One other thing: did you notice that they referred to the area as "the 
neighboring West Philadelphia (my emphasis)" and not University City???  

 

When they're printing brochures and hosting websites promoting what a wonderful 
place it is to live, work, and play, it's University City. When they want to 
control the neighborhood by making it sound like it's bombed-out Beiruit 
desperately in need of their "rescue", it's "West Philadelphia".  

 

And how is it that their "rescue" always seems to entail something for 
University use, and not something for the community that they supposedly want 
to "save"? 

 

So, which is it, Penn,  University City or West Philadelphia???


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [UC] They're B-a-a-c-k [Was] Penn and the community
Date: Fri, 9 Oct 2009 13:42:41 -0400



Well, Al, looks like they're "gettin' the band back together", and today's 
Daily Pennsylvanian report about the Campus Inn puts yesterday's post into 
context.  
 
It's the same old bullshit: West Philadelphia is a hellhole that we need 
Penn/UCD/Tom Lussenhop to rescue us from; unannounced closed-door astroturf  
presentations in front of a handful of handpicked so-called "community leaders" 
ready to regurgitate Penn's lies and to rubberstamp whatever Penn shoves in 
front of them. I guess next the propaganda machine will kick into gear again to 
explain to us igoramuses why it's so important that Penn should be able to do 
whatever they want.
 
Regarding certain "panelists", this just proves that there are some people who 
are incapable of embarassment or shame...Even Professor Marvel gave up the 
smoke and mirrors once his "Wizard of Oz" persona ("Pay no attention to the man 
behind the curtain!") was exposed as a sham. 

See ya at the Zoning Board hearings, folks... luckily I saved my "No Hotel In 
the Hood" posters!


From: [email protected]
Date: Thu, 8 Oct 2009 08:55:59 -0400
Subject: [UC] Penn and the community -- take, er, I lost count when it hit six 
digits
To: [email protected]


>From today's DP. Emphasis (color) and snide remarks (parentheses) added

 
You read it here, first, on the ever-popular Popu-List
Courtesy of Al Krigman
 



University seeks to build more bridges with community partnerships

Maanvi Singh

While Penn's relationship with the West Philadelphia community has been 
tumultuous in the past, last night a group of community leaders and educators 
discussed Penn's recent focus on interacting positively with its neighbor. 
(Recent focus? Maybe they mean dumping Lewis Wendell.)

The audience of community members, who filled a little over half the chairs 
(nobody I know was aware of this... so -- little wonder that only half the 
chairs were filled and I can only imagine who from "the community" was there) 
set up in the Arthur Ross Gallery, listened as the panel recounted Penn's 
historical interactions with West Philadelphia, as well as the University's 
current programs for community involvement.

Ira Harkavy, associate vice president of Penn's Netter Center for Community 
Partnerships, moderated the discussion on what he said was "the single most 
important issue that the University is focusing on" - helping to develop 
neighboring West Philadelphia. (This is the "single most important issue that 
the University is focusing on" ??? I would have thought that a world class 
research university would be focusing on less important things like education, 
research, bringing their endowment back up to the point where they don't have 
to fire people or raise fees to give it's president a big raise and otherwise 
stay afloat, etc.)

West Philadelphia has come a long way since the 1990s, when crime was on a 
major upspring, said panelist and member of the Spruce Hill Community Trust 
Board of Directors Barry Grossbach. (See. Someone still thinks Barry is a 
community "leader." Maybe they don't know about the sad fall from grace and 
standing of the Spruce Hill Community Association.)

Penn faculty and students, as well as West Philadelphia community members, have 
many more opportunities today to help ameliorate their neighborhoods, he added, 
citing the recent success of tutoring endeavors in the community and the Penn 
Alexander Elementary School. (Well, we can give them that one, anyway -- 
ignoring the real reason for Penn's involvement with the school.)

According to Grossbach, these outreach programs have been so successful that 
outside organizations have started to follow Penn's footsteps. For instance, 
the Teacher's College of Columbia University wants to create a program similar 
to that of Alexander Elementary School. (Do you think they hired Omar Blaik as 
a consultant?)

"I've seen the change," Leslie Rogers, a Penn doctoral candidate, said. As a 
Penn undergraduate and graduate student, she said, she felt that West 
Philadelphia community members were very skeptical of her intentions when she 
went to volunteer and later teach there. Now, Penn faculty and students are 
more warmly welcomed, she said.

Rogers said Penn undergraduates getting involved in West Philadelphia is a key 
to community-building. 

Thanks to an array of recently established programs, these students now "get to 
actually problem-solve in the community," she said. (These students are like 
the bright-eyed busy-tailed types that get hired at UCD. They are enthusiastic 
and well meaning -- but naive as newborn lambs and haven't a clue about the 
"problems" faced by people from a side of the tracks other than where they, 
themselves, were born and raised.)

Still, attendee Glenwood Charles, a Penn graduate who now oversees the Netter 
Center's tutoring program and reading initiative, argued that there is still 
more to be done. (Yes, but how can they raise the probability of doing more 
good than harm? Is there anything in the Penn curriculum that teaches the facts 
of life? ... no, not "those" facts; the other facts.)

"Get more involved," he told students. "There are a lot of opportunities." (As 
above... to do harm unless they somehow are brought to understand the 
situations in which they are getting involved.)
 
------------
 
plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose
----- Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
                                          

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