20-60% - Jenniffer Santos Hernández
Transcription
20-60% - Jenniffer Santos Hernández
Thursday, September 29, 2005 www.philly.com THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER B E5 Orchestra enjoys symphony of good fiscal news ORCHESTRA from E1 “It’s great when the sun, the moon and the stars align,” said Elizabeth Warshawer, the orchestra’s interim executive director. But for the orchestra, which ran a $4.3 million deficit for fiscal year 2004, this year’s happy results are more than a matter of pride. Two recent benefactors — Leonore Annenberg, who gave $50 million, and Joseph Neubauer, who gave $10 million — stipulated that the orchestra run a balanced budget. Pending an audit, the orchestra’s figures for last fiscal year, which ended Aug. 31, show less than a $100,000 deficit on a $37.6 million budget — a small trends, going up 24 percent fraction of 1 percent. from the previous year. “It’s certainly within the conThe orchestra has balanced ditions of the Neuits budget at other bauer and Annenpoints in recent Fund-raising berg grants,” Waryears, 1999 and has been shawer said. 2000, but only beOrchestra fundcause of unexpectparticularly raising has been ed large bequests. successful in particularly sucThis year’s essencessful in the last tially balanced budthe last year, year, says developget, however, did with annual ment vice president not benefit from unJulie Díaz. About bequests giving up 22 expected $22 million was (though there were percent. raised for endowsome smaller exment. Annual givpected ones). ing was up 22 percent over the “It didn’t happen by luck,” previous year. And corporate Warshawer said. “This is signifisponsorship bucked recent cant because all of the constitu- ent groups of the orchestra worked together to ensure that we achieve a balanced budget. This was everything from the way the musicians controlled expenses and earned new sources of revenue, to the way the staff controlled expenses, to the way the board and volunteers raised additional endowment and annual funds. … ” The size of the organization’s budget shrank a bit, to $37.6 million from $38.7 million. The orchestra, which held its annual meeting Tuesday, has hired the Boston search firm Isaacson, Miller to help identify a new executive director-president. The firm is helping to formulate a job description, and the orchestra hopes to hold interviews with candidates by the end of the year, Warshawer said. Music director Christoph Eschenbach has already been consulted by the search firm, she said. Also on Tuesday the orchestra board elected Harold A. Sorgenti its next chairman as of January, succeeding chairman Richard L. Smoot, who has held the additional title of chief executive officer. The orchestra’s bump-up in attendance after the arrival of Eschenbach and the opening of its new concert hall in the Kimmel Center in 2001 has leveled off, said orchestra marketing chief J. Edward Cambron. For the orchestra’s 96 subscription concerts between September and May, paid capacity was 89.2 percent — not a significant change from last season’s 90 percent. Attendance at the Mann Center was down significantly, however. “All in all, we’re pleased that we’re just shy of 90 percent,” Cambron said. Contact music critic Peter Dobrin at 215-854-5611 or pdobrin@phillynews.com. Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/peterdobrin. Disaster researchers study ingenuity DISASTER from E1 gory 5 hurricanes to small-town chemical spills. For four decades, the center has sent personnel to about 600 disaster scenes worldwide, examining on-the-spot reactions of emergency teams and gathering of-the-moment accounts of survivors and rescuers. The aim is to conduct a forensic examination of a disaster — last week the DRC dispatched teams to Mississippi and Louisiana — then use the findings to figure out how to do things better. “You talk to the cop and you talk to the fireman and you talk to the guy in the ambulance,” says center director Havidan Rodriguez. “You want a comprehensive overview of what happened.” The agency publishes its studies in academic journals, but also gives them to disaster managers, mayors and governors, helping to shape their thinking and budget priorities. Over the years, the center has drawn funding from agencies ranging from the CIA in Washington to the Board of Mental Health in Clinton County, Ohio, and looked at many issues including panic behavior and the handling of the dead. At the moment it’s running more than a dozen studies. For instance, the DRC is examining how people in the Mexican states of Veracruz and Puebla use local customs and practices — “ethno-knowledge” — to stay safe during floods. It’s conducting surveys in Oakland, Calif., to find out how people decide when the risk of living in an earthquake zone becomes unacceptable. It’s analyzing how businesses return to profitability — or don’t — in the years after a disaster, studying trends in Florida communities wrecked by Hurricane Andrew. “We try,” Rodriguez says, “to generate real-world answers.” ¢ Russell Dynes’ phone won’t stop ringing, as reporters call to ask him about the flood. No, not the flood in New Orleans, he says. The big one — the flood that landed Noah and his ark on a mountaintop. He’s old enough to remember it, he chuckles. Actually, Dynes is a young 81, and for half a century he has studied how governments and agencies respond to disaster. ROSE HOWERTER / Inquirer Suburban Staff Havidan Rodriguez, director of the Disaster Research Center, talks about field research in India and Sri Lanka after the tsunami. When he started at Ohio State University in the late 1950s, he couldn’t find anybody else interested. That changed in 1962. That October, America was threatened, not by rising waters but by rising tensions: As the United States and Soviet Union faced off over nuclear missiles in Cuba, the prospect of atomic war became terrifyingly real. Not long afterward, Dynes says, the federal government came calling. Money flowed, and in 1963 Dynes cofounded the DRC at Ohio State. It moved to Delaware in 1985. From the outset, Dynes wanted to put researchers on the ground as disasters unfolded. In 1965, Dynes arrived in Louisiana not long after Hurricane Betsy killed 76 people and flooded New Orleans. What did he discover? For one thing, the city had located its emergency command post in an underground bunker. It flooded almost immediately. In retrospect, it seems obvious, Dynes says, but at the time it was a lesson learned: Put your command center on higher ground. ¢ Here’s what intrigues Tricia Wachtendorf: That when the Red River threatened to flood Winnipeg in 1997, workers managed to build a city-saving dike out of whatever they could find, including old school buses. That amidst Hurricane Katrina, people in New Orleans managed to turn an airport into a makeshift hospital, and a bus station into a jail. “The very nature of a disaster will produce circumstances that are unexpected, and need to be improvised,” says Wachtendorf, a DRC assistant professor. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, she adds. The intense, even life-threatening demands of a disaster tend to breed a particular strain of innovation. Wachtendorf studies how those improvisations happen. The information, she says, can be used to create more flexible, functional disaster plans — and disaster planners. For spontaneity to occur, she suggests, managers must create an environment where it can occur. It’s trickier than it sounds. In a crisis, people can cling to a written plan as if it were law, even when changing conditions dictate that it be discarded. Wachtendorf is examining a fascinating bit of improvisation seen on Sept. 11: the waterborne evacuation of lower Manhattan. After the towers fell, fleeing office workers began gathering on docks along the Hudson River. Unbidden, private boat owners began going to get them. The rescues presented logistical and safety problems — but the Coast Guard quickly recog- AMERICA’S #1 MOVIE! “TWO THUMBS UP!” Jenniffer Santos studies coastal vulnerability of her native Puerto Rico. She is working on a master’s and doctorate in sociology. nized the value of the growing flotilla and put out a call for all available boats. No one anticipated it. It just happened. Exactly how it occurred, and why — and how innovation can be encouraged the next time a building falls or flood waters rise — is what Wachtendorf ® BEST – Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE EBERT & ROEPER “A HEART-STOPPING THRILLER.” PAUL CLINTON, CNN CENTER CITY CENTER CITY AMC PLYMOUTH CINEMA 12 UNITED ARTISTS RIVERVIEW STADIUM 17 800-FANDANGO (#650) REGAL CINEMAS EDGMONT SQUARE 10 800-FANDANGO (#339) UNITED ARTISTS KING OF PRUSSIA 16 LOEWS CHERRY HILL 610-397-0784 AMC WOODHAVEN 10 REGAL CINEMAS MARKETPLACE STADIUM 24 UNITED ARTISTS MAIN STREET 6 NATIONAL AMUSEMENTS ATCO MULTIPLEX CINEMAS 215-244-1200 PENNSYLVANIA BAEDERWOOD 4 AMC FRANKLIN MILLS 14 215-887-6310 AMC GRANITE RUN 8 THE BRIDGE CINEMA DE LUX 215-612-2715 610-891-6440 215-386-3300 CLEARVIEW CINEMAS ANTHONY WAYNE AMC MARPLE 10 610-328-5348 AMC NESHAMINY 24 610-222-FILM (#523) REGAL CINEMAS BARN PLAZA STADIUM 14 215-722-4262 800-FANDANGO (#341) REGAL CINEMAS WARRINGTON CR. 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NO PASSES OR DISCOUNT TICKETS ACCEPTED. CINEMARK 16 856-784-7964 AMC NESHAMINY 24 Bensalem 215/722-4262 AMC ORLEANS 8 Northeast Philadelphia 215/722-4262 AMC PAINTER’S CROSSING 9 West Chester 610/558-4793 AMC PLYMOUTH MEETING 12 Plymouth Meeting Mall 610/397-0784 AMC WOODHAVEN 10 Northeast Philadelphia 215/244-1200 BAEDERWOOD STADIUM 4 Jenkintown 215/887-6310 THE BRIDGE CINEMA DE LUX University City 215/386-3300 CLEARVIEW CINEMAS ANTHONY WAYNE Wayne 610/222-FILM #523 NARBERTH STADIUM 2 Narberth 610/667-0115 REGAL CINEMAS BARN PLAZA STADIUM 14 Doylestown 800/FANDANGO #337 Whatever happened to Harvey, Contact columnist Michael Klein at 215-854-5514 or mklein@phillynews.com. Read his recent work at http://go.philly.com/michaelklein. REGAL CINEMAS DOWNINGTOWN STADIUM 16 Downingtown 800/FANDANGO #336 REGAL CINEMAS EDGMONT SQUARE 10 Edgmont 800/FANDANGO #339 REGAL CINEMAS MARKETPLACE STADIUM 24 @ Oaks 800/FANDANGO #341 REGAL CINEMAS RICHLAND CROSSING 12 Quakertown 800/FANDANGO #342 UNITED ARTISTS EAST WHITELAND STADIUM 9 593 W Lancaster Ave 800/FANDANGO #641 UNITED ARTISTS GRANT PLAZA Northeast Philadelphia 800/FANDANGO #651 UNITED ARTISTS KING OF PRUSSIA STADIUM 16 300 Goddard Blvd 800/FANDANGO #644 UNITED ARTISTS MAIN STREET 6 3720 Main St 800/FANDANGO #647 REGAL CINEMAS WARRINGTON CROSSING 22 Warrington 800/FANDANGO #343 UNITED ARTISTS 69TH STREET Upper Darby 800/FANDANGO #654 UNITED ARTISTS MONTGOMERYVILLE 7 Montgomeryville 800/FANDANGO #646 UNITED ARTISTS OXFORD VALLEY STADIUM 14 Langhorne 800/FANDANGO #645 UNITED ARTISTS CHELTENHAM 8 Cheltenham 800/FANDANGO #649 SPECIAL ENGAGEMENTS NO PASSES OR DISCOUNT COUPONS ACCEPTED NEW JERSEY AMC DEPTFORD MALL 6 Deptford 856/845-8184 AMC MARLTON 8 Marlton 856/596-8289 CINEMARK CINEMARK 16 Somerdale 856/784-7964 LOEWS CINEPLEX CHERRY HILL THEATRE Cherry Hill 800/FANDANGO #748 NATIONAL AMUSEMENTS ATCO MULTIPLEX CINEMAS Atco 856/768-5500 REGAL CINEMAS BURLINGTON 20 Burlington 800/FANDANGO #259 UNITED ARTISTS MOORESTOWN Moorestown 800/FANDANGO #598 UNITED ARTISTS WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP 14 Sewell 800/FANDANGO #602 CHECK THEATRE DIRECTORIES OR CALL FOR SOUND INFORMATION AND SHOWTIMES Home Makeover Sale inc. Waterloo Gardens Coupon Coupon Valid Sept. 29 - Oct. 5, 2005 Save an Additional *C146* Briefly noted longtime morning man on WIOQ-FM (102.1) and WMGKFM (102.9), who’s been off Philly radio since 1995? He’s worked behind the scenes for Philly’s Banyan Productions for some time (where, he notes ruefully, his coworkers’ parents remember him). He’s starting his first full season as executive producer of Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls. The season, carried on NBC Saturdays as part of Discovery Kids on NBC, will premiere at 11 a.m. Saturday. Rapper 50 Cent has settled his $1 million federal lawsuit against Gary Barbera Enterprises. Mr. Cent, born Curtis Jackson, accused the Dodge dealer last month of using his likeness without permission in newspaper ads. Terms of the settlement were not disclosed in court records. Meanwhile, Barbera still faces a copyright-infringement suit by Snoop Dogg. Contact staff writer Jeff Gammage at 215-854-2810 or jgammage@phillynews.com. “THE OSCAR FOR THIS YEAR’S ANIMATED FEATURE BELONGS RIGHT HERE .” Harvey, the radio man, now is in TV production INQLINGS from E4 ter-of-fine-arts theater program — with a role in Dancing at Lughnasa also in the wings — when she had to evacuate because of Hurricane Katrina. She relocated to Philly and was accepted into Temple U’s MFA program. On her first day, she ran into Peter Reynolds, who’s directing Stephen Sondheim’s Company. After she told him she’s a soprano, he asked her to audition to replace an ensemble member who had to withdraw because of a scheduling conflict. With only a couple of minutes to warm up, she nailed the audition. Her family lives here, so she is expecting a big cheering section for the run, next Thursday through Oct. 15 at Temple’s Tomlinson Theater. Although she’d been in New Orleans a little more than a year, this was her third hurricane evacuation: Ivan (2004), Dennis (July), and then Katrina. “I’ve gotten really good at evacuating,” she says. wants to know more about. In a larger sense, the answers she seeks are the ones sought by the full DRC staff: How do you build predictability into the unpredictable? C146 20-60 25 25 25 % off % % Gift & Flower Shop* off *Discount taken off the regular price. Excludes patio and antique furniture, collectibles, grills, Unilock, purchase of Waterloo gift cards, planting, landscaping and installation, and quantity discounted items. In-stock merchandise only. Not valid on previously purchased merchandise or custom orders. Cannot be combined with any other sales. All Perennials Many varieties to choose from! Excludes hardy mums, pansies, cabbage, and kale. Shade & Flowering trees off Fall is a great time to plant! 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