Tag / city

LB Wilson students serving teachers and administators this Friday.
This Friday: The WLLB Club at Wilson will be serving all 300 teachers and administrators delicious Lebanese food from Sunnin Lebanese Cafe on Second Street.
Our desire is to show our appreciation to the Wilson faculty for all their hard work this year.
This is our third event at Wilson High School. We had a Thanksgiving and Valentines luncheon for over 100 Special Ed. students earlier in the year at the Wilson Media Center . It was an opportunity for students to serve one another.
Each student at Wilson needs 40 hours of service in order to graduate. Our goal as WLLB is to partner with our students so that they can learn why it is important to serve one another, their teachers, and their city. WLLB believes in raising up the future LB citizens with the hope that our city will known for how we love and serve one another.

- Sunday’s Bands: Deep Sea Diver (http://www.myspace.com/deepseadiver). This is Jessica’s first show back from touring in Japan w/ Beck and is excited to be playing back at home. And of course DJ Abel, and Jay Buchanan’s last show in LB. FREE at the Door.

Sunday's Bands:So Many Wizards, Chris Paul Overall & Jay Buchanan. $2 Door, $2 Drinks & Free 2 hour parking w/ validation.
So deliberate is the manner of Scott Jones and so demonstrative are his actions that at one point during our conversation—most of which concerns We Love Long Beach (welovelb.com), a secular/nonprofit community advocacy group the 26-year-old Long Beach native formed with his sister, Robin, 30—I jot down “love lobbying” in the corner of my notebook. Which is to say Scott Jones takes love—and all its meanings, forms and implications—very seriously. And he’d like you to, too.
In the time since 50 people showed up to the first neighborhood breakfast on March 31, 2008, We Love Long Beach has become something of a grassroots get-to-know-one-another phenomenon: 500 people attended a bands-and-BBQ bash last summer, featuring such local greats as Deep Sea Diver and the Fling; monthly dinners (at restaurants like Caffe La Strada, On the Mark, Number Nine Noodles and, on Jan. 29, Smooth’s Sports Grille) are regularly attended by upwards of 40 residents; another community breakfast will be held the morning of Feb. 28 at Livingston Park; and there is a BBQ scheduled for May 23 at Marine Stadium Park.
And that’s to say nothing of the offshoot club Scott formed for students at the Jones’s alma mater, Wilson High, where members earn service hours by hosting luncheons for special needs students and, in April, their teachers.
“I’d like to know more people in the city than anyone else,” he says. “It’s one thing to say we’re a diverse city, but it’s another to say we are a city that gets along.”
To that end, the essence of We Love Long Beach lies in its vision statement: “To know and serve the people, neighborhoods and the city of Long Beach.” And the first step toward achieving it, Scott explains, is saying hello to our neighbors—“knowing what they do, where they work.” Which leads to trust: “Every relationship is based on trust—husbands and wives, friends,” he continues. From there, Scott jumps to community, or “working off different gifts and passions,” with the ultimate goal being addressing needs, the kind that are far greater than borrowing a box of sugar. “You go off deeper needs and you become friends,” he concludes.
One could look at Scott and Robin’s efforts and see only idiosyncratic wishes rooted in youthful idealism—or, conversely, note in their accomplishments (delivering four dozen new diners to a restaurant, for example) the potential dangers that come with such influence—namely, power.
But to this Scott offers a sentence, written by Arts of the Wise Leader author Mark Strom: “True humanity is to take people places they haven’t been, so that they might go places I can’t go.”
“The goal for this year is to fine tune and get good at what we can do,” Scott says. “We’d like to be able to do what we do well in every neighborhood.”
LB native taps into need for neighborliness
By John Canalis, The Canalis Report
Posted: 01/04/2009 09:19:26 PM PST
“I want to give people an excuse … to get to know each other,” said Scott Jones of his Long Beach get-togethers. With sister Robin, left, and firefighters helping, 500 came to a summer barbecue. (Diandra Jay / Staff Photographer)
Lifelong Long Beach resident Scott Jones had plenty of friends.
But he didn’t know many of his neighbors.
So in March he asked those who live near him in Belmont Shore to breakfast. About 50 people came for coffee and pancakes cooked on camping gear in Livingston Park.
“I ended up having all of these amazing conversations,” he said. “I met more neighbors at one breakfast than I have my entire life. I thought, `Maybe I am onto something.’ It was the first time I actually hugged a neighbor.”
The breakfasts became monthly. Then came barbecues, restaurant dinner parties, fundraisers and a book club.
Careful to use a plural pronoun to reflect a collectivist sensibility, Jones, 26, called the group of strangers-turned-friends “We Love Long Beach.”
Check out the complete article here:
http://tinyurl.com/dgvg8m





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