Melani, I think your right, it is clearly not the senior population
complaining, their too 
busy playing bingo and gossiping to care about what UCD is doing! 
 
I do not agree with defacing private property to make political
statements, there are 
other ways to broadcast. Someone put a Bob Brady lawn sign in my yard
without my 
permission last week and I didn't like that either.
 
I wouldn't focus on the stickers being on private property or how much
they cost to
produce as much as WHY the whoever is doing it and WHAT they are really
trying
to say. This stuff is not going away any time soon, we need to figure
out a way to 
understand it and incorporate the sentiments into our planning. I don't
think it is healthy
to dismiss what we don't fully agree with as a bunch of crazy people who
have no claim
to the rights of residency.
 
S
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, April 08, 2007 11:45 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [UC] New Marketing Campaign
 

In a message dated 4/8/07 4:57:47 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


The debate started with stickers and banners, the question is why were
they placed?
I could relate to the sentiment if the stickers were being placed by the
now-elderly folks who made this place "home" for all or most of their
lives, since back before the term "University City" was popularized in
the late-50s - early 60s.  Some of my neighbors are in that group.  If
those folks were rising up and crying "ENOUGH," then I'd want to hear
what they had to say.  I think that they have more claim to the
neighborhood than those of us who grew up here later and/or arrived
later.  But, I haven't heard these anti-UC feelings expressed by my
elderly neighbors - ever.  And I doubt that the elderly folks would
suddenly taken up this sort of vandalism, even if they felt this way.  

I suspect that the stickers were placed by young punks, Trustafarians,
young recent arrivals, who want to see  the neighborhood be cheap and
down for their own selfish reasons, so that they can continue to live
here even though they live on allowances and/or don't hold full-time
jobs.  THE STICKERS are a marketing campaign.

There's nothing wrong with living on allowances and/or not holding
full-time jobs, but there is something wrong with illegally defacing
other peoples' property with stickers, and with feeling that upstarts
can march through the place that such a diverse population calls "home,"
and tell all of us how we must refer to it.

Melani Lamond
University City resident since 1971





Melani Lamond, Associate Broker
Urban & Bye, Realtor
3529 Lancaster Ave.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
cell phone 215-356-7266
office phone 215-222-4800, ext. 113
office fax 215-222-1101


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