Off Page Fest Is Nov. 3

Off Page Fest Is Nov. 3 — Not many festivals have paired new plays and films, so the audience visiting the Uptown Performing Arts Center in West Chester is in for a treat on Nov. 3.

“We have a festival that caters to both playwrights and filmmakers, and why not? It’s a great way to expose a new audience to a different art form,” said Festival Director Brigette ReDavid. 

In addition to plays and films, the show will also offer music, food, silent auctions, workshops and networking, as well as  featuring talented, up and coming screenwriters.

Call it a creative smorgasbord for everyone who loves the arts. “We are excited to welcome the works of talented local, national and international filmmakers screenwriters, and playwrights,” said Festival Programmer Julia Dupree of Philadelphia. “Many of the plays feature local directors and actors who add a uniquely Philly flavor to their work.” 

“Garage Invasion,” by New Zealand Playwright Rex McGregor, will be in the first block of the show.  “I’ve been a member of Off Page since 2020. The group offers a great opportunity to share new work. It’s where I met Oliver Assiran (of Drexel Hill), director of Garage Invasion. Oliver has read a variety of my characters, from a 9-year-old trick-or-treater and a Harry Potter addict to a cowardly frog”.

Rex’s short comedies have been produced on four continents.

Films and music videos will begin during and after the intermission. Area filmmakers include Tori Bond, Emily Dabney, Christopher Tait, Rajiv Mallick, Jordan Fox, Joe Ronca, Julie Reinstock, Brigette ReDavid and more. Prizes include: a $500 equipment rental from Expressway Cinema Rentals of Philadelphia, the prestigious iWoman TrailblazHER award to the film with the most women behind the scenes in key roles and distribution of the film on iWoman.   

The mission of the fiscally sponsored non-profit, Off Page, is designed as a platform for filmmakers and writers to showcase their work to help them sustain an industry career. One such writer is Eddie Ray Gray, a state correctional inmate who created the hand-drawn Off Page logo.  His book How Big Do You Want Your Cell,  which he hopes will deter people from going to prison, is available on Amazon. Another Off Page member, Yani Payne, garnered the $50,000 WB OneFifty Diversity Grant.”

“I’m looking forward to the Off Page Short Play and Film Festival because they do an excellent job in fostering community. Everyone is so open and welcoming,” Filmmaker Robert Boyd of Swarthmore said, who’s film Bounty will be in the show. 

Casting Director, Producer, Director Kimberly Skyrme and Director, Filmmaker Oliver Assiran will lead the Film Finance Workshop. Writer, Producer Lovinder Gill will lead the Writing a Killer Outline screenwriting workshop. 

Doors open at 1:30 p.m. Nov. 3 at Uptown Knauer Performing Arts Center, 226 N. High St., West Chester, Pa. 19380. Tickets are $24 for the festival and $15 for the workshops. Visit OffPageFilmFestival.com or https://uptownwestchester.org/

Off Page Fest Is Nov. 3

Machine Malfunction Reported At Chester Heights Voting Center

Machine Malfunction Reported At Chester Heights Voting Center — We got a report that police have been called Delaware County’s satellite voter services center in Chester Heights after a printer malfunction caused a delay angering those in the long line.

This service center is probably in the most Republican part of Delco.

Today is the last day for getting a mail-in ballot in Pennsylvania.

Lines, yesterday, were two hours long at the courthouse in Media. One rather ambitious Republican woman managed to get her self arrested, there.

Machine Malfunction Reported At Chester Heights Voting Center

Machine Malfunction Reported At Chester Heights Voting Center

Skip the third William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 10-29-24

Skip the third Cryptowit 10-29-24 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

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Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: Drink the first. Sip the second slowly. Skip the third.
Knute Rockne

Skip the third Cryptowit 10-29-13 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

Lord Jesus Christ William Lawrence Sr Cryptowit 10-28-24

Lord Jesus Christ Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-28-24 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

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Dgnmx Khvdgx

Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: . . .as you sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs among yourselves, singing and making melody to the Lord in your hearts, giving thanks to God the Father at all times and for everything in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Ephesians

Physicians Who Work For Free, Cosmas and Damian

Physicians Who Work For Free, Cosmas and Damian — On Nov. 1, we celebrate the feast of two remarkable brothers who lived during the early years of the Christian Church.

Cosmas and Damian were born of wealthy parents in Asia Minor who gave their sons the best education in the Roman Empire. They were interested in medicine and became physicians at an early age. The two brothers also became Christians. Their unique combination of medicine and prayer attracted the attention fo many.

Through their commitment to Christ, they endeavored to become healers not only of the body but the soul. Their fame spread and they soon developed a reputation as being miracle-workers who could heal with an herb or prayer.

About the same time, the brothers made a most unique pledge which was not to take money for their services.

They healed thousands of from diseases of body and soul and never accepted a thing.

Their reputation spread even more rapidly as they became known as “unmercercenaries” or someone who does not expect payment for services.

We can all become unmercenaries in the same spirit as saints Cosmas and Damian. Each of us can give something of ourselves without expecting a favor in return. Perhaps we can give our time to someone. Perhaps we can give advice without being offended if it’s not followed. Or, perhaps, we can give the gift of forgiveness without receiving, or expecting, an apology.

Physicians Who Work For Free, Cosmas and Damian

Courtesy of Holy Myrrh Bearers Church in Swarthmore, Pa.

Catch a fly Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-27-24 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

Catch a fly Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-27-24 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

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Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: It’s easier for a spider to catch a fly than it is for a fly to catch a horse
Banacek

Catch a fly Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-27-19 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

Autumn In Springfield

Autumn In Springfield — Here are some autumn pictures of Springfield, Delco, Pa.

Top is the First Presbyterian Church from Cascade Road.

Beneath it is the driveway in Veterans Memorial Park.

Autumn In Springfield

Autumn In Springfield

Another Facebook Lockout LOL

Another Facebook Lockout LOL — We are locked out of Facebook. It happened yesterday, Oct. 25, when we tried to post this story about Kathy Buckley’s Pennsylvania State House Race in the 168th District.

One finds special humor in the bizarre excuses they give for their censorship.

We’d be grateful for anyone willing to post Kathy’s story on Zuckerburg’s still too influential site.

Use Facebook, but don’t trust it.

Please make sure you have accounts on X, and at least Telegram, Truth Social, Patriot.Online or Gab, and get in the habit of using them.

Another Facebook Lockout LOL

Consistently Wrong Pollsters Try Again in 2024

Consistently Wrong Pollsters Try Again in 2024

By Joe Guzzardi

In 1964, I cast my first presidential ballot for Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater. I preferred Goldwater’s more aggressive solution to end the Vietnam War, at the time heating up and poised to get even hotter. Goldwater promised “a choice, not an echo.” Voters will never know how successful Goldwater’s plan might have been. But the documented facts are that although Johnson positioned himself as more moderate than Goldwater, he became the quintessential warmonger. After Johnson’s landslide victory, LBJ escalated President John F. Kennedy’s commitment from fewer than 20,000 U.S. troops to more than a half million. Following the election, the war waged on for longer than a decade as more than 58,000 U.S. service members and millions of Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotians were killed.

Since the 1964 election, 15-four-year cycles, I’ve been a registered Republican, a registered Democrat, and a registered Independent. I have lived in New York, California, Washington, and Pennsylvania. At no time did I ever miss in-person voting which must, I assume, qualify me among pollsters as “a likely voter.” Yet during the last six decades, I have never received a telephone call from a pollster asking me for whom I planned to vote. Moreover, after I inquired, I learned that no family member, friend, neighbor, or work colleague has been polled. Who, then, is polled? Given my long-standing experience as a confirmed but never polled voter, I wonder what the non-stop fuss in print media and television is all about: “Harris is up two points in Wisconsin, but down two points in Michigan!” or “Trump is up four in North Carolina and gaining in Arizona.” Comparable stories not only have headlined but consumed most of the print ink or broadcast air with one talking head after another chattering predictable points that depend on their political leaning.

Since the 2016 and 2020 polls were dramatically off the mark, no one should put any credibility in the 2024 election predictions. In 2016, Donald J. Trump’s victory shocked many Americans, especially pollsters who showed his opponent, Hillary Clinton, leading the race up right up to Election Day. All data they were looking at seemed to predict her victory. Clinton’s campaign, confident she would win, had the champagne ready to pop. But Trump, who disdained data gathering, carried swing states Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania which Democrats thought were in the bag. After the ballots were counted, Trump had won 306 electoral votes, compared to Clinton’s 232, securing him the presidency. The pollsters offered weak excuses for their embarrassing failures including a farfetched claim that the results were skewed by whether a male or female picked up the phone.

The 2016 misfire was supposed to serve as a wake-up call for pollsters, but it did not. The 2020 election would be, according to the polling, an easy Joe Biden victory. But Biden won by only three points versus his projected margin of eight—another humbling for the touted polling industry. Pollsters have spent the years since 2020 experimenting with ways to induce hard-to-reach voters to participate in surveys and testing statistical techniques to improve accuracy. But expert opinion is mixed on whether polling outcomes are due for a repeat of 2020, which a professional association of pollsters called the most inaccurate in 40 years. New developments, such as the shift of black and Latino voters away from Democrats and toward Republicans and the increase of online surveys that use unproven sampling methods create additional potential for error. Referring to 2024’s polling reliability, Stanford University political scientist Jon Krosnick said, “We are headed for more disaster.”

Pollsters do a better job of identifying the core issues that worry voters. The numbers one and two are the economy and immigration. But neither the polling organizations nor the candidates have comprehensively linked the two. Immigration directly impacts federal, state, and local economies. In March 2023, three years into the ongoing four-year invasion, the Federation for American Immigration Reform published its study, “The Total Fiscal Cost of Illegal Immigration.” FAIR estimated that, at the time of its report, 15.5 million illegal immigrants resided in the U.S. Beginning in 2023, the net cost of illegal immigration to the U.S. including K-12 education, emergency medical care, and other affirmative benefits is at least $150 billion. Subtracting the tax revenue that illegal aliens pay, just under $32 billion, from the gross negative cost of illegal immigration, $182 billion, FAIR arrived at its $150 billion total. Eighteen months have passed since FAIR’s report, and millions more illegal aliens have entered with taxpayers funding every step they take once inside the U.S.

The Biden/Harris administration has given the green light to millions of unvetted illegal aliens who have unlawfully crossed or, unprecedented, been flown into the interior via the unconstitutional CHNV program that admits 30,000 foreign nationals monthly. Voters who consider the economy their main concern should realize that unchecked immigration contributes to high living costs including the tax hikes necessary to pay billions for illegal aliens’ resettlement.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst. Contact him at jguzzardi@ifspp.org

Consistently Wrong Pollsters Try Again in 2024

Consistently Wrong Pollsters Try Again in 2024

Consistently Wrong Pollsters Try Again in 2024

Problem of social organization Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-26-24

Problem of social organization Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-26-24 by William W. Lawrence Sr.

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Answer to yesterday’s puzzle: The problem of social organization is how to set up an arrangement under which greed will do the least harm, capitalism is that kind of a system.
Milton Friedman

Problem of social organization Cryptowit Quote Puzzle 10-26-13