Despatches from University City Village

Brief posts from the Green Line Zone in the embattled University City Village, West Philadelphia.

My Photo
Name: Ross Bender
Location: Hindu Kush

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Alash - Tuvan Throat Singers and Philadelphia Sun Ra Arkestra Remnants


Tonight only! January 29 at the

WEST PHILLY ROTUNDA




Alash and Extra-Special Terrestrial Guests

Marshall Allen

Elliott Levin

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Have You Seen Our Loopy?

Whilst we were preoccupied at the canasta table in the back room our Loopy somehow managed to slip out the front door again and go wilding on the streets of University City Village. Guess I'll have to get that lock fixed one of these days, heh. Loopy is adorable, good with children, likes long intimate walks along the upper railings of the Benjamin Franklin Bridge, samba drumming, kayaking, Beat poetry, and knitting. Currently however she is somewhat edgy and extremely protective of her Young, so if you see her approach with caution. If you would be so good as to toss her a raw beefsteak and some Thorazine and take her home and keep her in the basement for the next month until we return from our cruise to Bimini, that would be super.

Thanks!

Friday, January 25, 2008

Clark Park Bathhouse Campaign 2008

It's a New Year, and that means it's time to gather petitions again for the Clark Park Bathhouse. West Phluffians will recall that the CP Bathhouse proposal went down to ignominious defeat last year at the Friends of Clark Park General Meeting when the Old Ladies Sewing Circle and Gentrification faction blocked the motion with their bodies, by lifting their skirts, exposing their, erm, nay-nays, and chanting Woo Woo Woo.








Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Babylon is Fallen



shape note singing at the Anarchist Headquarters


Sunday, January 20, 2008

An Introduction to Cognitive Glottopsychiatry

Saturday, January 19, 2008

University City Waitstaff Quiz II




Friday, January 18, 2008

Shelly and Drooples -- A West Philly Romance

I sensed there was something different about her the first time we met, at one of those wild West Philly afterparties -- I think it was after Cassidy's show at the Abbraccio in the winter of 2003. Cassidy was into robots, Goths and double amputees at the time, fooling around with an idea which eventually became his best-selling coffee table book, "Wired Americans: Portraits of Americans with Robotic Prostheses".

Anyhow, there was something doleful about her, curled up by herself in the Boom Boom Room at Abbraccio -- well, by herself and her Bassett hound "Drooples", without whom she seldom left her apartment. She was renting a basement studio from Siano at the time over on Larchwood -- just enough space for her, her pet, her electric bass, her stamp collection and her rosewood humidors filled with tasty but illicit Cuban cigars.

We fell into conversation. I was at loose ends that winter, my wife having kicked me out temporarily for being unemployed, drunk and listening to my Philip Glass collection at loud and irregular intervals during the wee hours. Right away she touched some deep inner chord within me -- artistic souls straining for a heavenly connection to that starry dynamo in the skies, strangers in the night exchanging glances.

Despite the disparity in our ages -- she was only 19 and I was pushing 60 at the time, there was something in our souls that spoke to one another.

"I write poetry," I recall her saying.

I took a hit on the hibiscus bhong.

"Wow. Like that is so amazing. So do I!" I exclaimed. "Like, who are your main influences -- poetically speaking?"

"Mmmm -- well, an early influence was Rod McKuen -- you ever read 'Listen to the Warm'?"

"Oh, man. Psychic. He was my favorite poet in the late sixties -- after Allen Ginsberg, Paul Eluard, Arthur Rimbaud and Robert Lowell. Geez -- what's your favorite color?"

She took a long soulful drag on her Cohiba. She exhaled. She heaved a world-weary sigh.

After blowing a few smokerings, she finally replied, "Blue. I think. No, yellow."

I was touched by her ambivalence. At her age, I had not yet made up my mind about my favorite color, either.

At that moment, Rogerio Harmonica came stomping in, announcing "Last Call for Alcohol! Heh."

She regarded Rogerio for a moment, then pronounced, "That dude is like *so* uncool."

"Yeah," I said. "But still, he's got a business to run. Let's blow this popsicle stand. Your place or mine?"

She looked me squarely in the eyes and said, "Dude, do you even *have* a place? Word on the street is that your old lady kicked you out."

I hesitated, somewhat humiliated. It was a hard winter for me. I didn't need sympathy from some 19-year-old punk chick with a pierced tongue, navel and who knew what other body parts.

"Hey, " I replied. "We can go back to my humble squat. That is, if you don't mind spending a night with a 60-something loser."

She brightened immediately.

"Naw," she replied, "I can see that you're a bohemian at heart and a soul-mate, even if old and draggly. Let's go over to my wretched basement at Siano's and I'll show you some moves that are guaranteed to put some life into yer wretched old soul -- and body -- what's left of it. Ever heard of the Viennese Oyster?"

A wicked glint glinted in her 19-year-old visage.

I hesitated, not knowing what I was getting into, but on the other hand not really caring.

"Dudette, lead on, " I said, and we disappeared into the night.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

The Mysterious East, Part II

A Poem on the Fish-Observing Terrace

by Su Shi



If you want to discuss similarities and differences in their minute detail,

Liver and gall-bladder then will seem as far apart as the states of Chu and Yue.

If you believe that 10,000 distinctions all converge in one principle,

Then, you can understand me, and I understand fish.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

The Mysterious East, Part I

Two stoners were strolling on the Hao River bridge.

Zhuangzi said, "The minnows dart in and out of the water, swimming contentedly -- this is fish being happy."


Huizi said, "Dude, you are not a fish; how do you know the fish are happy?"

Zhuangzi said, "You are not I, so how do you know that I do not know the fish are happy?"

Huizi said, "Dude, so true -- I am not you, indeed I don't really know you, so like what am I doing strolling on this bridge with you? Anyhow, you are totally not a fish, so it is like so obvious that you don't know the fish are happy."

Zhuangzi said, "Hold it right there, dude. Let's go back to where we started. When you said quote 'How did you come to know this?' YOU ALREADY HAD TO HAVE KNOWN THAT *I* KNEW THE FISH ARE HAPPY. Only then could you have asked me where I knew it from, know what I'm sayin'? So here's the thing -- I KNEW IT FROM BEING ON THE BRIDGE OVER THE HAO RIVER!!"

Huizi said, "OMG1111 !! You are so witty and amusing, dude!"

Monday, January 14, 2008

Where the World Ends....




and the water goes counterclockwise down the drains...

Friday, January 11, 2008

University City Waitstaff Quiz



This is a photo of the waitstaff at *which* fine UC dining institution:

a) Kelliann's
b) Abbraccio
c) Dock Street
d) Mill Creek Tavern

Mail your answer to ross.bender@gmail.com and be entered for a chance to win a trip to Philadelphia and a micro-brewed beer on training wheels.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

University City Blues

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

College Inn Hullabalooza!

UC Villagers are all up in arms again with their knickers in a twist over the possibility -- welcome or threatening depending on one's perspective -- of a new 48-storey College Inn complex at the corner of 40th and Pine. Innovative developer Tom Looseyhop wants to build a short-term stay boutique hotel and theme park at the site, atop the old Bazukufu Consulate.


old Bazukufu Consulate, 40th and Pine


"It's for the greater good of the community," says Looseyhop. "Folks from out of town need a place to stay when they're here to visit their babies and sell their organs at CHOP. Plus which University City has long been in need of a by-the-hour rental boutique love hotel. Win-win situation."


artist's sketch, new College Inn with Broth Towers

Others are not so sure. The Lubavitcher Rebbe of West Philly, whose headquarters are located nearby on Pine Street, is worried about the potential shadow cast by the 48-storey "abomination". The UC Old Ladies Sewing Circle and Gentrification Committee, while welcoming any development that would make UC Village "nicer" and "more upscale" wonders what effect the gargantuan new facility would have on parking availability, already tight, and on the trash situation in the vicinity. The more elderly of the Ladies are also not so sure about the Looseyhop "Brothel Towers" design.

"That's 'broth', not brothel," comments an exasperated Looseyhop. "These old ladies have nothing to worry about. We're gonna have a gigolo service to deal with the parking issue, and I have a firm commitment from UCD that the Ambassadors will sweep up all the used condoms."

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Now Hiring Buspersons at Abbraccio

This is an opportunity to learn about the wilds of the restaurant business without prior experience. We are looking for a "bus person" (formerly known as "bus boy") for these shifts: Friday 5-10 pm, Saturday 5-10 pm, Sunday brunch 9:30am-3:30 pm. Ending times are approximate and depend on how busy it is. After a short training period, pay is $5 per hour plus a share of waiters' tips. Alterness and dependability are key factors here. You can reply to this message or come in to Abbraccio and fill out an application, thanks.


Hostess Milly D'Abbraccio with new "bus person"

La professoressa di lingue รจ un film del 2000, diretto dal regista Enzo Gallo. Narra delle vicende di una docente di inglese di una citta' del nord Italia che accetta una cattedra in una scuola siciliana pur contro il volere del marito. In Sicilia la professoressa trovera' come soddisfare le sue voglie erotiche con docenti e studenti mentre il marito fara' lo stesso a casa. Famosa la scena in cui la D'Abbraccio fa autoerotismo con una banana.



Monday, January 7, 2008

Netherworld of 50th and Baltimore

I habitually do my laundry at the White Seal Laundromat and in the hot muggy summer months when the warmth from the drying machinery is excessive I flee to the shade of the sycamore trees in Cedar Park while my wash goes through its cycles -- "In Use" "Rinse" "Spin" "Repeat". Not always is there a bench available, but frequently I can find a spot to read my book. I'm not a big one for idle chitchat but on occasion I indulge in conversation with the undesirable denizens whom Penn, the UCD, Cedar Park Neighbors, and the International Gentrification Conspiracy are endeavoring to chase away.

Just the other week I was reading a scholarly tome entitled "The Genesis of East Asia, 221 BC - AD 907", by Charles Holcombe, a gripping work which describes the diffusion of the Han culture to the fringes of the Chinese empire -- Vietnam, Korea, Japan -- an area which the author describes as the "kanji sphere", kanji being the Japanese reading of the characters "Han letters", meaning of course Classical Chinese.

So engrossed was I in my thriller that I hardly noticed when a pleasant middle-aged gent sat down on the bench next to me.

"Genesis," he said, peering at the title. "You reading the Bible?"

"Why no," I said, a bit taken aback by the intrusion but quickly recovering my sangfroid. "It's a history of East Asia." I showed him some of the lavishly decorated maps of the region interspersed throughout the volume.

"Why, I myself was in Japan once," he exclaimed. "When I was in the Air Force. Not as a pilot, but as a desk jockey."

"Interesting," I replied, inspecting him more closely and making a quick calculation of his age. "During 'Nam, I suppose?"

"Why no," he chuckled. "During Korea. I look younger than my age. Anyhow, I like the Bible. Ever read it?"

"Yes," I replied. "I have perused it from time to time. What's your favorite book?"

"Romans," he replied immediately, and then, after a bit of thought, "And Psalms."

We sat in silence for awhile, meditating.

"You ever read 'The Purpose Driven Life' by Rick Warren?" he queried.

"I have not yet had the pleasure, " I responded, "but I've certainly heard of it. It's a famous book."

"Damn straight," he said. "Number 1 on the New York Times bestseller list for 21 weeks in a row."

We sat quietly, musing on this factoid.

Finally, he arose and extended his hand. "Pleased to meet you. I'm Earl."

"The pleasure is mine, " I said politely. "The name's Ross."

He wandered off. I reflected on the curious incidence of the name "Earl" among the more elderly gentlemen whom I have met in Cedar Park. Come to think of them, they're all named Earl.

Not so among the younger set. One hot August afternoon I took my place at the end of a shady bench, at the other extremity of which some young men were having a heated discussion. I opened my "Genesis of East Asia" and was instantly engrossed. Soon however, I had the uneasy feeling that someone was staring hard at me from a distance of a few feet.

"Whassup?" said the young gentleman.

"I beg your pardon?"

"Yo, whassup??" he repeated, giving me a hard stare.

Not having my handy phrasebook with me, I was somewhat at a loss for words.

"I said, whassup?" he said for a third time, giving me a distinctly hairy eyeball. "You just interrupted a discussion among me and my homies."

"Well," I responded pleasantly. "This spot on the bench was unreserved, and seeking some respite from the heat of the afternoon I simply plopped myself down here. I often come here to read while I'm doing my laundry across the street."

"Just doing your laundry, huh? Sure that's all you're doing?"

"To the best of my knowledge," I replied. "And of course I'm also sitting here trying to read my book."

Turning to his homies, he inquired "Yo, he say he just doing his laundry. You see him in the laundromat?"

There was a chorus of emphatic "No"s.

"My homeboys say they don't see you in the laundromat," he said, turning back to me with an inquisitorial glare. "What chew gotta say to THAT"?

"Perhaps they didn't notice me. Whatever. May I get back to my book?"

"Any my homies go to jail -- " he began again, trying to look even more menacing, which was difficult because he looked all of 15 years old, and there was apparently something wrong with his pants because he kept grabbing at the crotch and trying to hoist them up.

He put his face closer to mine.

"Any my homies go to jail, I know where you live."

"Yes, of course. I live just around the corner. I'm in the phone book," I said, wondering where this conversation was going.

"Awright then. Well, have a nice day," he said after what I presume he took to be a meaningful grimace.

"Right." I said, and he turned back to his discourse with his colleagues.

Interesting, I thought, my attention now diverted from my fascinating text. One meets all sorts of interesting folks just dying for a conversation here in Cedar Park. Quite the cosmopolitan canopy. But then, the sociologist in me suddenly awakened, and I turned back to my interlocutor and asked "Is your name Earl, by any chance?"

He scowled, spat, and retorted, "No, stupid. It's *Leroy*."

"Aha. Well thanks."

I felt that I had made a significant discovery. Perhaps this naming is in fact a generational thing -- the older men are named "Earl" and the younger "Leroy." For a moment I flirted with the idea of drawing up a survey and doing a serious statistical study, but then I glanced at my watch and noticed that my laundry was probably by now reaching its final spin, so I arose and crossed Baltimore, narrowly escaping being hit by a fire engine, a primitive roofer's truck, a Yuppie Beemer, and several UCD bikers.

Friday, January 4, 2008

Local Paparazzo Makes Good

Local photographer Kyle Cassidy becomes famous by shooting pix of other people's guns:


http://www.amazon.com/Armed-America-Portraits-Owners-Their/dp/0896895432/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2/002-8402081-3920861?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1178746625&sr=8-2

www.armedamerica.org/press/barns-and-noble-jan-24.pdf





Fabulous Kyle Cassidy Tribute Page

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Lost Mouse

I'm infested with somebody's lost mouse who must have slipped out of their owner's house by accident. He or she is adorable, sleek, good with children, likes opera and long walks along the kitchen counter, and quite enjoys listening to Proust on the radio. Mouse is apparently "fixed" -- at least doesn't seem to be reproducing yet. If this is YOUR mouse please come and fetch it before I have to take it to that bad animal shelter where it will probably be euthanized. I've tried CityMousies but they don't have any room right now.


Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Ron Paul Surges in Latest UC Poll


The latest UCD/UC Review poll shows Ron Paul surging and Al Gore maintaining his lead among likely UC Village caucus-goers. Although the UC caucuses won't be held until early April, when the crocuses bloom, interest in the Presidential race remains at fever pitch. Political fist-fights and shootings have been a nightly occasion in the streets and alleys of the West Philly hood since the New Year.

The poll revealed Ron Paul moving up to first place among Republicans and Loonies, with a 61-percent lunge in the last hours of December 31. Gore is still a favorite among Democrats, holding a comfortable double digit lead over Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Barack Obama, Bill Richardson, Chris Dodd, Joe Biden, John Street, Arthur Schlesinger, and the late Estes Kefauver.

In an interview at the Green Line Mennonite Cafe and Gin Joint, local village Loonie Kyle Cassidy said his money was on Ron Paul. "My money is on Ron Paul," he commented, frothing only slightly. "He gonna give us all the guns we want, also hibiscus and kickapoo joy juice."


local loonie and his barfing chicken

Rogerio Harmonica, proprietor of the Sleaze Bar at Abbraccio, was also enthusiastic about Ron Paul. "I changed parties so as to caucus for Mr. Paul. He's promised to bring back the Gold Standard, and that would certainly be a move in the right direction."

The UCD/UC Review poll is considered to be the most accurate gauge of sentiment among the denizens of University City Village, many of them illiterate, although it has registered wild fluctuations of opinion in the decade-long runup to the 2008 election. Many of the fluctuations seem to depend on what night of the week and hour of the day the poll is taken, with particularly dramatic aberrations during the Barfing Chicken Happy Hour, or during performances by Stinking Lizaveta.


Wanda Ong and the late Estes Kefauver

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

New Year's Eve at Abbraccio



Although the details are a little fuzzy in my memory for some odd reason, suffice it to say that New Year's Eve 2007 at Abbraccio was a gas. I managed to disable the surveillance cameras long enough to spend some quality time with Ms. Milly D'Abbraccio, the restaurant's hot new hostess, madam and charges d'affaires, back in the Boom Boom room quaffing absinthe cocktails, dancing up a storm, and getting to know each other.


Ms. Milly D'Abbraccio

After the midnight fireworks and all the shouting and shooting had died down, I made my way unsteadily back to 48th St, gathering up the skins of the unfortunate feral cats, ferrets and an opossum or two who had gotten in the way of the fusillade, and had time to dissect the quarry and prepare a savory stew whose medicinal qualities plus a hair of the dog that bit me were successful in helping to avoid the sort of nasty headache that frequently ensues after a late night out at Abbraccio. The pelts, sewn together, made a fetching tarp which when stretched taut over my hot tub not only guards against winged intruders of the night but also now serves as a drum head upon which, when I beat a tattoo, will summon those who know the signal to a festive soiree. So a word to the wise, and you know who you are -- keep an ear out.