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Northeast Journal - St. Petersburg, Florida Journal | Newspaper
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    • All
    • Cover Story
    • Animals Rule
    • Goodness InDeed
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    • History
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    • Miscellaneous
    • Monuments and Landmarks
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Goodness InDeed

Helping Abuse Survivors Through Yoga and More

November 28, 2023 by Stacie Steinke No Comments

The last six years have been a game of lost and found. Feeling a little lost in Northern Virginia, we had the chance to move to Old Northeast in 2017 and found this beautiful community along the water to start a new life. Even in this idyllic location, it can take a while to put down roots, however. I felt a little lost, until I found the yoga community here in St. Pete. 

Fast forward with two years of practice at YogaBlu and Body Electric Yoga Company, followed by yoga teacher training, and I was looking for a nonprofit for whom I could offer yoga on a donation basis.… Read More

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Reading time: 3 min
Spotlight on the Arts

Amanda Cooper Looks Back on 25 Years at the Morean Arts Center

by Brandy Stark No Comments

There are two names that are intricately linked in St. Petersburg: Amanda Cooper and the Morean Arts Center. A familiar face about town, Cooper has worked tirelessly with the local arts community and is the chief curator for the center, with the daunting task of programming the gallery spaces at the Morean and Chihuly Collection. As part of the Morean’s exhibition team, she helps organize over 50 exhibitions each year across three different locations.

Cooper is also preparing to celebrate her 25th anniversary at the Morean this February. 

The first incarnation of her job was as the gallery director for the then-named Arts Center.  She… Read More

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Reading time: 4 min
What's That?

Yard Oddities: Don’t Fear the (Virginia) Creeper

by Jon Kile No Comments

It seems like all the fun plants that grow wild in summer are invasive. Good news on the Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) – despite its name, it’s actually a Florida native. It’s not here to destroy us! This vine can be found covering ground and climbing just about anything, from trees to fences to houses, and is common throughout the eastern United States, from Canada to Mexico. Birds enjoy eating its berries, but humans shouldn’t indulge. 

Often confused with poison ivy due to its look, the plant’s leaves are relatively harmless to humans. And, unlike invasive vines like kudzu and wisteria, which Floridians are programmed to quickly remove, Virginia creeper has a few redeeming qualities.… Read More

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Reading time: 1 min
Uncategorized

Local Pianist-Author Brings Divas to Life

by Jeannie Carlson No Comments

Traditionally, operatic stories are filled with melodrama, romance, and adventure. Chaim Freiberg’s latest book, Lily Flowers Finds Love (and Other Tales of Passion), published by St. Petersburg Press last year, has all those qualities, but with a twist: these opera fantasy stories all take place in now-shuttered opera houses.

“The stories are all inspired by real people, real places, and real opera houses that are no more,” said Freiberg, who has given several talks on his book at Studio@620 as well as Barnes and Noble. At these events he invokes some of the mysterious people, places, and opera houses that stirred him to divine these legends.… Read More

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Reading time: 5 min
Why We Love the 'Burg

Know Your Pelicans: The Locals and the Snowbirds

by Samantha Bond Richman No Comments

While the term “snowbird” now often refers to our part-time human neighbors, it originally applied to real birds who winter in warmer climes. The general parameters of the snowbird season, both human and avian, are roughly from October through March, and there’s one that’s hard to miss: the American white pelican.

Perhaps you thought our local, brown pelicans turned white in the winter? In fact, the brown pelican, our beloved city mascot, is a smaller, year-round cousin of the white pelican. 

The American white pelican winters in Florida, among other warmer climes. Photo courtesy of FWC

Known for their dramatic hunting methods, brown pelicans are uniquely outfitted for catching their favorite meal, fish.… Read More

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Reading time: 2 min
History

Remembering Jessie Woods, St. Pete’s Daredevil in the Sky

by The Northeast Jounal No Comments

If you had seen this silver-haired senior lady walking around the Northeast Shopping Center in the early 1990s, you would have never guessed she was a famous wing-walker, aerobat, and pilot.

It all started in 1928. Jessie Schultz was bored that summer at her parents’ farm in rural Ulysses, Kansas – that is until she met and eloped with charming barnstormer pilot Jimmie Woods. With just enough clothes stuffed into her violin case, she flew off into the clouds with him and never looked back.

They flew back to Wichita where Jimmy had a job at the Swallow Factory selling airplanes and ferrying them to buyers, but they also made extra income from barnstorming – entertaining crowds with novelty flights.… Read More

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Reading time: 6 min
Monuments and Landmarks

Palladium Looks to Raise $10 Million for Renovations 

by Abby Baker No Comments

The Palladium Theater may soon go through a multi-million-dollar interior transformation. The Northeast neighborhood icon already received $850,000 from the Florida senate this summer, and much of those funds will go into the design and consulting teams who will redesign the Palladium interior. 

Executive director Paul Wilborn says the organization is applying for another $850,000 grant from the senate to aid with construction costs. In addition, the Palladium is launching a fundraising campaign with a $10 million final goal and an end date of 2025. 

“It’s a lot of money, but we’re confident we can [raise it],” Wilborn said. “The majority of the money will come from private donors.” … Read More

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Reading time: 2 min

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