Riverside Stained Glass – Forrest Smith

With its historic homes and distinctive architecture, East Falls is the perfect place for Riverside Stained Glass. Artisan Forrest Smith opened his shop here two years ago because he thought it would a beautiful play to work, play and eat. He is glad he did.


Riverside Stained Glass does custom stained glass, but specializes in repairs and restoration. For example, he has worked on the leaded glass on the Cathedral home on Midvale Avenue. He also can do stained glass repairs.

He will gladly come out to your home and talk about what your needs might be for restoring and repairing. He can also do custom work that matches existing work, such as matching a door to a window, or installing an historically appropriate transom window. Forrest makes sun catchers and Christmas Ornaments and you can place an order just in time for the holidays.

Forrest says he chose East Falls because he had been passing through for years, both on bike and by car, and saw new stores and opportunities. Now that he has been here, he appreciates how close and convenient it is for him to travel from here to other parts of the City, where he often has work in churches.

He loves the area because people are friendly and stop in to show appreciation for his work they can see in his windows. Right now, he is taking a painting of a rooster and turning it into stained glass – come in and check it out.

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Kontrena Clark

Author Kontrena Clark is the granddaughter of the legendary Jr. Walker & The All Stars, famous for the Motown Hit “Shotgun”. She has always had a passion for singing and dancing. She is currently a member of Bethany Baptist Church in Lindenwold, New Jersey. As a single parent of one, she has continued to focus on God and His plan for her life, hence the The Business Plan for the Believer. She is also determined to help others experience victory, healing, and deliverance after meeting and possibly falling in love with a “wolf in sheep’s clothing”, hence The Day I Met a Wolf! 

Steven Berry

I am a photographer, film-maker, photo illustrator and a playwright. As a photographer, I have photographed over 11,000 images. A number of my images have been exhibited at the African American Museum in Philadelphia (AAMP) and Community College in Philadelphia.. I have taken a number of photography and film classes at various schools and workshops over the years.

As a self taught playwright, I had the opportunity to study under Charles Fuller (A Soldier’s story) and I have written over seven plays, three of which were agency represented. I received a fellowship from the Theater Association of Pennsylvania (TAP) to help me complete my play, entitled, “Body, Mind and Spirit”, formally entitled , “The Molestation” . The play explores the Black Vietnam veteran suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). I have had film screenings in Philafilm, an annual film festival held in Philadelphia. I have also made a number of films for AAMP and I have created short video commercial segments for the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation (GPTMC). One of My documentary films was used by AMMP to accompany their exhibit on the 30th anniversary of the Odunde festival held annually in Philadelphia. In addition, I have taught playwriting at Temple’s PASCEP program.

More recently, I wrote the script and was the lead editor of the short documentary film entitled, Engine 11: A Journey of Segregation and Discovery, which was screened at the International House via Scribe Video. I am presently working on a multi-part documentary on the history of Jazz in Philadelphia.

As a result of my background in film and playwriting, My photo illustrations are assembled as if building a sequence of events or actions to arrive at a final image or destination. As a photo illustrator, I seek to imitate a pattern of the life cycle. Life is and can be transformational; we are born in one state of being and we physically die in another. By disassembling as well as re-assembling portions of my images, I intentionally explore this transformational process. I recreate the image hoping to expand its message.

The Gospel Truth

Mavis Staples releases You Are Not Alone.

by: Richard Gehr | from: AARP

Mavis Staples was an unusually husky-voiced teenager when she sang on “Uncloudy Day,” the Staple Singers’ first gospel hit, in 1956. Led by guitarist-songwriter Roebuck “Pops” Staples, her family’s group became spiritually charged pop stars with strong ties to the civil rights movement.

At 71, Mavis’ voice remains a force unto itself. Since the death of her father in 2000, Mavis has kick-started a solo career by getting back to her roots with the help of Americana heroes such as Ry Cooder and, more recently, Wilco bandleader Jeff Tweedy, who produced her new album, You Are Not Alone. Speaking on a typically hectic day in her Chicago condo, Staples was preparing to hit the road for a West Coast tour. “I love bein’ on the road,” she says. “If we stay away too long, I’m ready to go.”

Q: How did the Staple Singers go from being a pure gospel group to being one of the country’s biggest pop acts?

A: We started out singing gospel music in Southern churches. We would have some fun singing gospel. We would have good times, because you were singing and rejoicing and shouting when the spirit came.

I used to love hearing Ira Tucker and the Dixie Hummingbirds. Sam Cooke was with the Soul Stirrers, Lou Rawls was with the Pilgrim Travelers and we would all travel together in a caravan. Then, all of a sudden, white people wanted to hear us. We started playing folk festivals, and then we started getting calls for jazz and blues festivals.

I asked my father at one point, “Daddy, why we goin’ to blues festivals? We don’t sing no blues, Pops. We sing gospel.” He told me, “Mavis, music is music and our music has some of every kind of music in it.” The people we played to at the folk festivals — the flower children, the hippies — made me feel like we were still in church because they were such loving people.

Q: Was that why the Staple Singers started covering songs by the likes of Bob Dylan, Buffalo Springfield and the Band?

A: Pops often told us that back in Mississippi, if a white man was walking toward him on the same side of the street, Pops would have to cross over to the other side. So when he heard Dylan sing, “How many roads must a man walk down/ Before you call him a man?” he could relate to that. And when Buffalo Springfield sang, “There’s something happening here/ What it is ain’t exactly clear/ There’s a man with a gun over there/ Telling me I got to beware,” we felt it was gospel because it was truth.

Q: Jeff Tweedy and Wilco are probably the Buffalo Springfield of today. How did you hook up with him for your new album?

A: Tweedy and Wilco remind me a lot of Robbie Robertson and the Band, and we were the first group to cover “The Weight.” I didn’t know what I was going to do after the Ry Cooder record [We’ll Never Turn Back, released in 2007]. Then Tweedy called and told me he had some songs he wanted me to listen to, including songs my father played for us when we were young. Tweedy really took time to study me. He didn’t just throw something out there; he kept me in my comfort zone. One day, he said, “Mavis, guess what I have on my iPod.” I said, “What?” He said, “I have all of the Staple Singers music from the ’50s and ’60s.” And I said, “Well, you walkin’ around, Tweedy, with the best music of my life.” I told him I would love to sing my father’s songs again. At the end of the sessions, he wrote “Only the Lord Knows” and “You Are Not Alone,” which might be my favorite song on the album.

Q: How did he get it to sound so much like a contemporary Staple Singers album might sound?

A: The band that’s playing on it is the band I’ve been traveling with for about four years. Rick Holmstrom plays Daddy’s guitar licks all the time. Sometimes I have to look around to see if Pops is standing back there with him.

Singing songs like “Don’t Knock” makes me so happy. It takes me back to when I was a teenager, the happiest time of my life. It was just my father’s guitar and our voices. I could visualize Pops smiling and grinning with that twinkle in his eye when he was writing “Don’t Knock.” We had so much fun. [Singing] “You don’t knock, ring, push or hold/ The door’s wide open, waitin’ for your soul.” And my mother and all of us would be laughing. “Daddy! You wrote that?” They were joyous times.

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Kwanzaa Activities – Washington, DC Area

Kwanzaa

Many events require reservations or advance ticket purchases and may sell out – call before you go.

“THE BLACK CANDLE: A KWANZAA CELEBRATION” Dec. 11 at 4:30. Screening of the documentary by M.K. Asante that uses Kwanzaa to celebrate the African American experience. Narrated by Maya Angelou. Alexandria Black History Museum, 902 Wythe St., Alexandria. 703-746-4356. www.alexblackhistory.org. Free.

COYABA DANCE THEATER Dec. 18 at 8 and Dec. 19 at 2 and 8. Annual Kwanzaa celebration featuring 85 performers. Dance Place, 3225 Eighth St. NE. 202-269-1600. www.danceplace.org. $22, seniors and students $17, children 17 and younger $8.

FAMILY KWANZAA ADVENTURE Dec. 28 at 10:30. Saleem and Ivy Hylton of Youth and Families in Crisis lead a celebration with interactive drumming, singing, dancing and skits designed to explore the principles of Kwanzaa. The program closes with the “Circle of Hope and Healing,” an original Kwanzaa group activity designed to restore and renew the hopes and dreams of families for the New Year. Anacostia Community Museum, 1901 Fort Pl. SE. 202-633-4844. www.anacostia.si.edu. Free, reservations required.

KWANZAA CRAFT WORKSHOP Dec. 11 from 1 to 3. Jessica Smith, founder of Culture Kingdom for Kids, and Kwanzaa educator Pier Penic lead children in making Kwanzaa crafts. Alexandria Black History Museum, 902 Wythe St., Alexandria. 703-746-4356. www.alexblackhistory.org. $5, reservations requested.

KWANZAA FAMILY DAY Dec. 12 from 1 to 5. Celebrate the African traditions of family, community and culture. Learn about the seven principles of Kwanzaa while creating art and listening to performances by DishiBem and Jali-D. Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum Dr., Baltimore. 443-573-1700. www.artbma.org. Free.

KWANZAA LECTURE AND DEMONSTRATION Dec. 13 at 8. A history of Kwanzaa featuring dancing and drumming by the African Heritage Dancers and Drummers. Publick Playhouse, 5445 Landover Rd., Cheverly. 301-277-1710. arts.pgparks.com. $5, seniors $4.

KWANZAA: NIA Dec. 30 at 10:30. Melvin Deal and the African Heritage Dancers and Drummers will conduct a workshop that includes making tambor instruments, drumming and dancing. The workshop features a performance in celebration of the fifth Kwanzaa principle, Nia (purpose). Anacostia Community Museum, 1901 Fort Pl. SE. 202-633-4844. www.anacostia.si.edu. Free, reservations required.

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Who’s Your Brother

Who’s Your Brother offers you the opportunity to use your talent, your resources, and a small amount of your time to brighten someone else’s day by meeting a need without the exchange of money. Likewise you too can be contacted by someone in your community who would appreciate the honor of meeting your need. Whether you are a local electrician who is volunteering a few hours to help a family with your expertise or a stay-at-home mom who extends a little help to a local family whose father was recently laid off from work, collectively we can solve a number of challenges together in the spirit of brotherhood.

WYB makes it easy to locate people who need assistance in the areas you are prepared to give through the use of our search engine which lists each post by category, city, zip code and even key phases. WYB also provides the opportunity for you to view a person’s Phileo Rating, recommendations from others and a list of their local ‘Advocates’ to assist you in choosing a person to help.

So whether you have a need that can be fulfilled or you are eager to build up your community as you help your neighbor, let’s get started. It’s easy and best of all it’s free.

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Vegan Mainstream provides marketing solutions to vegan and vegetarian businesses.


Vegan Mainstream provides marketing solutions to vegan and vegetarian businesses. It is a strategic planning and marketing company ready to exceed your marketing ambitions for your business.

Vegan Mainstream was founded by Stephanie Redcross, a dedicated vegan with over 11 years’ marketing experience with small businesses and Fortune 500 companies. Stephanie heads up a team of people who are extraordinarily talented in strategic planning, market intelligence, social media, design, search engine optimization and public relations. As a result Vegan Mainstream excels in its ability to combine expertise and provide a custom marketing solutions service.

The word ‘vegan’ was invented over 65 years ago and while veganism was once considered extreme, going vegan or vegetarian is now becoming a greatly admired and popular life choice. There’s no doubt that ‘less-meat-a-tarian’ consumers are increasing – but whether vegan, vegetarian or non-vegan, more people than ever insist on buying animal cruelty-free products. Vegan Mainstream uses innovative marketing tools to spread awareness of your animal friendly business to both vegan and non-vegan consumers.

Vegan Mainstream can help you if you want to increase customer volume; improve your web traffic; manage a Twitter campaign; identify new customers; or if you need creative product promotions; detailed market intelligence; campaign management; and PR mastery. Vegan Mainstream is here to make your vegan or vegetarian businesses succeed, so it can propel your business into the mainstream — request a proposal.

Email: marketing@veganmainstream.com

Phone: (858) 523-8345

Address: P.O. Box 12076, La Jolla, CA 92039

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Body Gospel

The inspirational Body Gospel workouts, set to chart-topping gospel music, combine the power of your faith with your desire to lose weight and get fit.

Give praise. Get RESULTS.

Body Gospel is a comprehensive fitness program that connects the power of your faith with your desire to lose weight and get fit. It includes fat-burning cardio workouts set to uplifting gospel music, muscle-firming resistance bands, and a complete nutrition plan created by inspirational fitness expert Donna Richardson Joyner to help you transform your body, mind, and spirit.

Order now and get Donna’s 3-Day Jump-Start Plan to help you lose up to 3 pounds and 3 inches in just 3 days—guaranteed!

6 glorious workouts for a slimmer body and stronger spirit

  • Body Revival
    Lift your spirit, slim your body, and feel energized all day long with this calorie-blasting cardio workout. (Approx. 35 mins.)
  • Power & Praise
    Tone and define your muscles while you burn fat in this interval training workout that uses Donna’s specially designed resistance bands. (Approx. 35 mins.)
  • Gospel Glory
    Shrink your hips and thighs and flatten your tummy with this advanced body-slimming cardio workout. (Approx. 45 mins.)
  • Strength & Spirit
    Sculpt and tone your body from head to toe. You’ll alternate between strength and cardio training for maximum fat and calorie burning. (Approx. 55 mins.)
  • Core Revelation
    Lose those love handles and define your abs while slimming and trimming your thighs and backside at the same time. (Approx. 20 mins.)
  • Stretch in the Spirit
    Increase your flexibility, reduce stress, and breathe new life into your healthy temple. (Approx. 10 mins.)

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Tanya Murphy Dodd

Was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. African-American history, culture, urban life, feminism and religion are frequent themes expressed in her artworks. Tanya studied painting and drawing in an intensive magnet high school program for the arts. She went on to Temple University, Tyler School of Art in Pennsylvania where she immersed herself in photography. She received her BFA, degree from Tyler in 1988 and continued to pursue painting at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. Dodd’s art career has spanned more than twenty years and her photography remains at the root of all of her creativity.

She utilizes film, alternative processes, multiple format cameras and digital technologies to her advantage. Most notably she enjoys using her hand-made 4×5-inch pinhole box camera to “capture the simple pleasures of photography”. She is committed to raising the appreciation and education of the fine arts with a special affinity for fine art photography. Her photography and mixed media which incorporates collage, paint and photography is nationally represented by the NCA Gallery in Detroit, MI and the Panopticon Gallery of Photography in Boston, MA.

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Treasures by Neeva

I design statues depicting scenes form every day life of the Global community. I enjoy creating art work of people. I believe that man is God’s greatest creation. Since imitation is the most sincerest form of flattery I create images of people, some are full figures, bust, or reliefs. Imagine my surprise when I discovered not only was it a free form of expression but it was limit-less. Your only boundaries are your imagination.

When I work with clay, I am reminded that how much I enjoy creating beauty with my on hands. I begin a piece by being inspired by and idea or a scene. I know a piece is done when because is it nothing more can be done to improve it the piece says I’m finished. When my work is going well, I am filled with a sense of peace and accomplishment.

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Renda Rose Williams

Renda Rose is among the nations most sought after voices, as she boldly stands as a spokesperson for those with internal wounds and unheard cries. A life coach, motivational speaker, and inspirational poet all but scratch the surface of who Renda Rose is.

Resilient defines this woman who uses the devastation of her youth as a testament that there is indeed life after death! Having experienced the aftermath of molestation and rape at the hand of her biological uncle, which started at the tender age of 5; this plague again met her at the age of 19, when she was brutally raped by a couple of felons; one of which a convicted murderer.

New Artwork by Omenihu Amachi


Original Oil on Canvas
by Omenihu Amachi

Retail Price $650

Fine Artist Omenihu Amachi, inspired by beauty, culture & spirituality, passionately transforms visual elements, dynamic form & content into Oil and Acrylic paintings.

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Holiday events in the Phoenix area

“A Vote from Alice”

Herberger Theater Center

222 E. Monroe St. Phoenix, AZ, 85004

PHONE: 602-254-7399

January 25, 2011 – February 3, 2011 Tuesday, 12:10 PM
Wednesday, 12:10 PM
Thursday, 12:10 PM

ON THE WEB: www.herbergertheater.org

PRICE: $6 : $6 CREDITS: Written by Larissa Brewington, directed by Joy Bingham Strimple PRESENTED BY: Grey Matters Productions


The one-woman show is about Alice Allison Higgins, the first African American woman to receive White House credentials. She took a position on Lyndon B. Johnson’s campaign for the Democratic nomination. The show examines the racial challenges of that time period and highlights her experiences traveling with Harry S. Truman on his 1948 campaign trip. Part of the Lunch Time Theater series.

Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History: 315 E. Warren Ave., Detroit; 313-494-5800; Portrayals of Life and Landscapes: The Art of Frank Kelley, Jr.; through Dec. 12. Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing: How the Apollo Theater Shaped American Entertainment; through Jan. 2. Crowning Glories: Status, Style, and Self-Expression; through Jan. 17. Art of the Masters: A Survey of African American Images, 1980-2000; through Feb. Hours: Tue.-Sat., 9 a.m.-5; Sun., 1-5.

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38th Annual Noel Night

Compiled by Dora Robles Hernandez

With over 45 institutions, including the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Detroit Science Center, the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, the Detroit Historical Museum, and the Detroit Public Library, open their doors to the public during this Cultural Center-wide holiday “open house.” Activities include horse-drawn carriage rides, holiday shopping, family craft activities and performances by over 70 area music, theatre and dance groups, 5-9:30 p.m. 313-577-5088. www.detroitmidtown.com Free.

Read more: 38th Annual Noel Night | freep.com | Detroit Free Press http://www.freep.com/article/20101202/ENT05/12020438/38th-Annual-Noel-Night#ixzz16x04hJ8W