City Suburban News 1_29_14 issue

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS FREE

P H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S FAV O R I T E W E E K LY

Year 29, No. 21

Celebrating 29 Years of Community News

January 29 – February 4, 2014

FIND YOUR COMMUNITY Béla Fleck with Brooklyn Rider Perform “Q UEEN OF V EGAN D ESSERTS ” NEWS HERE! Works from New Album The Imposter C HEF F RAN C OSTIGAN Merriam Theater, February 1 anjo virtuoso and 14 time Grammy Award winner Béla Fleck performs new work with Brooklyn Rider from recent collaborative album release, The Imposter, on Saturday, Februar y 1 at 8 p.m. in the Merriam Theater. This performance features Béla Fleck on banjo performing new work written specifically for a banjo quintet with Brooklyn Rider members Johnny Gandelsman (violin), Colin Jacobsen (violin), Nicholas Cords (viola) and Eric Jacobsen (cello) joining him on stage. Program highlights include new work “Night Flight Over Water” from The Imposter, created by Béla Fleck for banjo quintet performance, and “Three Miniatures for String Quartet” written by Colin Jacobsen of Brooklyn Rider, among other new works. Béla Fleck has been “pushing the boundaries of the banjo for over 30 years” (The New York Times), re inventing the image and the sound of the banjo through a remarkable performing and recording career that has taken him all over the musical map. Winner of 14 Grammy Banjo virtuoso and 14 time Grammy Award winner Béla Awards, Fleck has been nomFleck performs new work with Brooklyn Rider from recent inated for 30 Grammys in more collaborative album release, “The Imposter,” on Saturday, categories than anyone in February 1 at 8 p.m. in the Merriam Theater. Grammy history. Brooklynbased string quartet Brooklyn Rider offers eclectic repertoire in gripping performances that continue to attract legions of fans and draw rave reviews from classical, world, and rock critics alike. Ticket prices range from $30 - $60 and can be purchased by calling 215-893-1999, online at kimmelcenter.org, and at the Kimmel Center box office on Broad & Spruce streets (open daily 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.).

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Author to Speak on Early Jewish Feminists Page 3

Haverford School Students Honor Dr. King Page 9

Cawley’s Irish Pub Celebrates 40 Years Page 16

Education & Camp News Pages 8 - 11

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P RESENTS N EW C OOKBOOK hef Fran Costigan, internationally recognized culinary instructor and author, whose pioneering recipes combine healthy eating with sumptuous tastes, comes to Tredyffrin Public Library, 582 Upper Gulph Road, Strafford, on Tuesday, February 25, 7 p.m., to share her highly anticipated new

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Fran Costigan, chef and author of “Vegan Chocolate: Unapolo getically Luscious and Decadent Dairy-Free Desserts.” book “Vegan Chocolate: Unapologetically Luscious and Decadent Dairy-Free Desserts.” Costigan, the “Queen of Vegan Desserts,” uses organic and minimally processed ingredients to create elegant as well as fun recipes, including Bittersweet Chocolate Truffles, Sacher Torte, and Moon Pies! Enjoy a See “Queen of Vegan Desserts” Chef Fran Costigan to Speak on page 7

“The Lady from the Sea” Continues EgoPo’s 2013-14 Henrik Ibsen Festival goPo continues their season devoted to the father of modern drama, Henrik Ibsen, with his rarelyproduced masterpiece Lady from the Sea, directed by EgoPo Resident Director Brenna Geffers, and starring a powerful cast including the wonderful Genevieve Perrier, Ross Beschler, and Ed Swidey. Lady from the Sea previews February 19 with Press Opening on Friday, February 21; the show will run two weeks, closing on March 2, at Christ Church Neighborhood House. Widely considered one of Ibsen’s finest masterpieces, Lady from the Sea is rarely performed making EgoPo’s lush staging a special treat for Philadelphia audiences. At the center of the play is one of the great female roles in all of western drama, and perhaps one of its most demanding. EgoPo is proud to have Genevieve Perrier take on this powerful, complex and mysterious woman, surrounded by a fantastic supporting cast. Lady from the Sea is one of Ibsen’s most lyrical, atmospheric and symbolic

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plays. The ocean, in all of its depth and mystery, becomes the central theme. Unfulfilled desire emanates from every

Two time Barrymore Award winning actress, Genevieve Perrier, stars in one of Ibsen’s finest masterpieces “The Lady from the Sea.” EgoPo will transport audiences to a life lived in the shadows of the mountains, a place caught between mountain sea, darkness and light, with another of their distinctive stagings opening February 19 at Christ Church Neighborhood House. Photo/David Cimetta line, as Ibsen digs deep into the layers of each character’s psyche, stripping the façade off their personal lives, and revealing their deepest longings. EgoPo will transport audiences to a life lived in the shadows of the mountains, a place caught between mountain and sea, darkness and light, with another of their signature distinctive stagings. See EgoPo’s “The Lady from the Sea” on page 12


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January 29 – February 4, 2014

EVEN MORE EVENTS Lankenau Used Book Sale The Women’s Board of Lankenau Medical Center on Lancaster Avenue in Wynnewood will hold its semi-annual used book sale on Wednesday, January 29 (8 a.m. - 4 p.m.) and Thursday, January 30 (8 a.m. - 3 p.m.) in the Cafe on the lower level. Thousands of books of all types and age are available for perusal and purchase. All proceeds are used to further patient care at the hospital. Co-chairs are Women’s Board members Barbara Scorzetti, Peggy Cristofalo and Barbara Evans. For info, contact Sue Williamson in the Volunteer Office at 484-476-2139. Book donations are taken all during the year at this office and at the hospital’s thrift shop, “The Hamper Shop,” on Montgomery Ave. in Narberth.

Vocalist Najwa Parkins and the After Hours Trio

Free Baby Conference at Arrowroot Natural Foods Mothers always want the best for their babies, but knowing what constitutes as truly healthy is often confusing. On January 31 at 6 p.m., holistic health expert and author Mary Ann Settembrino will educate mothers about prenatal and post natal health as well as “Excellence in Motherhood” – raising young children to become healthier, happier adults. She will show mothers how to avoid common toxic pitfalls, shed light on homeopathic remedies, holistic nutrition, and the parents’ roles in a child’s development. Attendees are encouraged to ask questions throughout the seminar. The Prenatal to Toddler Conference will take place at Arrowroot Natural Foods located at 834 W. Lancaster Ave, Bryn Mawr, PA near Suburban Hardware and the Bryn Mawr Film Institute. The event is free but RSVP is requested. Attendants can RSVP in-store at Arrowroot Natural Foods, by phone 610-527-3393, or email arrowrootnaturalfoods@gmail.com.

Blood Drive at Library

The Jazz Bridge Second Wednesdays, Neighborhood Concerts Series at the Lutheran Church of the Holy Communion – 2110 Chestnut Street in Center City Philadelphia – presents vocalist Najwa Parkins and the After Hours Trio on Wednesday, February 12. Showtime is 7:30 p.m., tickets are $10/$5 for students, and are only available at the door. For info, call 215-517-8337 or visit www.jazzbridge.org/ events/neighborhood-concerts.

The Haverford Township Free Library is proud to host the American Red Cross for a blood drive Tuesday, February 4 from 2 - 7 p.m. in the Network for New Music Performs at Community Room. The Red Cross urges you to make an appointment today at www.redcross.org/make-appointment. The need is constant. The Haverford College gratification is instant. Give blood. The Library is located at 1601 Darby On Sunday, February 9 at 7:30 p.m., the Department of Music at HaverRoad, Havertown, PA. For information, contact Mary Bear Shannon at ford College presents Network For New Music with guest Maren Montal610-446-3082 ext. 216 or email shannon@haverfordlibrary.org, or visit bano, mezzo. Their program On Seasons and Cetaceans features Jeremy www.haverfordlibrary.org. Gill’s “Helian” (poetry by Georg Trakl), George Crumb’s “Vox Balaenae” (“Voice of the Whale”), and Bernard Rand’s “Walcott Songs.” This conStamp Your Own Valentines cert will be held in Roberts Hall and Marshall Auditorium on the HaverThe Haverford Township Free Library will host a Valentine card stamp- ford College campus at 370 Lancaster Avenue in Haverford, PA, and is ing workshop on February 4 at 7 p.m. Want to send a homemade, per- free and open to the public. sonalized Valentine’s Day card to someone special? Come flex the creative side of your brain and learn to stamp your own cards with expert The Capitol Steps at Bristol Riverside Theatre stamper and card maker Ann Marie Urban. Workshop participants will The Capitol Steps bring their special brand of political satire to Bristol make three different cards—something for all the people on your Riverside Theatre for one week on February 19 - February 23. FeaValentine’s Day list! This program is free and open to adults, teens and turing parodies of well-known songs from the past several decades skewtweens. Registration is required. To register, go to www.haverfordliering the most talked about political issues and scandals of the day, perbrary.org/events. The Library is located at 1601 Darby Road, Havertown, formances are February 19 at 2:00 and 7:30, February 20 at 2:00, PA. For information, call Mary Bear Shannon 610-446-3082 ext. 216, February 21 at 8:00, February 22 at 2:00 and 8:00, and February 23 at email shannon@haverfordlibrary.org, or visit www.haverfordlibrary.org. 3:00. Tickets starting at $40 are available by visiting www.brtstage.org or calling the BRT Box Office at 215-785-0100. Bristol Riverside Theatre Narberth Area Garden Club Program is located at 120 Radcliffe Street in Bristol, PA. Bernard Wiener, a founding officer of the local chapter of the American Begonia Society, calls begonias, “a perfect houseplant.” Find out why at Tri-State Jazz Society Presents Ragtime the Narberth Area Garden Club’s meeting on February 6, 2014, 7:15 Pianist Bryan S. Wright p.m., at the Narberth Borough Building, 100 Conway Avenue, Narberth, Bryan S. Wright will play for Tri-State Jazz Society on Sunday, February PA 19072, 2nd floor (use the Haverford Avenue entrance). His background in horticulture includes courses at the Barnes Arboretum and Longwood 23, 2014 from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. This concert will be at the Community Gardens. A dedicated volunteer he has received much recognition for Arts Center, 414 Plush Mill Road, Wallingford, PA 19086. A ragtime comhis horticultural work with school children and for Retired Senior Volun- poser as well as pianist, Bryan has performed at ragtime and early jazz festivals all over the United States and abroad and was honored last year teers (R.S.V.P.). Free for club members; $6 for nonmembers. to be selected as the 2013 Artist in Residence for the Scott Joplin International Ragtime Foundation. Half-price admission is $10, available for Free Concert with Pianist Matthew Bengtson first-time attendees and members; general admission is $20. High school and the Amernet String Quartet and college students with IDs and children accompanied by a paying On Friday, February 7 at 4:15 p.m., the Department of Music at Haver- adult are free. Pay at the door; there are no advance sales or reservaford College presents Music and Conversation with Pianist Matthew tions. The Community Arts Center is less than a mile from the MediaBengtson and the Amernet String Quartet. Their program will feature Swarthmore exit of I-476. There’s free parking. For information, call 856the Vittorio Giannini “Piano Quintet,” Elliot Carter’s “5th Quartet,” and 720-0232 or visit www.tristatejazz.org. Leo Janacek’s “String Quartet No. 2.” This concert will be held in Roberts Hall, Marshall Auditorium on the Haverford College Campus at 370 Pick Up Your FREE Issue of Lancaster Avenue, Haverford, PA, and is free and open to the public. For CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Every Week! information 610-896-1011 or www.haverford.edu/music/events. Advertise Your Winter Specials, Services, and Programs in City Suburban News! Call 610-667-6623 for great rates.

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January 29 – February 4, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

ARTS, CULTURE & SOCIETY EVENTS

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TRopiC HeAT JAzz pARTy in CHeSTnuT Hill

Bala Cynwyd Library Offers Talk on Early Jewish Feminists he Bala Cynwyd Library will offer a talk by Melissa Klapper about the role of activist Jewish women in the early days of American feminism, from 1890 to the beginning of World War II. The talk, Ballots, Babies, and Banners of Peace is based on Klapper’s recently issued book of the same name. It tells the stories of impassioned, educated and influential women who helped shape the social movements of their time, emphasizing suffrage, birth control and peace. The book has been awarded the 2013 National Jewish Book Award in Women’s Studies. Dr. Klapper, a resident of Merion, is a Professor of History at Rowan University and the author of three books about women’s history and the immigrant experience before and after the beginning of the last century. The talk will be held at the Bala Cynwyd Library, 131 Old Lancaster Road, on Wednesday, February 5 at 7:30 p.m. Admission is free. For information, call 610-664-1196.

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Exotic African Garden Lecture

First Friday Flick

Renowned conservation scientist and botanical expert Brian J. Huntley will visit Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library on Saturday, February 1, 2014, to share his insights into one of the world’s most unique and exotic horticultural treasures, the Kirstenbosch National Botanical Garden in Cape Town, South Africa. Huntley’s richly illustrated lecture be in Winterthur’s Brown Horticulture Learning Center. Registration is recommended, as space is limited. Winterthur is located on Route 52, six miles northwest of Wilmington, Delaware, and five miles south of U.S. Route 1. For information, visit www.winterthur.org.

The Haverford Township Free Library will host the First Friday Flick on Friday, February 7, at 7 p.m. in the Community Room. The film is part of the library’s monthly First Friday Flick program and is free and open to the public. The library is located at 1601 Darby Road, Havertown, PA. For information on what the movie that will be shown that evening, call 610-446-3082, or visit www.haverfordlibrary.org. Bring a snack or beverage – popcorn served!

Local Landscapes and Water Lilies Comprise New Art Exhibit by Frank DePietro “Contemporary Realist Paintings” featuring local landscapes and water lilies by Frank DePietro will appear at Beauty Art Gallery in Edgmont from February 1 to March 8, 2014. A public reception with the artist will be held February 1 from 5 to 8 p.m. Beauty Art Gallery is located at 3857 Providence Rd., Newtown Square, PA 19073. In case of poor weather, the reception will be held Saturday, February 8. DePietro’s water lilies and landscapes depict favorite scenes from Chester County, Kennett Square and Longwood Gardens. For information about this event, visit www.beautyartgallery.net, or call 610-353-4569.

Jewish Artists in the Philadelphia Museum of Art Collection Join for a “tour” of some spectacular works by Jewish artists when longtime PMA volunteer Renée Margulies presents a look at “Jewish Artists at the Philadelphia Museum” on Sunday, February 2 at 9 a.m. The talk will focus on the works of several of the many Jewish artists included in the Museum collection—some famous and many obscure. These famous Jewish artists include Camille Pissarro, Mark Rothko, Amedeo Modigliani, Louise Nevelson, Roy Lichtenstein and Marc Chagall. Coffee and bagels will be served at 9 a.m., with the Hassel Adult Education program immediately following. Invite a friend —all are welcome! Main Line Reform Temple, 410 Montgomery Avenue, Wynnewood. 610-649-7800.

Bristol Riverside Theatre kicks off the new year with “Tuesdays With Morrie” by Jeffrey Hatcher and Mitch Albom based on the book by Mitch Albom on January 28 February 16. Directed by Susan D. Atkinson, the ensemble cast features Richert Easley and Danny Vaccaro. Previews begin Tuesday, January 28 with opening night on Thursday, January 30. Performances run Tuesday through Sunday until February 16. Tickets start at $31, with discounts for students, groups and military personnel. Tickets are available by visiting www.brtstage.org or calling the BRT Box Office at 215-785-0100. Bristol Riverside Theatre is located at 120 Radcliffe Street in Bristol, PA. FIND WONDERFUL EVENTS HERE!

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with

Ms. Jeannie Brooks JAZZ VOCALIST EXTRAORDINAIRE

Sat., Feb. 8, 2014

• 8 p.m.

Regular Dinner Menu & $22.95 Specials Available

H $10 Music Charge + $15 per person food/drink min. H

Roller’s Restaurant at Flying Fish

8142 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19118 215-247-0707 • www.rollersrestaurants.com Seating is limited, reservations recommended.

BONJOUR !

Philly Auto Show 2014 Black Tie Tailgate The Automobile Dealers Association of Greater Philadelphia (ADAGP), the producers of the Philadelphia Auto Show, will host the 2014 Black Tie Tailgate on Friday, February 7. Dine and dance among the finest automobiles in the world at Black Tie Tailgate, where you get an inside view of everything that the 2014 Philadelphia Auto Show has to offer. For the first time, the event will be catered by Garces Group. Garces Group will work in conjunction with ARAMARK/SFS to design and help prepare the special menu. The Association is honored to donate all proceeds from this year’s gala, which is open to the public, to the Division of Neonatology at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. For information and to order tickets, visit www.phillyautoshow.com.

A l’EcOlE FRANçAisE You will love your French classes & amaze yourself!

JNF Day at Hadassah

Registration any time & also Sat. 2/22 • 9 am - 12 pm

The Main Line Delaware County Hadassah will hold its annual JNF (Jewish National Fund) day meeting on Monday, February 10, 2014, at 11:15 a.m. at Adath Israel, 250 North Highland Ave., Merion, PA. Each person attending is asked to bring their charity box, aka “Pishka,” or to contribute a minimum of $ 5, as a donation to JNF. The featured speaker is Terry Katz, National past president of JNF’s Sapphire Society and head of Arad 2020 Task Force. A petite luncheon, at a cost of $10, will be served. For information, call 610-642-1972.

alecolefrancaise.com • 610-660-9645

BeAuCoup Blue

“Tuesdays With Morrie”

Jazz Doctors

Philadelphia’s nationally touring roots Americana group.

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Page 3 – Arts, Culture & Society Events

Featuring David and Adrian Mowry on guitars and vocals with Bill Zinno on bass and Jeff Sheard on drums.

Beaucoup Blue performs the first Wed. of each month at l’eTAGe

Wed., February 5

• Doors open 7:30 p.m.; Show: 8 p.m. Special guest each month. Cover charge $5.

L’ETAGE, a cabaret and nightclub located above BEAU MONDE on the corner of 6th and Bainbridge, Philadelphia • 215-592-0656

www.beaucoupblue.com • www.creperie-beaumonde.com

For Special Events, Benefits and Galas that are open to the public (meaning if someone is interested in attending, receiving an invitation or calling to attend, and/or paying for the event), please submit – ViA EMAil ONlY – ready-to-publish information formatted in full sentences, with a phone number included in the last sentence. The information should include a simple headline with all information in one paragraph. Email your special event to “CitySuburbanNews@mac.com” with “PAGE 3” in the subject line. Please include your name & phone number so that we can verify information. Free family-oriented events, concerts, & general happenings should be submitted with “Even More Events” in the subject line for our page 2 events. All information must be received 2 weeks prior to our publication date. There is no guarantee that every event submitted will be published. Events, if published, are only published once. Private events can not be published. Thank you.

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

January 29 – February 4, 2014

Pennsylvania Ballet Presents Multifaceted Program Featuring George Balanchine’s Serenade Plus: Afternoon of a Faun by Jerome Robbins, Under the Sun Pas de Deux by Margo Sappington, and Petite Mort by Jiří Kylián [Company Premiere] February 6 - 9 at the Merriam Theater xperience the sweeping breadth of Pennsylvania Ballet’s repertoire with a mixed bill headlined by a timeless George Balanchine classic, Serenade, February 6 - 9 at the Merriam Theater. Blank Rome is the Lead Sponsor. “The four ballets on this program complement each other beautifully,” Artistic Director Roy Kaiser says. “Together, they create a performance experience that is at once emotional yet exhilarating, intimate yet powerful.” Serenade, a romantic, plotless ballet, holds a special connection to Pennsylvania Ballet. The Company’s founder, Barbara Weisberger, witnessed the creation of this seminal work. As Mr. Balanchine’s first child student, Ms. Weisberger sat under a piano and watched as he choreographed the piece on older students at his School of American Ballet. The resulting work is a milestone in bal- Artists of Pennsylvania Ballet in George Balanchine’s let history, featuring a lush Tschaikovsky score with strikSerenade, choreography by ing moments of drama throughout. George Balanchine © The Also on the program, Afternoon of a Faun by Jerome Robbins George Balanchine Trust. has been called “a miniature masterpiece.” Set in a ballet stuPhoto/Alexander Iziliaev dio with memorable music by Claude Debussy, a male and female dancer meet, with the audience as their mirror. Under the Sun became an iconic work for the Company when commissioned from choreographer Margo Sappington in 1976. Inspired by artist Alexander Calder, the pas de deux features hypnotic music by Michael Kamen and inventive partnering. Jiří Kylián’s aggressive and athletic Petite Mort, set to two Mozart piano concertos, receives its Company premiere in closing this deeply varied program. Tickets to Serenade at the Merriam Theater are on sale now. Tickets are available online at paballet.org, by phone at 215-893-1999, and in person at the Kimmel Center Box Office. Serenade performances at the Merriam Theater: Thursday, February 6 at 7:30 p.m.; Friday, February 7 at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, February 8 at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.; Sunday, February 9 at 2 p.m. Toast the performance with a FREE Pre-Show Talk on Friday, February 7 at 6:30 p.m. at Enjoy an elegant performance and dinner package with at Ruth’s Chris Steak House, right next door to the Merriam Theater. Prices start at $68 and include your performance ticket the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel at Broad & Locust Streets, open to all Serenade ticketand prix fixe dinner. To order, contact Group Sales Manager Arajua Backman at 215-587- holders. Sip a complimentary cocktail and get behind-the-scenes stories from the rehearsal studio. 6921 or abackman@paballet.org.

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Million Dollar Bike Ride Saturday, May 3, 2014 – Mark your calendars for the first annual Million Dollar Bike Ride (www.milliondollarbikeride.org) to raise money for rare disease research, organized by the Penn Center for Orphan Disease Research and Therapy and Rare Disease Cycling. The event is the only cycling fundraiser to start and end in the city of Philadelphia, with the start/finish line at Highline Park (31st and Chestnut) on Penn’s campus. There are 3 route options: 11, 35 and 73 miles. The ride starts at 9 a.m. Refreshments and entertainment at the start/finish line and fun for the entire family. All participants will receive free gear,

including a Million Dollar Bike Ride jersey. Individual cyclists can register and raise money for their specific orphan/rare disease foundation. Examples of teams already formed include Bike to End Duchenne, Pitt Hopkins Pedalers, Spin Factor for Hemophilia, Team FARA, Team ALD, Team Cure ML4, LAM Foundation, Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia (HoFH) Proceeds will help further research by the Penn Center for Orphan Disease Research and Therapy (www.med.upenn.edu/orphandisease). Registration, volunteer signup and additional race information: http://rarediseasecycling.org/may-2014-fundraisercycling-event. For information, call 215-573-9020, or email wilsonjm@mail.med.upenn.edu.

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January 29 – February 4, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

Page 5

Youth Aid Panel of Lower Merion and Narberth Appoints New Executive Chairs

LIVING WATER COMMUNITY CENTER

he Youth Aid Panel (YAP) of Lower Merion and Narberth has announced that Paula Singer, M.S.S., L.S.W., and Susan Miller, M.S.W., will serve as Executive Co-Chairs. Singer and Miller will oversee the three panels that serve as an alternative to District Court for juveniles who have committed firsttime non-violent offenses in Lower Merion and Narberth. The YAP is a restorative justice program of the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office. It provides a second chance for juvenile offenders to be accountable for their actions to the community. Teens (who are referred to YAP by the police departments) and their families meet with trained volunteer panelists, who assign a resolution that is tailored specifically to each youth. A resolution could include community service, educational activities, apology letters, and/or drug and alcohol education classes. Upon successful completion of the resolution, teens will have no criminal record. The Ardmore Initiative generously provides the meeting space for the panels. Paula Singer, who was among the founders of YAP in Lower Merion and Narberth in 2001, has been a panel member for The Youth Aid Panel (YAP) of Lower Merion and Narberth 12 years, and has chaired a panel for the past several years. has announced that, from left – Susan Miller, M.S.W., and She is a community organizer who creates girls’ leadership Paula Singer, M.S.S., L.S.W., will serve as Executive Co-Chairs. and positive youth development programs in the Philadelphia area. She lives in Ardmore. Susan Miller is in her 8th year as a YAP volunteer, and has chaired a panel since 2008. She worked as an elementary school guidance counselor at Waldron Mercy Academy for 14 years. Miller is a resident of Villanova. Singer and Miller succeed Craig Sheffler-Collins of Wynnewood, who served as Executive Chair for three years, and now chairs one of the panels in Lower Merion and Narberth. Other volunteers on the panels include: Amy Golden of Penn Valley, Betsy Lucas of Narberth, Donald Weinstein of Wynnewood, Evan Steinberger of Merion Station, Helen Bakanauskas of Bala Cynwyd, Helene Zeiger of Villanova, Kathy Esibill of Merion, Linda Hasert of Narberth, Matthew Cramer of Wynnewood, Nicole Kreamer of Wynnewood, Norma Edwards of Wynnewood, Pat Norton of Haverford, Patrick Johnston of Merion, and Susan Bolno of Penn Valley. There are many benefits from the YAP process. It saves taxpayer dollars by reducing the number of costly court cases. The involvement of local nonprofits as sites where teens perform community service demonstrates adult understanding of the mistakes that young people make, and connects youths more personally to their community. Organizations interested in serving as a YAP community service site can contact paula.singer37@gmail.com.

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FREE Programs & Events at Living Water Community Center • All Welcome!

• Sat., Feb. 8 & Sat., Feb. 22 – A FREE Bag of Food and Free Clothes from “The Clothes Closet,” 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. • Wed., Feb. 19 – Breast Cancer Support Group, with guest speaker, 6:30 p.m. • Fri., Feb. 28 – “Movie Night,” Lee Daniels’ “The Butler,” inspired by a true story. Refreshments will be served. 6:30 p.m. • Bible Talk – Starting Feb. Every Thursday, 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. For info, contact Community Center Social Worker

Dot Daniels at 215-877-1274.

LIVING WATER BAPTIST CHURCH INTERNATIONAL MINISTRY Sunday School 11 a.m. • Sunday Worship Service 12 p.m.

7501 Brookhaven Rd., Philadelphia, PA 19151 www.livingwaterbcim.org

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Winterthur Point-to-Point Pre-Race Party Public Invited to Rehoboth Event on February 12, 2014

s Valentine’s Day draws near, Dogfish Head Brewing & Eats shows its love for the 36th TOP-QUALITY WORK Annual Winterthur Point-to-Point by throwing a pre-race party open to the public on Wednesday, February 12, 2014. Festivities kick off at 6 p.m. at Dogfish Head Brewing & FREE ESTIMATES Eats, 320 Rehoboth Ave., in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. Patrons will enjoy a complimentary sneak peek of the delectable spread that awaits guests in the Dogfish Head Hospitality LOCALLY-OWNED Tent at this year’s Point-to-Point steeplechase, which will be Sunday, May 4 on the grounds of Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library. COMPANY Irresistible offerings include Greek feta-chicken bratwurst made with spinach, feta, mint and Ancient Ale Midas Touch; an heirloom Italian bratwurst featuring pork, red pepper flakes, fennel and Midas Touch; a spicy espresso-chicken bratwurst bursting with the flawindowconceptsii@msn.com vor of espresso powder, minced habanero peppers, cumin and chicory stout; and a traditional pork bratwurst seasoned with white pepper, coriander, mace and Dogfish Head’s Raison D’Etre. Also on tap at the party: Live music; fruit and cheese platter; Brewpub Exclusive Beer; specialty cocktail mint julep; guest bartenders; $5 raffle tickets with lucky winners receiving a gift basket of Dogfish Head specialties; a gift card to Rehoboth’s award-winning Nage Bistro & Wine Bar; and two pairs of tickets to the Dogfish Head Point-to-Point Hospitality Tent (value $200 each). Admission to the pre-race party is free. For more information on Dogfish Head’s February 12 event, visit www.dogfish.com. For ROMOTE OUR USINESS VERY EEK IN ITY UBURBAN EWS more information on Winterthur and Point-to-Point, visit www.winterthur.org. Call 610-667-6623 for Great Rates and Advertising Ideas to Help Your Business! Every year, thousands flock to Winterthur’s Point-to-Point, the Brandywine Valley’s most stylish spring sporting event. Experience the excitement of elite steeplechase racing amid the splendor of Henry Francis du Pont’s beautiful former estate. Sanctioned by the National SERVICE CENTER COLLISION CENTER Steeplechase Association, Point-to-Point is more than a pro610-649-0300 610-642-3700 fessional horse race; it is the standout social event of the season. 125 E. Lancaster Ave. • Ardmore 41 Greenfield Avenue • Ardmore Point-to-Point has a wealth of attractions for children and (office at Chevrolet Showroom) • Competitive Coupons Honored families all day, including personal ponies in the Winterthur Hunt, stick horse races, canine capers, magnificent vintage • All Extended Warranties Honored autos, and much more. And, Point-to-Point again will feature Free • Sr. Citizen Discount• AAA Approved the much-anticipated, magnificent antique carriage parade, estimates • Warranty Service on all GM vehicles Chevrolet • Saab savory brunch tent, convenient Tailgate Parking Tents, and service Center Coupon service Center Coupon service Center Coupon other race-goer favorites!

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Jazz Vespers featuring the Larry McKenna Quartet with John Swana on valve trombone will be presented on Sunday evening, February 9, 2014 at 7 p.m. at the Union United Methodist Church, 200 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, PA 19083. A reception and an opportunity to meet the artists will follow the service. A freewill offering will be accepted. For information, see www.Unionhavertown.org or call 610-789-1700.

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

January 29 – February 4, 2014

DINING & ENTERTAINMENT • GET READY FOR VALENTINE’S DAY

LANSDOWNE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA PRESENTS

“T ROPICAL J AZZ ” AND B LUES PARTY B RINGS D YNAMIC V OCALIST B ACK TO C HESTNUT H ILL

VALENTINE’S DAY CONCERT Guest conductor Reuben Blundell, Musical Director & Conductor of the Hunter Symphony, Hunter College

Help Cure Your Winter Blahs with the Jazz Doctors azz – tasty, swinging, spicy and soulful – returns to Chestnut Hill Saturday, February 8, at 8 p.m., as Roller’s Sunday, February 9, 2014 • 3 p.m. Restaurant at Flying Fish presents the Jazz Doctors with Upper Darby Performing Arts Center dynamic vocalist Ms. Jeannie Brooks. Called “captivating” 601 N. Lansdowne Avenue, at School Lane by the Philadelphia Inquirer, Upper Darby, PA • FREE PARKING Jeannie Brooks is the consumTickets: $18 adults • $15 seniors • $5 students with ID mate singer whose talents For tickets call the box office at extend to almost any style, be it pop, rock, R&B, soul, gospel 610-622-1189 • WWW.UDPAC.ORG or her true passion, jazz. She Roller’s Restaurant at Flying Fish presents the Jazz Doctors with dynamic vocalist pays homage to Ella, Sassy and Ms. Jeannie Brooks Saturday, February 8, at 8 p.m. Dinah in song, but makes each ADVERTISE YOUR ARTS & CULTURAL song her own. Pianist Joe Camardo (MD) and bassist Justin Fink (PhD), the popular “house band” at Roller’s Flying Fish for 3 years, PROGRAMS HERE! have performed together for over 30 years in clubs, restaurants and private venues throughout the Delaware Valley. Their Call 610-667-6623 today to reach your audience! music ranges from classic jazz to bop, to Cuban and Brazilian. Appearing with them also will be journeyman jazz percussionist, Ron Howerton, who brings sultry and combustible Afro-Cuban and Afro Brazilian rhythms to the Jazz Doctor’s characteristically lively musical mix. When Brooks comes together with the ever energetic and versatile Jazz Doctors, it’s a reliably hot jazz party (propelled Let Your Business Grow in City Suburban News! Call 610-667-6623 for Great Solutions to Reach Your Customers! by talent drawn from up and down City Avenue—each of the four musicians is from Overbrook, Wynnefield or Wynnewood). In this instance, the theme of the party is tropical jazz as a kind of therapy for midwinter blues. “Many of us experience the seasonal affective blahs,” says bassist Fink. “The Jazz Doctors have a theory. Winter blahs can be linked to something called Jazz Deficit Disorder.” He quickly adds that, “Short winter days with too little sun can get you down, but if you’re not getting a good jazz supplement, you could be missing an important preMERGING RTISTS ERIES ventive measure.” To account for this, the band prescribes a mid-winter musical tonic to inoculate the lisST MARY’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH • 104 Louella Avenue, Wayne, PA tener to the seasonal blues-jazz deficit problem: a dose of bossa, samba, cha-cha or mambo, ...flawless technique, precocious musical and a few shots of Duke, Diz or Bird to deliver the heat and pep you up. understanding – Chicago Tribune Jeannie Brooks, a resident of Overbrook Farms, is a Philadelphia music treasure who has TEFAN ACKIW VIOLINIST been capturing the ears and fancy of jazz, blues and R & B fans for 30 years. The youngest ten singing siblings in a very musical family, Jeannie grew up on a farm in Hopewell, New NNA OLONSKY PIANIST of Jersey, where the entire Brooks family would sing gospel songs for family, friends, and any Stravinsky, Brahms, Frederic Brahms and Strauss. possible occasion. They still sing together. In 1993, the diminutive but assertive vocalist won the People’s Choice Award for Best Sunday, February 2 • 3 p.m. Jazz Vocalist in the Philadelphia area and Atlantic City. The following year, she made her Meet the Artists at a Complimentary first appearance at the Cape May Jazz Festival. Ms. Brooks has been a featured performer Post-Concert Reception at this prestigious event over many seasons since, in addition to appearances at jazz and blues festivals across the United States and Europe. Tickets at door: $20, seniors $15, Brook’s first CD, “Just Jeannie: Live at the Brickhouse,” puts you front-and-center at an students & children free exciting club date with Jeannie and a select, back-up trio of veteran jazz artists Mickey For reservations & directions call 610-649-2517 or visit www.tricountyconcerts.org Roker (drums), Mike Boone (bass), and Bob Thornton (piano). Since opening 30 years ago Roller’s Restaurant at Flying Fish has been synonymous with fine dining, and a deliciously creative kitchen under Owner/Chef Paul Roller. Over the past few years, the chef has quietly added jazz to the menu at his white tablecloth venue. Now, he has one of the citys warmest and most imtimate rooms for putting live jazz and fine dining together. Roller’s is located in Chestnut Hill at 8142 Germantown Avenue, Phila., PA 19118. Call 215247-0707 or visit www.rollersrestaurants.com for information. España, Rhapsody for Orchestra, by Emmanuel Chabrier; Cello Concerto, in D Minor (1st movement), by Eduard Lalo; Elizabeth Lee, soloist; Symphony Fantastique, op. 14, by Hector Belioz

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610.649.9055


January 29 – February 4, 2014

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O U T - A N D - A B O U T – Dining & Entertainment News By Jerry H. Bloom, Staff Writer Onstage • Merriam Theater, 250 South Broad Street in Philadelphia, presents banjo virtuoso and 14-time Grammy Award winner Béla Fleck with Brooklyn Rider string quartet, Saturday, February 1, at 8 p.m. Program highlights include new work Night Flight Over Water from The Imposter, created by Béla Fleck for banjo quintet performance, and Three Miniatures for String Quartet. For tickets ($30 - $60) or info, call 215893-1999 or visit www.kimmelcenter.org. • The Prime Rib, in the Warwick Hotel, 1701 Locust Street in Philadelphia, presents the All-Star Jazz Trio in The Leopard Room: Late Night Lounge, every Saturday evening, beginning at 10:15 p.m. Special late night menu available and no cover charge. For reservations or info, call 215-772-1701 or visit www.theprimerib.com/philadelphia-pa. • World Cafe Live Philadelphia, 3025 Walnut Street in Philadelphia, presents Peek A Boo Revue – Valentine’s show, Saturday, February 8, Doors: 7 p.m.; Show: 8:30 p.m., a neoburlesque cabaret show, entertaining crowds with good old follies style dancing, knee slapping comedy, sultry singing, and burlesque beauties performing modern and classic striptease. For tickets ($20) or information, call 215-222-1400 or visit www.philly.worldcafelive.com. • 11th Hour Theatre Company, 2329 South 3rd Street in Philadelphia, presents The Secret Garden, based on the novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett with book and lyrics by Marsha Norman, music by Lucy Simon, and directed by Megan Nicole O’Brien, February 8 - 10, in the Caplan Recital Hall at the University of the Arts, Terra Hall, 211 South Broad Street, 16th & 17th Floors. 11-year-old Mary Lennox, orphaned by cholera in India, goes to live with her reclusive uncle in his haunted mansion. As Mary searches for a new beginning and a secret garden, she breathes new life into a place filled with despair. For tickets ($25) or info, call 267-987-9865 or visit www.11thhourtheatrecompany.org. • Inis Nua Theatre Company presents Trousers, February 5 - 23, at the Off-Broad Street Theater in the First Baptist Church, 1636 Sansom Street in Philadelphia. Mick and Dermot shared a giddy summer in Manhattan in 1989, working as busboys to earn college money. Singing duets to impress girls and chasing the New York dream, it was all for one and one for all…almost. Fast forward to 2006: Mick is down on his luck and hustles his old friend Dermot for a place to stay in Dublin, up-ending Dermot’s carefully ordered life. For tickets ($25 and $30) or info, call 215-454-9776 or online visit www.inisnuatheatre.org. Dining Around • Cook and Shaker, 2301 East Albert Street in Philadelphia, Laura Viegas’ friendly neighborhood spot on the Kensington/Fishtown border serves elevated comfort food, craft beers, and artful cocktails in a 55-seat space featuring an

at Sangkee Asian Bistro

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The Stagecrafters Presents Philadelphia playwright Thomas Gibbons’ powerful and provocative play

“BEE-LUTHER-HATCHEE” The All-Star Jazz Trio – pianist Andy Kahn (shown), drummer Bruce Klauber and bassist Bruce Kaminsky – continues at The Prime Rib every Saturday evening at 10:15 p.m. expansive bar made of reclaimed wood, exposed brick walls, and a menu available from 3 p.m. until midnight on weekdays and beginning at noon on weekends. Dishes change frequently and include sandwiches and entrees (many vegetarian or vegan) and none over $15. For reservations or info, call 215-426-2665 or visit www.CookandShaker.com. • Pepperoncini, 72 Poplar Street in Conshohocken, PA, offers Chef/owner Paul DiBona’s new Red Sauce Sunday Menu. Choose From eight Homestyle Italian Entrees served with house salad for $15. $5 glasses of Pinot Grigio, Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Chianti too. For reservations or info, call 610-941-7783 or visit www.pepperoncinirestaurant.com/site. Special Events • Brandywine Valley Association (BVA) hosts the 7th Annual Brandywine Polar Plunge, February 8, at the Brandywine Picnic Park, 690 South Creek Road in West Chester, PA to raise awareness about their conservation work in the 330 square mile Brandywine Creek Watershed. Participants collect at least $35 in donations from friends and family in exchange for braving the chilly Brandywine Creek in the middle of winter. Event info and registration available online at www.brandywinewatershed.org. E-mail releases two-weeks in advance of publication date to jerry@jerrybloom.com. Follow paragraph format above. SAY YOU SAW IT IN CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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RECEPTION

An Indecent Proposal: Erotica and The American Civil War alentine’s Day and the American Civil War are typically linked by love letters composed of flowery prose and romantic sentiment, tragic deaths breaking young couples apart, and the enduring theme of affection in so difficult a time. But what about the stories soldiers wouldn’t tell? As the war kicked into high gear and photo technology advanced; there was no shortage of those willing to exploit it for money. Along with the ability to broadcast images of battles throughout the country came a rise in prostitution and the pornographic industry. This Valentine’s Day, join the Young Friends of Laurel Hill Cemetery as they explore the history and taboos of the salacious business that rocked the 1860s. From the story of General Joseph Hooker and the women who came to bear his unfortunate namesake; to the coun-

Valentines Dining §

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try’s desperate attempts to deal with widespread disease and violence; to the women who found their independence in the red-light industry; this talk is sure to pique your interest. After a glimpse into sexuality in a time of war, the lecture will conclude with wine, cheese, and chocolate. This event is for adults ages 21 and over only. The talk will take place on Thursday, February 13 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:00 p.m., in Laurel Hill Cemetery’s Gatehouse at 3822 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19132. Free parking is located in the lot across the street from the Gatehouse. The cost is $20/person. Space is limited, advance registration is required. Tickets can be purchased by phone 215-228-8200 or online at www.thelaurelhillcemetery.org.

“Queen of Vegan Desserts” Chef Fran Costigan to Speak Continued from front page

free cooking demonstration and tasting at the library and learn techniques for creating healthy and delicious desserts that will satisfy vegans and omnivores alike. Copies of Costigan’s book, published this past October by Philadelphia’s Running Press and featuring mouthwatering photographs by Kate Lewis, will be available for sale and signing by the author. Home cooks and professionals all over North America and Europe enjoy Costigan’s lively demonstrations, TV appearances, workshops, and classes, including the Vegan Baking Boot Camp Intensive® in New York City. A graduate of the New York Restaurant School and the Natural Gourmet Institute, Costigan worked as a pastry chef in both traditional and vegan kitchens, before focusing on teaching. For information and to register for “Vegan Chocolate,” visit www.tredyffrinlibraries.org or call 610-688-7092. This event is sponsored by Real Food Works, a Philadelphia based company offering home delivered meals for both weight loss and healthy living. The snow date for this event is Tuesday, March 25, 7:30 p.m.

EVERY WEEK FIND GREAT RESTAURANT

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ENTERTAINMENT NEWS HERE!

Exploring the boundaries between art and reality, the play poses the ultimate question: “Who owns the story of one’s life?” – CONTINUING –

Jan. 30, 31, Feb. 1, 6, 7, 8 • 8 p.m. Feb. 2 & 9 • 2 p.m. Thursday evenings • 2-for-$25 Online, 2-for-$30 At door Tickets: $17 Online • $20 at door $13 Students with ID A “Meet the Cast and Director” Q & A session will be held following the performance on Friday, January 31. The playwright is planning to be in attendance.

215-247-8881

8130 Germantown Avenue, Chestnut Hill www.thestagecrafters.org

REACH YOUR COMMUNITY HERE! Pick Up Your Free Issue of City Suburban News, PLUS Easily Read City Suburban News Online! www.issuu.com/CitySuburbanNews or LIKE us on facebook for online issues.

UPCOMING SPECIAL ISSUES: February 5 – Education News, Get Ready for Valentine’s Day, Sr. Back Page February 12 – Healthy Living, Get Ready for Valentine’s Day, Get Ready for Camp February 19 – Education News, Advertise Your Winter Specials, Senior Services February 26 – Healthy Living, Get Ready for Camp March 5 – Education News, Sr. Back Page Dining & Entertainment News Every Week! Call 610-667-6623 for details. Deadline previous Thursday.

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Polly’s Playroom Early Learning Family Child Care “A Playroom of Possibilities” Near 65th & Lansdowne • Phila

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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215-879-3864 www.pollysplayroom.com

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January 29 – February 4, 2014

GET READY FOR CAMP AIM Academy Offers Summer Programs for Grades 1-12 he transition back to school in September is an important one for all students. This is particularly true for students who learn differently. This can be accomplished through a continued focus on academic skills and strategies during the summer months. AIM Academy educators believe that summer learning and summer fun go hand in hand in this unique program. AIM Academy serves the needs of children with language based learning differences throughout the academic year and continues to do so in the summer with its Summer Enrichment Program. In summer 2014 Lower School students will be immersed in the wonders of China as they embark on a fun and educational exploration of the culture and traditions as part of AIM Academy’s unique academic club methodology. The 2014 program will begin on Monday, June 30 and will run for four weeks. In Lower School mornings will be spent on academic enrichment and the Wonders of China. An optional afternoon component will feature traditional camp activities in Middle School Students enjoying the AIM Summer Program. This year’s Summer sports, music, and performing arts. Program will begin on Monday, June 30 and will run for four weeks. The program focuses on the skills and subjects critical to students at each grade level. Lower School students (grades 1 through 5) will ben- skill development, and time management. College Preparaefit from small group instruction in Reading and Writing, tory work will also be offered to rising 11th and 12th graders multisensory Math computation and fluency, and the arts- with concentration on ACT Math and Verbal, and an essay based study of subjects such as History, Science, and World writing boot camp. For information or to apply, interested parents can visit Cultures. Students in the Middle School (grades 6 through 8) and Upper School (grades 9 through 12) will focus on individ- www.aimpa.org or call 215-483-2461. Open houses at AIM ualized reading and writing instruction, the development of are held monthly and parents interested in the summer promath skills, specialized instruction in STEAM (Science, Technol- gram are encouraged to attend. AIM Academy is located at ogy, Engineering, Art and Design, and Math) and instruction 1200 River Road, Conshohocken, PA 19428. in the use of assistive technologies for note-taking, study

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Morris Arboretum’s Summer Adventure Camp on’t let the chill in the air deter you from planning ahead to a summer of fun at the Morris Arboretum! This year, there will be six weeks of summer exploration with a variety of themes to satisfy inquisitive minds 6 to 10 years of age. The Arboretum’s experienced and licensed educators will have plenty of fun activities to keep kids moving and engaged throughout the day. Campers will interact with the natural world by keeping field journals, hiking in the woods, exploring the Arboretum’s streams, and enjoying activities designed around each week’s theme. Dates & Details Camp dates & theme: June 23 - 27 Birding Buddies; July 7 - 11 Green Gardeners; July 14 - 18 Sensational Summer Science; July 21 - 25 History Crusaders; July 28 - 31 Habitats Hunters; August 4 - 8 Arboretum Artists. Time: Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Cost: $265 for Morris Arboretum members; $285 for non-members. Age Photo/Tiffany Stahl Morris Arboretum Camp Counselor, Peter Range: 6-10 years of age. Learning leads campers on an exploration for Online Camp registration opened January 21, 2014. Interested parents should aquatic life during a discussion about the importance of biodiversity in Philadelphia. register on or before February 28 to secure a guaranteed place for your child and to receive an early bird discount of 15% off camp tuition. Go to https://online.morrisarboretum.org/summer camp and register today! It is sure to be a summer full of exciting and educational activities. The Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania is located at 100 East Northwestern Avenue in the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia. The 92-acre horticulture display garden features a spectacular collection of mature trees in a beautiful and colorful landscape. The Arboretum includes numerous picturesque spots such as a formal rose garden, historic water features, a swan pond, and the only remaining freestanding fernery in North America. A permanent nationally award winning exhibit, Out on a Limb – a Tree Adventure adds to Morris Arboretum’s allure by transporting visitors 50 feet up into the treetops on a canopy walk that requires no climbing. 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 8:00 p.m. For information, visit www.morrisarboretum.org.

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Advertise Your Educational Programs & Open Houses. Call 610-667-6623.


January 29 – February 4, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

EDUCATION NEWS Students Honor Memory of Martin Luther King Jr.

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JEWISH IDENTITY What did it mean to our grandparents? What will it mean to our grandchildren?

Haverford School kindergartener Riyad Rolls finishes stuffing and tying a huggable heart-shaped pillow. The pillows will be given to patients in the Cardiac Care Unit of Bryn Mawr Hospital and CHOP. Haverford School fifth-graders Caleb Yee and Christopher Sims assemble meals for PALM. averford School Lower Haverford School first-grader School students and their Alistair Wiedmer decorates a “Special Place to Rest Your families celebrated Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision of work- Head” pillowcase that will be given to homeless shelters ing together as a community in Upper Darby. to support each other by coming to school on January 20 to participate in a morning of service projects to benefit local agencies and soldiers serving overseas. The day began with a performance by the second-grade

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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 offer? At the dawn of the enlightenment, how did our parents adapt their Judaism to the developments of a modern age? And what can we learn from their struggles, in order to connect more deeply with our own Jewish identities?

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See Haverford School Students Honor Memory of Dr. King on page 10

PLACE YOUR SCHOOL & SUMMER CAMP PROGRAMS HERE! Call 610-667-6623 today to reach your campers!


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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

July 17 – July 30, 2013

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS Education News

EDUCATION NEWS

Delaaw Delaware waare V Va Valley alley Friends School F riends S chool IT’S NOT TOO LATE...

Disney’s “The Little Mermaid, Jr.” Splashes Onstage

P H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S FAV O R I T E W E E K LY

This classic story has long been a family favorite! pper Darby Summer Stage presents Disney’s “The Little Mermaid, Jr.,” one of Disney’s most classic tales. Performances are on July 23, 24, 25, and 26 at 10:30 a.m. and on July 25 at 7:30 p.m. The show is approximately 70 minutes and is ideal for ages 4 and up. July 23 is a special additional performance! In a magical kingdom below the surface of the ocean, Ariel (Olivia Cicalese of Swarthmore) wishes desperately to leave her home and live a life above the water. First she must defy her father King Triton (Nicky Kirschner of Ardmore), make a deal with the sly and evil sea witch Ursula (Danielle Agan of Springfield) and convince Prince Eric (Scott Berkowitz of Havertown) that she is the girl with the beautiful voice. With the help of her friend Flounder (Nick Vecchione of Springfield) and everyone’s favorite crab Sebastian (Toney Goins of Lansdowne), “The Little Mermaid, Jr.” is certain to be an enchanting, timeless, and musical adventure! Limited tickets remain and may be purchased at the Box Office, by calling 610-622-1189 or online at www.udpac.org. The Upper Darby PerPhoto/Cate R. Paxson Performing in Disney’s “The Little Mermaid, Jr.” are, from left – forming Arts Center is located in Drexel Hill at 601 N. Lansdowne Avenue, minutes from the Main Danielle Agan of Springfield as “Ursula,” Toney Goins of Philadelphia as “Sebastian,” Olivia Cicales of Swarthmore as “Ariel,” and and Line and Center City. Parking is free. Nick Vecchione of Springfield as “Flounder.” The show is under the direction of Dawn Morningstar, one of Upper Darby Summer Stage’s most veteran directors. “I think theatre is an experience like no other… I hope that people come away feeling they have taken a journey with the actors. Productions here are very high quality…the audience will see a professional production. I also feel it’s incredible how the audience gets to meet the cast after the show!” Children are invited to come early for pre-show activities before the morning performances and stay after the show to meet the cast members! Free babysitting is offered for those too young to enjoy the show quietly.

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Is your bright student struggling in school? It’s not too late to make a change for the better. ~ GRADES 6-12

FOR STUDENTS WITH LANGUAGE~ BASED LEARNING DIFFERENCES SUMMER PROGRAM ~ JUNE 24 - JULY 26 ~ MONTHLY ADMISSIONS

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Author Elvira Woodruff Discusses Writing with Students

July 31 – August 6, 2013

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ollowing two successful summer workshops in 2011 0 at0 Bryn Mawr 0+0Col0 and 2012 Join Our Summer -0 0#&-0#!"% lege, the Cellospeak instrumental choir comprised of Tutoring Earlier this year, Elvira Woodruff, author of “George Washington’s Socks,” spoke to Haverford Program more than 80 cellists will again School third-, fourth-, and fifth-graders before conducting a writers’ workshop for theNow fifth grade. and Your perform two free concerts in She discussed her path to becoming an author (She worked as a gardener, receptionist, iceThomas Great Hall on Friday, cream truck driver, window-dresser, store owner, and storyteller in a library!), theChild inspiration will be Ready August 2, and Friday, Au for several of her books, and suggested that the students look to personal experiences and famgust 9, at 7:30 p.m. Area resily history when trying to write stories of their own. Aspiring writers with Woodruff from forare,September. idents are invited to attend left – fifth-graders Davis Flanner y, Sam Reisbord, Lleyton Winslow, Christian Shah, and these extraordinary concerts Yeshwin Sankuratri. presented by participants and faculty of Cellospeak’s Overbrook Learning Center 13th Annual Cello Workshop 7708 City Line Avenue • 2nd Floor, Suite 215 for Adults. These free conPhiladelphia, PA 19151 certs will be the grand finales Continued from front page 215-877-8801 • Fax: 215-877-9549 of two separate week-long workcomedy, a tragedy, but mostly a love story. And Mom would have insisted that I tell it.” OverbrookLearningCenter@yahoo.com shops for adult amateur celJonatha Brooke and her music are well-known to WXPN listeners from her years as a solo lists. artist (since 1994) and before that as a member of the duo The Story. She has released ten The Concert on August 2 SAY YOU albums and her songs have been featured in television shows and commercials, and in SAW IT IN CITY SUBURBAN NEWS will be a demonstration of the films. Skill-Builder week, as well as The Philly Fringe Fest production of My Mother Has Four Noses will be only its fourth, fola faculty performance of Respighi lowing summer performances at the Warner Theater in Torrington, CT and at the Playwright’s Advertise Your Educational Services, Participants of Cellospeak’s 2012 Ensemble Workshop. The Cellospeak instrumental choir “Andante Con Variazioni” arCenter in Minneapolis. Open Houses and Fall Programs in comprised of more than 80 cellists will again perform two free concerts in Thomas Great ranged by Gary Fitzgerald for For information, visit http://xpn.org/events/four-noses. Hall on Friday, August 2, and Friday, August 9, at 7:30 p.m. 16 cellos and the Villa Lobos CITY SUBURBAN NEWS! “Bachianas Brazileiras #5” also for 16 players, with Carl Donakowski as the cello soloist and his sister Monica Donakovska as the soprano soloist. BACK-TO-SCHOOL ISSUES: On August 9, the entire cello choir under the direction of Conductor Miriam Burns, will perform pieces by Bach, Telemann, Beethoven, Dvorak and a special cello version of the Orange Blossom Special. EVERY WEEK OF AUGUST & SEPTEMBER In addition to a repeat of the work by faculty in a performance of the Respighi, the premier of a brand new edition for cellos of the Tchaikovsky “Serenade for Strings” will be debuted. Founded in 2000 by Artistic Director Dorothy Amarandos with just 13 of her cello students, Cellospeak’s Annual Cello Workshop has grown to over 120 participants and 20 cello professors from across the U.S. who will come together at Bryn Mawr College for one or two weeks of musical study. They share their love of the cello by performing in coached quartets and in Cellospeak’s signature choir. The Workshop offers students opportunities to improve their technical skills, gain exposure to diverse teaching styles and enjoy their own and other’s performances at nightly recitals. To learn more about Cellospeak, visit www.cellospeak.org, for details on the concerts info@cellospeak.org.

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C APTURE L IFE S TORIES F REE W ORKSHOP A free Capture Life Stories workshop will be given on Thursday, August 8 at 3 p.m. at Brandywine Senior Living at Haverford Estates, located at 731 Old Buck Lane. Personal Historian and author Barbara Sherf (shown) will talk about the importance of capturing family stories. Worksheets will be available to all registered participants. Seating is limited so register by August 2 by calling Kathleen Giandonato at 610-5271800. For information or directions go to www.brandycare.com. For info about the workshop, visit www.CaptureLifeStories.com.

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Presidents Day Undergraduate Information Session at Immaculata University mmaculata University is hosting an admissions information session on Presidents Day, Monday, February 17. This event, held in the Green Room of Villa Maria Hall, will provide an overview of the admissions process, academics, financial aid and scholarships, as well as time for questions and answers. Registration and a continental breakfast will begin at 8:45 a.m. The program will start at 9 a.m. and conclude at 11 a.m. For information, contact the College of Undergraduate Studies Office of Admission at 610-647-4400, ext. 3060 or admiss@immaculata.edu. Register online or learn about more admissions events at www.immaculata.edu/visit. The College of Undergraduate Studies offers more than 60 majors, minors, certificate, and pre-professional programs, including athletic training, business, fashion merchandising, criminology, education, and nursing. Students can participate in an array of leadership opportunities, service projects, internships, and athletic activities. In addition to scholarships and financial aid, Immaculata offers four-year fixed-rate tuition, helping undergraduates plan their college expenses. Learn more at www.immaculata.edu/cus. Immaculata University is a Catholic, comprehensive, coeducational institution of higher education, located on the Main Line between Malvern and Exton, 20 miles west of Philadelphia.

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M ARTINS R UN A RT E XHIBIT Continued from front page

exhibit will be on display through September at Marple Library on Sproul Road in Broomall. For information on Martins Run’s Featured Artist Series, contact Amy Blum, Program Coordinator at Martins Run, at 610-353-7660 ext. 254 or ablum@martins-run.org. LIKE City Suburban News on Facebook for weekly links!

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS P H I L A D E L P H I A & T H E M A I N L I N E ’ S FAV O R I T E W E E K LY

January 29 – February 4, 2014

he Upper Darby High School Choral Music Association is once again preparing to host its annual invitational Choral Music Festival. Now in its 22nd year, the Festival takes place Friday, January 31, 7:30 p.m., at the Upper Darby Performing Arts Center, 601 North Lansdowne Avenue, Drexel Hill. Approximately 700 singers from seven area schools are slated to take part in this concert, which offers audience members of all ages a delightful evening of choral music. Barbara Benglian, Upper Darby High School Choral Director, looks forward each year to hosting this event. She points out that the Festival, the only one of its kind in the area, is a non-competitive one that promotes continued friendships and fosters inter-district musical collaboration. For students and choral directors it is an opportunity to share repertoire and experience varied musical styles; for audiences, it is an upbeat evening of family entertainment. In addition to the award-winning Upper Darby High School Concert Choir and Encore Singers, the festival showcases groups from Beverly Hills and Drexel Hill Middle Schools, as well as ensembles from Interboro, Haverford, Springfield and Sun Valley high schools. Choruses from each of the participating schools will be highlighted in performances of short pieces of their choosing. The concert will conclude with the combined choirs performing “America, the Beautiful.” This is a highly entertaining festival that anyone who enjoys choral music will want to attend! All seating is General Admission; the $5 per person admission fee will be taken at the door. Refreshments will be available for purchase during intermission. The Upper Darby Performing Arts Center is handicapped accessible. For information, call 610-622-7000, ext. 2363.

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22nd African American Children’s Book Fair he 22nd Annual African American Children’s Book Fair will be held from 1 to 3 p.m., February 1, at the Community College of Philadelphia (1700 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia). The event is free and open to the public. The Book Fair started out on a cold frosty day at John Wanamaker Department Store. Sounds like the beginning of a novel. But today it is one of the oldest and largest single-day events for African American children’s books in the region. On average, more than 3,500 people attend the event each year. More than 22 nationally known bestselling authors/illustrators will participate. Many have won the American Library Association Coretta Scott King Book Award. These authors/illustrators have produced some of the best books of our generation. The afternoon is packed with activities that promote the power and joy of reading. Authors and illustrators will make presentations from their books. The Literary Row will distribute book-related promotional materials free of charges. NBC10 will once again host the Reading Circle. Syndicated cartoonist Jerry Craft will hold a workshop in the PECO Literary Salon. McDonald’s, Health Partners Plan, Health Partners Foundation, Comcast, The Literary Media Publishing Consultants are sponsoring The Educator’s Book-Giveaway program, which distributes brand new books of the guest authors/ illustrators to teachers, librarians and parents. Free Parking is available at the 17th Street Garage. For info, call 215-878-BOOK, email vlloydsgam@aol.com or visit www.theafricanamericanchildrensbookproject.org.

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HAVERFORD SCHOOL STUDENTS HONOR MEMORY OF DR. KING Continued from page 9

choral group, Coro Primo, in the Lower School Multipurpose Room, followed by a morning filled with hands-on service projects in the Dining Hall. Service projects included decorating placemats for the mothers and children of St. Barnabas Mission and children at CHOP; coloring flags for U.S. troops serving in the military; stuffing huggable heart-shaped pillows for the patients in the Cardiac Care Unit of Bryn Mawr Hospital and CHOP; decorating “Special Place to Rest Your Head” pillowcases for homeless shelters in Upper Darby; and sorting items from a clothing drive for the Life Center of Eastern Delaware County and other local agencies. Additionally, the students collected gently used books to be distributed to Philadelphia inner city schools. Fifth-graders packaged dinners for PALM (Positive Aging in Lower Merion) and a number of area programs that serve the hungry. Proceeds from the Snack Shack benefitted Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation for Pediatric Cancer.

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January 29 – February 4, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

Page 11

H A R C U M O F F E R S N E W D E S I G N C E R T I F I C AT E S New Digital and Fashion Design Classes Begin February 24 “‘Design is not for philosophy, it is for life,’” explained Julian Crooks, Program Coordinator for Continuing Studies in Design, referring to a value once expressed by the worldrenowned fashion designer Issey Miyake. “Design is part of everything we do, and our new Continuing Studies programs offer students the opportunity to explore this.” The Digital Design Certificate program is based on mastery of the Adobe Creative Suite and consists of five required courses including graphic design, Photoshop, Illustrator, desktop publishing with InDesign, and website design. The Fashion Design Certificate program combines skills and artistry and consists of six required courses includHarcum’s new design classes are open to all ages including high school students, who can ing construction, pattern making, design, advanced conuse the program to create a portfolio for college. struction, advanced pattern arcum College is launching two new certificate programs making, and Photoshop and Illustrator for Fashion Design. in Digital and Fashion Design on February 24. The eveHigh school age students through adults of any age may ning-only classes will offer a certificate upon completion of enroll. High school students are entitled to a discount on all coursework and are part of the College’s newly expanded courses in either program. Continuing Education in Design curriculum. All courses will For information or to register, call 610-526-6087. Online be held at the Bryn Mawr campus, 750 Montgomery Avenue. registration is also available on the Harcum College website The certificate programs can be used to deepen one’s skills, at www.harcum.edu/csfashiondesign and www.harcum.edu/ create a portfolio, or merely taken for personal enrichment. digitaldesign. All classes are taught by professionals working in the field.

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“Henry and Mudge” Comes to Upper Darby Performing Arts Center The fun show, with songs by award-winning composer and Wallingford native, Brian Lowdermilk, will be performed on February 7 pper Darby Performing Arts Center invites the public to “Henry and Mudge” was adapted for the stage by Lowdercome in out of the cold to enjoy the heart-warming fam- milk (composer/lyricist) and award-winning songwriting ily musical, “Henry and Mudge.” The 60-minute performance, collaborator Kait Kerrigan (bookwriter/lyricist), both alumni appropriate for children ages 4 and up, is performed by the of Upper Darby Summer Stage. The show opened Off-Broadprofessional actors of Theatreworks USA. The show will take way at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in December 2006. Tickets are $6 - $9 and may be purchased at www.udpac.org place on February 7 at 7:30 p.m. at Upper Darby Performing or by calling the box office, 610-622-1189. Upper Darby PerArts Center. With songs written by critically acclaimed composer and forming Arts Center is located at 601. N. Lansdowne Avenue, Wallingford native Brian Lowdermilk, the show is based on Drexel Hill, PA. UDPAC offers free parking and is wheel-chair the best-selling children’s book series by Cynthia Rylant. accessible.

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Page 12

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

January 29 – February 4, 2014

Programs at Journey’s Way Help Montgomery County Community College to Host Monnette You Stay Healthy & Save Money Sudler’s Philadelphia Guitar Summit Feb. 8 f you are 60+, The Center at Journey’s Way, 403 Rector St., invites you to check out these programs to improve your health and save you money: • Get your meds checked Thursday February 6, 9 a.m. Noon. Make sure you are taking your medications in the best possible way—dosage, timing, drug and food interactions are all considered. Just bring your prescriptions and over the counter meds. • Monday - Friday, Journey’s Way serves lunch for a $2 optional donation (register two working days in advance), and breakfast from $1 - $3 (walk-ins welcome). • If you live in Philadelphia and meet the income guidelines, you can pick up a free box of food every month. Gross monthly income must be $1,245 or less for a household of one person and $1,681 or less for a household of two people. • EnhanceFitness chair exercise is Tuesdays 10 - 11 a.m. and Fridays 11 a.m. - Noon for an optional $2 donation. Research shows that exercise improves energy, strength, flexibility and even brain health,. Besides, this class is fun. If you are 65+ and you live in Philadelphia, Journey’s Way subsidizes CCT transportation to the center and medical appointments. To register for these programs or for information, call Mark, Center Counselor, at the Center at Journey’s Way, 215-4871750 ext. 1008. (Note weather policy: when public school is closed for severe weather, the center is closed). Visit www.intercommunityaction.org.

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E GO P O ’ S “T HE L ADY FROM THE S EA ” Continued from front page

The production traces the deep yearnings of Ellida, the play’s beating heart. In her youth, Ellida fell in love with a sailor who shared her deep connection with the sea, but one day he left on a voyage and never returned. The years pass and as society demands, Ellida makes a happy marriage with a widower, taking on the role of mother for her step-daughters, and forever concealing her past love. Lady from the Sea reaches a crescendo when the mysterious sailor returns to reclaim his love. Forced to choose between her past and future, Ellida must confront her own needs and passions, beyond domineering social expectations. EgoPo is thrilled to welcome back set designer, Dan Soule, for this production. Returning from earning his masters at NYU, Soule’s past EgoPo credits include Vieux Carre, Bluebird, Woyzeck, Endgame, and Waiting for Godot. He will bring his beautifully immersive style to create Ibsen’s changing world by the sea. The dynamic role of Ellida will be played by the extremely talented Genevieve Perrier. EgoPo is excited to welcome back Perrier, having performed in EgoPo’s 2012 world premiere of The Golem. A two-time Barrymore Award winning actress, and graduate from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, Perrier is well known in Philadelphia for her work with the Philadelphia Theater Company, the Arden, and Lantern among many others. EgoPo is proud to have many familiar faces join the cast of Lady from the Sea such as Ross Beschler (The Golem, Hell, and Marat/Sade) known for his work at the Wilma and People’s Light; Ed Swidey (the star of last year’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin) most recently seen in the incredible one-man Bathtub Moby Dick, as well as K.O. DelMarcelle (Anne Frank), Robert Carlton (Uncle Tom’s Cabin), Lee Minora (Houdini), and Kevin Chick (The Golem). EgoPo is also excited to have Colleen Corcoran join its stage for the first time. The Lady from the Sea runs February 19 through March 2 at Christ Church Neighborhood House. Wednesday through Friday curtain is at 8 p.m., Saturdays at 5 p.m. and 8 p.m., and Sundays at 3 p.m. Tickets: $22 - 35. For a full performance schedule and ticket information, visit www.egopo.org or call 267-273-1414.

Paoli’s Cold War Roger Thorne, Tredyffrin-Easttown Historical Society board member and past president, will present “When the Cold War Cast Its Shadow Upon the Great Valley: The Paoli-Valley Forge Nike Missile Base, 1954-1964” on Thursday, February 13, 7:30 p.m. at Tredyffrin Public Library, 582 Upper Gulph Road, Strafford. Fifty years ago, as the Cold War was well under way, the U.S. Army manned a base in Paoli, equipped with stateof-the-art guided missiles and prepared for the unthinkable: an atomic attack by the Soviet Union. Today no physical traces of those installations remain, only dozens of rare, unpublished photographs and personal recollections from local residents and soldiers assigned to the base. Thorne spoke with many of those involved in order share this chapter in local history. Information and registration is available at www.tredyffrinlibraries.org or 610-688-7092. The snow date for the event will be Thursday, February 27. Thanks for reading City Suburban News every week!

rganized by Philadelphia’s “first lady of guitar,” Monnette Sudler’s Philadelphia Guitar Summit – an exciting evening of diverse musical performances by guitar virtuosos and multi-talented supporting artists – comes to Montgomery County Community College on Saturday, Febr uar y 8, at 8 p.m. in the Science Center Theatre, 340 DeKalb Pike, Blue Bell. Tickets cost $30 for general admission and $15 for children under age 12. Visit www.mc3.edu/livelyarts or call 215-641-6518 for tickets and information. “This is the fifth year for the Summit, and I am proud to say it is thriving and moving in a positive direction,” says Sudler, a jazz guitarist, composer, singer, poet, band leader, producer and teacher who founded the event in 2009. “The direction I envisioned offers guitarists and music lovers a way to find benefit and joy in the wealth of this diverse instrument.” This year’s event will feature: Sheryl Bailey’s trio, with Bailey on lead guitar, Ron Oswanski on the Hammond organ and Ian Froman on drums. Named Photo/courtesy of Monnette Sudler Monnette Sudler’s Philadelphia Guitar Summit scheduled for February 8 at a 2013 “Rising Star” by the Downbeat Montgomery County Community College, 340 DeKalb Pike, Blue Bell. Critics, she has toured and recorded with bass virtuoso Richard Bona, David Krakauer’s Ancestral Groove, pop diva Irene Cara and many locally and internationally and released five albums. Mulebone, an American blues-based duo featuring roots others. An associate professor of guitar at Berklee College of Music, she has taught at The Collective School of Music singer-guitarist Hugh Pool on guitar, bootboard, harmonica, in New York City and several prominent guitar and jazz work- percussion, vox and vocals, and John Ragusa on flute, corshops and helped develop Guitar Sherpa, an interactive vir- net, fife, pennywhistle, conch shell, vox and Jew’s harp. The two have performed at New York City’s The Bottom Line, tual jazz academy. Sherry Butler (sherrywilsonbutler.com), a North Philadel- seen their album of traditional songs reach the American phia-bred jazz singer and songwriter who performed inter- Roots Top 100 charts, and been featured along with Sweet nationally before starting college. She has provided backing Honey in the Rock, Maria Muldaur and David Grisman on the vocals for such musical legends as Teddy Pendergrass and award-winning Ellipsis Arts compilation album, “American Patti LaBelle and gives back to the community by teaching Lullaby.” Philadelphia Guitar Summit founder Sudler (www.monvoice lessons through the nonprofit organization Musicopia and at the Philadelphia Clef Club and Perkins Performance nettesudlermusic.com) has been described by Guitar Player magazine as demonstrating “…a keen sensibility and a lot of Arts Center in Morristown, NJ. Tosin Abasi, a self-taught eight-string guitar virtuoso who perfectly executed guitar techniques.” A graduate of Temple studied jazz and classical guitar at the Atlanta Institute of University’s Esther Boyer College of Music, she has perMusic. Known for exploring such techniques as hybrid pick- formed with such legends as Odean Pope, Hugh Masekela, ing, sweeping, taping and slapping, Abasi founded the Wash- Doug Carn and the late Grover Washington Jr. and is profiled ington, D.C.-based instrumental progressive metal band in Scott Yanow’s recently released book, “The Great Jazz Animals as Leaders. Following his performance at the Summit Guitarists: The Ultimate Guide.” Full bios for this year’s participating artists, who will be he will be available for a brief question-and-answer session. Hiroya Tsukamoto, a guitarist and songwriter originally available for CD sales and autographs during intermission from Japan, on acoustic guitar and vocals performing origi- and following their final performance, can be found at nal Japanese songs with Satoshi Takeishi on percussion. www.philadelphiaguitarsummit.com. Follow “Destination Arts” Tsukamoto began playing banjo at age 13 and received a at Montgomery County Community College on Facebook at scholarship from Berklee College of Music to study in the www.facebook.com/DestinationArts for information about United States. Since then he has performed with his group performing and fine arts events.

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Baby Boomers at Higher Risk for Hepatitis C very year, nearly three to four million people are being infected by hepatitis C, a disease that often has no symptoms and can cause an increased risk of cancer and liver failure. Although hepatitis C can affect anyone, an increasing number of middle-age and older adults are being diagnosed, particularly baby boomers. “More than 75 percent of the adults who are infected with hepatitis C were born between 1945 and 1965, but most don’t know about it because there are no symptoms. It’s a real health issue facing the older population,” explains Scott Fink, MD, Chief of Hepatology at Main Line Health. Most baby boomers with hepatitis C are believed to have contracted the disease in the 1970s and 1980s, when rates of infection were the highest and before the screening of blood supply began. The disease is most often transferred through blood transfusions, sharing needles, and sexual contact. Since hepatitis C has no symptoms, many of these adults have been living with the disease for years, and the longer it has gone untreated and undetected, the more at risk patients are for serious health complications down the road, including liver disease, liver cancer, and, in serious cases,

E

Super Sunday Phon-a-thon

death. Fortunately, treatments are available for hepatitis C. While the disease has traditionally been treated with a weekly injection that caused unpleasant flu-like side effects, there is hope on the horizon for patients looking for better treatment options. The FDA recently approved two new drugs – Sovaldi and Olysio – that are expected to improve both the treatment of hepatitis C and decrease unpleasant side effects of treatment. “There are a number of benefits to these treatments. For some patients, this is the first time an all-oral regimen has been available for hepatitis C. It offers fewer side effects and higher response rates for patients,” says Dr. Fink. “It provides a lot of hope for patients who historically have only had one option for treatment.” The only way to know if you have hepatitis C is to get tested. Your doctor can conduct a blood test to determine whether or not you’ve been affected. If you think you may be at risk, talk to your primary care doctor about your concerns. To find a Main Line Health physician in your area, online visit www.mainlinehealth.org.

p.m. Join the Jewish community in making the calls that make a difference in the lives of people in need here in Philadelphia, in Israel and Be a part of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia’s Super Sun- around the world. There will be free child care and children’s programday phon-a-thon on Sunday, February 9, at the Jack M. Barrack Hebrew ming all day and a community fair from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for all to enjoy. Academy in Bryn Mawr. Register for a morning, afternoon or evening Sign up today at www.jewishphilly.org or call 215-832-0630. shift or stay for all three; phoning will take place between 9 a.m. and 9 Promote Your Business Every Week in CITY SUBURBAN NEWS! Call 610-667-6623.


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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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January 29 – February 4, 2014

Cawley’s Irish Pub Celebrates 40 Years awley’s Irish Pub in Upper Darby celebrated its 40th anniversary the weekend of January 17 - 19, 2014. (January 17, 2014 was the official anniversary date.) Sean and Ann Cawley immigrated to the U.S. almost 50 years ago. They worked, got married, had four children, and bought a bar that would become a staple in the Irish-infused neighborhood of Upper Darby. Throughout the years, there have been many people who met and married at Cawley’s, decadelong friendships made, and staff members and customers that have become family.

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Dear friends and pub employees Christine Gavigan, Havertown, Annmarie Cawley-Hegarty of Aston, and Kim Henry of Drexel Hill. The weekend-long celebration included live music, dancing, guests bartenders (many former employees who work-

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The Cawley family celebrated (and worked hard) throughout the anniversary weekend, from left – Annmarie Cawley-Hegarty of Aston, Ann Cawley of Upper Darby, Charles Cawley of Broomall, and Sean Cawley of Upper Darby.

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ed at Cawley’s decades ago), and some Irish-inspired food and drink specials. Cawley’s Irish Pub is located at 7919 West Chester Pike, Upper Darby. For info, call 610-449-1194 or checkout https://www.facebook.com/pages/ Cawleys-Irish-Pub/151965754842411 for specials and updates.

Philadelphia Heart Ball Come dance the night away for a good cause. The Philadelphia Heart Ball will be held at Philadelphia Downtown Marriott on Saturday, February 15, from 6 p.m. - 11 p.m. A premier black-tie event, Heart Ball raises funds for and awareness of heart disease and stroke. George V. Hager, Jr., CEO, Genesis Healthcare will receive the Heart of Philadelphia award and Morris Kotler, M.D., Chairman Emeritus, Division of Cardiovascular Disease, Einstein Medical Center will receive the Edward S. Cooper M.D. award. Heart Ball, attended by more than 700 people, begins with an amazing silent auction, followed by an elegant dinner, an inspiring program, a spectacular live auction and an incredible entertainment. For info, visit www.philadelphiaheartball.heart.org.

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February 5 – Education News, Get Ready for Valentine’s Day, Sr. Back Page February 12 – Healthy Living, Get Ready for Valentine’s Day, Get Ready for Camp February 19 – Education News. Advertise Your Winter Specials, Senior Services February 26 – Healthy Living, Get Ready for Camp

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