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Celebrating Urban Life Since 1989

  • 5 for CNY - Learn How
  • Crouse Weight Loss 530 x 75
  • Land Bank - Restoring Properties
  • Mannion for NY_Vote on Nov 5th_Horizantal General Election
  • NYSF Urban CNY Banner 530 x 75
  • Second City 530x75
  • Malmgren Concert Duke Ellington
Faith-Based News & Information Spiritual Music Scene

The 9th Annual Cora A. Thomas Gospel Extravaganza Sunday February 23rd at Bethany Baptist Church

  This awesome FREE event “sponsored” by Syracuse University’s Office of Multicultural Affairs  will feature the renowned KAREN CLARK SHEARD of the super anointed CLARK Sisters! Sunday, February 23rd 4:30pm Bethany Baptist Church,149 Beattie St. Rev. Phil Turner, Pastor Karen Clark-Sheard is an American gospel four-time Grammy Award winning singer, musician, and songwriter. The youngest daughter of pioneering gospel choral director Mattie Moss Clark, Sheard began her career as a member of the Grammy-Award winning, gospel legendary female group, The Clark Sisters. She is the mother of contemporary gospel singer and actress Kierra “Kiki” Sheard.[br] During the hiatus of the Clark Sisters, Sheard rose to fame after she recorded her critically acclaimed and much anticipated solo album Finally Karen, which spawned her hit, “Balm in Gilead” (a re-recording of a song she originally recorded as part of The Clark Sisters back in the 1980s for their Heart & Soul album) the R&B-flavored “Just For Me” and “Nothing Without You” – a contemporary duet with R&B diva Faith Evans. Finally Karen became one of the most successful gospel albums of 1998 earning Sheard a Grammy nomination and earning her a Soul Train Lady of Soul Award for “Best Female Vocalist”.[br] After her debut album success and much touring, Sheard was hospitalized in 2001 after one of her blood vessels burst during a minor surgery, resulting in doctors giving her a 2% chance of survival. Her testimony inspired the title name for her long-awaited sophomore project, Second Chance released in 2002, featuring a “Secret Place” – which is now considered a classic amongst fans. Sheard recorded two more live albums, including The Heavens Are Telling and It’s Not Over (which featured some studio recordings), before releasing All in One, Sheard’s first all-studio-recorded album in 13 years. [br] The album debuted at #3 on the U.S. Billboard Gospel Chart and #98 on Billboard’s Top 200 albums chart, while its first single “Prayed Up” has so far peaked at #10 on the U.S. Billboard Gospel Songs chart.[br] Sheard is in talks to play Kitty Parham (a member of The Famous Ward Singers) in Aretha Franklin’s upcoming biopic.

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Entertainment

Syracuse Stage presents David Henry Hwang’s Sexy, Fun and Hilarious Broadway Hit “Chinglish” Performs February 26—March 16

(Syracuse, NY)—Chinglish is Tony Award-Winning playwright David Henry Hwang’s hilarious new comedy about the misadventures of miscommunication. It tells the story of an American businessman, Daniel Cavanaugh, who travels to a bustling Chinese province looking to score a lucrative contract in properly translated signs. But the deal isn’t the only thing lost in translation as he tangles with a government official, a bumbling consultant, and a surprisingly sexy bureaucrat along the way. Time magazine named Chinglish one of the best plays of 2011, and the New York Post called it “a comedy gold mine!” Chinglish performs February 26–March 16 in the Archbold Theatre at the Syracuse Stage/Drama Complex. It is recommended for mature audiences. Tickets can be purchased online at www.SyracuseStage.org, by phone at 315-443-3275, or in person at the Syracuse Stage Box Office at 820 East Genesee Street. Discounts are available for groups of 10 or more at 315-443-9844. Pre-and post-show events during the run of Chinglish include the Opening Night Party on February 28 with live music by Merit (www.gomeritgo.com), Wednesday @ 1 Lecture on March 5 (“Facing East: The Theatre of David Henry Hwang” with Christian DuComb, assistant professor of English and Theatre at Colgate University), Happy Hour on March 6 (with half price drinks and complimentary snacks), an Actor Talkback following the 7 p.m. show on March 9, and Prologues (moderated discussions with actors) on March 2, March 8, and March 13. Visit Syracuse Stage Events for more information. Playwright David Henry Hwang drew inspiration for Chinglish from the common miscommunications he experienced while on business trips to China. On one trip in 2005, he visited a brand-new cultural center where everything was gorgeous – except for the badly translated, “Chinglish”-y signs. “For instance, the designation on the handicapped restrooms that read, ‘Deformed Man’s Toilet.’ I started to think about using those signs as a jumping-off point for a play about doing business in China today, one that would deal with the issue of language. I’d never seen a play deal with this.” Nearly half of Chinglish is in Mandarin Chinese that is translated with over 750 surtitle slides, letting audience members in on humor that stems from miscommunication between the plays’ characters. Almost all of the actors in Chinglish are required to speak fluent Mandarin Chinese. Three translators and a cultural consultant assisted the cast and creative team. Chinglish debuted on Broadway in 2011 at the Longacre Theatre after a successful run at the Goodman Theatre where it earned Hwang the coveted Jeff Award in the New York category. “Chinglish explores the different levels on which people and cultures misunderstand each other,” Hwang says. “The most superficial of these is language. Going deeper, we encounter differing cultural assumptions and preconceptions. Beneath this, even when two people speak the same language, they often misunderstand each other, particularly in the arena of romance. In the play, two people discover they hold very different assumptions about the importance of love and the role of marriage in life.” Hwang earned a Tony Award in 1998 and was a 1989 Pulitzer Finalist for his most famous play M. Butterfly. He was also awarded a Tony nomination in 1998 and OBIE Award for Golden Child, as well as another Obie Award and was a 2008 Pulitzer Finalist for Yellow Face. Hwang’s FOB earned him another Obie Award in 1981, and The Dance and the Railroad won a Drama Desk nomination in 1982. May Adrales, director of Chinglish at Syracuse Stage, recently directed Hwang’s The Dance and the Railroad at NYC’s Signature Theatre Company followed by a run at the Wuzhen International Theatre Festival in China. Chinglish is made possible with generous support from: The Dorothy and Marshall M. Reisman Foundation (Presenting Sponsor); WAER (Media Sponsor); and Syracuse Media Group (Season Sponsor). Chinglish is co-produced with Portland Center Stage in Portland, OR.

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News

The Center for Community Alternatives Applauds the Governor’s Higher Education Initiative

The Center for Community Alternatives applauds Governor Cuomo’s initiative to expand access to college for people in prison.  This is yet another example of the Governor’s leadership in being smart on crime and focused on public safety.  A recent study by the RAND Corporation based upon 30 years of research shows that people who participated in education while incarcerated had significantly lower rates of recidivism than those who did not.  In New York State, a prison-based college education program directed by Bard College shows a recidivism rate of only 4 percent for people who attended the program compared to New York’s overall recidivism rate which hovers around 40 percent. Providing college education opportunities for people in prison should not be counterposed with such opportunities for people in the general community.  Both are important.  Prison-based college education costs very little, especially compared to the costs of incarceration and even when prisoners had access to public grants such as TAP or PELL, these costs were less than 1 percent of grant awards. The Governor’s Plan makes good sense – it will reduce recividism and help make formerly incarcerated people productive and taxpaying citizens who in turn will contribute to the very tax base that supports our SUNY system. CCA is proud to support this first step at restoring higher education to people in prison.

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Neighborhoods News

N.A.N Syracuse Chapter celebrates Black History Month with Onondaga County Executive Joanne Mahoney

On Saturday, February 22nd, 2014 the Syracuse Chapter of the National Action Network will host its weekly meeting with special guest speaker Onondaga County Executive Joanne Mahoney.  This meeting will be held at Fountain of Life C.O.G.I.C. – 700 South Avenue at 10:00 AM. For more information contact Walt Dixie at 315-832-0026.

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Neighborhoods News Salt Springs (east) Syracuse - East

Our Children, Our Schools… Our Future!

Syracuse schools, facing ongoing fiscal and state aid challenges, to hold Feb. 25 community forum Stakeholders of the Syracuse City School District will gather at H.W. Smith K-8 School on Tuesday, February 25, to draw attention to the ongoing fiscal challenges facing the city’s schools, develop a solid understanding of the key issues and learn how to be effective advocates for their children, schools and communities. The event, “Our Children, Our Schools…Our Future!,’’ has been organized by the Central New York School Boards Association, in partnership with United Syracuse, to bring together concerned citizens of all backgrounds for an informative and inspiring forum that will let them know what is at stake if the SCSD does not receive additional state aid.  United Syracuse is a coalition of Syracuse families, businesses and labor and community organizations that has come together to advocate for equitable state funding for the school district. The February 25 program will start promptly at 6:30 p.m. and end promptly at 8:30 p.m. H.W. Smith K-8 School is located at 1130 Salt Springs Road, Syracuse. The featured presenter for the forum is Dr. Rick Timbs, Executive Director of the Statewide School Finance Consortium. Dr. Timbs will address the complexities of state aid and the overwhelming need for millions of dollars of additional aid in the Syracuse City School District.  The forum is being coordinated by the Central New York School Boards Association in partnership with United Syracuse.   CNYSBA’s mission is to inform public school board members about critical issues affecting public education and the operation of public schools and to mobilize board members to effectively influence stakeholders outside the schools who also share responsibility for the education of our children.   For more information, including a list of member districts, please visit CNYSBA at www.cnysba.org.  

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