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Urbi et Orbi

Tip: If you are interested in the weather you want to subscribe to Phillyweather.net

Phillyweather.net just celebrated its 5th anniversary and has been sharing deep background on weather stories since its launch. If you like weather widgets on your desktop, or want to know more about what is happening with the daily forecast, Phillyweather.net is who you want to subscribe to.

Tip: Into Gardening? Check out Pete's

Pete's Gardening Blog regularly shares tidbits relating to the author's gardening efforts, including tips and pictures.

Related blogs and services you will be interested in:

Straight From the Farm

Philadelphia Orchard Project

SS United States gets a reprieve for now

PlanPhilly: Lenfest keeps Big U alive.

Related: Flickr: Rob Bender: SS United States

Tip: Interested in the future of Philadelphia? PlanPhilly is a project you want to connect with

PlanPhilly enables Philadelphians to take part in a dialog about the future of the city. Its home page was recently redesigned. Check it out.

Tip: Subscribe to Geekadelphia

Geeks are cool. At least, I tell myself that since I am one. And Philly is lucky to have a lot of them who are involved in events all over the city every day. To get keyed into the various geek scenes in Philly (it is so .. awesome to be able to say that!) you have to go here and subscribe.

Tip: Subscribe to Above Average Jane

Above Average Jane has been doing a fantastic job sharing news items happening in the Philadelphia region's political scene you should be aware of. Yeah, it can be bit "inside baseball" sometimes, but it is more 'news you should know' than 'news you are looking for'. Subscribe. Get aware.

Tip: Subscribe to Christopher Wink's Blog

Christopher Wink, co-Founder of Technically Philly, has a diverse set of interests that place him right in the middle of media's evolution in Philly. He shares these interests on his terrific personal blog that you want to subscribe to. Check it out.

Phylliss Mass: "The louder the conversation, the more meaningless the topic."

Read Phylliss Mass, "Public Is the New Private", in Metropolis.

Heroes - our neighbors

Pat at The Frankford Gazette in "Thankfully, Our Neighbor Had Our Back!" talks about how great his neighbors are in Frankford. I can relate here in Fox Chase Philly. We can't say it enough.

Our neighbor is a hero. I told him that and he said he would tell his wife. I also told him we already knew that about him. God bless you, neighbor and friend! God bless all those who are willing to get involved and help their neighbors!

R. Bradley Maule heads to Portland, OR

Albert Yee shares news that R. Bradley Maule has completed his move to Portland, OR. He managed the very significant phillyskyline for almost ten years. His knowledge and love of architecture, of place, of photography and Philadelphia inspired and informed thousands across the city.

From the phillyskyline about page:

Hello, I'm R. Bradley Maule, sometimes RBM, always B Love. This is my web site. It is made in honor of the city I live in and love, Philadelphia. It is to present an honest look—warts and all—at the city and its varied urban fabric.

I came here from Tyrone, Pennsylvania (Steelers Country) in 2000, and have spent all my 33 years at a PA address. I have no mission statement or goal with this site, but if I had one wish, it would be that Pennsylvanians could see past the nonsense and love one another, from Erie to Philly up to the Poconos back out to the Burgh and everywhere in between.

But here on Philly Skyline, my friends and I are just sharing our experiences right here in Philadelphia with our fellow humans.

Albert points to his Farewell, Philadelphia slideshow on Flickr. Make sure to subscribe to Maule of America to follow his work in the future (some great shots already there!).

He left an imprintis going to be greatly missed. His impact will live on.

Thank you Brad.

Villanova football star donating bone marrow to a 1 year old

Philadelphia Inquirer: Villanova football star Szczur to donate bone marrow:

Szczur, a wideout in football and outfielder/catcher in baseball, is preparing to become a bone-marrow donor. The junior learned three days ago that he was match for a 1-year-old girl who has leukemia. He did not comment; when and where the procedure will take place were not disclosed.

Help Sherry Tillman of Ardmore making a difference for children and for peace in Afghanistan

Philadelphia Inquirer: From Ardmore to Afghanistan, a mission of giving:

The goodwill gesture is called Operation Angel Wings, and it's the brainchild of an Ardmore shopkeeper and a Broomall trauma surgeon stationed in Afghanistan, Lt. Col. Kenneth Marx.

"Someday those kids will grow up to place their finger on a trigger," Marx said in an e-mail. "The moment when the target in their sights resembles the guys who once gave them a winter cap is that moment when reconciliation might hold violence at bay.

"Life in the mountains here is nasty, brutish, and utterly strange. Soft power and indirect means may be the winding path to an improvised solution, if there is a solution to be found."

Writing from Nangarhar province, where he is deployed with the National Guard's 108th Cavalry, Marx said the immediate aim was to get Americans and Afghans talking.

"We have asked for folks at home to send small gifts of winter clothing, which are excellent conversation-starters," he said.

When he arrived in Afghanistan on Oct. 12, Marx said, he saw a need for children's hats, gloves, sweaters, socks, scarves, fleece jackets, and small, lightweight toys that could go with soldiers on patrol.

On Nov. 9, Marx received an e-mail from Sherry Tillman, 6,824 miles away in Ardmore, inviting him to the holiday sale at her gift and art-gallery store. He wrote back, saying he couldn't attend and asking if she could send warm clothes for the Afghan children.

"He wrote me that the kids are barefoot and in rags, and it's winter," Tillman said. She said she recalled thinking, "Oh, my God, I have to do something."

Sponsored by First Friday Main Line, a nonprofit organization that promotes the Lancaster Avenue shopping district, Operation Angel Wings began immediately.

Tillman, director of First Friday Main Line, said she was determined to collect everything on Marx's wish list. The gifts will be stored at her shop, Past*Present*Future, and the Ardmore Initiative office, both on Lancaster Avenue.

Tillman has set Friday as the shipping date for the first donations.

"I'd like to be able to send several packages right away, and to be able to continue sending," Tillman said.

A couple of weeks ago, Carla J. Zambelli, publicist for First Friday Main Line, sent out an e-mail blast asking residents for donations. The donations have started trickling in, Tillman said.

Visit First Friday Main Line for more information.

How Al Boscov saved Boscov's - Philadelphia Inquirer Profile

Philadelphia Inquirer: How he rescued Boscov's: Al Boscov's work and goodwill saved the stores that bear the family name.:

The odds were against the Reading company when it went bankrupt just weeks before last fall's stock market crash.

There was, conventional wisdom said, no realistic way to rescue its thousands of regional employees, dozens of stores, or century-old legacy. No money. No banks willing to step into the economic meltdown with emergency loans. No hope.

But in crunching the numbers that spelled doom for the nation's largest family-owned department-store chain, the doubters underestimated the power of a pint-sized 79-year-old man.

Had their spreadsheets been able to tabulate big-time heart and brains, they would have predicted a different outcome. Because Al Boscov is no ordinary businessman.

"I can dance, I can sing," Boscov joked later in a Manhattan elevator, tap-dancing in a charcoal suit to an absurd ditty about saving the company. The vaudevillian flash ended as the doors opened. "That's what did it," he said, and hopped out.

It would, indeed, require an extraordinary businessman to pull off a Rocky-worthy win against an economy devouring itself: a savior who was beloved, not feared, but no-nonsense when needed; one with more friends than enemies; who preferred details and long hours over swagger and power lunches.