andclimate change knowledge with museum visitors through short programs and interactiveactivities that they will have developed under the guidance of Academy scientists and edu-cators. The students also will give presentations at community festivals such as the annu-al Philadelphia Science Festival.A total of 15 Philadelphia public high school students who are enrolled in the Academy’s
nationally recognized Women in Natural Sciences program will be selected to participate.Five of them will be picked to travel to Mongolia in summer 2015. Fifteen Mongolian girls willbe selected from a similar program in their country called ROOTS, and five of them will arriveat the Academy this November.Participation in this Museums Connect project is made possible by the U.S. Department
of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. Administered by the American Allianceof Museums, Museums Connect pairs museums in the U.S. with museums abroad for a cross-cultural exchange that brings people, especially youth, together to open a dialogue throughcommunity projects, partnerships with local or tribal governments and schools, and localevents.“Museums Connect is one of the programs of which we are most proud,” said AAM
President Ford W. Bell. “AAM is privileged to partner with the U.S. State Department on thisinitiative, because Museums Connect inspires young people, their communities and theirmuseums to address substantive challenges confronting all of us, and is emblematic of whatmuseums do best.”“We are thrilled to have been selected in this highly competitive grant process,” said
Academy Vice President of Education Dr. Jacquie Genovesi. “This is an opportunity of alifetime for our WINS girls. How often does a student get to travel to Mongolia to work withclimate change scientists on one of the most pressing environmental issues of our time?”
Why Mongolia?Mongolia is a country with a rich history, unique cultural traditions, and varied environ-
mental features. It is also one of the regions most impacted by climate change: between1940 and 2012 the temperature warmed by 3.8 degrees F. This substantial rise in tempera-ture has caused pasture grasses to become scarce, making it difficult for the large herderpopulation to properly prepare their animals for the harsh winters, and thus affecting theirlivelihoods.The Academy’s scientific work in Mongolia began in 1994 when Dr. Clyde Goulden started
researching climate change and its effect on Mongolia’s herders and one of the most pristinelakes in the world, Lake Hövsgöl. During a 20-year partnership, Goulden and other Academyresearchers have helped train a new generation of Mongolian scientists.Because of the huge success and the contribution to science and capacity building, the
government recognized and awarded Goulden its highest prizes, the Polar Star and theFriendship Medal. Academy scientists are still making yearly trips to Mongolia to study cli-mate change and its effect on Mongolia’s biodiversity, including fish and insects.“All this makes Mongolia an ideal place for a discussion on climate change, a critical com-
munity challenge,” Goulden said.Besides the scientific partnership between the nations, the Cultural Repercussions pro-
ject builds on the Academy’s successful WINS model. WINS is a free, four-year-long after-school and summer science enrichment program for Philadelphia public high school girls
who meet the rigorous criteria. Since its founding in 1982, WINS has introduced hundredsof high school girls to future careers in science and other professions by providing hands-on science workshops, career and college exploration, and positive youth development.A key component of the WINS program is that students are trained to be Explainers in
the museum, interacting with the general public and sharing information about topics in -cluding animals, water pollution and biodiversity. Starting in early 2015, the teens partici-pating in the Mongolia project will begin adding climate change and its effect on Philadel -phia and on Mongolia to their scripts and activities. The Mongolian girls will do the samefor their home-based museum.
And the Project BeginsWhile the five Philadelphia girls won’t travel to Mongolia until summer 2015, and the Mon -
golian girls are not expected to arrive in Philadelphia until this November, there is muchto be done before then.In August, 15 WINS students will be selected to participate in the project based on their
academic skills and social and emotional characteristics. The students will begin workingwith Academy educators and scientists to develop an afterschool program curriculum onclimate change in Philadelphia and Mongolia and its impact on these different cultures.The students in the two countries will study climate change issues together online through
the subtopics of culture, water and food. They will communicate across continents usingFacebook, Twitter and other online tools. Through the months, the students will learn eco-logical principles that they will use to create an electronic museum program guide to trainstudent Explainers to interact with museum visitors.“We don’t know what they’ll come up with,” said Genovesi. “We want the teens to actu-
ally develop these materials so that we get climate change from their viewpoint. While anemphasis will be on cultural exchange – building bridges between nations and students –we want to build science and understanding that is generated by these young women.”During the two-week trips to partner countries, the girls will explore each other’s cultures,
continue to learn about climate change, and conduct research with scientists from eachcountry. They also will learn about different careers in science and museums.Once the project is up and running, Academy visitors will benefit by learning about cli-
mate change in Mongolia and right in their own communities.
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WINS girls learn about wetlands preservation on a recent field trip in Delaware withAcademy scientist Melanie Mills. Photo/Mike Servedio/ANSP
Teen Girls Will Build Bridges on Climate Change from Their Hometown to Mongolia and Back
The Baldwin School announces the appointment of CindyLapinski as its new Director of Middle School. Lapinski
brings 16 years of experience in Middle School education tothe region’s leading independent girls’ school for Pre-K-Grade 12. The announcement was made by Sally M. Powell,Head of School.“Cindy shares Baldwin’s strong commitment to valuing
and educating the whole girl,” said Powell in making theannouncement. “She emphasizes the importance of prepar-ing Middle School students as problems solvers and indoing so, brings a critical blend of education, experience,innovation, and compassion to her work. As a communitythat deeply values excellence in all endeavors, we look for-ward to Cindy’s presence at Baldwin.” For 16 years, Lapinski has been a dedicated teacher, advi-
sor, and mentor to middle school students. After beginningher career as a second grade teacher, she found her passionin teaching eighth grade and never looked back. She rosefrom teaching science, computer literacy, and language arts,to serving as the assistant principal and then principal atStrayer Middle School in the Quakertown School District.Lapinski will direct the many unique offerings and oppor-
tunities available to Baldwin Middle School students includ-ing Mini Week, a three-day program in which students are
immersed in a subject of their choosing, as well as a varietyof other extracurricular trips, service experiences, and lead -ership opportunities. In addition, Lapinski will oversee theexpansion of the School’s DREAM Lab® into Grades 6 and 7.Now celebrating its first anniversary for girls ages 5-11, theDREAM Lab® is continuing its momentum and expanding tothe Middle School for the 2014-15 school year, building onits fusion of Design, Robotics, Engineering, Arts, and Mathe -matics. “In Middle School, opportunities and foundations are keys
to success,” explained Lapinski. “Many Baldwin girls maybe preparing themselves for jobs that don’t even exist yet.It’s our job to prepare each girl as a problem solver and tohone her emotional and social skills to ensure her successno matter her chosen path.”Lapinski completed her bachelor’s degree in Biology at
Ursinus College, obtained her teacher certification at MoravianCollege, and earned her master’s degree in Educational Ad -ministration from Gwynedd-Mercy College.The Baldwin School is an independent, all-girls college
preparatory school for pre-kindergarten through grade 12students. For information, visit the school’s Open Houseson Oct. 22 at 6 p.m. or Nov. 6 at 9 a.m. You can also visitwww.BaldwinSchool.org or call 610-525-2700.
TH E BA L DW I N S C HOO L NAM E S C I N D Y L A P I N S K I N EWD I R E C T O R O F M I D D L E S C HOO L
The Baldwin School announces the appointment of CindyLapinski as its new Director of Middle School.
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July 30 – August 5, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 13
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Reach Your ClientsEvery Week.
The Nelly Ber-
man School
of Music (NBS)
will hold a mem-
orial concert in
memory of gifted
violin student,
Chanlan Lee, on
January 23, 2009
at 7 p.m. Chanlan
Lee, age 8, pass-
ed away on Dec-
ember 19 due to
a severe case of
viral encephali-
tis. He was the
youngest schol-
arship student
at the Nelly Ber-
man School of
Music and quite
an accomplished
violinist for his
young age.
Chanlan had a
deep passion for
music that was transparent and vibrant. He was involved
in not only solo performances, but chamber groups and
intensive summer camps. His hard work paid off when he
was the youngest soloist chosen to perform on the stage
at the Kimmel Center as a platinum winner of the NBS Golden
Key Competition. In addition to his heart for playing, he was
also dedicated to the scholarship program that supplement-
ed his lesson fees. To show his appreciation, he took initia-
tive to raise funds, over $300 to be exact, by playing in his
’ t h C
f P d l
C R
AB N
pays homage to such women,
and includes personal corre-
spondence and private jour-
nals of Abigail Adams, Martha
Jefferson, Dolley Madison, and
Sacajawea, among others.
Given annually, the Ivy Young
Willis Award recognizes women
who have made outstanding
contributions in the field of
public affairs.
The American Women in Radio
and Television cited Roberts as
one of the 50 greatest women
in the history of broadcasting,
and the Library of Congress
named her a “Living Legend,”
making her one of a select group
of Americans to have attained
that honor. A member of the
Broadcasting and Cable Hall of
Fame, Roberts also serves on
the boards of several non-prof-
it institutions and on the Presi-
dent’s Commission on Service
and Civic Participation.
Ivy Young Willis was a pio-
neer in teaching and reading
on television, and served on
The League of Women Voters
and the World Affairs Council.
Past recipients of the award
include Lisa Nutter, president
of Philadelphia Academies, Inc.;
Kathleen McGinty, former sec-
retary of the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental
P t i R A d t f th
INSIDEYear 24, No. 19
Celebrating 24 Years of Community NewsJanuary 21 – January 27, 2009
P H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S F A V O R I T E W E E K L Y
CITY SUBURBAN NEWSCITY SUBURBAN NEWS
FIND YOUR
COMMUNITY
NEWS HERE!
FFFFRRRREEEEEEEE
Author &
Historian to
Discuss Civil
Rights
Page 5The concert will commemorate Chanlan
Lee’s love and passion for music and life.
Political Commentator Cokie Roberts
to Receive Cabrini College Award
On February 5 Cokie Roberts will speak about her work
covering politics and about women who helped shape
America, at Cabrini College.
Education News
Pages 8 - 10
M E M O R I A L C O N C E R T F O R
G I F T E D S T U D E N T
Music school holds concert to remember student
and build his legacy.
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eherbert yentis realtors7300 City Avenue • 215-878-7300
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** OverbrOOk **
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SELLING YOUR HOME?Ronin Acq. Real Estate
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OverbrOOk Park7546 Woodbine ave. – 18 ft., 3 BR, 2.5 baths, recently
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COMING SOON – OverbrOOk Park1840 Farrington & 16xx Farrington
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Piano Lessons
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GaInor aPTS.Wy N N E F I E L D
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hardwood flrs., elev. bldg.,laundry room.
215-877-9168 T/F
Antiques Wanted
Vehicles Wanted
Page 14 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS July 30 – August 5, 2014
JUdY’S anTIQUESTop Dollar Paid in Cash for:Jewelry & Costume Jewelry,
Lamps, oriental Rugs,Knick-Knacks, Paintings,
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7/30
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PIano LESSonSIn THE CoMforTof YoUr HoME
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City Suburban News will beclosed Aug. 25 - Sept. 2.
OVERBROOK2 BR Duplex, lovely neighbor -
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transp. Very nice. Avail. immed.$750/mo. + utils.
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730
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215-247-0220 7/30
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FREE MEASURINg & INSTALLATIONH Gold and Silver MIRROR verticals H
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July 30 – August 5, 2014 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Page 15
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Values Into Action, Ser -vice and Support forPeople with Disabilities,
206 W State Street, Media, PA19063 in vites the communityto see the show “Joyful,” fea-turing the paintings of ARTsisterSusan Stefanski on displayfrom August 5 - September9, 2014. The public is invit-ed to join in the 2nd Satur dayArts Stroll on August 9, 6 - 9p.m.
2nd Saturday creates oppor -tunities for local artists andmusicians to share their tal-ents. The Media Arts Coun -cil regularly holds galleryopenings and special eventsas a part of 2nd Saturday. 2nd Saturday is a fantastic event for a date, for the family, or togo out with friends! The Arts Stroll is free of charge but requires the continued support ofsponsors, participating businesses, and gracious donors to make it happen. Learn more at:www.mediaartscouncil.org.
ARTsisters, a group of professional women artists dedicated to empowering each otherand the community through their art, have taken up the task of providing art to Values IntoAction each month. More information available at ARTsisters.org. Learn more about ValuesInto Action at www.valuesintoactionpa.org.
Learn lessons with thecast of “SchoolhouseRock LIVE! Jr.” as they
go on an adventure to bringthe classic, Emmy-Award win -ning TV show to life on thestage. Performances are July30, 31 and August 1 at 10:30a.m. and on July 31 at 7:30p.m. The shows are performedat the Upper Darby Perform -ing Arts Center, 601 N. Lans -downe Avenue, Drexel Hill, justminutes from the Main Lineand Center City. Parking is free.Tickets are $7 - $10 and can bepurchased at www.udpac.orgor by calling the box office:610-622-1189. Children are in -vited to come early for funpre-show activities and stayafter the show to meet castmembers. “Schoolhouse Rock,LIVE! Jr.” is ideal for agesfour and up and free babysit-ting is available for those whoare too young to enjoy theshow quietly.
Page 16 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS July 30 – August 5, 2014
Advertise on our Senior Back Page every other week. Call 610-667-6623.
Page 8 CITY SUBURBAN NEWS April 23 – April 29, 2014
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Kathleen Poliski, a Neumann University senior, has wonthe Grand Prize in the Independence Blue Cross (IBX) 90-
Second Video Contest, designed to raise awareness amongmillennials about the need for health insurance. As GrandPrize winner, Poliski, a Communications and Media Arts major,will receive $10,000 from IBX.
Her humorous 90-second video focused on the need forhealth care coverage in case of a spontaneous zombie attack.(Watch the video at http://www.neumann.edu/about/news/news13-14/IBX.asp.)
The giant health insurance company launched the “IBX:90 Seconds” competition to show that everyone can benefitfrom having health insurance — no matter their age or healthstatus. The company asked for video submissions of up to90 seconds in one of three categories:
• My Independence Blue Cross Insurance Story,• The Moment I Knew I Needed Health Insurance, and• A Parent’s Wisdom on the Importance of Health Insur -
ance.The contest began on February 7 with a call for entries,
which were posted and open to a popular vote on March 6.Winners were announced on March 24. In addition to Poliski’s$10,000 Grand Prize, Temple University won $10,000 as theschool in the contest with the most student and alumnientry votes.
Neumann Student Wins$10,000 in IBX Video Contest
Kathleen Poliski won the grand prize of $10,000 in theIndependence Blue Cross video contest. Brian Forrest starred
in the humorous production that illustrates the need forhealth care coverage in case of a zombie attack.
On Friday, April 25, 2014, the Child Protection Programat St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children will host the
second annual Child Abuse Prevention Conference, titled“What Can I Do?” Putting Child Abuse Prevention into thePractice. The conference is open to professionals who workwith children and will be held in the DiGeorge Auditoriumat St. Christopher’s, located at 3601 A Street in Philadelphia.
According to Maria McColgan, MD, Medical Director of theChild Protection Program and Attending Physician at St.Christopher’s, the goal of the conference is to present ChildAbuse Prevention as a public health issue and to explore
ways that practitioners can address Adverse Childhood Ex -periences (ACE’s) and toxic stress in every day practice. Thiseducational conference will help increase community sup-port and help prevent child abuse and neglect.
As April is nationally recognized as Child Abuse Preven -tion month, the Child Protection Program at St. Christo pher’swill also celebrate its 10 year anniversary during the con-ference. At this time, an award ceremony will be held to rec-ognize Angelo P. Giardino, MD and his contribution to launch -ing the Child Protection Program.
St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children to Host Child AbusePrevention Conference and Celebrate 10 Years
Penn Vet’s Ryan Hospital is hosting the 7th annual National Service Dog Eye Exam eventsponsored by the American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists (ACVO) and Merial.
On May 6, 8, 12-16 and 21, Penn Vet’s Dr. Gustavo Aguirre, professor of ophthalmology;Dr. William Crumley, staff ophthalmologist; and Dr. Stephen Gross, staff ophthalmologist,will join 190 ACVO board-certified ophthalmologists conducting eye examinations across thecountry.
The ACVO/Merial National Service Dog Eye Exam is a philanthropic effort generously pro -vided to the public by the board-certified Diplomates of the American College of VeterinaryOphthalmologists, who donate their time and services to provide free ocular exams to quali -fied service animals.
As a way to serve dogs who dedicate their lives to serving us, these exams are free to reg-istered service dogs across the United States and Canada. Through these efforts, service doghealth can be improved and potential disease averted.
How to Make an AppointmentTo qualify, animals must be “active working animals” that were certified by a formal train-
ing program or organization or currently enrolled in a formal training program. The certi-fying organization can be national, regional, or local in nature.
1. Owners/agents for the animal(s) must FIRST register the animal via an online registra-tion form at www.ACVOeyeexam.org. Registration ends April 30.
2. Once registered online, the owners/agents will receive a registration number and willbe allowed access to a list of participating ophthalmologists in their area.
3. Owners/agents may then contact Ryan Hospital’s appointment desk (215-746-8387) toschedule an appointment
What Veterinary Ophthalmologists Look for During the ExamDuring the complete ocular exam, veterinary specialists look for problems including red-
ness, squinting, cloudy corneas, retinal disease, early cataracts, and other serious abnor-malities. Early detection and treatment are vital to these working animals.
The American College of Veterinary Ophthalmologists® is an approved veterinary special -ty organization of the American Board of Veterinary Specialties, and is recognized by theAmerican Veterinary Medical Association. Its mission is “to advance the quality of veterinarymedicine through certification of veterinarians who demonstrate excellence as special istsin veterinary ophthalmology.” To become board certified, a candidate must complete a Doctorof Veterinary Medicine degree, a one-year internship, a three-year approved residency, andpass a series of credentials and examinations.
For information, visit www.vet.upenn.edu.
Penn Vet Ophthalmologists Offer Free EyeExams for Service DogsRegistration is now open through April 30
See Child Abuse Prevention Conference on page 10
Green Tree School & Ser -vices (GTSS) recently re -ceived a $25,000 grant fromRonald McDonald House Chari -ties® (RMHC®) of the Philadel -phia Region, Inc. to fund equip -ment for the new multi-sen-
sory room as part of its sen-sory-based therapy program.Established in 1957, GTSS pro -vides education and therapeu-tic services to children withlearning, developmental andemotional needs, including Autism Spectrum Disorder and Emotional and Behavioral Disorders. GTSS representatives and
students were on hand to accept this grant from local McDonald’s® Owner/Operator Ken Youngblood at the school’s East
Washington Lane location.Call 215-866-0200 or visit www.gts-s.org to learn more about Green Tree School & Services.
Every Wednesday Pick Up Your FREE Copy of CITY SUBURBAN NEWS!
March 5 – March 11, 2014
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
Page 3
ARTS, CULTURE & SOCIETY EVENTS
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PLACE YOUR SPRING SPECIALS HERE! • REACH OUR MAIN LINE COMMUNITY!
From left – ChristynRuggiero, GTSS occupationaltherapist; Andre Austin, GTSSstudent; Ken Youngblood,McDonald’s Owner-Operator;Ronald McDonald, ChiefHappiness Officer,McDonald’s; Julie Alleman,COO, GTSS.
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Ballet Hispanico to Perform Montgomery County Community College will bring the nationally re -nowned Ballet Hispanico to the Science Center Theater, 340 DeKalbPike, Blue Bell, with a daytime performance geared toward schoolchild-ren and families on Friday, March 7, at 10:30 a.m. and an evening per-formance on Saturday, March 8, at 8 p.m. Tickets for the evening per-formance cost $30 for general admission and $15 for children under age12, with $5 tickets for all ages available for the daytime performance.Visit www.mc3.edu/livelyarts or call 215-641-6518 for tickets and infor-mation.
The All-Brass Ensemble of the PhiladelphiaYouth Orchestra PerformsThe seventeen amazing teenage brass musicians in Bravo Brass areplanning a one-night world tour. On Saturday, March 8 at 7:30 p.m., theall-brass ensemble of The Philadelphia Youth Orchestra will play musicfrom all parts of the globe in “Around the World in Brass,” at SaintMark’s Church, 1625 Locust Street in Philadelphia. Conducted byMaestro Paul Bryan, the gifted Trumpet, Tuba, French Horn, Tromboneand Euphonium players in Bravo Brass will showcase pieces fromEurope, Africa, Asia, Australia, and North and South America by com-posers including Dupré, Strauss, Prokofiev, Takemitsu, Grainger,Piazzolla, and Sousa. Admission is $10; no charge for children under 13.For concert information, call 215-545-0502. In a festive reception follow-ing the concert, refreshments themed from around the world will beserved.
Philadelphia Union Foundation“Cocktails & Cleats” Gala The Philadelphia Union Foundation will hold its annual “Cocktails &Cleats” gala on Wednesday, March 12 at 6 p.m. at Vie in Philadelphia.The gala will feature the entire Philadelphia Union team and TechnicalStaff and will be emceed by Comcast SportsNet anchor and “State of theUnion” host Amy Fadool. The Philadelphia Union Foundation is dedicat-ed to the young people of Chester and the Greater Philadelphia Region.Character development, enhanced academic performance and nutrition-al education remain the focal point of the Foundation’s programminginitiatives. Using soccer as a conduit for change, the Foundation rein-forces character values of integrity, effort, accountability and pride. Lastyear’s Cocktails and Cleats celebration was extremely successful, net-ting over $50,000 to benefit the Philadelphia Union Foundation. Thenight will also honor Phila del phia’s own Walter Bahr with a lifetimeachievement award, while Bob Kozlowski will receive the Foundation’s“Building Blocks” Award. The “Building Blocks” award recognizes anindividual who has shown selfless dedication to the Foundation’s fourBuilding Blocks: Community, Health, Education & Recreation in thecommunities of Chester and the Greater Philadelphia Region. For infor-mation on how to become a sponsor or to register for this year’s event,visit www.philadelphiaunion.com/foundation/cocktailscleats/sponsors.Overbrook High School Reunion NoticeOverbrook High School Class of January 1959 will host its 55th yearReunion Luncheon on Saturday, May 17, 2014 at The Radnor Hotel.Call Diane Millmond Gottlieb, 636-812-2175 for information.
SAY YOU SAW IT IN CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
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Green Tree School & Services Receives Grant from RonaldMcDonald House Charities®
International re
cording artist and 2012
Blues Music Awards nominee Alexis P.
Suter will b
e playing a free concert o
n Fri -
day, February 7 at 8 p.m. in Julia Ball Audi -
torium on Gwynedd Mercy University’s
campus. The well-known ensemble has per -
formed at Blues concerts and festiv
als all
over the country,
including the Cincinnati
Blues Festival, T
ampa Bay Blues Festival
and the Mont Tremblant Music Festiv
al.
Suter and her band began growing in popu -
larity while performing regularly at Levon
Helm’s Midnight Ramble Sessio
ns in Wood -
stock, NY. They opened the show at The
Midnight Ramble in Woodstock, NY over 90
times and have since played to sold-out
audiences around the country.
Alexis was nominated for Best S
oul Blues
Female Artist at th
e 33rd Annual Blues Music
Awards and her song, “A
ll Over Again,” w
as
NPR’s “Song of th
e Day” in January 2012.
“When I first h
eard her voice, I was m
em-
orized and virtu
ally put in a tra
nce. Her music tra
nscends styles—
it includes blues, s
oul,
folk, gospel, and jazz. Gwynedd Mercy Universit
y is truly fortunate to have a performer as
fine as Alexis Suter here on our campus,”
Carol Evans, director of Gwynedd Mercy Uni ver -
sity’s s
inging group the Voices of Gwynedd, said.
For more information on Alexis P
. Suter, visit http://w
ww.alexispsuter.com.
“Our Lady of 121st S
treet,” by Steven Adly
Guirgis, opens on Second Stage at th
e
Players Club of Swarthmore on Friday, J
anu -
ary 24, directed by Bridget Dougherty.
Like Guirgis’s “The Last D
ays of Judas Iscariot”
(performed at PCS last season), th
e play is a
wild romp propelled by irreverence, laced with
street talk and underlain with a hard-won
spirituality.
An unlikely crew of dysfunctional
souls gathers t
o pay their respects to
beloved
Sister Rose...but th
e body, to sta
rt with, is m
iss -
ing.Performances are Friday and Saturday
nights at 8 p.m. for th
ree weeks beginning
January 24; there is a Sunday matinee at 2
p.m. on February 2. Tickets are $10 at th
e
door. Second Stage is not handicapped-acces-
sible.
There will be an opening night re
ception
at 7:30 p.m. on Friday January 24. Friday,
January 31 is desse
rt night; d
esserts
will be
served at 7:30. Friday, February 7 is M
eet the
Artists n
ight; the actors a
nd staff w
ill share their th
oughts about th
e play and answer ques-
tions after the performance. For in
formation, visit www.pcsth
eater.org or call 610-328-4271.
CITY SUBURBAN NEW
S
January
22 – January
28, 2014
DINING
& ENT
ERTAIN
MENT
Adverti
se Your
Valent
ine’s Da
y Specia
ls Here!
Mike R
aimond
o of La
nsdown
e may o
r may
not aba
ndon h
is little
brother
, played
by
Joseph
Cartage
na of P
hiladelp
hia, in
“Our
Lady of
121st S
treet,” o
pening January 24
at the P
layers C
lub of S
warthm
ore.
Photo/M
eagan
Ebersol
e
Interna
tional r
ecordin
g artist
and 201
2 Blues
Music A
wards n
ominee
Alexis
P. Suter
will be
playing
a free c
oncert
on Frid
ay, February 7
at 8 p.m
. in Jul
ia Ball
Auditor
ium on
Gwyne
dd
Mercy U
niversity
’s campu
s.
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INTHE NEWS!
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Suburban
News: 610-667-6623
for Great R
ates and
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eas to
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Member of American Society of Bariatric Physicians
Body by FISHER Now
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JEWISH
I�NTI�
What did it mean to our
grandparents? What will it
mean to our grandchildren?
WHAT WAS IT LIKE FOR OUR
ancestors to say goodbye to the shtetl, to set
out to discover new lives for themselves, along
with all of the liberties the free world had to
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Alexis P. Suter Band to Perform at Gwynedd
Mercy University on Feb. 7
“Our Lady of 121st Street” Opens on Second
Stage at the Players Club of Swarthmore
By Joyce
Eisenbe
rg and
Ellen Sc
olnic
Remember w
hen macar
oons,
the cocon
ut Passov
er treat,
came in only v
anilla and
choco -
late? Now
the sup
ermarke
t
displays a
re stocked
with choc
o -
late alm
ond, cho
colate d
ip -
ped, cho
colate chi
p, chocol
ate
chunk, an
d doubly
choco la
te
gluten-fre
e. Choos
ing one
is
almost as co
nfusing a
s decid -
ing wheth
er our tee
th need th
e
toothpa
ste with “
advanced
whitenin
g” or “ta
rtar prot
ec-
tion.”
We’ve bee
n known
to stand
before th
e drugst
ore sham
-
poo disp
lay paral
yzed wit
h
indecisio
n. Is our
hair fine
or
limp? Do we
need “T
ruly Re -
laxed” or “
Curl Con
trol?” Most -
ly, we’re
just glad
to wake
up
and find
that we s
till have h
air.
We should
probabl
y go with
“Age Defy
,” which p
romises to
“turn back
the stran
ds of time.”
These da
ys, there
are more
choices
than eve
r – and it
’s both w
onderful
and exha
usting.
We unders
tand how
Russian
immigrants, fo
r whom sho
pping us
ed to mean
standing
in a
bread lin
e, felt w
hen they
entered
an America
n superm
arket for
the firs
t time an
d were
bewilder
ed by th
e variety
and abu
ndance o
f consum
er goods.
Shopping
require
s some so
ul-search
ing. To b
uy chick
en broth
, we hav
e to weig
h the rel
-
ative evil
s of fat, s
alt, chem
icals and
chickens
that hav
en’t been
allowed
to roam
free. Th
e
problem is s
olved wh
en we fin
d a box th
at promises
none of th
e above
– at twic
e the cos
t.
We also ha
ve to deb
ate the m
erits of t
ried and
true vs.
somethin
g new. T
hat turn
s out to
be easy:
The bran
d-new, “l
ight who
le wheat B
ran Matzo
s” don’t e
ven tempt us
. We’ll stick
with
the plain
kind.
After we
navigate
the groc
ery aisles
, we reali
ze that w
ith Pesac
h coming,
we have w
ay more
than four
question
s:
1. Do we
have eno
ugh room
to inclu
de Uncle
Harold’s
“lady fri
end” this
year?
2. Where
exactly
should w
e put tha
t orange
on the s
eder plat
e?
3. Will ou
r family w
ant the s
ame-old haro
set (the a
pple-win
e mixture) or
would th
ey enjoy
an exotic
Sephard
ic version
?
4. Should
we final
ly buy ne
w prayer
books o
r use the
raggedy
old ones.
There are
thousand
s of hagg
adot – th
e prayer b
ook that
details th
e songs
and orde
r of the
Passover
seder –
in existen
ce, from
an ecolo
gical hag
gadah th
at asks u
s to thin
k about
the
four tree
s to a fem
inist hag
gadah th
at focuse
s on the
contribu
tions of
Miriam, Sar
ah, Rache
l
and othe
r women in
Jewish h
istory. Ot
her hagg
adot the
mes includ
e LGTB,
interfaith
, and
hip-hop (
for those
who wan
t their Je
wish tune
s written
by rap a
rtists). T
he 30-Minut
e Seder
April 9 – April 15, 2014
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
Page 9
Advertise in Our Next Jewish
Culture & Community Issue!
Publishing May 14. Ad deadline May 7 at noon.
Reserve Your Ad Early at 610-667-6623.
Ellen Scolnic (left) and Joyce Eisenberg (rig
ht) presenting
their “Shmoozing With the Word Mavens” program at an
area synagogue.
���������
CELEBRATING JEWISH CULTURE & COMMUNITY
Few Je
wish hol
idays ev
oke the
same wa
rm sentiments
as Passo
ver. Memorie
s of family
and frien
ds gathe
red as the
four cup
s of wine
are pour
ed, the fo
ur quest
ions aske
d and the
Matzah se
rved, all
contribu
te to Pas
sover’s p
opularity
in the J
ewish co
mmunity. Br
inging
the warm
th and t
radition
of this f
estival to
the Wynne
wood Co
mmunity, Ch
abad of P
enn
Wynne is in
viting all
resident
s to part
icipate in
communit
y Seders
to be he
ld on Monda
y
night, April
14, at 8 p
.m. at the K
aiserman, J
CC 45 Ha
verford
Rd., Wynne
wood PA
.
The Sede
rs take p
articipan
ts throug
h the won
drous lib
eration o
f our anc
estors fr
om Egyp -
tian bond
age, whi
le sharin
g the rele
vance an
d beauty
of the ag
e old fest
ival in ou
r modern
lives. Inc
luded in
the Seder
will be a
full cate
red dinn
er, fine im
ported w
ine for th
e 4 cups,
and hand
made roun
d ‘Shmurah
’ Matzah fro
m Israel.
“Passove
r is not si
mply a cele
bration o
f the hist
oric libe
ration of
an ancie
nt peopl
e,” said
Rabbi Moshe
Brennan
, of Chaba
d of Penn
Wynne. “Pa
ssover is
about ou
r own pe
rsonal lib
-
eration –
physica
lly, emotio
nally and
spiritual
ly. Passo
ver inspi
res us to
break fre
e from the
shackles
restrain
ing us fro
m reachin
g new he
ights – in
our live
s, relatio
nships a
nd con-
nection w
ith G-d.”
All are w
elcome to
join the c
ommunity sed
er, regard
less of Je
wish affil
iation or
backgrou
nd.
Reservat
ions can
be made
online at
www.Cha
badPennW
ynne.org.
Chabad of Pe
nn Wynne Present
s Community
Passover Sed
er
“Relive t
he Passo
ver Exod
us” with R
abbi Moshe
Brenna
n
Passover is A
lmost Here, and We Have Way
More than Four
Questions
See Passover is Almost Here on page 12
Holy Child Academy Sixth Grader
Sarah McGrath of Drexel Hill was
recently selected as a winner in
the 2014 Young Voices Middle
School Monologue Festival co-
sponsored by the Philadel phia
Young Playwrights and InterAct
Theatre Company in Philadelphia.
Sarah and the other winners had
the opportunity to watch adult
professional actors perform the
monologues they wrote for this
annual contest. Holy Child
Academy, a co-educational, inde-
pendent, Catholic school located
in Drexel Hill, offers an Early
Childhood Montessori Program
(Nursery 2+) in addition to edu-
cation for Kindergarten through
Eighth Grade students.
By Laura J
amieson
The Friends Free Library at Germantown
Friends School celebrated National Library
Week by asking library visitors (students, em -
ployees, parents and community members) to
share how libraries have changed their lives.
“It has been so much fun to hear all of the
different stories,” says library assistant Kath -
ryn Murphy. People wrote on a dry-erase sign
and shared a “selfie” photo to the nationwide
hashtag campaign #NLW14 #LivesChange.
The stories included a high-school student
recalling memorizing her library card number
before she knew her phone number, a pre school -
er writing that reading books about dinosaurs
makes him feel like he is “living with the dino -
saurs” and a community patron sharing his dream
of one day becoming a librarian. “Dreams are
discovered in libraries and libraries provide a
path for those dreams to come true,” says Murphy.
Kackie St. Clair, head of the Friends Free Library,
says, “Libraries are a place to connect your
knowledge and your curiosity to the worlds be -
yond the library walls; and a much-needed place
for some peace
and quiet.”
At the FFL, the
staff assists com -
munity mem-
bers with com-
puter skills, writ -
ing resumes and
filling out job
applications.
The also get to
know and help every student. “These connections may be small but they are significant in
building a sense of community and belonging,” says Murphy. “Libraries provide endless
resources and support—for FREE! That is a beautiful thing.”
April 23 – April 29, 2014
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
Page 11
GET READY FOR CAMP
wayne art center
12 one-week sessions
June 2 - Aug 22
Fine Art, Ceramics
Jewelry, Drama
& Culinary
413 Maplewood Ave Wayne PA 19087 610-688-3553 www.wayneart.org
Bren
da C
arpe
nter
Pho
togr
aphy
Summer
Art CampPassport to Art
PLACEYOUR
SCHOOL & S
UMMER
CAMPPROG
RAMS HERE!
Call 610-66
7-6623 tod
ay
to reach yo
ur camper
s!
Next Educ
ation & Ca
mp issues:
April 30 –
PLUS Ever
y Week of
May
GFS Celebrates N
ational Library W
eek
Holy Child Acad
emy Student a Winner in
Monologue Conte
st
Students at Germantown Friends School share their love for the
Friends Free Library.
On Wednesday, June 18 at
6:30 p.m., award winning
chil dren’s author Dr. Jessica
Dimuzio will present her
Green Bean Scene Program
in the outdoor, summer gar-
den at Morris Arbore tum. Dr.
Dimuzio will read her new
book “Bow Wow Wow! Green
Beans Now?,” which recent-
ly received the silver award
from Mom’s Choice in the
Green Earth Category. Follow -
ing the read ing, the author
will discuss organic garden-
ing, geared for kids, that is
sure to produce laughter and
learning. Dr. Dimuzio reports
that the children usually have
a lot of bug questions and
often ask, “Is this really true?”
This event is free with admis-
sion and Dr. Dimuzio’s new
book, appropriate for the early
elementary school reader, is
available for purchase in The
Shop at Morris Arboretum.
The Morris Arboretum of the
University of Pennsylvania is
located at 100 East North -
western Avenue in the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia. Open weekdays 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
and weekends 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Open late on Wednesdays in June, July, and August until 8
p.m. For information, visit www.morrisarboretum.org.
Page 16
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
June 11 – June 17, 2014
Pick Up Your Free
Issue Each Week
or Easily Read Ou
r Issues Online at
www.issuu/CityS
uburbanNews.
Call CITY SUBURB
AN NEWS at 610-
667-6623 for Gre
at Rates and Adv
ertising Ideas to
Help Your Busine
ss or Organizatio
n!
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View City Suburban News online: Visit www.issuu.com/CitySuburbanNews
Plus, LIKE us on Facebook to easily read our online issues.
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Monday - Saturda
y 10 am - 8 pm •
Sunday by Appt.
Experience the healing harmony of the ancient art of reflexology at...
111 BALA AVENUE, BALA CYNWYD • 610-667-8370HEADACHE • DIGESTIVE DISORDERS • NEUROPATHY
INSOMNIA • BACK PAIN • NUMBNESS • SCIATICACertified Profession
al Services • Orien
tal Massage Availa
ble
Credit Cards Accep
ted • Gift Certifica
tes Available • Free Parking
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Every Wednesday Pick Up Your FREE Copy of CITY SUBURBAN NEWS!
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SENIOR
CITIZENS’
G U I D E T O S P E C I A L S E R V I C E S
Compassion. Excellence. Reliability.
BAYADA offers companionship, assistive care, and skilled
nursing services. Since 1975, families have trusted BAYADA
to care for their loved ones with dignity at home.
The best care comes
in the comfort of home.
Call 610-255-7373 | www.bayada.com
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Advertise Here!CALL 6
10-667-6623.
Advertise in
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News toReach You
r
Customers!
www.issuu.com/CitySuburbanNews
or LIKE us on facebook for online issues.
U P C O M I N G S P E C I A L I S S U E S :
June 18 – Education & C
amp
June 25 – Education & C
amp, Healthy Liv
ing,
Senior Services &
Sr. Back Page
July 2 – Education New
s, Get Ready for
July
4th!
July 9 – EARLY DEAD
LINE JULY 2 – H
ealthy
Living
July 16 – EARLY DEAD
LINE JULY 9 – S
PECIAL
2-WEEK ISSUE –
RECEIVE 2 WEEK
S FOR
THE PRICE OF O
NE!
Find Dining & Entertainment News
Every Week!
Call 610-667-6623 for details.
Deadline previous Thursday.
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS –
Your Community Paper
for 29 Years!
Morris Arboretum Hosts Author
Dr. Jessica Dimuzio
Five Devon Prep eighth grad -
ers recently competed in
the “You Be the Chemist Chal -
lenge” regional competition
sponsored by the Chemical
Education Foundation (CEF),
a non-profit organization dedi -
cated to enhancing science
education for students.
Mich ael Hinke of College ville,
Jamie Lorgus of West Chester,
Brendan McGrath of West
Chester, Akul Naik of Phoenix -
ville and Jacob Pabia of Phoe -
nixville were among the 35
students who qualified for the
regionals by competing with
over 700 students on the local
qualifying test. The regional
competition was held at the
Dow Northeast Technology
Center in Collegeville.
Dow scientists facilitated the
competition which included
three rounds of questions involv
ing scientific history and safety,
fertilizer’s effect on plants,
units of measure, isotopes, atom
s, the periodic table and variou
s laws of physics. Students
were eliminated in each round u
ntil only 12 remained for the fin
al round of questions.
Brendan McGrath emerged in th
ird place and will go on to comp
ete at the State Challenge
April 2 – April 8, 2014
CITY SUBURBAN NEWS
Page 9
See Devon Prep Chemists on page 12
EDUCATION NEWS
Devon Prep Eighth Grader Brend
an McGrath (left) earned
third place in the regional “You
Be the Chemist Challenge”
and has qualified to compete at
the state level. Akul Naik
will attend the state competition
as an alternate.
Five Devon Prep eighth graders
recently competed in the “You B
e the Chemist Challenge.”
Pictured with Science Teacher M
rs. Annette Loutrel (right), they
are, from left – Jamie Lorgus
of West Chester, Jacob Pabia of
Phoenixville, Brendan McGrath
of West Chester, Akul Naik
of Phoenixville and Michael Hin
ke of Collegeville.
PLACE YOUR SCHOOL &
SUMMER CAMP PROGRAMS HERE!
Call 610-667-6623 today to rea
ch your campers!
Next Education issues: April 1
6 & April 30
Next Camp issues: April 16 & April 23
On Saturday, April 12 at 9 a.m. A
IM Academy will host the third
annual Race to Read –
a 5K run, 1 Mile Fun Run/Walk,
and Book Exchange – all to ben
efit students who learn
differently. The Race will take p
lace on the Schuylkill River Tra
il that is at the rear of the
AIM campus. Registration is now
open at http://www.aimpa.org/Ne
w/Giving/RacetoRead.shtml.
This event is a great way to sup
port AIM Academy while enjoyi
ng a 5K run and 1-mile fun
walk/run on the beautiful Schuy
lkill River Trail.
AIM Academy, a grade 1-12 co
llege preparatory school, prov
ides extraordinary educa-
tional opportunities to children
with language-based learning di
fferences including dyslexia,
dysgraphia, and dyscalculia, ut
ilizing research-based interven
tion strategies and an arts-
based learning environment. In
addition, the AIM Institute for
Learning and Research is an
international, multidisciplinary se
rvice delivery model designed to b
ring the latest research and
educational training opportuni
ties to parents, teachers and p
rofessionals who work with
children who learn differently. T
o learn more about AIM, visit w
ww.aimpa.org.
AIM Academy Race to Read
DEVON PREP STUDENTS SHINE AT “YOU
BE THE CHEMIST CHALLENGE”
����������������������������������������������������������������������������
�#2" 1(-,�6��$ *1'5��(3(,&�6��$,(-/��$/3("$0�6�/10���2*12/$����-"($15��3$,10�6��* 00(%($# (,(,&����,1$/1 (,+$,1�6��$*$!/ 1(,&��$4(0'��2*12/$����-++2,(15�6��$1��$ #5�%-/�� +.
Kimmel Center
Presents and
MagicSpace
Entertainment pre-
sent the all-new live
show “Myth Busters:
Behind the Myths,”
s t a r r i n g J a m i e
Hyne man and Adam
Savage, co-hosts of
the Emmy-nominat-
ed Discovery series
“MythBusters,” at
the Merriam Theater
for two performances
on Saturday, Novem -
ber 22, 2014 at 2 p.m.
and 8 p.m. “MythBus te r s :
Behind the Myths”
presents a fantastical
evening of on-stage
experiments, audi-
ence participation,
rocking video and
behind-the-scenes
stories. With this
show, for the first
time, fans join Jamie
and Adam on stage
and assist in their
T
bell’s Soup Cans, and Andy’s
Wig as they determine if immor -
tality is worth dying for.
This hour-long cabaret marks
Stage 2 of a year-long explo-
ration of Warhol in collabora -
tion with Opera Philadel phia.
Featuring original music by
Heath Allen, along with the
occasional ’60s rock favor ite,
the cabaret performances of
“Andy: A Popera” can be seen
in the Wilma Lobby. Each per -
formance will be an experi-
ment, allowing for changes from
one evening to the next based
Year 29, No. 45SPECIAL 2-WEEK EDITION • Celebrating
29 Years!July 16 – July 2
9, 2014
Free CelloSpeak
Concert Aug. 8
Page 8
� � � � � �� � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
� � � � � � � � � � � � �CITY SUBURBAN NEWSCITY SUBURBAN NEWSFFFFRRRREEEEEEEE
Dining &
Entertainment
Page 6 & 7
FIND YOUR
COMMUNITY
NEWS HERE!
The Bearded Ladies,
Philadelphia’s experimental
cabaret troupe, presents
Stage 2 in the development
of “Andy: A Popera,” an
hour-long cabaret piece
inspired by the life, fame,
and philosophy of Andy
Warhol, from July 16 - 27,
at the Wilma Theater.
Makeup by Rebecca Kanach.
Photo/Kate Raines and
Plate 3 Photography
MythBusters from left – Jamie
S TA G E 2 O F WA R H O L - I N S P I R E D
“A N D Y : A P O P E R A ”Presented by The Bearded Ladies and Opera Philadelphia –
A cabaret performance exploring the life, legacy, and ‘pop’-ularity of Andy Warhol
July 16 - 27, 2014 at The Wilma Theater
Adam Savage and JamieHyneman of “MythBusters:
Behind the Myths” Tour At the Merriam Theater, Saturday, November 22
�(")��.��-2/�������002$��-# 5� 1��3$/������ (,��(,$��-" 1(-,0�-/� 0(*5��$ #��2/��,*(,$��002$0� 1�'11.��(0022�"-+�"(1502!2/! ,,$40
Thank You for Supporting Us!
GREAT LOCAL
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& NEWS
FIND GREAT INFORMATION EACH WEEK INCITY SUBURBAN NEWS!
Susan Stefanski’s Solo Art Exhibit “Joyful”“ S C HOO L HO U S E RO C K L I VE ! J R . ”
From left – Billy McKeown of Newtown Square as Tom, YasmineFerguson-Smalls of Upper Darby as Interplanet Janet, SarahKane of Drexel Hill as Lady Liberty and Alan Oruska ofSpring field as George prepare for their performances in“School house Rock LIVE! Jr.” Photo/Cate R. Paxson
“Here Today, Gone Tomorrow,” painting by Susan Stefanski.