ISSUE .
October 16th, 2008 other issues :
What's Your Function?Josh Owen's vision for the future of Philadelphia design fuses economy, education and a healthy dose of practical magic.
by Nathaniel PopkinOwen, approaching mid-career, is feeling sober. In part,
he means he's becoming a wiser, less self-conscious designer, more receptive to the nuances of a market already filled with
smart objects. But this doesn't mean he's getting conservative. He's
gained clarity, he says, a willingness to engage in a process that allows practical
concerns like economics and manufacturing technology to inform design.
Outside the BoxA Q&A with Brian Phillips, principal at Interface Studio Architects and contributor to DesignPhiladelphia's "A Clean Break" exhibit.
by A.D. Amorosi"Philadelphia's tipping point is a triangulation between available land,
great location, affordability and an influx of creative-class types.
All of the projects we show speculate on how this energy can help to
produce infill activity in key areas."
Sudden ImpactThis prefab neighborhood sprouted in a Philadelphia minute, but its roots are deep.
by A.D. AmorosiIn this city, nothing so zestfully calls to mind the need for design
evolution than "A Clean Break," a "pop-up neighborhood" exhibit of
prefabricated spaces combining notions of sustainability, affordable
housing, eco-friendliness and near-future revitalization.
Design Philadelphia: The Blueprint by Aaron MoselleWith a whopping 90 events — from exhibitions and lectures to open
studios and workshops — on offer, DesignPhiladelphia gives new meaning
to the term "sensory overload." Not that we mind.


Editor's Letter:
Box PopuliHow can this be different? How can this be better?
by Brian HowardOur publisher, Paul Curci, asked students in UArts' graphic design and industrial design departments to re-imagine the part of City Paper no one thinks they think about: our honor boxes. Dented up and iconic, our orange boxes are inextricably tied to our identity.

Loose Canon:
Art for Our SakeGood Advice, Anytime.
by Bruce SchimmelThe PSAs of their time, these posters were affected by neither
corporate-speak nor snarkiness, and so their messages resonate with a
confidence that today is shocking and refreshing.
Feedback:
Letters to the EditorWhat You Say
"Mr. Faris, please don't use my son's death as an anecdote to your
city's Democratic leadership's failure to do their job for the last 56
years."
A Head in the CrowdJob fairs play the percentages and make you feel like a number.
by Maureen CoulterPeople are past the point of panic attacks/excessive
drinking/doctor-shopping for Xanax in reaction to reports of massive
job cuts, outsourcing and skyrocketing commodity prices. It's old news.
Even so, bills don't pay themselves, and if you are among the many
mired in occupational insecurity, you may have considered a job fair or
career expo.
IcepackAmorosi on the news, nightlife, gossip and bitchiness beats.
by A.D. Amorosi"I have to feed my babies and I miss being a shopkeeper. I guess you can say I'm a slugger. Either that or nuts."
Running NumbersA scholarly look at the digits that matter.
by Nick NorlenEvolution test? Is that really something we want to take?
Hope and (Ex)ChangeWhat the election means for heroin users.
by Isaiah ThompsonIn Pennsylvania, it is illegal to buy, sell or
distribute syringes without a prescription. But people who inject drugs need to find them somewhere. One place to get them
is on the street. But there is another way: Drug users can go to a van staffed by the
nonprofit Prevention Point Philadelphia and exchange a dirty needle for
a guaranteed-clean one. Strictly
speaking, the program is still illegal. For 17 years, though, the city
of Philadelphia has not only tolerated the program, but helped fund it. Why? Because it works.
The Bell CurveCity Paper's Quality-o-Life-o-Meter
When news breaks in Philadelphia, we make jokes.
All in the Game, YoKuroda threw at Victorino because of baseball's unwritten rules.
by E. James BealeWhat enables players to "police" the field by throwing at each other and brawling?
The answer, it seems, are baseball's Unwritten Rules. Known to
players of every uniform and nationality, plus umpires and Major League
Baseball itself, the Unwritten Rules are copious — you might be
surprised at the sheer amount of unofficial protocol in a game in which
chewing tobacco and adjusting oneself mid-inning are commonly accepted.

Dispatch:
Fun Ray Goes to QuizzoAs one might expect from a man who practices a dying art, Ray separates work from life.
by Mike NewallReal Ray is a dedicated craftsman who for years performed all silver
restorations for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, and who proudly
displays an overstuffed office folder filled with e-mails from
satisfied customers. Fun Ray, on the other hand, spends his evenings standing at the bar
in Coco's, where he and his jeweler friends
drink Tuaca and shout, "What the, who the, where the ..." any time a
pretty woman walks past.

Political Notebook:
Fundraising to the Finish by Mary F. PatelOn Friday, Democratic nominee Barack Obama made the scene for a triple fundraiser — two at the Sheraton Hotel on Race Street, followed by dinner at Comcast exec David L. Cohen's house.

Art:
Walking with the GhostThe curious academic life of Penn's first black professor eludes even his reverent biographer.
by Nick NorlenIt's fitting that Bruce Kuklick's biographical sketch of William Fontaine, Black Philosopher, White Academy: The Career of William Fontaine, begins much like a ghost story: Kuklick is alone in the
university's archives, doing unrelated research, browsing a bare-bones
file on the late philosophy professor, when he sees something that
would give most people chills — his own name.
Excerpt from Black Philosopher, White AcademyIn 1932 [William Fontaine] earned his M.A.
from Penn. A year later, after continuing to take courses, he spent the
summer studying philosophy at Harvard, easily the commanding
institution of higher learning in the United States.
Full Exposure:
Fit to Be ToyedJohn Vettese sees what develops
by John VetteseThey're called "toy" because these film cameras are über-basic
point-and-shoot plastic boxes. They generally have two aperture
settings, one shutter speed and none of the bells and whistles of
modern digital photography. This lo-fi approach to fine art allows the
photographer little in the way of control — which is how Patrick McHugh likes
it.
Theater Review:
Fear FactorMonster
by Mark CoftaChange some names, add a few pretty profilers with guns and cell phones, and it's TV's Criminal Minds.
Kafka in the CourtroomThe Trial
by Mark CoftaJared Reed's co-artistic director, Paul Kuhn, creates a vast white expanse
with a canopy that threatens to devour us, emphasizing shadows and
surprises: With all furniture on wheels, artfully choreographed
movement creates a courthouse's labyrinthine corridors and K.'s growing
paranoia on crowded city streets.
Opera:
Beethoven Behind BarsFidelio
by David ShengoldFidelio — an ever-timely work celebrating the victory of
individual courage over systematic, corrupt oppression — is sublime
stuff musically. But it's not all Big Moral Statements —
there is humor, romance and suspense as well, since the leading
character is impersonating a guy and flirting
nervously with the chief jailor's daughter in order to
rescue her unjustly imprisoned husband.
Now See ThisGet Out!
Parsons Dance | Spooky Action | Roy Blount Jr. | Magnetic North | ContempraDance Theatre

Last ChanceCatch it or Regret It
by Molly EichelFeet | WYSIWYG | Bioforms
Arts Agenda Picks:
Just Do ItDracula Festival
by John VetteseBram Stoker's research notes and drafts for the novel will be on display,
offering vamp-nerds the chance to fact-check for themselves.
Just OpenedThe Chemical Heritage Foundation Museum
by Rachel DukemanTen years in the making, this $20 million project uses contemporary
art, history, current events, artifacts and technology to examine
science in our everyday, beaker-phobic lives.
GalleriesMuseums/ExhibitsPerforming ArtsReadings/Book Signings
Going to the ChapelAnne Hathaway leaves light comedies behind for a powerhouse performance as an addict home for her sister's wedding.
by Sam AdamsThe movie
reveals the history and the extent of Kym's drug problems gradually. At
first, she seems like a standard-issue movie malcontent, cracking wise
like a sardonic teenager and bristling at her father's attempts to keep
an eye on her. But as the family's dynamics unfold, it becomes clear
that Kym's addiction is long-standing, and that its consequences have
been tragic.
Sports IllustratedThe U.S. Sports Film Festival
by Molly Eichel"These stories are about athletes as heroes, imperfect people that
achieve great things. It's really about the human
stories."
Repertory FilmYour weekly guide to local film events, festivals and under-the-radar screenings.
Send repertory film listings to molly.eichel@citypaper.net.
Heir SitarAnoushka Shankar still plays with her pop (but hasn't gone pop).
by A.D. AmorosiPop culture will tell you that being a child of the famous isn't easy, but Anoushka Shankar has a different story.
Suite Spot:
The Dinnerstein VariationsPeter Burwasser on Classical
by Peter BurwasserIn music that begs for a personal approach, such as Liszt or Schumann,
there is always the danger for a performer to cross a line and bring
more of themselves to the music than the composer, but that danger
exists, in an understated way, in the more restrained works of Mozart
and Bach, as well.
SoundadviceGet Out!
Outerspace | Bad Touch | Wovenhand | Network for New Music | Werner Moebius
Music Picks:
The Spinto BandFri., Oct. 17, 8 p.m., $12, all ages, with Frightened Rabbit and The Sw!ms, First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St., 866-468-7619,
r5productions.com.
by Kevin PearsonWhile some might argue against the "local" part of the "local boys done
good" tag, you can get to Wilmington, Del., on SEPTA, which makes The
Spinto Band honorary Philadelphians.
Reef the Lost Cauze by Deesha Dyer"This is grown-man music, it's very soulful, insightful and surprisingly very female-friendly."
Michael Winograd Klezmer EnsembleThu., Oct. 16, 8 p.m., $15, Settlement Music School, Mary Louise Curtis Branch, 416 Queen St.,
myspace.com/mwinfection.
by Shaun BradyBrooklyn-based clarinetist Mino Winograd sneaks a rendition of the Gnarls Barkley hit "Crazy" onto the end of his latest CD, establishing his ensemble as the wedding band of choice for only the hippest of shtetls.
Remembering Christopher TuckerFor Jack: A Tribute to the Music of Christopher Tucker, Fri., Oct. 17, 9 p.m., $10, North Star Bar, 2639 Poplar St.,
northstarbar.com.
by A.D. AmorosiTucker had a tender trap of a mind. My guess is that he left a lot of people missing the wonderful way he thought.
Mauricio Kagel/Michael MaierhofMichael Maierhof, Sat., Oct. 18, 8 p.m., $10, Slought Foundation, 4017 Walnut St., 215-701-4627; Mauricio Kagel, Sun., Oct. 19, 8 p.m., $10, International House, 3701 Chestnut St., 215-387-5125,
soundfield.org.
by Shaun BradyKagel's absurdist, theatrical pieces lend themselves to celebration,
not mourning, so leave the black armbands at home in favor of Dadaist
gestures.
His Dark MaterialsBold, complex flavors sprout at Christopher Hora's hyper-minimal Root.
by David SnyderHora named his restaurant Root because the word represents the
foundation for everything that grows. Here's hoping the chef continues
to do just that — all while keeping his roots planted right where they
are.
Feeding FrenzyRestaurants opening, closing and pending
by Drew LazorMi Lah Vegetarian | Earth Bread + Brewery | New chef for South Philly Tap Room | Meal Ticket
Mystic PiazzaThe Plaza at Table 31
by Trey PoppThe Plaza's perch on the building's spacious pedestal gives the lunch
crowd a slice of high-urban love that is without parallel in
Philadelphia.
Top 5:
Tremendous TartaresRarefied
by Felicia D'Ambrosio1 Steak Tartare | 2 Kibbe Naya | 3 Kitfo | 4 Salmon Tartare | 5 Top Sirloin Tartare
What's Cooking:
The Week In EatsGet Out!
by Nikki VolpicelliSouth Jersey Restaurant Week | Biketoberfest | Rittenhouse Row Wine Week | Jose Garces and Marc Vetri Collaborative Dinner

Agenda Lead:
Waste NotFall shopping for the reluctant consumer
by Holly OtterbeinSwap-O-Rama-Rama — which will make its way to Philly this Sunday with
the help of the Philadelphia Sewing Collective — addresses all-American hang-ups with thoughtful nuances. Mirrors are not allowed at the event,
quietly discouraging vanity and self-judgment while also coercing
people to socialize.

Shopping SpreeFashion > Forward
by Monica WeymouthBigger is Better | Vintage Collection's First Birthday Party | Jump Trunk Show | Habitude
Agenda Picks:
Just Do itAmerican Indian Powwow
by Jimmy ViolaVaughnda Hilton's Philadelphia-based Native Nations Dance Theater is
just one of the groups dedicated to preserving the traditions of tribes
ranging from the Canadian Iroquois to the Blackfeet of Montana to
Florida's Seminole.
Just Do ItHome Movie Day
by Kathryn LipmanSince many people have kept film past the time they threw out their old
projectors, the event allows them to re-live events and see images of
relatives for the first time in decades.
On The DLAchieving a Nuclear Weapons-Free World
by Andrew ThompsonHans Blix, former director-general of the International
Atomic Energy Agency and current chairman of the Weapons of Mass
Destruction Commission, will address the need to make nuclear
disarmament a top priority.
Just Do ItCSI: Museum
by Campbell StatesSo what do forensic anthropologists do, exactly?