City Suburban News 10_4_17 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 33, No. 6

Celebrating 33 Years of Community News

October 4 – October 10, 2017

FIND YOUR COMMUNITY Taste of Ardmore to Highlight Restaurants; Barbara Bradley Hagerty NEWS HERE! Kitchen and Home Brew Competitions Speaks About Life Reimagined oin the Ardmore community on October 12, 2017 from 5:30 p.m. 9 p.m. for the 9th Annual Taste of Ardmore, produced by The Ardmore Initiative, presented and hosted

J Great Pumpkin Carve in Chadds Ford Page 6

Alison Willse – “New Drawings” Exhibit Page 7

Pat Nogar and guests enjoy sips and tastes from Ardmore restaurants at Taste of Ardmore. Photo/Haley Richter Photography by Ardmore Toyota. This signature fall event allows guests to sample a variety of dishes prepared by Ardmore restaurants and enjoy hand-selected wines, specialty cocktails, and craft brews. Taste of Ardmore focuses on Ardmore’s vibrant and growing restaurant scene—one that is turning Ardmore into a true Main Line destination for food lovers. Businesses bringing their best “tastes” include: Bam Bam Seoul Kitchen, Iron Hill Brewery, Jack McShea’s of Ardmore, Maido, Marokko, Not Your Average Joe’s, PokéOno, Sam’s Asian Cuisine, The Tasting Room, and more. Newcomers participating for the first time this year include Delice et Chocolat, The Bercy, and Yi’s Iron Hill Brewery prepares their bite for Taste of Ardmore guests. Photo/ Haley Richter Photography

Light The Night® Walk in Wayne Page 11

Barbara Bradley Hagerty will discuss her latest book, “Life Reimagined,” on Monday, October 16 at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church. Photo/George David Sanchez

Boba. Tired Hands Brewing Company, Dad’s Hat Rye, Main Line Wine Events, Manatawny Still Works, McCloskey’s Tavern, Philadelphia Brewing, and more will be providing libations to round

uthor and journalist Barbara Bradley Hagerty will discuss her latest book, Life Reimagined, at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church on Monday, October 16 at 7 p.m. in the Sanctuary. At this Community Forum Distinguished Speaker Series, she will talk about “How to Transform Your Life and Thrive,” providing a frank and imaginative discussion of life and the science of spirituality for people of all ages as well as those approaching their 40s, 50s and beyond. Her presentation is a dynamic and inspiring exploration of the new science that is redrawing the future for the better—and for good!

See 9th Annual Taste of Ardmore on page 4

See Barbara Bradley Hagerty Speaks About “Life Reimagined” on page 4

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Inis Nua Theatre Company Presents US Premiere of “The Swallowing Dark” Halloween Happenings Pages 6 & 11

Education News Pages 7 & 8

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9776 or visiting www.inisnuayths and dreams will theatre.org. swirl through the Louis “Leave to remain” is the inadBluver Theatre at The vertently ironic term for the staDrake (302 South Hicks Street) tus of being allowed residency in October as Inis Nua presents in the UK (for both asylum seekLizzie Nunnery’s “The Swallowers and general immigrants). It ing Dark.” From England, this drama deals with the bureauWalter DeShields and Jessica cratic fragility of asylum for one Johnson star in the American family, but the nature of truth Premiere of “The Swallowing itself commands center stage. As Dark” by Lizzie Nunnery The Independent said, “Can the at Louis Bluver Theatre at truth ever be turned into a clear, The Drake from October 4 consistent story? That’s one of to October 22, 2017. Photo the troubling questions that by Plate 3 Photography/ underlie The Swallowing Dark, Kathryn Raines Lizzie Nunnery’s powerfully suggestive new play.” is not permanent, though, and “The Swallowing Dark” opens can come up for review. Liveron Friday, October 6 at 8 p.m., pool has been home to Canaan with previews on Wednesday, and his young son for 5 years after October 4 and Thursday, Octofleeing Robert Mugabe’s brutal ber 5 at 7 p.m. “The Swallowing regime in Zimbabwe. They could Dark” runs for a total of 15 pernow lose asylum as the choices formances, through October 22, 2017. All shows are at the Louis Bluver Theatre at The Drake, 302 South Hicks Canaan made to stay alive are thrown up into the harsh light of interrogaStreet. South Hicks Street runs along the side of The Drake apartment build- tion. Tasked with the bureaucratic load of renewal paperwork, new caseing at 1512 Spruce Street. Tickets are on sale for $25-$35 by calling 215-454See Inis Nua Theatre Company’s “The Swallowing Dark” page 3

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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October 4 – October 10, 2017

EVEN MORE EVENTS RSVP Holds Volunteer Information Sessions Learn about volunteering in your community by attending a Volunteer Information Session where you’ll learn about how you can give back in your community. Next meetings: Bala Cynwyd Library, 132 Old Lancaster Road, Bala Cynwyd – October 5 at 10:30 a.m., December 7 at 10:30 a.m. In King of Prussia – RSVP 901 E. 8th Avenue Suite 200, King of Prussia – October 26 at 10 a.m., December 4 at 10 a.m. Learn about opportunities or share your experience as a volunteer. Email: volunteer123@rsvpmc.org or call 610-834-1040 ext. 123 for information and to reserve your space. Bring a friend! RSVP, a nonprofit organization, provides volunteer opportunities to adults in Montgomery, Delaware and Chester counties and throughout the region. These activities focus on important community needs, such as helping veterans, the elderly, disadvantaged preschool children and at-risk youth. RSVP volunteers also assist museums, historic sites and other nonprofits throughout the Delaware Valley. For more information visit www.rsvpmc.org.

Old City Fest

“First Friday” at Old City Jewish Art Center It’s Simple. . . Advertise Your Business in City Suburban News to Reach Your Clients!

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The Old City Jewish Art Center in Philadelphia will hold a Sukkot program on October 6 as part of its “First Fridays” monthly arts offerings. This coming week kicks off an exhibit displaying Works by Jamie Wyeth, Federico Uribe, Andrew Stevovich, Steven Spazuk and Aithan Shapira, Old City District presents Old City Fest on Sunday, October 8, An Adelson Galleries and OCJAC collaboration. Visitors to the Old City 2017, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., along N. 3rd Street (from Market to Jewish Art Center in Philadelphia right now will literally step into the Race) and Arch Street (from 2nd to 4th). Activities will include a fabric of Jewish life. Even before they walk through the door, they will festival stage with live music, runway fashion shows, a family fun find themselves within an arts-oriented sukkah, a bough-covered hut in zone, pop-up street performances and a wide array of food, beverwhich Jewish people spend time for the duration of the weeklong Sukkot ages, art, craft and retail shopping, with 100+ Old City vendors parholiday. The exhibit kicks off on Friday, October 6, during the festival ticipating. Admission is free, with food and drink pay-as-you-go. of Sukkot, as part of the center’s “First Friday” regular arts programs. For info, visit www.oldcitydistrict.org, tweet @OldCityDistrict or From 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., visitors can view the art and enjoy kiddush (a brief call 215-592-7929. Shown are Circus Performers. Photo/Kyle Ober benediction, followed by refreshments) in the sukkah. “Back to Nature ” at the Old City Jewish Art Center, at 119 N. Third St. in Philadelphia, will be on display during the month of October. Private viewings can be made come to the program and following coffee hour. For information, contact by appointment. Call 215-627-2792 or email: info@ocjac.org. the Society at office@phillyethics.org or 215-735-3456 or visit the Ethical Society website at www.phillyethics.org. Free street parking by permit Free Concert Chamber Orchestra First Editions available on arrival. On Saturday, October 7 at 3 p.m., the Department of Music at Haverford “Revival of Life” Exhibit College presents Chamber Orchestra First Editions. Their program includes Schuller’s Journey Into Jazz for orchestra and jazz quintet, nar- Enzhao Liu, recent graduate of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, rated by retired MA congressman Barney Frank and performed with the shows his luscious paintings “Revival of Life” in the Fireside Gallery of Stanford Thompson’s Rittenhouse Jazz Quintet, along with Mozart’s Main Line Unitarian Church, 816 S. Valley Forge Road, Devon. Visit Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 and Piano Concerto No. 12 in A www.mluc.org. Opening reception will be October 8 from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Major, K. 414, Andrew Hauze, piano, and a new work by Gabriel Klobus- The public is invited. The exhibit runs through November 2. Call 484Hoenich. This concert will be held in Roberts Hall, Marshall Auditorium, 341-8014 for information. on the Haverford College Campus at 370 Lancaster Avenue in Haverford, PA, and is free and open to the public. For information: 610-896-1011 or Visiting Artists Program: Catherine Murphy www.haverford.edu/music/concerts-events. The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) presents this free program on October 11, from 12 - 1 p.m. Catherine Murphy is an estabGoggleWorks Center for the Arts’ lished American realist painter who has been creating depictions of ob6th Annual Arts Festival jects, people and spaces for over 40 years. She primarily works in oil paint, GoggleWorks Center for the Arts (GoggleWorks) presents the 6th annu- and is known for her rich, detailed, close-up compositions. For details, visit al Arts Festival Reading on October 7-8 from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Attendees www.pafa.org/events. can shop handcrafted items and unique artwork by more than 90 of the Arts @ Night in the Piazza area’s finest artists and craft vendors, learn from live artist demonstrations, explore GoggleWorks’ dynamic campus, enjoy live musical perfor- See, discover, experience! The Schmidt’s Commons presents Arts @ Night mances, sample local foods, and take a break at the terrace bar. Admis- in the Piazza on Friday, October 13, 2017, from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. Arts sion to Arts Festival Reading is $8 in advance; $10 at the door with chil- @ Night is a magical night of creativity and artistic performances with dren 12 and under free. GoggleWorks Center for the Arts is located at 201 more than 20 artists performing under the stars in Northern Liberties. Washington Street, Reading, PA 19601 and offers free lot parking. Tickets Artists will not only be showcasing their work for purchase, but will be creavailable https://arts-festival-reading.ticketleap.com/arts-festival-read- ating masterpieces right in front of you to show their process and show ing/. Plan your visit at www.goggleworks.org. off their talent. For information, visit www.theschmidtscommons.com.

“Political Journalism in the Age of Trump”

Vox Ama Deus All-Beethoven Concert

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National political columnist Dick Polman will speak on “Political Journalism in the Age of Trump,” 11 a.m., Sunday, October 8, at the Philadelphia Ethical Society, 1906 S. Rittenhouse Square. He will address the following questions: What’s the most professional honest and effective way to cover the historically unique Trump administration? How can journalists best do their jobs when they’re branded as “fake news” and “enemies of the people”? Currently, Dick Polman is national political columnist at Newsworks/WHYY (www.newsworks.org/polman) and full-time Writer in Residence at the University of Pennsylvania; previously, national political columnist and reporter at The Philadelphia Inquirer. All are wel-

On Friday, October 13, 2017 at 8 p.m. in The Kimmel Center’s Perelman Theater (South Broad and Spruce Streets, Philadelphia) the Ama Deus Ensemble, conducted by Valentin Radu, will perform a stellar allBeethoven concert featuring the Egmont Overture, Opus 84, the Piano Concerto No. 3 in c minor, opus 37; and, the monumental Missa Solemnis in D Major, Opus 123. The quartet of vocal soloists in the Mass will be Andrea Lauren Brown (soprano), Jody Kidwell (alto), Dana Wilson (tenor), and Kevin Deas (bass). Tickets: $25 to $80 available at The Kimmel Center Box Office, 215-893-1999, or online at www.kimmelcenter.org. For info, contact Vox Ama Deus at www.voxamadeus.org or 610-688-2800.

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October 4 – October 10, 2017

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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ARTS, CULTURE & SOCIETY EVENTS

TINY HEARTS FAMILY CHILD CARE

10th Annual Fall Stahl’s Pottery Festival

Building Young Minds for Success Stories, Songs, Art, Fun Activities, and Core Curriculum Ages: Birth to School Age • 6:30 a.m. - 6 p.m.

o you love admiring fine craftsmanship and exquisite pottery? Want to learn more about a local, early twentieth-century redware pottery? If so, plan to visit the Stahl’s Pottery Fall Pottery Festival on October 7, 2017, located at 6826 Corning Road, Zionsville, PA, on the outskirts of beautiful Powder Valley (not too far from Quakertown exit of PA Turnpike). Sponsored by Stahl’s Pottery Preservation Society, this marks the 10th year for this event. Hours are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., rain or shine. Admission is $4per adult (over 18) and parking is free. Activities at the festival include tours of the historic, redware pottery site, pottery demonstrations, a museum exhibit of Stahl’s Pottery and two dozen contemporary potters displaying and selling their fabulous, hand-crafted redware, stoneware or porcelain wares. A light lunch and baked goods sale are also available, as well as pottery memorabilia and books. The 25th anniversary comEnjoy Stahl’s Pottery Fall Pottery Festival on October 7, 2017, memorative redware sgraffito plate made by Joel located at 6826 Corning Road, Zionsville, PA. Leh, great grandson of Thomas Stahl, will be available as well as a history book entitled “Stahl’s Pottery of Powder Valley” featuring historic photos of the Pottery and a color portfolio of pottery made at Stahl’s Pottery. Stahl’s Pottery Preservation Society was founded in 1987 to preserve and interpret the Stahl’s Pottery site. The site includes the potting shed, home of Thomas and Alice Stahl, and the round, stone wood-fired kiln built in 1933/34. Thomas and Isaac Stahl ran the pottery from 1934 to 1950, using the skills they had learned from their father, Charles Stahl, in the nineteenth century. After 1950, Russell Stahl, Isaac’s son continued the business until 1956, when the kiln was fired for the last time. All funds raised at the event help to continue the preservation and interpretation of the site. For directions and further information see website: www.stahlspottery.org or call 610-965-5019.

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Opera Company Presents Free Concerts in Local Parks he Delaware Valley Opera Company is thrilled to present not one, but two free concerts in local Philadelphia parks! Bring blankets, lawn chairs, picnics, dogs, and settle in for an entertaining afternoon of beautiful music. And remember, these concerts are free! This is a great opportunity to introduce friends and family (including kids!) to the art of opera. DVOC presents two different programs of arias and ensembles on consecutive Sunday afternoons: October 15 at 3 p.m. in Vernon Park, 5800 block of Germantown Avenue, 19144; and on October 22 at 3 p.m. in Gorgas Park, 6300 block of Ridge Avenue, 19128. On October 15 pianist Isaac Dae Young and singers including baritone Thad Shirey, tenor Kent Schauble, Soprano Synthia Pullum, soprano Laurice Kennel, soprano Elizabeth Oliver and mezzo-soprano Fran Bjorneby Kraemer will perform works by Giacomo Puccini, Gioachino Rossini, Georges Bizet, Vincenzo Bellini, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Giuseppe Verdi, Leonard Bernstein, Sigmund Romberg and George

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Gershwin. On October 22 pianist John Dulik and singers soprano Angelica Feliciano, mezzo-soprano Emily Byrne, bass Evan Thomas, baritone Jeff Thomas, soprano Sharon Neff, and tenor David Price will perform works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Jacques Offenbach, Giacomo Puccini, Samuel Barber, Giuseppe Verdi, Peter Tchaikovsky, Otto Nicolai, Gaetano Donizetti and Friedrich von Flotow. These performances are part of Philadelphia’s Performance in Public Spaces program, funded by grants from The City of Philadelphia and Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy. The Performance in Public Spaces program is designed to bring quality artistic experiences into Philadelphia neighborhood parks, while providing employment opportunities for Philadelphia's performing arts community. For information about this and other DVOC events, visit www.dvopera.org. For info about Philadelphia’s Office of Arts, Culture and the Creative Economy, visit www.creativephl.org.

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I NIS N UA T HEATRE C OMPANY ’ S “T HE S WALLOWING D ARK ” Continued from front page

worker Martha begins to piece together Canaan’s political activities in Africa and finds hints that he may have been not just victim but also perpetrator of violence in his efforts to navigate Zimbabwe’s horrific no-win political landscape. Was he an activist in the Movement for Democratic Change? Or was he a government CIO agent tracking and torturing dissidents? What do we expect to hear from a man trying to save his own life? As she sits as judge and jury of Canaan’s reality, Martha struggles with a damning truth within her own family, her brother’s seeming involvement in a terrible crime. This professional’s mandate to find and invest in the truth becomes a shackle as she confronts truth’s ever-shifting form. Government reports cannot encompass the complexity of a refugee’s life or journey to safety, but the magical stories of Zimbabwe that infuse “The Swallowing Dark” hint at a truth just out of reach. Inis Nua’s Literary Manager and Associate Director Claire Moyer is directing “The Swallowing Dark” and was drawn to the playwright’s style: “The Swallowing Dark stood out to me as Nunnery’s writing is shaped by poetry, folklore and the vague images at the edges of our memory—but it’s simultaneously tackling a very modern and relevant political issue.” In curating Inis Nua’s Reading Series: Immigration Stories last season, Claire found that the changing face of Britain is increasingly reflected in new work from the U.K. Some playwrights use immigration in a matter of fact or humorous way, as Alan Harris does in Inis Nua’s winter offering “Love, Lies and Taxidermy.” Lizzie Nunnery, however, is taking dead aim at the contradictions and hypocrisy of immigration, asylum and the reality of refugee admissions. “The Swallowing Dark” stars Walter DeShields (Co-Founder and Associate Artistic Director of Theatre in the X) and Jessica Johnson (“Gumshoe,” New Paradise Laboratories, “The Legend of Georgia McBride,” Arden Theatre Company) and takes us from a dreary Liverpool office to the streets of Harare. Longtime Inis Nua collaborator Meghan Jones will handle the set design, and Avista Custom Theatrical Services provides the props. Sound design is by Elizabeth Atkinson with lighting design handled by Amanda Jensen—they both set the scene for Radiant Vermin. Swallow’s costume designer Natalia de la Tor is back for this production, as well as Inis Nua veteran technical director Joe Daniels (Leper + Chip). Another Inis Nua veteran, Lauren Tracy, is back as production manager with newcomer Alex Donnelly as stage manager. Tickets are on sale for $25-$35 by calling 215-454-9776 or visiting inisnuatheatre.org. To join the conversation, like Inis Nua Theatre Company on Facebook and follow @InisNua Theatre on Twitter. Advertise Your Special Events and Programs in City Suburban News!

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BARBARA BRADLEY HAGERTY SPEAKS ABOUT “LIFE REIMAGINED” Continued from front page

In her recent book, Life Reimagined, she advocates taking time to re-evaluate one’s purpose, refocus relationships, and transform the way one thinks about self and the world. Drawing from emerging information in neurology, psychology, biology, genetics, and sociology – as well as her own story of transformation – Hagerty redraws the map for people and plots a new course forward in understanding our health, our relationships, even our futures. There’s no such thing as an inevitable midlife crisis, Hagerty writes in this provocative, hopeful book. It’s a myth, an illusion. New scientific research explodes the fable that it is a time when things start to go downhill for everybody. In fact, midlife can be a great new adventure when you can embrace fresh possibilities, purposes, and pleasures. Following her first job at The Christian Science Monitor and a one-year Knight Fellowship at Yale Law School, Hagerty switched focus to the religion beat at National Public Radio and reported on the intersection of faith and politics, law, science, and culture. In 2005, a Templeton-Cambridge Fellowship experience questioning world-class scientists and theologians at Cambridge University is summarized in her work, Fingerprints of God, which delves into the emerging science of spirituality. The Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church Community Forum Distinguished Speaker Series began in 1997. The forums are made possible by the Anna and Herbert H. Middleton, Sr. Fund of the Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church Foundation and are offered as a service to the community at large. Committee members include Chair Nancy Ameen, Richard Allman, Anna May Charrington, Peter Craig, Louisa Mygatt, the Rev. Dr. Agnes Norfleet, and Monica Devane. Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church is located at 625 Montgomery Avenue, Bryn Mawr. Reservations are not needed for this free event and book signing. For info, visit www.bmpc.org or call 610-525-2821.

Nicotine Anonymous Meeting This ongoing 12-step recovery program meets every Tuesday from 6:30 - 7:30 p.m. at Lankenau Medical Center, 100 E. Lancaster Road, Wynnewood, PA, Parking Lot “A” – Annenberg Building, Knorr Conference Room #102, 1st floor. The only requirement is a desire to stop using nicotine. No dues or fees. Call Milton for details: 215-370-9955.

October 4 – October 10, 2017

9 T H A N N U A L TA S T E

OF

ARDMORE

Continued from front page

out the evening fun. “We are especially excited about the 2017 Taste of Ardmore,” said Christine Vilardo, Executive Director of the Ardmore Initiative. “This year we are welcoming many newcomers to the event, including The Bercy, an exciting new restaurant that is not even open yet!” said Vilardo. “Taste of Ardmore is the perfect way to showcase the new kids on the block along with established favorites. As always, this evening would not be possible without our generous presenting sponsor and host, Ardmore Toyota. We are so appreciative of their ongoing support.” Ardmore establishments use Taste of Ardmore to showcase some of their best dishes and this year is no exception. Delice et Chocolat, the French pastry shop that has been delighting patrons since its opening, will feature a coffee bar and assorted chocolates. Ardmore’s eagerly-awaited newcomer, The Bercy, will stay true to its French roots serving a chicken liver mousse and smoked salmon rilleje. Bam Bam Seoul Kitchen will feature Korean fusion sliders and Yi’s Boba will serve green and mill teas with various toppings. “Our restaurants always put their best dishes forward for Taste,” said Vilardo. “Guests will enjoy returning favorites including PokéOno, serving a fresh tuna or salmon dish and Maido with their popular Japanese curry—there will be something for everyone!” Guests with a competitive streak will delight in the return of the Homebrew Competition and Ardmore Kitchen Challenge both in their second year at Taste. The Homebrew Competition will feature five experienced brewers from the Main Line Home Brewers Association presenting their finest beer for guests to taste throughout the evening. This year the competitors will vie for two awards: Voter’s Choice and Expert’s Choice. Guests will be able to taste the brews and vote for their favorite and a surprise expert panel will also choose a winner. The Voter’s Choice and Expert’s Choice winners will receive a bag of malt and a box of hops from Iron Hill Brewery and Tired Hands Brewing Company. The Ardmore Initiative, Pat Nogar, host of “Living Well with Pat Nogar,” and Main Line Foodies are again teaming up to showcase the best home cooks in the area. Three contestants will shop for ingredients at the Ardmore Farmers Market, cook their best dishes in the spacious kitchen of the beautiful Merion Tribute House, and then submit them to celebrity judges. The competition will culminate at Taste of Ardmore with the winner showcasing the winning dish alongside pro-

Andrew Danieli and Deborah Chung of PokéOno get ready to serve the crowd of 300+ at Taste of Ardmore. Photo/Haley Richter Photography fessional chefs. Details about the competitions and the competitors can be found at www.TasteofArdmore.com. Tickets are available at www.TasteofArdmore.com and are $40 each until October 5, $45 each until October 11, and $50 at the door. An amazing selection of raffle prizes including a tequila dinner for 4 from Besito, restaurant gift cards from Bam Bam Seoul Kitchen, Jack McShea’s, and more are also part of the fun. Raffle tickets are 3 for $20 or $10 each and are available on the Taste of Ardmore website or at the event. Additional information about Taste of Ardmore, including parking info, participants, and raffle prizes can be found at www.TasteofArdmore.com or by contacting The Ardmore Initiative at 610-645-0540 or info@ardmoreinitiative.org.

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October 4 – October 10, 2017

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

DINING & ENTERTAINMENT

O U T - A N D - A B O U T – Dining & Entertainment News By Jerry H. Bloom, Staff Writer Onstage • Keswick Theatre, 291 North Keswick Avenue in Glenside, PA, presents South African world music superstar Johnny Clegg, The Final Journey World Tour, Thursday, October 26, 8 p.m. Despite a list of honors and a 35-year legacy highlighted by his antiapartheid stand, Clegg’s two-year battle with pancreatic cancer is forcing him to call it a career despite his groundbreaking social, political, and cultural impact that includes multi-platinum album sales and dozens of awards and honors worldwide. His recorded output earned him millions of record sales, countless awards and nominations (including a Grammy nomination), and multiple international releases. He was the forerunner of combining Western musical styles with African ones, sparking a revolution in South African music that can be still be heard in the work of artists today. Johnny Clegg in concert October 26 at the Keswick Theatre. Photo/courtesy Randex Communications For tickets ($39.50 - $79.50) or info, call 215572-7650 or visit www.keswicktheatre.com. • World Cafe Live Upstairs, 3025 Walnut Street in Philadelphia, presents A Big Band Salute to The Legends of Jazz Drumming, with the dynamic drums of Bruce Klauber, the 15-piece Monday Blues/Jazz Orchestra, the swinging All-Star Jazz Trio, and the jazz singing of Mary Ellen Desmond, Sunday, October 15 at 3 p.m. For tickets or info, call 215-222-1400 or visit www.worldcafelive.com/event/1496877-big-band-salute-legends-philadelphia. • Theatre of Living Arts, 334 South Street in Philadelphia, presents Chicano Batman, Sunday, October 8, show at 8 p.m. the band is four young men in vintage formalwear, playing songs that blended Brazilian Tropicalía with early ’70s psychedelic soul and romantic pop. The band is making their boldest statement yet with Freedom Is Free, their third album. Chicano Batman’s look has done as much to set them apart as their sound or their name. Since the beginning, they’ve performed in matching suits and ruffled shirts. Outside the studio, Chicano Batman has a stellar reputation through heavy touring across the country winning over thousands of rock fans, night after night. For tickets ($18 – all ages) or info, call 215-922-1011 or visit http://venue.tlaphilly.com//EventDetail?tmeventid=020052CCAC764D54&offerid=0. • Annenberg Center Live, 3680 Walnut Street in Philadelphia, presents the lightning-fast fretwork of Jake Shimabukuro, October 22, 7 p.m. in the Zellerbach Theatre, where his Ukulele meets rock (and jazz, classical, bluegrass and folk). Jake’s breakout cover of George Harrison’s While My Guitar Gently Weeps, hit YouTube ten years ago and has since gained over 14 million views. His sophisticated arrangements and revolutionary techniques redefined the musical possibilities of the ukulele. For tickets ($33 - $40) or info call 215-898-3900 or visit www.annenbergcenter.org/event/jake-shimabukuro. Dining Around • Yangming, Conestoga and County Line Roads in Bryn Mawr, PA, hosts a Luncheon Series: Monthly Tasty Talks by accomplished media professionals on the theme of Making a Difference. The next speaker on Thursday, October 25, is Jim Donavan, CBS3 Morning News. Schedule: 1 p.m. – Hors d’oeurves; 1:20 p.m. – Jim Donavan; 1:40 p.m. – Lunch, Q&A. Cost is $20 (includes tax and tip) for each pre-registered guest. Walk-ins $25 and the prix fixe price does not include the available alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages. All profits donated to the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Charity. For reservations or info, call 610-527-3200 or visit http://yangmingrestaurant.com. Special Events • The Fishtown Neighbors Association and YELP, will host the 10th Annual RiverCity Festival, Saturday, October 14, from 12 - 6 p.m. in historic, Penn Treaty Park. This free festival begins with a 5K fun run winding through the historic streets of Fishtown. Once the runners return from their scenic run, they will be able to enjoy the music all afternoon on the main stage while enjoying a post-run beverage in the hospitality tent. Run registration includes tech t-shirts, beverage tickets, and swag bags. WXPN welcomes Swift Technique, Candy Volcano, Creem Circus, Minka, Maitland and Ali Wadsworth providing live music. Local vendors and businesses will display a wide array of arts and crafts, along with a Beer Garden. Also returning is the Pet Tent with representatives from the PSPCA, ACCT Philly, and many more organizations and local businesses dedicated to helping out our furry friends. For more info, visit www.rivercityfestival.org. Submit event listings 2 weeks in advance of publication date to: jerry@jerrybloom.com. Follow paragraph format.

F REE L EGAL A DVICE O FFERED O CT . 18 BY P HILADELPHIA B AR A SSOCIATION he Philadelphia Bar Association will offer free legal advice to residents of Philadelphia and the surrounding counties on Wednesday, October 18, between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. Members of the public can access the service by calling the Association’s LegalLine P.M. hotline at 215-238-6333. Area residents seeking confidential legal advice will be able to speak for free with a volunteer attorney from the Philadelphia Bar Association. Attorneys are available to offer information about any aspect of the law including family law, landlord-tenant, workers’ compensation and employment law, among other topics. LegalLine P.M. is a public service sponsored by the Young Lawyers Division of the Philadelphia Bar Association, providing residents with free, quick and accurate legal advice during convenient evening hours. LegalLine P.M. is offered on the third Wednesday of every month from 5 to 8 p.m. The program has existed for nearly 20 years, allowing volunteer attorneys to help thousands of callers through direct service or by referring them to an appropriate source. In addition, during regular work hours, the Philadelphia Bar Association offers another program – the Lawyer Referral and Information Service (LRIS) – which provides lawyer referrals to area residents. Staff attorneys take calls from the general public and refer callers to attorneys in private practice for a 30-minute consultation, for which the attorney agrees to charge a drastically reduced fee of $35. If callers do not need an attorney or cannot afford one, they will be directed to a legal service organization, agency or other resource for assistance. LRIS is available Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., by calling 215-238-6333. Founded in 1802, the 12,000-member Philadelphia Bar Association is the oldest association of lawyers in the United States.

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Acting Without Boundaries (AWB) P R O U D LY P R E S E N T S

Sunday, October 15 at 4 p.m. Centennial Hall • The Haverford School 450 Lancaster Avenue, Haverford, PA $15 • Purchase tickets at the door or online at www.actingwithoutboundaries.org

Acting Without Boundaries (AWB) is a unique year-round theater program that celebrates inclusion offering a platform for the creative and artistic expression of children, teenagers, and young adults with physical disabilities.

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

October 4 – October 10, 2017

HALLOWEEN HAPPENINGS

42nd Annual Great Pumpkin Carve in Chadds Ford he Chadds Ford Historical Society hosts the 42nd Annual Great Pumpkin Carve on October 19-21, 2017. The Great Pumpkin Carve is the quintessential Brandywine Valley experience, and is a great way to get in the Halloween spirit. The Great Pumpkin Carve was started by artists Andrew Wyeth, Jamie Wyeth and Jimmy Lynch in the 1970s to decorate the Chadds Ford Inn for Halloween. The event has grown each year, and is now an autumn tradition for thousands of people every fall. This family-friendly festival features 70 local artists competing by carving huge pumpkins into jacko-lanterns on Thursday night. The pumpkins, which may weigh as much as 400 pounds, will be lit and displayed at the end of the carving on Thursday, and illuminated again on Friday and Saturday nights. Pumpkins are judged and winners declared in several categories: Best Overall, Most Halloween, Best Carving, Most Original and Best Use of Pumpkin. Since 2017 marks the 100th anniversary of Andrew Wyeth’s birth, a new prize category has been added to this year’s carving competition. Since Andrew Wyeth loved Halloween so much, the “Andy’s Spookiest Award” will be given to the carver who creates a carving using elements that best evoke the spooky and eerie mysteriousness of the October holiday. In addition to the pumpkins, the festival offers entertainment for adults and children alike including live music, raffle prizes, hayrides, pumpkin painting and other fun activities. This year the event is expanding the variety of food offered by including local restaurants and food trucks to join for the Great Pumpkin Carve. Also new this year is the addition of a Scarecrow Display & Competition where individuals, families, classrooms and businesses can make a scarecrow to compete in several prize categories: Celebrating Chadds Ford, Keeping Traditions, Forged in History and Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. The Great Pumpkin Carve is held on the grounds of the Chadds Ford Historical Society, 1736 N. Creek Road, Chadds Ford, PA 19317. Admission is $10 for adults; $5 for children; free for children 6 and under. CFHS members are free with membership card. All ticketing is at the gate. Free parking is available at the event. The Great Pumpkin Carve begins at 5 p.m. and ends at 9 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, October 19 and 20, with extended hours on Saturday, October 21, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. Registration is required to enter both the pumpkin carving competition and the Scarecrow Display & Competition. Visit www.greatpumpkincarve.com for information, and to apply to compete in the carving or scarecrow competitions. The Chadds Ford Historical Society is a non-profit organization based out of Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. Proceeds from the organization’s events help support the Society’s educational programs, historic preservation efforts and its ongoing research projects on the history of the Chadds Ford area. For information, visit www.chaddsfordhistory.org.

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The Chadds Ford Historical Society hosts the 42nd Annual Great Pumpkin Carve on October 19-21, 2017. The Great Pumpkin Carve is the quintessential Brandywine Valley experience, and is a great way to get in the Halloween spirit!

Spooky Mini Golf

THE HAVERFORD SCHOOL Preparing Boys for Life

Friday, Saturday, & Sunday evenings, October 1 - October 30, 6 - 9 p.m., 18 holes of frightening fun await only the bravest of souls as Philly Mini Golf is transformed into Spooky Mini Golf during the month of October. Purchase a ticket to putt your way through Historic Philadelphia landmarks turned haunted, including Independence Hall, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Liberty Bell, and many more! For info and to purchase tickets, visit www.historicphiladelphia.org.

Cricket BOO

Open Houses Middle & Upper School Oct. 18 Lower School Oct. 25

Look & Learns (grades 6 to 8)

Oct. 5 Nov. 9 Dec. 7 (pre-k to 5)

Oct. 4 Oct. 8 Nov. 15 Dec. 6

Celebrate Halloween Cricket Avenue style with the ultimate children’s Halloween bash! Join Lulu’s Casita and pucciManuli on Saturday, October 21, 2017, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m., for the 3rd Annual Cricket BOO! Events at Cricket BOO include create-your-own treat bags, trick-or-treating on Cricket Avenue, pumpkin decorating, BOO! parade, ghouly games, Pumpkin 500!, photo booth, light refreshments, face painting, trunk-or-treat, sensory station, spider web maze, unlimited play at Lulu’s Casita, and more! The cost is $15 per child. For a complete schedule of events and information, visit www.CricketAvenue.com.

Franklin Square Pumpkin Patch On Saturday, October 21, Noon - 2 p.m. come pick a pumpkin out of the Franklin Square Pumpkin Patch, decorate it with your best spooky design, and take it home for Halloween! While you’re at the Square, take a ride on the Lightning Bolt Express Train, as it makes a fall stop ($5 adults, $4 children). This activity is a FREE family-friendly event for children 10 and under. Limit: 1 pumpkin per child. Group reservations and participation are not available. Quantities are limited, while supplies last. For info, visit www.historicphiladelphia.org.

Ardmore Halloween Spooktacular Join Downtown Ardmore businesses in celebrating Halloween with a miniparade, candy hunt, and more Saturday, October 28, 2017, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.! For a complete schedule of activities visit the Ardmore Business Association at www.ArdmoreShops.com. MORE HALLOWEEN HAPPENINGS ON PAGE 11

RSVP at

haverford.org/events

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October 4 – October 10, 2017

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

Page 7

EDUCATION NEWS

A LISON W ILLSE – “N EW D RAWINGS ” E XHIBIT Opens October 19 in Rosemont College’s Lawrence Gallery awrence Gallery presents a new exhibit featuring the works of Alison Willse. The show, titled “New Drawings,” will be on display from October 19 through November 24, 2017. An opening reception will take place Thursday, October 19 from 4 through 7 p.m. with an informal gallery talk at 4:30 p.m. This powerful solo exhibit of recent work by emerging artist Alison Willse combines unusual subject matter (skulls, Halloween masks, and cigarettes) with dramatic lighting and limited space. Her use of compressed charcoal intensifies the theatrical effect of each image. By subtracting the environment the artist evokes a sense of imporSee “Mask #2,” Charcoal on tance in the ordinary and the viewer is comPaper, 28” x 35”, 2016 (right), pelled to “re-see” everyday objects. “It’s important to me from a conceptual in Alison Willse’s exhibit on standpoint that it’s understood how the display from October 19 through November 24, 2017 subject matter is very much rooted in Pop Art,” Willse said. “It also channels my background in printmaking in the sense that the work has a strong graphic sensibility.” at Rosemont College. Her process begins with identifying objects that achieve a specific balance of light and shadow, and are organic in nature. Willse then photographs the subject matter and edits the photos to bring out the drama of each object. Usually she Photoshop’s the black space around the object as a final step before outputting the image to get a sense of the final drawing. Alison Willse has exhibited at various galleries in and around Philadelphia. Selected venues include: Philadelphia City Hall, Moore College of Art and Design, Slingluff Gallery, Abington Art Center, Chestnut Hill College, Pagus Gallery, and the Philadelphia Sketch Club. Willse graduated magna cum laude with her B.F.A. in Studio Art and Printmaking from Rosemont College in 2006. Upon receiving a prestigious fellowship, she then went on to pursue her M.F.A. in Printmaking at Marywood University, from which she graduated in 2008. “I’m very excited to show my newest works in Rosemont’s Lawrence Gallery. This large WAYNE W AYNE AR A ART T CENTER and well-lit allows me to highlight the drama of my black and white drawings.” Lawrence Gallery is located in Lawrence Hall on Rosemont College’s campus at 1400 Montgomery Avenue in Rosemont, PA. Lawrence Gallery is open Monday through Friday between All Levels & All Ages the hours of 9 a.m. and 8 p.m. The Gallery is also open by appointment. For more info, contact Patricia Nugent at pnugent@rosemont.edu or 610-527-0200 ext. 2310.

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Start the School Year with Music Lessons at

Ballet 180 Presents “A Secret Garden” Ballet 180 presents a single showing of “A Secret Garden” on Saturday, October 14 at 4 p.m. at McShain Performing Arts Center, Rosemont College located at 1400 Montgomery Avenue, Rosemont, PA 19010. Audiences of all ages will enjoy beautiful dancing to music by Bach, Mozart, Philip Glass, and more. The production will feature three original works: “Spring, Strain, Stretch” – a dance for three people that shows the strains of life and how growth occurs when we are pushed beyond our limits; “Platform” – a Latin inspired dance to intoxicating beats and jazz infused steps; and “A Secret Garden” – a beautiful interpretation of the healing power of love that is found in a garden, where those secret places in our hearts and our imagination come to life. Tickets range from $15-$35 and can be purchased online at www.ballet180.org. For information, call 484-639-9571. Photo/Biking Photography

“Advocacy for Teachers and Students to Empower Learning” Symposium The Philadelphia Reading Council presents “Advocacy for Teachers and Students to Empower Learning” on Saturday, October 14, 2017, from 8:30 - 11:30 a.m. This symposium will be held in the President’s Lounge of the Campion Student Center of St. Joseph’s University. Philadelphia School District educator Samuel Reed III will be the keynote speaker, followed by a panel discussion with State Representative Jordan Harris, McClure school principal Sharon Marino, 2016 “Teacher of Courage and Conscience” Danielle Arnold Schwartz, Soccer for Success mentor Leysie Lloyd, and community leader Virginia Pollard. The program is $5 for PRC members and full-time students and $10 for non-members. Three Act 48 credits will be given. To pre-register, contact Nancy Gilhool at gilhoolfam@verizon.net. Walk-ins are welcome.

Pickleball Tournament Sally Young, a parent of a uveal melanoma patient and USA Pickleball Association Ambassador, will host a Pickleball Tournament on Saturday, October 21, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. to benefit cancer research. Pickleball is the fastest growing sport in the United States. The indoor tournament, held at Brandywine Youth Club, Glen Mills, is open to all skill levels, ages 18 and above. Entry fee per person is a $40 tax-deductible donation. All fees will be donated to Eye Cancer Research at Jefferson Hospital. Spectators are encouraged. To avoid eye cancer, please get a DILATED eye exam. For info email sutsme2@aol.com or call 610-525-7280.

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April 23 – April 29, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

Page 9

EDUCATION NEWS

Slow down, meditate and learn about the healing qualities of the mind.

Students Inducted into The Haverford School’s Cum Laude Chapter

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Headmaster John Nagl (standing, far left) and Cum Laude speaker Bill Fortenbaugh ’54 (standing, far right) with new inductees into The Haverford School’s Cum Laude Society (seated, from left) seniors Cory Fader, Dylan Henderson, Matthew Larson, Haram Lee, John Zipf, Jonathan Paras, William Ye, Rudy Miller, Michael Solomon, R.J. Meiers, and Gregory Boyek; (standing) juniors Jackson Simon, Harry Bellwoar, Brendan Burns, Jake Pechet, Jackson Henderson, Manav Khandelwal, Jamie Leyden, Nathan Kidambi, Connor Atkins, Logan Atkins, and Jonathan Soslow. wenty-two Haverford School students were admitted into the Cum Laude Society during the 84th induction ceremony 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 academic 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.

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Registration any time & also Sat. 5/3 • 9 am - 12 pm

Overbrook High School Reunion

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Overbrook 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.

March 26 – April 1, 2014

CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

Our informative Education News is published the first and third Wednesdays of every month.

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GET READY FOR CAMP Archbishop John Carroll High School Student Wins Widener University Leadership Award ierce Lockett, a junior at Archbishop John Carroll High School, has been recognized by Widener University and NBC 10, as a winner of the Widener University High School Leadership Award. Lockett joins 134 students from high schools in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Dela-

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Pierce Lockett, a junior at Archbishop John Carroll High School, has been recognized by Widener University and NBC 10, as a winner of the Widener University High School Leadership Award.

– Receive continued reader recognition with your advertising.

ware who demonstrate courage and leadership within their communities. Students were selected for their abilities to stand up for what is right, address a wrong and make a difference in their communities or schools. Lockett, a resident of Ardmore, has spoken out on the use of the “r-word” in schools and his community. He was nominated for the award by Joe Denelsbeck, principal at Archbishop 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 also receive a scholarship of $20,000 over four years if they enroll at Widener University.

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CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

October 4 – October 10, 2017

Annual Fall Festival at Church of St. Asaph

EDUCATION NEWS

The Church of St Asaph’s in Bala Cynwyd presents its annual Fall Festival, a family-friendly event of music, food, fun and more on Saturday, October 14 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 27 Conshohocken State Rd. at St. Asaph’s Road. Rain date: October 21. The event will feature live performances, available treasures of every kind, family activities, food trucks, soft drinks, tours and raffle items benefiting St. Asaph’s outreach programs serving inner city public schools, Philabundance, the UN Refugee Center for Syrians and Hospital Albert Schweitzer Haiti, among many others. For information, call the Church at 610-664-0966.

Eight Baldwin School Seniors Honored by National Merit Program

“We’ll Always Have Casablanca” For Main Line Reform’s opening Hassel lecture, the speaker will talk about the beloved film “Casablanca,” with new insights as the film commemorates the seventy-fifth anniversary of its premiere. On Sunday, October 15 at 9:30 a.m. Noah Isenberg, director of screen studies at the New School in New York will talk about his book “We’ll Always Have Casablanca: the Life, Legend, and Afterlife of Hollywood’s Most Beloved Movie.” Join at 9:30 a.m. for coffee and bagels followed by a talk at 10 a.m. by film historian Noah Isenberg. Main Line Reform Temple, 410 Montgomery Ave., Wynnewood, PA 19096, 610-649-7800. Visit www.mlrt.org.

Eight seniors from The Baldwin School have been recognized by the National Merit® Scholarship Program. Top row, from left – Emily Thompson, Cara Guernsey, Hilary Liu, Melia Hagino; bottom row – Sabrina Rustgi, Pranshu Suri, Sara Syed, Olivia Isenberg-Landes. he Baldwin School is proud to announce that eight students from its senior class have been recognized by the National Merit® Scholarship Program. Three Baldwin students have been named Semifinalists and five students have been named Commended Students in the 2017 62nd annual National Merit® Scholarship Program. Cara Guernsey, Hilary Liu and Pranshu Suri have been recognized as Semifinalists for their outstanding performance on the 2016 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT®). Of the nearly 1.6 million high school juniors who entered the program, these three Baldwin students were among 16,000 seniors who qualified for recognition as Semifinalists. Semifinalists have an opportunity to continue in the competition for some 7,500 National Merit Scholarships, worth about $33 million that will be offered next spring. About 90 percent of the Semifinalists are expected to attain Finalist standing, and about half of the Finalists will win a National Merit Scholarship, earning the Merit Scholar® title. Finalists will be selected on the basis of their skills, accomplishments and potential for success in rigorous college studies. In addition to Baldwin’s Semifinalists, Melia Hagino, Olivia Isenberg-Landes, Sabrina Rustgi, Sara Syed and Emily Thompson have been named National Merit Commended Students by the 2018 National Merit Scholarship program. “We are extremely proud of our seniors recognized by National Merit,” said Valerie Marchand Welsh, Director of College Counseling. “Baldwin students are extraordinary in their academic and extra-curricular accomplishments. We know that our students will go on to be lifelong learners and will have an impact in their own way. We wish them the best of luck.” For information, visit www.BaldwinSchool.org or call 610-525-2700.

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Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Hosts Program for Middle School Students and Parents ryn Mawr Presbyterian Church invites the community to attend its “Middle School: The Ride of Your Life” program on Sunday, October 22 at 4 p.m. in Congregational Hall. This free event is presented by the BMPC Youth Ministry Department and the Middleton Center for Pastoral Care and Counseling. David Smith, interim director of youth ministry at Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church, and a panel of mental health professionals will help parents learn creative ways of guiding their children through the transitions of middle school. In addition, youth will grapple with what the transitions of middle school mean for their overall development, learn how to view change through the lens of faith, and celebrate new beginnings. This is an interactive event where parents and youth meet together for an opening session in Congregational Hall and then participate in age-specific discussions. For information, contact David Smith at 610-520-8821 or davidsmith@bmpc.org.

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School-to-Prison Pipeline Program at Free Library The School-to-Prison Pipeline is the set of policies and practices that have the result of pushing students out of schools and into adverse life outcomes such as employment insecurity, impoverishment, and incarceration. Deborah Gordon Klehr, the Executive Director of the Education Law Center-PA, will discuss policies we can implement in Pennsylvania schools to dismantle the School-to-Prison Pipeline. This event takes place on October 16, 2017 at 7 p.m. in Room 108, Parkway Central Library, Education, Philosophy & Religion Department, 1901 Vine Street 19103, 215-686-5392. Free event, no ticket required, but an RSVP is appreciated at: schooltoprison_flp.eventbrite.com.

Overbrook High School Class of June 1957 Reunion The Overbrook High School Class of June 1957 is holding its 60th reunion on Sunday, October 22, 2017 at 11:30 a.m. at the Bala Golf Club, 2200 Belmont Avenue, Philadelphia. The cost per person is $45. For info, contact Irene Kohn at 610-667-2291.

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n Saturday, October 14, 2017, friends, families, children of all ages, and co-workers will come together for The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s (LLS) Light The Night® event at the Wilson Farm Park in Wayne. Light The Night is an inspirational and memorable evening. During the two-mile leisurely walk, participants carry illuminated lanterns – white for survivors, red for supporters, and gold in memory of loved ones lost to cancers. Thousands of walkers will form a community of support, care, and love, bringing light into the dark world of cancer. Tamara Proietto of Phoenixville, will walk with her team, Team Tamara, in this year’s Chester County Walk. Proietto has been participating in

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Tamara Proietto of Phoenixville, will walk with her team, Team Tamara, in this year’s Chester County Walk. Proietto has been participating in the Light The Night Walk for the last four years after being diagnosed with acute myeloid lymphoma (AML). the Light The Night Walk for the last four years after being diagnosed with acute myeloid lymphoma (AML). Five months after her diagnosis, Proietto received a bone marrow transplant from an anonymous donor and has been in remission ever since. “When you or someone you love hears the words, ‘you have cancer,’ it’s one of the darkest moments in your life,” said Proietto. “The best advice I received was to only use the LLS website when doing research online, because of their commitment to providing information, resources and support to those affected by blood cancers.” There is no fundraising minimum to participate in Light The Night, but every walker is encouraged to become a Champion For Cures by raising $100 or more. Nationally, participants raise an average of $300. “Light The Night gives hope to patients and their families and lets them know that they are not alone in their battle against cancer,” said Ellen Rubesin, LLS Executive Director. “It is a night to pay tribute to lives touched by cancer, honor those we have lost, and celebrate the lives that have been saved.” To become part of Light The Night, call the Eastern Pennsylvania Chapter at 800-482-2873 or visit www.lightthenight.org/epa.

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HALLOWEEN HAPPENINGS 13th Annual Gravediggers’ Ball The Friends of Laurel Hill Cemetery eagerly announce the date for their 13th Annual fundraising gala, the Gravediggers’ Ball, as Saturday, October 14, 2017 from 7 p.m. - 12 a.m. at the Event Center at SugarHouse Casino, overlooking the Delaware River in Philadelphia. The event will include a raffle, wine toss and silent auctions. Cash, check and all major credit cards are accepted as payment. Black-tie, masquerade or costume is encouraged, with prizes awarded for best costumes. Live musical entertainment will be provided by All About Me Band, one of the region’s most acclaimed party bands. Tickets to the Gravediggers’ Ball are $200/person and include open bar cocktails and hors d’oeuvres until 8:30 p.m.; full dinner service with wine and desserts; live entertainment; dancing; and complimentary onsite parking. A portion of all ticket sales is taxdeductible. Special discounts for tables of ten and Young Friends (ages 21-40) are available. Tickets must be purchased in advance. For additional information about attending or supporting the 13th Annual Gravediggers’ Ball, or to view photos from past Balls, visit the event website at www.gravediggersball.org, or call 215-2288200. Over the past decade, the Gravediggers’ Ball has raised nearly half a million dollars towards the preservation, maintenance, accessibility and educational interpretation of Laurel Hill Cemetery, the first cemetery in the United States to receive the designation of National Historic Landmark.

Panorama’s Halloween Party to Benefit Saved Me Philly Join Panorama as they host an outdoor Halloween Pawty for four-legged friends and their humans on Sunday, October 15, from 3-5 p.m. at Panorama, 14 North Front Street, Old City entrance at Front and Market. Dress your dog up in a Halloween costume and celebrate the season with Panorama and Doggie Style at this people-friendly dog block party. ALL proceeds from the event will be donated to Saved Me Philly. Human guests will be served wine and snacks from Panorama’s Chef Matthew Gentile, while dogs enjoy a “Gourmet Treat Buffet” from Doggie Style, featuring fall themed flavors, like pumpkin spice from the following vendors: Emerald Pet, Natural Balance, Wellness and Pet Releaf, with complimentary Earth Rated Poop Bags for your next walk. There will be seasonal themed “selfie stations” and a canine costume contest with gift bag prizes from Doggie Style for the first, second and third place winners. Humans are encouraged to dress up with their furry friends. Guests will have the opportunity to meet adoptable puppies and dogs during the event; and Panorama will be collecting new and gently used towels and dog treats for Saved Me. In case of rain, the event will be moved indoorswith all dogs welcome. Tickets will be $45 per person and can be purchased by visiting https://www.pennsviewhotel.com/panorama. Space is limited and advanced purchase is strongly encouraged. Advanced registration for the costume contest is also suggested.

East Passyunk Fall Fest and Spooky Saturday East Passyunk Avenue Business Improvement District (EPABID) presents a full day of spooktacular fun with free activities for the kids, adults and even fido too! East Passyunk Fall Fest and Spooky Saturday returns on Saturday, October 28, 2017, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Family activities include pumpkin decorating, arts and crafts, live music, trick or treating, costume contests (for children and dogs), pet treats and more. For the grownups enjoy live music, 40 craft and arts vendors, fall fare, spirited cocktails, and more. Businesses between the Singing Fountain and Mifflin Triangle (Mifflin and East Passyunk) will open doors to trick or treaters. Most activities will be held at the Singing Fountain (EPA and Tasker), with select activities to be held at Mifflin Triangle (EPA and Mifflin). For more information, visit www.visiteastpassyunk.com, like EPABID on Facebook and follow @epassyunkave on Twitter.

Franklin Square Trick-Or-Treat Trail Saturday, October 28, Noon - 3 p.m., start your Halloween at Franklin Square by decorating your very own Trick-Or-Treat bag! Follow the Trick-Or-Treat Trail map to the trail stops to receive a treat! The Lightning Bolt Express Train also makes a stop in the Square to take Trick-Or-Treaters on a Halloween ride ($5 adults, $4 children). This activity is a FREE family-friendly event for children 10 and under. Group reservations and participation are not available. Quantities are limited, while supplies last. Trick-Or-Treat Trail & Lightning Bolt Express Train presented by Fox Rothschild. For info, visit www.historicphiladelphia.org.

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PHILADELPHIA AND THE MAIN LINE’S FAVORITE WEEKLY

Celebrating 33 Years of Supporting the Arts!

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he Trai l’s EndCafé in Bala Cyn the wyd will be site for the book on launch party 10, Sunday, July e e and Shar for “How to Writ es to Tickle niqu Humor: Tech County author Montgomery presents Donna Cavanagh“How to her new book Humor: e Write and Shar le Funny Tick Techniques to ” at Fans Bones and Win party on a book launch 10, from 1 p.m. Sunday, July Trail’s End the at p.m. 3 to yd Café, at the Cynw375 at Train Station, State Road. Conshohocken Fans” Win and s Funny Bone or ry County auth by Montgome . Donna Cavanaghto be having “I am thrilled ch at the new the book laun

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Act Bonanza Summer One- “He Said, Players’ 2016 2016, includes Old Academy 15, 16, & 17, ings, Dale July 8, 9, 10, n are, top row – Jane Jenn Mitchell, She Said.” Show tor; front row – Meredith . direc pa, Robb la Mezzacap pson, Ange Matthew Thom

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UPCOMING SPECIAL ISSUES: October 11 – Education News, Halloween Happenings, Healthy Living October 18 – Education News, Halloween Happenings October 25 – Education News, Halloween Happenings, Healthy Living November 1 – Education News Find Dining & Entertainment News Every Week! Call 610-667-6623 for details. Deadline previous Thursday.

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Derek Barnes of the Philadelphia Orchestra will be soloist with Orchestra Concordia on October 20. Photo/Jessica Griffin, Philadelphia Orchestra rchestra Concordia will present its first concert of the season on October 20 at 8 p.m. at the Radnor Middle School, 150 Louella Avenue, Wayne, PA. The performance is free and open to the public. Under the direction of conductor Gary White, the program will include Philadelphia Orchestra cello soloist Derek Barnes in a Haydn Concerto, and music by von Suppé and Brahms. Orchestra Concordia was recently recognized by the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts for offering admission-free performances at a convenient location and making superb concerts accessible to all. In residence at the Wayne Art Center for some rehearsals, the two notfor-profit arts organizations partner to provide an unparalleled variety of arts opportunities to the public. Orchestra Concordia is a volunteer orchestra comprised of outstanding professional and amateur musicians from the Philadelphia area. They work together in an atmosphere of respect and joyful camaraderie to produce orchestral music of the highest quality. David Kim, Philadelphia Orchestra Concertmaster, and Nancy Campbell, Executive Director of the Wayne Art Center are members of Orchestra Concordia’s Artistic Advisory Board. For information, visit www.orchestraconcordia.org.

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LM Libraries Offer Free E-books for Kids A new collection of ebooks for children expands services provided by Lower Merion Libraries he Lower Merion Library System announces the addition of TrueFlix to the online children’s book collection. TrueFlix is a series of non-fiction books geared toward elementary school children. Each book is accompanied by a lively video overview that provides an introduction to the subject, then an e-book offers in-depth information on the topic. The topics range from people, places and history to science and nature. The e-books make great resources for school projects or general interest. Students can learn about each of the 13 original colonies, Rosa Parks, Extreme Science and much more from the dozens of books available. To use TrueFlix and other e-book services, have your LMLS library card ready, and visit www.lmls.org. Click “Explore Our E-Library” menu and then e-books, and the link to the specific service. You will be prompted to enter you LMLS library card number. TrueFlix joins the many other e-book services geared toward children offered by LMLS libraries. BookFlix also features e-books paired with a video. It is geared toward younger children and has great topics for early and reluctant readers. Even more online picture books are available with the Tumblebooks online service. Tumblebooks features a collection of picture books with animation, sound, music and narration added for children to read or have read to them. And for even more books, check out the Overdrive service. Click on the “Overdrive” link from the LMLS web page, www.lmls.org and then select “Subjects” and scroll down to “Picture Book Fiction” (under the “Juvenile Fiction” section). Overdrive e-books can be downloaded to your tablet, phone and other portable devices. For more information on these and other services, visit www.lmls.org or stop by any LMLS library and staff will be happy to demonstrate these services.

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American Red Cross Blood Donation Opportunities The American Red Cross urges eligible donors of all races and ethnicities to give blood to help ensure a diverse blood supply for patients in need. Some blood types are unique to certain racial and ethnic groups, so a diverse blood supply is important to meeting the medical needs of an increasingly diverse patient population. Donors of all racial and ethnic backgrounds, as well as all blood types, are needed to help patients fight sickle cell disease, alpha thalassemia and other illnesses. Make an appointment to give blood by downloading the free Red Cross Blood Donor App, visiting www.redcrossblood.org or calling 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-7332767). To help reduce wait times, donors are encouraged to make appointments and complete the RapidPass online health history questionnaire at www.redcrossblood.org/RapidPass. SAY YOU SAW IT IN CITY SUBURBAN NEWS

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