community archive
May 31, 2008
23226 Keeps Richmond Address; 23229 Moves to Henrico
Back in May, the United States Postal Service sent a survey out to folks who live in Henrico, but still use Richmond as their postal address, asking them if they’d like to change their mailing address to Henrico. The majority said yes, so for the Near West End that means that starting at then end of this year ”Henrico” will be the preferred address for those in the 23229 zip code. Because the 23226 zip includes portions of both Henrico and Richmond, the 23226 city zip will we remain “Richmond”.
But, the bottom line is you can still use Richmond, and your mail will get to you. Either Henrico or Richmond remain acceptable.
Click here for the full press release.
May 28, 2008
Annual Greek Festival Comes to Richmond Tomorrow
The Greek Festival starts tomorrow (and runs through Sunday) it will feature wine, music, dance, church tours and of course wonderful Greek Food.
Gyros, pastries, loukomades, calamari & shrimp all return this year with theit own stands click here for the layout. And, fear not if you didn’t have a chance to swing by the ATM — Checks, MasterCard, and Visa credit cards are accepted.
Actually, the culinary offerings are so many, that for someone like me, it helps to have a menu with descriptions. Luckily, they’ve provided that too!
Here are the hours:
Thursday May 29 - 11:00 am to 9:30 pm
Friday May 30 - 11:00 am to 10:00 pm
Saturday May 31 - 11:00 am to 10:00 pm
Sunday June 1 - 12:00 am to 7:00 pm
Questions: 358-5996
In addition to the food, they’ve got plenty else going on. Here’s a bit from the website:
Music and Dancing: Did you know there are over 200 dances from Greece? Each one represents different regions, villages, and islands. As always, Achilleas provides the live music and the Byzantio Hellenic Dance Troupe demonstrates a few of these unique dances. Cathedral Tours:During the Greek Festival, tours of the sanctuary will be given on the half hour. Guides will provide special lecture tours about the history of the Eastern Orthodox Church, which traces its origin to the day of Pentecost.
Thursday and Friday: 2 p.m.-7 p.m.
Saturday: Noon - 8 p.m.
Sunday: Noon - 5 p.m.Shopping at the Agora:
At each Greek Festival, there is a wide selection of vendors that come to set up a market, or “Agora”. Greek jewelry, leather, nick-knacks, videos, music, embroideries and rugs, t-shirts and other clothing, folk art, and icons are available for purchase.
Win a Trip to Greece:If you purchase a raffle ticket, you can enter a drawing to win either $1500 OR two round trip tickets (coach class) to Athens, Greece. Tickets are 1 / $2 or 6 / $10. The drawing will be held on Sunday June 1st. You do not have to be present to win. And yes, restrictions apply. Find out more information when you make a purchase
May 27, 2008
New Restaurant, Cafe Caturra, Comes to Near West End
Cafe Caturra Coffee & Wine is coming to the former Luna Grove location at Grove and Maple Avenue near Saint Catherine’s School. It is scheduled to open this summer. Currently Cafe Caturra has two other locations at Alverser Plaza and Midlothian Village Square.
Cafe Caturra roasts its own coffee, serves wine and other tasty goodies.
May 22, 2008
University of Richmond’s Mandy Friend Named to Regional Team
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND, Va. – Mandy Friend used her junior season to set new standards for the Richmond women’s lacrosse program. Friend has been named to the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Association’s All-South Regional Second Team. The native of Canandaigua, N.Y. also set six new records this season as a Spider, breaking four single-season bests and two career highs.
This is the third-straight IWLCA All-Regional honor for the midfielder. Friend was named to First Team in both her freshman and sophomore seasons. Also in her first two years at Richmond Friend picked up Third Team All-American and Rookie All-American honors her first year along with a spot on the All-American Second Team as a sophomore.
Besides earning national recognition for her play in 2008, Friend has set six new school records at Richmond. The junior is now the owner of three single-season records in Spider history. In 2007, Friend scored 62 goals, taking over the top spot from Caroline McGuire.
[via UR press release]
May 18, 2008
Barkesdale Auditions for Shirley Valentine and Driving Miss Daisy
SHIRLEY VALENTINE and DRIVING MISS DAISY — Barksdale Theatre at Hanover Tavern announces open auditions for both of these shows tomorrow, 7 to 9 p.m. at Barksdale Theatre’s Willow Lawn location, 1601 Willow Lawn Drive. (Both shows will be presented at Barksdale Theatre’s Hanover Tavern location.) All roles are open, and actors are paid. No appointments necessary. Those auditioning should come prepared to read from the scripts. For details, call (804) 783-1688 ext. 13.
“Shirley Valentine” by Willie Russell will run July 11 through Aug. 24. Barksdale is looking for one woman who can play a 42-year-old British housewife. “Driving Miss Daisy” by Alfred Uhry will run Sept. 19 through Oct. 26. Barksdale seeks one white woman who can play a Southern woman age 72 to 97, one black man who can play her chauffeur, age 60 to 85, and one white man who can play her son, age 40 to 65.
May 16, 2008
Follow RVA Dog Play Group on Twitter
Hi all. As you may know, the NWEN blog has a Twitter account that sends updates to everyone following it every time we post an article on the blog. Great way for those in the “Twitterverse” to keep in touch with news and events going on around the NWEN community.
I’d like to also mention a new Twitter group account that allows follows to send dog-related playgroups and events to the group’s followers. Been using it a lot to let everyone know about related events around the NWEN area. However, it’s cool to use for letting everyone know about events all around the RVA metro area too!
The name of the group is RVADogPlayGrp. Simply follow it and you’ll have to the ability to let everyone know events by sending a “DM” (direct message) to the group. More details/how-to’s here.
Happy “play dog grouping”! :)
May 15, 2008
Lost Dog — Malamute, Husky Type Near University of Richmond
May 14, 2008
“Perception and our Public Schools” Event and Superintendent Search
Deborah Jewell-Sherman, Richmond Public Schools Superintendent was just named the Virginia Superintendent of the year. And, if you blinked you might not have noticed the local coverage as School Board Rep, Kim Bridges points out.
Here is a message that she sent out to the Mary Munford community via the PTA e-newsletter:
*** Message from Kim Bridges, 1st District School Board Representative ***
Bridges For Schools Update - May 2008It’s official: Richmond has the best in Virginia
If you blinked (or didn’t read all the way past the obituaries) you might have missed it, but Dr. Jewell Sherman was named Virginia Superintendent of the Year on Tuesday evening.
After being selected as one of eight regional finalists, she was chosen by a group representing superintendents, PTA, the state Department of Education, the Virginia School Boards Association, and the business community. It’s quite an honor, and Richmond’s superintendent will now proceed to the national award level along with the best of the best across the nation. She deserves our congratulations and thanks–and if you feel so inclined, you may reach her at djewell@richmond.k12.va.us.A Tale of Two Systems?
The statewide recognition illustrates a point that has been vexing me for some time. The current status of Richmond Public Schools could be, to borrow from Dickens, “A Tale of Two Systems.” (Even the first line of A Tale of Two Cities rings true for RPS. Extra credit to any fellow English major or avid reader who can prove your recall of the novel’s opening–no googling allowed!) It’s not just me; others have noticed that the state and national perspective of RPS differs considerably from the local perspective. I’ve been examining that disconnect and have asked Councilman Tyler if we could delve into it at the next 1st District Town Hall meeting on May 28. Please join us at Mary Munford that evening at 7:00 p.m. for a dialogue on “Perception and our Public Schools.” I’ll be inviting members of the media to attend as well, as a number of 1st District folks have approached me to ask, “What’s up with the coverage of RPS?” I think it will be an interesting and productive discussion - please come.More chances to talk
Speaking of dialogues and the attributes of a successful superintendent, the school board is hosting several public forums to hear from the community about what we want in our next superintendent. These four public forums will be a critical first step in beginning the superintendent search process. The 1st District will host the forum at TJ on May 14 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., and I’ll share the other dates below.Progressing Procurement and Improving Infrastructure
Hopefully you got the chance to read about the actions taken so far to improve the school system’s procurement woes.The statewide expert has begun his work to “reengineer” the entire department. With his guidance, that process should be done by July 1.
I received another promising report at yesterday’s school board Facilities and Operations committee meeting. With city council’s support in the upcoming budget, RPS is looking ahead to an unprecedented level of capital projects for ADA upgrades, City of the Future new/renovated school construction, and yearly maintenance/critical repairs next year. The list of schools that need funds for HVAC, roof and other repairs are the most critical and time sensitive of the maintenance projects–not niceties but necessity to keep children protected from the elements during the school day. These old buildings may be solid and beautiful, but they need on-going care to keep them functional. Please thank council members for putting the funding in place for these projects as they finalize the city budget.
Don’t sit on the sidelines!
There’s much more to talk about, but I’m going to end with upcoming school board dates and a promise to touch on additional topics in the days ahead.May 14 @ 6 p.m. - Public Forum on our superintendent search at TJ
May 17 @ 10 a.m. - Public Forum on our superintendent search at Lucille Brown
May 19 @ 6 p.m. - School Board meeting
May 21 @ 6 p.m. - Public Forum on our superintendent search at Franklin Military Academy
May 28 @ 6 p.m. - Public Forum on our superintendent search at Holton
May 28 @ 7 p.m. - 1st District Town Hall meeting featuring discussion of “Perception and our Public Schools”
May 13, 2008
Broad Appetit Comes to Downtown this Sunday
I know it’s not the Near West End. But occasionally, as you have probably noticed, I’ll feature events outside the immediate area of they are free and look especially fun, and kid friendly. Plus, my friend, Heidi Rugg, and her Barefoot Puppets, will be performing at 1p.m. and 4 p.m. that alone would be worth the trip.
So, here’s the scoop from the Carver & Jackson Ward News about this Sunday’s Broad Appetit:
The First Annual Broad Appétit Food and Art Celebration which will take over Broad Street between Adams and Monroe this coming Sunday, May 18th.
From the Broad Appétit site:
The first annual Broad Appétit Food Festival will feature Richmond’s favorite food purveyors, restaurants, chefs and artisans. The event is free to the public and is designed to feed your mind, body and soul with an eclectic mix of crafts and art, more food than you can imagine and a huge kid’s area with puppet shows and story-telling. A performing arts stage will host musical acts and performance artists, and demonstrations will be on hand from fascinating folks like our nations leading Bug Chefs and food revolution leader Joel Salatin.
The big taste-off will be the Taste Of Richmond – “To Die For” Dish Awards in 25 to 30 of Richmond’s best chefs prepare three mini-dishes, each of which the public can taste for $3. Each chef will submit one of those delicious dishes to be judged by a panel of experts who will determine who has the “To Die For” Dish of Richmond.
Check out the event schedule, the food, and the artists of the WHODUNNIT? exhibition @ Quirk Gallery.






