Fleeing The Fringe

“Leah Cooper, who helped the Minnesota Fringe Festival become one of the largest such events in the country, will step down as executive director next August, following the 2005 festival. Cooper announced her departure after a four-year tenure in which the attendance has grown 72 percent. The 2004 festival hosted a record 902 performances of 175 shows at 24 venues, drawing more than 50,000 people. Cooper also was instrumental in professionalizing the management of the festival and in bringing stability to the fast-growing festival’s financial organization.”

Banning Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code has been banned in Lebanon because church officials call it ofensive to Christians. “Catholic leaders called for the book to be withdrawn because of its depiction of Christ marrying Mary Magdalene and fathering a child. Shop owners said security officials had told them to pull French, English and Arabic copies off their shelves.”

Philadelphia Orchestra, Musicians Far Apart On Contract

The Philadelphia orchestra and its musicians appear to be very far apart in their negotiations for a new contract. Under the orchestra’s latest proposal, “Philadelphia players would not achieve their goal of keeping pace with colleagues in the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Philadelphia players are making a minimum of $105,040 in the contract about to end, while the Boston musicians’ minimum salary will reach $108,160 in the season about to start, and $112,840 in 2005-06.”

Art Of Stamps In A Digital World

So famous your face is on a US postal stamp? Fame just got a whole lot cheaper. A new service lets you take a snapshot with a digital camera and send it by computer to a website. “Within five to seven business days, usually sooner, the stamps arrive… in the mail. But you can’t take an action shot of your favorite Eagle, or an unflattering photo of your pesky next-door neighbor. No celebs, no politicians, no nudity.”

Who Owns The Philadelphia Vermeer?

Who owns the rare Vermeer that’s been hanging at the Philadelphia Museum of Art for the past month? “The painting was lent to the museum anonymously after changing hands at a London auction early in July. A Young Woman Seated at the Virginals (an early harpsichord) was the first Vermeer to be offered at auction since 1921.” And the speculation on who owns it is…