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ISSUE . July 2nd 2009
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Soldiering On
Meet the people who fought — and continue to fight — our wars in the Middle East.
by Charles Cieri
More than 1.5 million Americans have fought in this country's two ongoing wars. While public interest and news coverage in Iraq and Afghanistan have waxed and waned, these volunteers have continued to stream to and from the battlefield. Here are 12 such people from the region.

Rob Pomroy
22, Fishtown
Specialist, Army
Currently in Iraq
"Daddy has to go far away, for work, to beat up the bad guys."

Byron Roth
36, Yardley
Captain, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Summer 2005
He witnessed three MASCALs — attacks where the number of wounded exceeds the immediate medical capacity — and was himself injured, halfway through his tour, by an IED on the road.

Laura Golembiewski
22, Northeast Philly
Corporal, Marine Corps
Deployed to Iraq Winter 2006
"With all the graduates coming out of college, with a degree that I don't have, and all the military coming back — it's like rolling the dice."

Jose Quinones
24, Northeast Philly
Specialist, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Spring 2005
Quinones' duties in the infantry varied, but his missions were consistently dangerous.

Dave Marris
50, Northeast Philly
Independent Military Contractor
Currently in Afghanistan
"Without contractors, the military could not function at the level that they do. The manpower just is not there."

Raheem Rowell
22, Trenton
Specialist, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Summer 2008
"I sit down to eat and reach for my weapon and realize it's not there."

Matt Brennan
23, Jenkintown
Sergeant, Marine Corps
Deployed to Iraq Fall 2005 and Spring 2007
"My fiancée said it's either [the Marine Corps] or me, and she wins every time."

Tim Stanton
20, King of Prussia
Specialist, U.S. Army Reserve
Deploys to Iraq this Monday
On Sept. 11, 2001, Tim Stanton was only in fifth grade; that's the day he decided to join the military. He joined the Army Reserve

Carl W. Notter
60, Elkins Park
Master Sergeant (Retired) Army National Guard
Deployed to Afghanistan Winter 2003 and Winter 2007
"Some people try to mimic the life that they have back at home," says Notter. To him, this is completely wrong.

Roberto Brabham
27, North Philly
Technical Sergeant, Air National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Summer 2006, Kyrgyzstan Spring 2008
"It was either that or go to prison," he says. By "prison," he means Olney High School.

Web Exclusive
Lilliam Bernal
27, Trenton
Second Lieutenant, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Winter 2005
"I didn't talk to my mom, I didn't consult with my boyfriend. I just went and did it."

Web Exclusive
Tim Johnson
50, Port Richmond
Specialist, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Winter 2004 and Spring 2008
"When the mortar passed overhead, I said, 'Fuck 'em, if they do me they do me, I'm going outside to smoke a cigarette.' And that's exactly what I did."

Web Exclusive
RJ Ernst
27, Newtown
Sergeant, Marine Corps
Deployed to Iraq Spring 2005, in Iraq currently
"We have some TVs, we hear what’s going on. But, we’re already there, no matter what people thought."



Loose Canon:
Domestic Tranquility
When the system is fair, we tend to share.
by Bruce Schimmel
In effect, our little scheme to ensure tranquility in our house shares the same principles to keep the peace in the nation. That people are all valued the same and all share equality in the common good.

Feedback:
Letters to the Editor
What You Say
"Subsequent bites made me eat the steak like the Three Stooges — taking their mouths to their hands and chewing."



News :: Needle in a HaystackNeedle in a Haystack
The president made a promise about syringe exchange.
by Isaiah Thompson
The controversy around needle exchange is endlessly frustrating for advocates, because the data is so uncontroversial. An abundance of studies have shown that needle exchange programs prevent HIV and Hepatitis C infection among needle drug users.

Dispatch:
By the Sword
Little Anthony's mother didn't like the 18-inch sabre he'd hung above his bed.
by Mike Newall

In the apartment upstairs, Edward Harty was lounging in his underwear watching the Discovery Channel. His 11-year-old son heard commotion. Edward went to his front door but didn't hear anything. The son heard more noises. Edward walked downstairs to Anthony's slightly open front door. "Oh no, please," he heard Anthony saying.


Icepack
Amorosi on the news, nightlife, gossip and bitchiness beats.
by A.D. Amorosi
Bonus Web Content
I'm not a sentimentalist. I want the future now. I just want Philly to be careful and get harder where it counts.

A Million Stories
Philly's proposed "broadband stimulus" | Francisville LOVES IT! | Dionte's disappointment

The Bell Curve
City Paper's Quality-o-Life-o-Meter
When news breaks in Philadelphia, we make jokes.



Arts :: Blessed Union
Art:
Blessed Union
Ish Klein preaches connectivity through poems and puppets.
by A.D. Amorosi
Ish Klein's work is an extension of her gentle, playful, daring soul. It's also part-and-parcel with happily growing up the daughter of a sanitation worker.

Arts Picks:
1776
Through July 5, $25-$52, Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival, 2755 Station Ave., Center Valley, 610-282-9455,
by Mark Cofta
It's been 233 years since the historic bickering among the 13 colonies about declaring independence in "foul, fuming, fetid, foggy, filthy Philadelphia" (some things never change).

City of Nutterly Love
July 8-26, $39, Suzanne Roberts Theatre, 480 S. Broad St., 215-985-0420, philadelphiatheatrecompany.org.
by Mark Cofta
Some of the Philly phenomena they've discovered: It's the only place where the phrase "John Wanamaker's giant organ" isn't creepy.

Kaleidoscope
flickchart.com | Lapham's Quarterly | Revival Burlesque | Mos Def's The Ecstatic

Arts Picks:
A Rake's Progress
Through December, free, Brolo Hill Farm, 8480 Hagy's Mill Road, 215-482-7300, schuylkillcenter.org.
by Brion Shreffler
Each of Gary Miller's eight rakes, installed outdoors at the Schuylkill Center's Brolo Hill Farm, corresponds to a major element in William Hogarth's painting series A Rake's Progress.

First Friday Focus
Lori Hill's First Friday Hit List
by Lori Hill
Bonus Web Content
Philadelphia Book Co. | Space 1026 | Pageant Gallery | Delware Center for the Contemporary Arts | Seraphin Gallery

Web Exclusive
Arts Picks:
Collaboration 26
Opening reception Fri., July 3, 5-9 p.m., free, through Aug. 2, 3rd Street Gallery on 2nd Street, 58 N. Second St., 215-625-0993, 3rdstreetgallery.com.
by Chris Monigle
Francine Shore has brought together a diverse group of colleagues of different ages and professions and whose passion transcends mere hobby.



Movies :: MoonMoon
City Paper Grade: B
by Sam Adams
The movie successfully imagines a distant but recognizable future in which the planet's energy problems have been solved by a transition to fusion. But we discover eventually that consumption has only been displaced and not eliminated, and that the true fuel source is not lunar rock but something far more precious.

Repertory Film
Your weekly guide to local film events, festivals and under-the-radar screenings.
Send repertory film listings to molly.eichel@citypaper.net.



Music :: Hidden Gems
Suite Spot:
Hidden Gems
by Peter Burwasser
The theme that coursed through so much of the recently concluded Hidden City Philadelphia Arts Festival is history.

Web Exclusive
Music Picks:
Japandroids
Tue., July 7, 8 p.m., $10, with Matt & Kim and Team Robespierre, First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St., 866-468-7619, r5productions.com.
by Molly Eichel
Brian King and David Prowse always meant to make their garage rock outfit a trio but never got around to finding a lead singer.

Kindred
Wed., July 8, 8 p.m., $25-$35, , World Café Live, 3025 Walnut St., 215-222-1400, worldcafelive.com.
by Deesha Dyer
Three albums and a few children later, Aja and Fatin still possess that true love of soul and self that you've been reading about in City Paper for almost a decade.

Erik Rico
Wed., July 8, 10 p.m., $10, with Dot.matic, Kanu, Mydnite Angel, Silk City, 435 Spring Garden St, Philadelphia, PA, 215-592-8838, eavesdropsessions.blogspot.com.
by Deesha Dyer
This may be the closest you'll come to someone who was discovered by Randy Jackson.

Witch Hunt
Wed., July 8, 6:30 p.m., $12, with The Subhumans and The Ray Gradys, Barbary, 951 N. Frankford Ave., 866-468-7619, r5productions.com.
by Patrick Rapa
Witch Hunt is pissed off. That they manage to channel it into some furious, glorious music is some kind of public safety miracle.

Cryptacize
Thu., July 2, 7 p.m., $12, with Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, First Unitarian Church Chapel, 2125 Chestnut St., 866-468-7619, r5productions.com.
by Patrick Rapa
Itsy-bitsy California indie project Cryptacize is slowly turning into an actual band.

Web Exclusive
Sonic Youth
Thu., July 2, 8:30 p.m., $25-$27, with The Entrance Band and Kurt Vile & the Violators, Electric Factory, 421 N. Seventh St., 215-336-2000, electricfactory.info.
by Michael Pelusi
There was probably a time when it seemed that Sonic Youth might deconstruct rock music into nothingness.

Bobby Zankel and the Warriors of the Wonderful Sound
Thu., July 2, 9:30 p.m., $10, Tritone, 1508 South St., 215-545-0475, tritonebar.com.
by A.D. Amorosi
Bobby Zankel doesn't need a 14-piece ensemble in which to make dense horn charts fly or dynamic rhythms pounce.

Magos Herrera
Fri., July 3, 5:45 and 7:15 p.m., free with museum admission of $16, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2600 Ben Franklin Parkway, 215-763-8100, philamuseum.org.
by Shaun Brady
Whether singing in English, Spanish or Portuguese, Magos Herrera's expressive voice bridges language barriers through pure emotion.



Food :: Drink DapperDrink Dapper
Bartender Christian Gaal is a vision of sartorial sipping splendor.
by Felicia D'Ambrosio
Gaal is known both for his beyond-retro look and encyclopedic knowledge of cocktail lore, dispensed as he concocts adult beverages from a boggling array of obscure liqueurs at APO Bar + Lounge and the newly opened Noble: An American Cookery.

RECIPES: The Blood & Sand and the Alaska Man's Luck
Learn how to make two of Christian Gaal's cocktails.
by Felicia D' Ambrosio

What's Cooking
July 4 Edition
by Lauren Fleming
11th Annual All-You-Can-Eat Ice Cream Festival | 4th of July Extra-vegan-za | Live Music and Barbecue at Chaddsford Winery | 4th of July Red, White & Blue Food Tour

Feeding Frenzy
Restaurants opening, closing and pending
by Drew Lazor
MIGA | Max Brenner, Chocolate by the Bald Man | Brauhaus Schmitz



Agenda Lead:
Nerdcore
In the future, will science be cooler than rock 'n' roll?
by Holly Otterbein
When I reach Scott Beibin over the phone, he's acting like a rock star. The thing is, he's not one. A much better description would be "artsy scientist" or even simply "nerd from West Philly."

Agenda Picks:
Tree Adventure
Opening reception Sat., July 4, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., free with regular museum admission of $7-$14, exhibit ongoing, Morris Arboretum, 100 E. Northwestern Ave., 215-247-5777, morrisarboretum.com.
by Kyle Press
One of Morris Arboretum's new exhibits is the treehouse you always wanted as a kid, blown up to epic proportions.

City Tavern's Independence Day
Sat., July 4, 11:30 a.m.-5 p.m., free, City Tavern, 138 S. Second St., citytavern.com.
by Carlene Majorino
Ben Franklin is so clearly our boy.

The Bully Pulpit
Wed., July 8, 10 p.m., $5, Shubin Theatre, 407 Bainbridge St., 267-233-1556, phillyimprovtheater.com.
by Chelsea Calhoun
"This show is different because this features off-the-cuff comedy, where the panelists can be themselves and talk about basically whatever they want."

Catflowers
by Holly Otterbein
These soft, all-fabric headbands are made with vintage floral prints, lace and cotton. But achieving comfort doesn't mean having to sacrifice style

Last Chance:
Last Chance
Catch it or Regret It
by Holly Otterbein
Wind Challenge 3 | The Fab Show | Nexusselects


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