Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Walk for Wildlands

Walk for Wildlands
On the Ironton Rail Trail
Earth Day
Saturday, April 22, 2006
9:00 a.m. registration check-in


Celebrate Earth Day 2006 with Wildlands Conservancy and get in step to raise funds for your local conservation organization! Gather family and friends together for a day of outdoor fitness and fun, while helping to preserve, protect, and enhance the land, water, ecological, and recreational resources of the Lehigh Valley and the Lehigh River valley.

Beginning at Saylor Park in Coplay, Pa., participants will walk the five-mile loop of the Ironton Rail Trail, leading them along the Coplay Creek to the Lehigh River and looping through Whitehall Township back to Saylor Park. Half way, walkers can stop, rest, and pick up a bottle of water and a snack at the Hokendauqua Park (to view a map of the trail, visit www.irontonrailtrail.org).

Walkers will enjoy the route, visit various education stations, experience fun environmental activities, all while learning how Wildlands Conservancy does the work of protecting open land and wildlife habitat, restoring streambanks, creeks and rivers, and enhancing outdoor recreational greenways.

A Go Green Challenge will also be a part of the fun! While on the trail, simply fill in the answers to the questions listed on the sheet given to you at registration. All registrants who complete the Walk and the Go Green Challenge will receive an event T-shirt, conservation literature, and other goodies. Additional prizes will be awarded to the first 100 registrants who complete the Walk and correctly answer the Go Green Challenge.

Entry fees are $25 per person, $45 for a family, or $100 for a team of eight or more. A pledge sheet is also available for those who wish to solicit additional funds from others and help widen the support. Call (610) 965-4397, ext. 10 or contact us via e-mail to request a registration form.

Sunday, April 09, 2006

Crazy For You

Looking for a little culture in your life? Desales University Theatre is putting on "Crazy For You" with music and lyrics by George & Ira Gershwin. April 26-May 7. Tickets cost $19-$24 depending on what day you go.

Crazy for You is a comic feast of toe tappin', hilarious mayhem and some of the best George and Ira Gershwin melodies and lyrics ever written! This Tony Award winning show, filled with spectacle, farce, and the "hottest" dance choreography ever seen in the Lehigh Valley, will have the entire family singing "I Got Rhythm!"

For Tickets contact the box office at 610.282.3192

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Your Thoughts on Mayfair?

On Memorial Day Weekend the city of Allentown will celebrate 20 Years of Mayfair. To help in the celebration, Lehigh Valley Marketplace wants to know all about your Mayfair experience. Give us a brief summary of your favorite things about Mayfair, great tips to share with festival goers (best place to park, best food, music not to miss, etc.), or your best Mayfair memory. If we use your comment, you'll win two full festival passes ($20 value) good for entry every day of the festival. You must include your contact information, if you wish to be eligible for the free tickets. Your information will not be sold or use for any other promotional opportunities.

Please pass this on to Allentown area friends or out of town visitors you know love to come to the Lehigh Valley for the Mayfair experience!

Thanks for sharing with Lehigh Valley Marketplace!

You can email your opinions to Lori here or mail them to this address:

LEHIGH VALLEY MARKETPLACE
1275 Glenlivet Drive, Suite 100
Allentown, PA 18106

Please use this format when submitting your opinions:

MY MAYFAIR EXPERIENCE
Name:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip:
E-mail:

My Mayfair Experience:
(100 words or less)

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Free Film Screening by SSFF

The SSFI will be supporting their community-building effort by programming two nights of FREE films selected from our 2004 and 2005 SouthSide Film Festivals. Each night is a different two-hour block of films. You can catch up on films you missed, or see these great films again. The A/V setup will be using Lehigh's equipment, which is pretty good, but nowhere near the caliber of what you will see during our film festival. The films will be of high quality, and the point really is to get out and view art.
Where: Packard Lab Auditorium 101 (view map )-- Easiest point of entry is straight up Vine Street from Deja Brew. Packard Lab is the large stone building at the end of that street. Take the door facing the temporary gravel parking lot and the auditorium is only a few steps down the hallway.

When: Wednesday and Thursday nights, April 5th and April 6th7:30pm (screenings start at 7:45 sharp both nights

Cost: Free

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

Events Meeting

The NET is what you make it and we are looking for a few people to help us make it great! Our next events meeting will be held on Monday, April 10th at 7pm at Borders in Whitehall. We hope to plan out our events for the spring and start off the summer with a bang. If you have any ideas, we are all ears and can't wait to hear what you think will help make the NET even better.

If you have ideas but can't attend the Events Meeting, please fill out this handy events form and let us know what you think.

Friday, March 17, 2006

Happy St. Patrick's Day

You're dressed in green, had a green bagel for breakfast, and are craving a pint of green beer...all that preparation and no where to go? Here's a quick list of Irish bars in your city.

  • Porter's Pub (700 Northampton St, Easton) - Even the bartenders wear kilts on St. Patty's Day
  • JP McGrady's ( 117 E Third St, Bethlehem) - With 48 beers on tap there are sure to be some Irish ones!
  • Jack Callaghan's ( 2027 Tilghman St, Allentown) - Events all weekend to celebrate your Irish heritage to the fullest

We know there are plenty more, so leave us a comment and let us know where your favorite Irish bar is!

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Something About The Valley

Young adults talk about what lured them to the region, and how to keep them here.
By Veronica Torrejon
Of The Morning Call

Lehigh Valley native Amy Pirrotta uprooted herself after college with starry-eyed ambitions of making a name for herself as a fashion photographer in sunny Southern California.

What she couldn't quite shake were the feelings of homesickness and longing that had her scouring butcher's racks for Hatfield country sausage and rooting through her grandmother's cookbook for traditional Pennsylvania Dutch fare. The Penn State grad was overcome with emotion the day she found and emptied the supermarket shelves of TastyKakes.

Almost four years after she arrived, Pirrotta, 30, packed her bags, bid adieu to the fast-paced Los Angeles region and returned to the valley her family has called home since the 1700s. She remains hopeful that revitalization efforts will transform the Lehigh Valley into a place where young graduates can discover themselves without leaving home.

Pirrotta joined a packed crowd of young adults in the Terrace Room of the Hotel Bethlehem on Tuesday night for the first in a series of five community forums to seek input on how to reverse the so-called ''brain drain'' of graduates who flee the state for better-paying jobs in more metropolitan areas.

The group of mainly 20- and 30-somethings included Lehigh Valley natives like Pirrotta and transplants originally from major East and West Coast metropolitan areas and smaller cities in the Midwest. Coming from varied backgrounds and professions, they touched on many common themes including job opportunities, housing, transportation and the local social and cultural scene.

The event was hosted by the Campaign to Renew Lehigh Valley and other groups including the Lehigh Valley Network of Young Professionals.

''Pennsylvania is leading the country in losing its young workers,'' said Emmaus Councilwoman Joyce Marin, who led the fairly informal presentation and discussion that ranged in tone from serious to lighthearted.

''The only state that has more old people than Pennsylvania is Florida, and they have the rich ones,'' said Marin jokingly, eliciting chuckles of laughter from the audience. Marin told attendees she intends to use their discussion to compile a report that would be distributed among state lawmakers.

''What do we need to do differently? That's what we need to get our arms around,'' said Marta Gabriel, senior vice president of the Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce.

Topping the wish list for young adults in attendance Tuesday was affordable housing, a passenger train to New York and other cities and the preservation of farmland and open space for recreation.

Some of the more novel ideas included a hovercraft public transportation system along the Lehigh River or a light rail connecting Allentown, Bethlehem and Easton. More bike paths, walkable communities and a centralized theater, restaurant and nightclub district were also among the ideas.

Pirrotta said she would like to see more of an upscale lounge scene and more emphasis on theater and the arts. Local businesses tend to cater to the college crowd and not people who are 25-to-30 years old, she said.

''I find myself going to New York and Philly for entertainment,'' she said earlier. ''The few nightclubs out here, I feel like an old lady.''

Revitalization efforts are already evident. Bethlehem is going through a renaissance, said a few attendees, with trendy restaurants and storefronts. The nightlife, though geographically widespread, is varied and diverse.

Pirrotta agreed.

''There is a sort of coolness factor to Bethlehem now that wasn't there when I left,'' Pirrotta said. ''Allentown doesn't quite have that pull yet Â… Easton is on it's way.''

Pirrotta's odyssey is an all-too familiar tale for experts who have been tracking the migration of young professionals from the area. A Brookings Institute report found Pennsylvania is No. 1 in exporting college graduates. A more informal survey by the local Network of Young Professionals found that although only a minority of its members say they agree the Lehigh Valley has an active nightlife, an overwhelming majority say it is a great place to raise a family, said organization President Abraham Nemitz.

''When you are young and looking for adventure, you are looking elsewhere,'' said Nemitz. ''When you start thinking about raising a family, you come back.''

Formed in 2001, the Network of Young Professionals is a resource for young adults concerned about job opportunities and also a social organization networking hundreds of people in the area.

Nemitz, 29, also hopes the organization can be a tool for people whose jobs bring them to the Lehigh Valley, so they can make friends and rapidly put down roots in the area. Nemitz is a senior product manager at PPL's Telecom division and a transplant from Minneapolis.

Although their paths to the Lehigh Valley differed, both Nemitz and Pirrotta agreed it has great potential.

Pirrotta eventually found a job that allows her to work from her home in Allentown's West End. She now handles marketing for Sideshow Collectibles, a California company. Her husband, Christopher, 31, is a Web site designer for the company. The couple return to California four times a year on business.

''I was like most young people in the area with ideas about moving to a big city somewhere and doing something important with my life,'' she said. ''In the end what mattered to me was that I was somewhere that made me happy.''

Article can be found here on mcall.com