Near North Side Area Plan – Image Preference Survey
The Image Preference Survey (IPS) is a planning technique that helps us understand how you would like your neighborhood to look and feel in the future. We will show about 75 neighborhood images (some from the Near North Side and some from other places). You will be asked to rate each image based on your preferences for the design of residential and commercial development, public space and parking areas. We will then have a discussion about the desirability of different types of development. Results from the IPS will be used in developing recommendations for the Near North Side Area Plan. Space is limited, please RSVP to Robert Harris, 414.286.5654. Calvary Baptist Church 2959 N. Teutonia Ave. Milwaukee, WI More Information: http://www.mkedcd.org/planning/plans/NearNorth/index.html
Mar 15th, 2009 by Dave ReidNear North Side Area Plan – Image Preference Survey
The Image Preference Survey (IPS) is a planning technique that helps us understand how you would like your neighborhood to look and feel in the future. We will show about 75 neighborhood images (some from the Near North Side and some from other places). You will be asked to rate each image based on your preferences for the design of residential and commercial development, public space and parking areas. We will then have a discussion about the desirability of different types of development. Results from the IPS will be used in developing recommendations for the Near North Side Area Plan. Space is limited, please RSVP to Robert Harris, 414.286.5654. Atkinson Library 1960 W. Atkinson Milwaukee, WI More Information: http://www.mkedcd.org/planning/plans/NearNorth/index.html
Mar 15th, 2009 by Dave ReidHistoric Preservation and Smart Growth in Wisconsin
Speaker: Rick Bernstein – Wisconsin Historical Society SARUP is the acronym for School of Architecture & Urban Planning lecture Series are Free and Open to the Public. All presentations will take place at the UWM School of Architecture and Urban Planning (SARUP) from 12:00 – 1:20 pm in Room 345. SARUP is located at 2131 E. Hartford Avenue, Milwaukee, WI. Spring 2009 Schedule
Mar 15th, 2009 by Dave ReidLeast-cost Paths to Energy Independence at a University Campus
Speaker: Lee DeBaillie – Energy Center of Wisconsin SARUP is the acronym for School of Architecture & Urban Planning lecture Series are Free and Open to the Public. All presentations will take place at the UWM School of Architecture and Urban Planning (SARUP) from 12:00 – 1:20 pm in Room 345. SARUP is located at 2131 E. Hartford Avenue, Milwaukee, WI. Spring 2009 Schedule
Mar 15th, 2009 by Dave ReidSmart Growth and Urban Design
Speaker: Maria Pandazi, AICP – City of Milwaukee, Department of City Development SARUP is the acronym for School of Architecture & Urban Planning lecture Series are Free and Open to the Public. All presentations will take place at the UWM School of Architecture and Urban Planning (SARUP) from 12:00 – 1:20 pm in Room 345. SARUP is located at 2131 E. Hartford Avenue, Milwaukee, WI. Spring 2009 Schedule
Mar 15th, 2009 by Dave ReidStreetcars Coming to Milwaukee
With the recent news of the federal approval allowing the City of Milwaukee to move forward on a modern streetcar system we thought it would be good to see what one of these systems might look like.
Mar 14th, 2009 by Dave ReidPride and Prejudice
Jane Austen is beloved in the pantheon of English writers for her gift for social observation and her sly wit. The Milwaukee Repertory Theater brings Pride and Prejudice (perhaps her best-known novel) to the stage in this adaptation by Joe Hanreddy and J. R. Sullivan. Mr. Sullivan directs a cast of some of the city’s best-known actors in this delightful story of love and social standing during the Regency period of English history. The neighborhood in which the Bennett family resides is thrown into chaos when a young gentleman of good fortune rents a nearby estate. Since it is universally acknowledged that a single man in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife, Mrs. Bennett immediately begins scheming to get him to marry one of her five daughters; he falls in love with Jane, the oldest. But the story centers around Elizabeth, the next daughter in the Bennett family, and the young gentleman’s equally wealthy and far more haughty friend, Mr. Darcy. These two strong personalities enter into a courtship that has stood the test of time and entered the annals of all-time most-romantic stories. Along the way, there are various plots, misunderstandings, and tragedies. Austen’s writing is full of wit and innuendo, and Hanreddy and Sullivan’s adaptation respects that. The actors are all equally capable of bringing to life the nuance of Austen’s language, and the subtle supplementation of a raised brow or a wave of a hand. Every single one of them understands and communicates the full richness of their characters’ emotions while maintaining the reserve that is an essential component of Austen’s writing. Lee Stark as Elizabeth Bennett and Grant Goodman as Fitzwilliam Darcy are excellent. They fight, they tease, they fall in love, and they are absolutely believable throughout. Jonathan Gillard Daly and Laura Gordon are both a bundle of neuroses as Mr. and Mrs. Bennett; Gordon in particular is charming, funny, and just a little cringe-worthy during Mrs. Bennett’s fits of shrill histrionics. Brian Vaughn as the Bennett’s cousin, Mr. Collins, is a ridiculous blend of obsequiousness and pride that takes over every scene he appears in, just as one imagines Mr. Collins would take over any room he entered. Gerard Nugent and Sarah Rutan are quietly agreeable as Jane Bennett and Charles Bingley, and Emily Vitriano is loud, boisterous, and delightfully obnoxious as Lydia Bennett. Michael Ganio’s scenic design is minimalist, which seems at first an odd choice for a play about the upper-crust of English society. These people live on estates, in mansions. But, with little set decoration, a change of scene can be accomplished by simply moving a chair from here to there, adding or subtracting a vase of flowers, or raising and lowering a chandelier. This simplicity makes set changes easy, which keeps the production moving along at a good pace, without lagging. It also has the added benefit of making the dialog, most of which was taken directly from Jane Austen’s novel, the […]
Mar 14th, 2009 by Ryan FindleyA proposed playlist for derbying
The Roller Derby List (click here to read article), from warm-ups to cool down: Can I Kick It? by A Tribe Called Quest Let’s Go Crazy by Prince* Filthy Gorgeous by Scissor Sisters Give It To Me Baby by Rick James Funkytown by Lipps, Inc Kiss (covering Prince) by Art of Noise with Tom Jones Rock this Town by the Stray Cats* Goody Two Shoes by Adam Ant Whip It by Devo It’s Tricky by Run-DMC Satisfaction by Benny Benassi* Intergalactic by the Beastie Boys* Girlfight The Remix by Brooke Valentine Push It by Salt-N-Pepa Are You Gonna Be My Girl by Jet Panama by Van Halen Everybody Wants You by Billy Squier Hot Tamale Baby by Buckwheat Zydeco* Timebomb by Beck Try It Again by the Hives* That’s Not My Name by the Ting Tings I See You Baby by Fatboy Slim* Another One Bites The Dust by Queen* We Like to Party! By Vengaboys Firestarter by Prodigy Rock And Roll by Led Zeppelin Dimension by wolfmother* Get Your Hands Off My Woman by the Darkness Rock and Roll Queen by the Subways I Don’t Want To Die (in the hospital) by Conor Oberst Ugly by the Violent Femmes* Paper Planes by M.I.A. Roller Derby (a surf song) by the Challengers You Can’t Roller Skate in a Buffalo herd by Roger Miller *suggests artist with multiple songs in their oeuvre that can be used. Also-rans, songs in no particular order: Everyday I Love You Less and Less by the Kaiser Chiefs Now, Right Now by Reverend Horton Heat The Warrior’s Code by the Dropkick Murphys Block Rockin’ Beats by the Chemical Brothers* The Love Below (Hey Ya!) by Outkast Universal Mind Control by Common Blitzkreig Bop by the Ramones Pump It Up by Mistakens (covering Elvis Costello) Paint It Black by the Rolling Stones My Sharona by the Knack Rollerderby Queen by Red Aunts (I’m A) Road Runner by The Who Middle Management by Bishop Allen Bone Broke by the White Stripes I Would Never Wanna Be Young Again by Gogol Bordello Daft Punk is playing at my house by LCD Soundsystem Everyone Nose by N.E.R.D. Hot Lava by Perry Ferrell (covering Chef) Any way you want It by Journey You Really Got Me by the Kinks Roller Skating Jam Named ‘Saturdays’ by De La Soul I Left my Wallet in El Segundo by Tribe Called Quest And The Girls Go by Men Without Pants Time To Pretend by MGMT Magic Dance by David Bowie Roller Derby Queen by Jim Croce (Queen of the) Roller Derby by Leon Russell American Girl by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Shake Your Groove Thing by Peaches and Herb Come On Eileen by Dexy’s Midnight Runners Bitch Gonna Get Ya’ by RZA Say Aha by Santogold Mercy by Duffy We Will Fall Together by Streetlight Manifesto In the Ayer by Flo Rida I need a Hero by Bonnie Tyler Eye of the Tiger by Survivor Bust a Move by Young MC
Mar 13th, 2009 by Brian JacobsonFriday Photos Friday, 13. March 2009
We thought some signs of summer would be nice. Bradford Beach Bradford Beach Jazz in the Park Third Ward Riverwalk East Side Path
Mar 13th, 2009 by Dave ReidEpisode #1 – The New Media Show
The New Media Show – Welcome to the inaugural episode of the ThirdCoast Digest podcast: A weekly mixture of Milwaukee community and culture. On this weeks episode, ThirdCoast Editor-In-Chief Jon Anne Willow speaks about the switch to internet publishing, and shares all that ThirdCoast Digest has to offer. Also on the program, Ted Bobrow tells us his thoughts on the Brew City as a native New Yorker, and Milwaukee music kingpins Fan-Belt give us the 4-1-1 on the “Milwaukee Sound” Play Here Subscribe with iTunes Featured Music: Christine Hoberg – www.myspace.com/christinehoberg Big Fun 4Ever – www.myspace.com/bigfun4ever Juiceboxxx – www.myspace.com/officialjuiceboxxx —————————————————————————————————– Next Week: Tea Krulos speaks his mind on the downsides of intellectual property, Mark Metcalf sits down with former Milwaukee Shakespeare artistic director Paula Suozzi, and Nick Schurck brings us a very special interview.
Mar 13th, 2009 by ThirdCoast PodcastChicago Doesn’t Always Beat Milwaukee
Too often we, as Milwaukeeans, are too quick to assume all the good ideas in Milwaukee are trickling up from Chicago.
Mar 12th, 2009 by Jeramey JanneneHelp us rename the Bruisers column
Last month, VITAL Source and ThirdCoast Digest were threatened with a cease and desist order by another derby league in the region, alleging that the title of our popular derby column Talk Derby to Me, by Tea Krulos (with a fabulous vodcast of the same name by Noah Therrien), was protected under U.S. Trademark. It’s a dark day for Milwaukee derby lovers, but have no fear: we will continue to publish the bout recaps, skater interviews and season recaps you’ve come to love and post great footage, live from the track, after every game. Today, we ask you today to help us select the new title of TD2M: 2.0. If you don’t like any of these, we’re savvy; just shoot us an email and let us know if you’ve got a better idea. We’ll add it to the poll. Voting closes on April 10 and the new title will be unveiled at the April 18 Bruisers bout at the Franklin County Sports Complex. You can buy your tickets now at brewcitybruisers.com! Thanks for your help! [poll ID: “2”]
Mar 12th, 2009 by Amy Elliott













