December 23, 2008

What You Can Do To Help Evicted Park Slope Couple

I received an email this morning from Jenifer Epelbaum, who has been advocating on behalf of a Park Slope couple recently evicted from their apartment.

Dear Neighbors,

I am writing because you are one of the kind
neighbors who has written to me in the past when I posted concerns
about an old couple on my block who were being evicted.

I have tried very hard to help these neighbors, with much help provided by quite a few of you (thank you).

Today
I sent a detailed letter to an organization which earlier this year was
appointed "guardian for property" for my former neighbor Frances. The
organization is a wonderful one, but I have seen the casework on this
one case, and I am quite certain JASA would not be happy with what I
have seen. I prefer not to share all the sordid details in an email, in
part out of respect for all the other, truly wonderful work done for
others by this same agency.

I made numerous efforts to bring
better treatment for my neighbor Frances Mulligan (who is slightly
mentally impaired). I wrote quite a few emails directly to the
caseworkers on her case, and I even sent a letter to the judge. Those
efforts seem not to have helped at all. The situation is very, very bad
for Frances and I have now shifted my attention to higher officers at
JASA (the organization providing the guardianship for property). In my
letter today (sent to the President, the CEO and the Director of
Services) I told in detail some of the most appalling treatment I have
witnessed towards Frances and her partner.

At
this time, I believe it would be extremely helpful if JASA heard from a
few more concerned neighbors of Frances. You do not (and should not)
accuse them of anything. I witnessed events I could write about (and
did), and I think that is enough of that.

What would be
wonderful would be just a quick email expressing concern for Frances
Mulligan. Tell them you are her neighbor in Brooklyn and you care about
what happens to her, or any other polite comment you care to make on
the subject. I think if even a quarter of those who wrote to me
privately at different times, now sent an email (even a one line
email), it could make a BIG difference for Frances. If you do send an
email, please put FRANCES MULLIGAN in your subject line.

The person you should email is the CEO, Aileen Gitelson, AGitelson(at)jasa(dot)org

Feel free to call me if you would like an update on what is going on with Frances and her partner Frank Monaco.

Thank you very much for your concern for these Park Slope neighbors.
Jennifer Epelbaum
jen_epel(at)yahoo(dot)com

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 23, 2008

Leon Freilich, Verse Responder: NY Times Falls For Phony Anti-Caroline Letter

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/opinion/l23editorsnote.html

   

MERRY DIRTY TRICKS

So the mayor of Paris didn’t
Reject Caroline’s candidacy
And the Times was fooled by a prankster
Who’s scornful of Clan Kennedy.

But at the season of forgiveness
When we look for the best in folks
It might just be fitting to laugh this
Off with Ho-ho-hoax!

Filed under: VERSE RESPONDER: LEON FREILICH  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 23, 2008

Pictures of the Other Breukelen

Dsc05426
Dsc05427_2
Dsc05433_2Dsc05438_2
Here are some photographs of the city of Breukelen, Netherlands photographed by Roy Fidler, `who kindly sent them my way. He grew up in Brooklyn and now lives in Northern California.

He wrote: "In the original Dutch…City hall…The Breukelen Bridge…Brooklyn boy by the Breukelen Bridge…"

According to Wikipedia: Breukelen is a municipality and town in the Netherlands, in the province of Utrecht. It is situated to the north west of Utrecht, along the river Vecht and close to the Loosdrechtse Plassen, an area of lakes and great natural beauty. It is in an area called the "Vechtstreek". During the 17th century a number of Amsterdam merchant families built opulent mansions along the river near Breukelen.

There is a large Van der Valk (Hotel Breukelen) hotel, the façade of which is in the Chinese style. Universiteit Nyenrode is located in Breukelen.

The borough of Brooklyn in New York City is named after Breukelen (see History of Brooklyn).

December 23, 2008

Jazzy New Year’s Eve at Bussaco

I got this email from Park Slope jazz musician Joshua Shneider about what he’s doing on New Year’s Eve:

Come spend New Year’s Eve with me and my Quartet featuring Monte Croft, keyboards and vocals; Gregory Ryan, bass and Eric Halvorson on drums, at Bussaco in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
 

Bussaco is a fabulous new restaurant with incredible food and
drink which was just opened by my old friend Scott Carney and his wife
Melanie Kozol. It is a beautiful, spacious room with a full bar and a
warm comfortable vibe. Scott is a sommelier who has been in the
business for many years and has now created a first class restaurant in
the Slope. Check them out at www.bussacobklyn.com.

 

As for my fine band, we will be playing some of the greatest hits from
the last 100 years, as well as whatever we feel when the spirit visits
us.

 

Please join us for the night or, if you’re already booked, just stop by and have a drink first. We’d love to see you.

 

New Year’s Eve at:

 

Bussaco


833 Union St


Brooklyn, NY 11215


Reservations Recommended 718.857.8828


www.bussacobklyn.com

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · 1 Comment
Tags:
December 22, 2008

Freezing Temperatures Today: How to Help Homeless

Today’s press release from Councilmember Bill de Blasio tells how New Yorkers can help street homeless during this winter’s
coldest days. Temperatures are in the
teens and twenties – with wind chills that will make the temperature feel to be
in the single digits at times. According to the Department for Homeless Services (DHS), street homeless
individuals are at a higher risk for death due to the cold during the harsh
winter months.

"While street homelessness is a
problem many New Yorkers face all year long, it becomes especially dangerous
during the coldest winter months. The combination of well below-freezing temperatures, icy winds, and wet,
wintry weather spells disaster for those homeless individuals not utilizing the
traditional shelter system. If you
see or know of a street homeless person who is in need of shelter, there are a
few steps you can take to help. First, call 311; their operators will contact DHS and send an outreach
team to bring help to the client in need. DHS’s outreach teams will get the client any needed medical care, and
then take them to a shelter, drop-in center, safe haven, or a warming center or
bus. If it appears that the person is in need of medical assistance of any
kind, you should immediately call 911. Finally, if you’re still uncertain of what to do, please call my
district office for assistance, at 718-854-9791," said Councilmember Bill de
Blasio, Chair of the General Welfare Committee.

 

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 21, 2008

No Words Daily Pix: Photograph by Hugh Crawford

2cbw2676

Filed under: No Words_Daily Pix by Hugh Crawford  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 21, 2008

Smartmom Nails It: She’s Jealous

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper.

Last week, Smartmom called Best and Oldest to see if she wanted to
meet at Dashing Diva for a pedicure. Decadent and fun, the best and
oldest friends like to do this sort of thing from time to time for the
chance gossip and gab. Plus, they get their toenails cleaned and
polished — a win-win for all involved.

Best and Oldest liked the idea, especially because her daughter Bee
was set to hear whether she got into Brown University (early decision)
that very afternoon. At exactly 5 pm, Brown was going to send out the
acceptance letters by e-mail.

Best and Oldest wanted to be home when Bee checked the computer. But as Tom Petty wrote, “The waiting is the hardest part.”

Best and Oldest was such a jittery wreck that she figured it would be diverting to have her toes done.

So there were B&O and Smartmom, sitting on the high banquettes
at Dashing Diva with their toes in steaming hot water and trying to
talk about anything but Brown. Every time B&O’s cellphone rang (she
still had the “Obama, Obama” ring tone on it), Smartmom jumped.

“No, it’s too early,” B&O explained. Bee and her best friends,
three other high achieving girls, who had also applied to hard-to-get
into colleges on early decision, were going from house to house
checking their mailboxes. Schools like Amherst, Wesleyan and Carlton
still send their letters the old fashioned way: by snail mail.

Finally, B&O did hear from Bee. None of the other girls had
gotten their letters, so they were back at her house waiting for the
verdict. Bee thanked her mom for the homemade brownies that were out on
the kitchen table. (Nice touch, thought Smartmom. Brownies for Brown.)

B&O did a good job of pretending to pay attention to whatever
Smartmom was talking about (she is her best and oldest friend, after
all), but Smartmom could tell that she was extremely distracted.

Who wouldn’t be?

Brown is considered one of the best universities in the world. The
odds of getting in are like, well, astronomical — roughly equivalent to
the odds that Dumb Editor, himself a Brown graduate, will actually put
his Russian Literature and Language degree towards any
useful purpose someday. (Dumb Editor’s note: Since when is Brown one of
the best universities in the world?)

Brown is where Bee wanted to spend the next four years of her life.
Her heart is set on it. And Bee deserves to go to Brown as much as any
other smart, highly motivated, hard-working high school senior. But
it’s a longshot.

The pressure was on, and B&O was stressing — but she did seem to
enjoy her pedicure even if her in-grown toenails hurt when the
pedicurist cut her cuticles. For her part, Smartmom loved having her
feet rubbed and the smell of the orange aromatherapy cream.

The situation brought up a host of issues for Smartmom. Secretly,
she considered choosing bright green nail polish to symbolize the
jealousy she was feeling toward B&O.

Smartmom’s son Teen Spirit has had, shall we say, a completely
different relationship to academia than Bee. While there’s no denying
that he’s a very smart guy, he’s never been quite as gaga about classes
and studying. Music is his thing — it’s his passion and he’s applying
to music schools now and planning to take a gap year before going to
college.

Smartmom tried to imagine what it would be like to have a son or
daughter waiting to hear from Brown. That would be a real mitzvah.
Isn’t it every parent’s dream to have a high-achieving child who
qualifies for the best colleges in the country?

Getting your kid into a top school is certainly one iteration of the
American dream — and it means, on some level, that the parent has done
his or her job, prepared your child for the dog-eat dog world out there
and given him or her a great start in life.

Smartmom nearly choked on the metallic odor of the nail polish. She
decided on a deep red to signify her mix of free-floating anxiety and
excitement.

Sadly, Smartmom felt like her usual B-list self. She has multiple
family members who went to Brown. In fact, her uncle was a football
hero at Brown in the 1930s, and most of her first cousins and their
kids went to the uber-university.

Talk about having a Brown complex. Smartmom was more of a state
university kind of gal. She went to SUNY-Binghamton, which one of her
friend’s calls the Schmatta League. These days, Smartmom satisfies
herself with the fact that the school is really hard to get into
nowadays (but it ain’t Ivy, the other part of her brain reminds her).

The Ivies. Now that’s cool. But it just wasn’t meant to be for Smartmom’s boho, intellectual, Tom Dylan Bob Waits wannabe son.

Talk about pushing Smartmom’s buttons. Or toenails. Yeah, sure, she
wanted Bee to get into Brown. But she wasn’t without some residual
jealousy that her kid just wasn’t going down that privileged road.

OK, OK. Smartmom wouldn’t be Smartmom if she didn’t have mixed
feelings about the whole thing. What would there be to write about?

At 4:45, B&O ran off. “I’ll call you as soon as I know,” she said as she scurried down Seventh Avenue on the rainy night.

Smartmom felt her heart race. Even if she did feel slightly envious
of B&O, she hoped with all her heart that Bee did indeed get in.

And guess what dear reader? She did.

Shoulda gone with the green nail polish!

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 21, 2008

Tom Martinez, Witness: Book Lover

Img_1776

A devoted patron of a well-covered book stand shops during one of the  first major snows of the winter (Adam’s St., Brooklyn, NY).

photo by Tom Martinez

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 21, 2008

Photography by R0dolph Vernaz-Colas: We Are Our Thoughts

3122065344_98c8ac6d86
Photograph by Rodolph Vernaz-Colas

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 20, 2008

No Words Daily Pix: Photograph by Hugh Crawford

2cbw2667

Filed under: No Words_Daily Pix by Hugh Crawford  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

No Words Daily Pix: Photograph by Hugh Crawford

2cbw2568

Filed under: No Words_Daily Pix by Hugh Crawford  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

Council Passes Snow Day Alternate Side Parking Rules Suspension

Here’s the press release with the Bill de Blasio spin:

Today, the City Council passed a bill which will suspend alternate
side parking rules during snowstorms, when the Department of Sanitation
(DOS) has to suspend its street sweeping activities. Councilmember Bill
de Blasio released the following statement on the bill’s passage:

 

"We all know how hard it is to find a parking spot in the City, and in inclement weather it can be nearly impossible.  Once there is a lot of snow on the ground, we can’t expect residents to be able to move their snowed-in cars to a new spot. Fining them for not doing so when alternate side parking rules are in effect is completely unfair. Suspending
alternate-side parking rules when there is enough snow to require
plowing of City streets is a common sense measure that will benefit
thousands of New Yorkers this winter, and I am proud to have supported
it today," said Councilmember Bill de Blasio.

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

The Oh-So-Prolific-One: Leon Freilich/Verse Responder

       CHICAGO-UNBOUND

The embattled governor of Illinois

Is nothing worse than a naughty boy

Whose habit is outraging grown-ups

With statements he declines to own-ups.

When Blagojevich talks of contributions,

The thin-skinned rage of prosecutions

As if this noble public servant

Weren’t merely being fervent

In placing sky-high values
on

The trust that seats of power spawn.

To prove his honesty to the skeptic

And demonstrate he’s antiseptic

Blagojevich intends to appoint

A man for the U.S.senate joint

Against whom no one certainly

Will cast the charge of bribery:

Himself.  No money will change hands–

Gold Rod’ll be serenaded by bands,

Becoming what tabs’ll be calling "Blago,"

The little-boy senator from Chicago.

Filed under: VERSE RESPONDER: LEON FREILICH  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

Deep Throat Dies

Announced today in the NY Times:

W. Mark Felt, who was the No. 2 official at the F.B.I. when he helped bring down President Richard M. Nixon by resisting the Watergate cover-up and becoming Deep Throat, the most
famous anonymous source in American history, died Thursday. He was 95
and lived in Santa Rosa, Calif.

W. Mark Felt, left, with reporters in Washington in 1980. Mr. Felt and
Edward S. Miller, right, were fined $8,500 for approving illegal
break-ins.

His death was confirmed by Rob Jones, his grandson.

In 2005, Mr. Felt revealed that he was the one who had secretly supplied Bob Woodwares of The Washington Post with crucial leads in the Watergate affair in
the early 1970s. His decision to unmask himself, in an article in
Vanity Fair, ended a guessing game that had gone on for more than 30
years.

 

   

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

Evan Thies and David Yassky: Less Street Cleaning Would Save NYers Parking Time, Money & Stress

Today Evan Thies, who is running for David Yassky’s City Council seat, has an op-ed in the Daily News written with David Yassky, who is running for NYC Comptroller, about opposite side of the street parking. Thies is currently the Sanitation and Environment Chair of Community Board 1 in Brooklyn.

They make an interesting point. The streets may not to need to be cleaned as often as they are.

According to Thies and Yassky, the Department of Sanitation could save New
Yorkers time, money and stress by cleaning New York’s dirty
streets—not its clean ones.

Reduce the number of times a week we’d have to move the car? Is that possible? It certainly would be an amazing quality of life improvement. Here’s the editorial from the Daily News. See what you think:

The ritual is as much a part of being a New Yorker as loud noises and high prices.  Once, twice, or four times a week, most of us with cars do the opposite side of the street parking dance; moving our car from one side of the street to the other to avoid the street cleaner and a big ticket.  It’s annoying.  But it’s necessary to keep the streets clean, right?

Not necessarily.

Last year, Community Board 6 became the first area of the City to beat back parking regulations that they believed to be overly onerous.  They argued effectively that if the streets in their neighborhood were well above the cleanliness standard on a two-day-a-week cleaning schedule per side, then a once-a-week schedule should be enough to get the job done.  The City agreed, and new parking signs went up all over Park Slope, Carroll Gardens, Cobble Hill and Red Hook.

After that victory we took a look at North Brooklyn and found that the neighborhoods of Community Board 1 also met the City’s standard for CB6 of three straight years of 90% “acceptable clean streets”.  Surely, we thought, the same rules would apply, and opposite side parking would be reduced.  But now it turns out there is a different, harder-to-reach standard.  The Department of Sanitation has divided community board districts into smaller individual sections, and is requiring that every single one stay above 90% for the parking to be changed community board-wide.

Last year, the City’s annual clean streets average was an immaculate 94.3%—the highest mark ever achieved, and a number which continues to be pushed higher.  Clean streets are important, and all New Yorkers appreciate the tireless work of our Sanitation Department.  But there still must be a mechanism in place for neighborhoods to limit the frequency of opposite side parking so that New Yorkers aren’t burdened needlessly, and money isn’t spent pointlessly.

We propose that, once a year, when the City reports the cleanliness ratings for each sanitation section, those sections which have reached a rating of 90% clean or above for three consecutive years should be brought up for review.  Local community boards and City Council members could then make recommendations, and the Department of Sanitation could make changes based on their suggestions.  This would free up resources for problem areas with low ratings and reduce the overall resources the City now uses.

If this system were in place this year, 184 of the 234 sanitation sections across the City would be up for review, and thousands of car owners could be saved the wasted time and gas they spend moving from one side of the street to the other.  This would prevent needless pollution that triggers asthma attacks. It would also mitigate the traffic risks to pedestrians and bicyclists that double parking can create.

Perhaps most importantly, reducing the amount of street cleaning in low-need areas would save taxpayers money.  At a time when all New Yorkers are tightening their belts to ride out the recession, and the Sanitation Department is already cutting back on essential services such as trash pick-up, a more efficient street cleaning program could net millions of dollars a year in critical savings to plug the deficit or pay for cleaning in the neighborhoods that really need it.

Of course, reducing opposite side parking is not a cure-all.  A recent study by Transportation Alternatives showed that charging more for curbside parking helps businesses, and that residential parking permits can help reduce traffic. Reducing the amount of time when there is no parking for street cleaning from the typical 90 minutes to a more reasonable 30 minutes would also be a step forward.  We should consider taking these steps as well toward making New York a more livable city for New Yorkers.

The Department of Sanitation should implement our proposal to save New Yorkers time, money and stress.  Let’s clean New York’s dirty streets—not its clean ones.

.

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

What Issues Matter to You?

Brad Lander, who is running for Bill De Blasio’s City Council seat, wants to give OTBKB readers a heads-up on his first piece of campaign mail,
which they are mailing to likely voters in the district this week. 

In fact, you may receive one.

Yes, it’s true: it’s election season again. This time on the local political scene. Once again you’ll be getting loads of snail mail and email. Groan.

As
you’ll see, Lander’s snail mail includes a tear-off survey and asks people to share their
thoughts with Brad. But if you put that piece of mail in the junk mail recycling, you can
also answer the survey online, too.

The
goal, says Brad, is to hear what issues matter to people in the district (on
how to respond to the current economic/fiscal crisis, but also on
broader issues). Another goal is to dentify people who are interested in the
campaign.

In addition to the mailing, they’ve got an online presence as well:
– The survey is up at www.bradlander.com/survey
– It’s linked from Lander’s facebook politician page as well, http://www.facebook.com/pages/Brad-Lander/10356181156?ref=s
Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

Pols Urge Little Room to Relocate!

Local politicians urge Little Room (Brooklyn Heights Montessori) Board of Trustees to consider hiring a consultant to help them find a way to relocate program.

The feeling seems to be that this well-regarded program for children with language processing issues is just too good to disappear. Congresswoman Yvette Clarke, State Assemblywoman Joan L. Millman, State Senator-Elect Daniel Squadron and Council Members de Blasio and Yassky had this to say:

"While we are thankful that The Little Room has a home through the end
of 2010, we are concerned about the November 2009 deadline imposed by
the Board to shut the program down if a viable alternative location is
not found.  This is not a sufficient amount of time to identify,
secure, and raise the necessary funds to renovate a new location,
especially since a full-time director is still needed.  We are asking
the Board of Trustees to extend its self-imposed deadline to August of
2011 and to explore hiring a consultant to aid in rapid relocation of
the program.

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 19, 2008

Tom Martinez, Witness: Framed

Img_1730_22_3
Framed by thousands of empty frames, an employee of a frame shop on  Seventh Avenue lights up and juggles.

photo by Tom Martinez


December 18, 2008

No Words Daily Pix: Photograph by Hugh Crawford

2cbw2181

December 18, 2008

Why Shop Local?

This is this year’s final installment of Buy in Brooklyn’s "Why
Shop Local?" series. The campaign has had the misfortune of rainy weather over its
two year tenure, particularly this year. But many businesses are extending sales this Thursday as well.

In the end—regardless of the weather or season, the importance
of shopping local remains a critical component of community health. Whether you come at it locally or globally, keep
investing in what matters to you—the returns will always be real.

Tara Hodgens
is representing the
owners of Timboos 5th Ave 11th Street. She will be
participating in Buy in Brooklyn’s Snowflake Celebration during the
first three Thursdays in December by hosting live music and Happy hour
prices all night til closing.

Q: When did you
open for business and why did you choose Park Slope? 

A: Opened in
1969, I am fourth generation Park Slope (with a fifth generation after me!)  My great grandfather on my father’s side passed
away when my grandfather was 3 of the few epidemic.  He was a Hodgens, his
mother remarried Andy Murphy who raised him.  He owned the Midway bar
which was somewhere by Prospect Ave. My Nana’s parents, my great grandfather
and grandmother lived down 11th street by 4th Ave.  Family lore has it
that they owned a speakeasy before prohibition came to an end.  I was
born on top of Timboos and the rest is history.

Timboos Factoid: They have been a
local establishment for 40 years.  In fact, they have a few locals that
have been customers for all 40 years of Timboos’ long history.

Q: Which of the Sustainable Business
Network NYC’s "Top Ten Reasons" to shop locally resonate most
with you & your business?

A: Reason #2 Our
one-of-a-kind businesses are an integral part of Brooklyn’s distinct character
.
There have only been 3 owners since establishment including Timboos.  We
have been a family bar, where people feel comfortable when they walk through
our door like they are home.  When people visit Timboos, they feel s. So
many families have moved out of the neighborhood.  They usually stop
by Timboos when they come back to visit.

Shop Local Factoid: When residents are
asked to name their favorite restaurant, café or shop, it’s typically a unique local
business.

"Why Shop Local?" is a communication initiative of the Buy in
Brooklyn team. To learn more about Park Slope’s Buy in Brooklyn campaign, visit
their website at
http://www.buyinbrooklyn.com/
The site, with its ever-growing list of participants and partners is updated
regularly.

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

See the Bay Ridge Christmas Decorations

Actually it’s a day trip to Bay Ridge from Brooklyn Based. And it concludes with a 6 pm tour of Bay Ridge’s famously elaborate Christmas decorations and lights.

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

Ad Hoc Snowflake on Seventh Avenue

This is Catherine from the Community Bookstore.

Hi Everyone: Quick dash from the world of holiday retail, just to let you know that not to be downcast, disheartened or
defeated (to use words beginning only with a D), many retailers
(including us) are staying open late tonight, too, and still doing fun
stuff . . . it’s a little ad hoc, so harder to tell who is and isn’t
participating, but you can find out more by checking www.buyinbrooklyn. com . . . Come See us!!!!!

Lotsa,
Catherine
Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

Romemarie Hester, Learning Specialist: Power Hours in Park Slope

Rosemarie Hester is a Learning Specialist living and working in
Brooklyn. A learning specialist can often pinpoint where and why a
child is stalled and offer a tune-up that sends a child on his or her
way.

As a Learning Specialist focused mostly in Park  Slope, Rosemarie has her finger on the pulse about kids, families and reading/writing
instruction. 

She asked me if I would be interested in running a weekly column. Of course I am.

I thought this column could be a real service to OTBKB readers because Rosemarie is aware of the full
range of issues and themes in education and can mix up the columns,
so that they are not all just about the nuts and bolts of providing
support. There are many directions in which to take this idea. Here is Rosemarie’s first column.

The process of learning to read and write is scattered with ‘red light/green light moments’ — moments in which a child can either move forward or experience some sort of confusion, no matter how bright the child, literate the family or good the school. 

If you sense your child is ‘stopped at a red light,’ there are a few things you can do.

–Help him or her to look at the first two or three letters of a work in order, literally saying the names of the letters out loud.  Often, the child is then able to finish the word.

–Learn the seven different types of syllables with your child and help him or her to divide words by syllable, always stopping at unfamiliar words rather than rushing through them.  Here are the syllable types:

           Closed,   as in                           cat,    Ted,   sit,   cot,   cut

            Magic E,   as in                        rake,  eke,  fine,  rote,  cute

            Open,   as in                             no,  so,   ze-ro,  hel-lo

            Consonant LE,   as in               wig-gle,    pur-ple,    bun-dle

             Final Stable                              na-tion, station, na-ture, cul-ture

             Bossy R                                    or-der,  form, form-er,  corn, fern

             Vowel Pairs                              Au-gust, team, rain, field, group

–also very useful to have a pencil handy when reading for marking in a text.  (If that is not an option, have a xerox copy available, with enlarged text, if that is appropriate)  Child or parent can learn to loop under syllables which will train the eye through practice.  Most words are combinations of different syllable types. 

These three strategies will be useful for many kinds of learners if practiced in small sessions and repeated over time.  Think of these as your child’s ‘power hours,’ for education is certainly empowerment!  More next week about how to support your child’s learning.

 

Filed under: Rose marie hester  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

Great Gift for Parents of Teens and Tweens: 13 is the New 18

Smallcover198x300
A new book by Park Slope’s Beth J. Harpaz. 13 is the New 18 And other things my children taught me while I was having a nervous breakdown being their mother could be just the thing for those parents of tweens and teens on your gift list. Order it from the Community Bookstore.

Beth Harpaz figures there’ll be no Generation Gap when her kids become teenagers. After all, she grew up in the ’60s and ’70s. She’s seen everything! But when her son has a bar mitzvah and turns 13, suddenly her life goes from hosting pizza parties for 12-year-olds to monitoring the MySpace page where he claims he’s 22 (even though his photo shows him standing next to Bugs Bunny at Six Flags).

She joins Facebook to spy on him, but he refuses to friend her. (No matter, she finds hundreds of friends of her own and ends up addicted to it.) She remembers being teased about her “highwater” pants as a kid, but she just can’t accept her son’s argument that without $100 sneakers, he might be bullied for having uncool shoes. As she tries to decipher lyrics to rap songs and text messages with mysterious codes like NM JC, she starts wondering if she’s failed as a mother, or if all of this is just a normal part of growing up in the 21st century.

When she finds some scary secrets in her son’s room and starts getting calls from school about his behavior, she’s afraid to ask the Perfect Mommies she knows for advice, so she turns to a variety of unconventional sources: the Sopranos, Erma Bombeck, and most of all, Google, her guru and oracle. By the time her son turns 14, he’s grown out of a lot of the things that worried her – and she’s learned a lot about raising teenagers.

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY: “Harpaz has an engaging voice, and her outlook on everything from teen fashion to Facebook is fresh and funny.”

“I wonder sometimes if there’s something to the old superstition about the number thirteen. Maybe that superstition was originally created by the mothers of some tribe who noticed that in their children’s thirteenth year, they suddenly became possessed by evil spirits” – from 13 Is the New 18.

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

The Little Room to Stay Open Until August 2010

I ran into a friend who’s son is a student at Brooklyn Heights Montessori and she told me that the school, a haven for 3- and 4-year-olds with language and visual processing issues, will stay open until August of 2010.

This is good news for the children and staff already in the school but a huge loss for the Brooklyn educational landscape.

And it’s the second pre-school in brownstone Brooklyn to announce its plans to close this year. We know it’s expensive to run a school. But what’s the deal here?

Dane L. Peters, the head of BrooklynHeights Montessori, told the New York Times that The Little Room required a subsidy
of more than $100,000 a year to make up the difference between the
program’s expenses and about $1.2 million in annual reimbursements from
the state.

Parents at the school are obviously relieved that the school is not closing at the end of this school year but still slightly vexed by the school’s handling of the matter.

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 18, 2008

Another Late Night for Shopping on Fifth Avenue

I just got this reminder from Fonda at Zuzu’s about late night shopping tonight on Fifth Avenue. Other stores will, of course, be open, too. Zuzu’s is located between 5th and 6th Streets on Fifth. Brooklyn Mercantile, Serene Rose, Razor, Get Fresh, PYR, the new wine shop (with tastings!!!) will also be open.

Dearest zuzushoppers…..

If it does not rain, snow or sleet tonight. we will have our third
late evening sip and shop at The Big.
Have some nice red wine, a bit of cheese, and bread while you gift
gather with the zuzus. call us to confirm by 5 pm. we can hold anything
you have your eye on till you get there.

see you later.
fonda

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 17, 2008

No Words Daily Pix: Photograph by Hugh Crawford

_igp3899

Filed under: No Words_Daily Pix by Hugh Crawford  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 17, 2008

Tom Martinez, Witness: Toni at The Farm

December_2008_2_2

Toni painted a picture today during her art class in which she made several distinct layers of sky, much like the paintings
that were on display at The Farm.  She commented on the similarity and seemed to enjoy it.

photo by Tom Martinez

Filed under: Uncategorized  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:
December 17, 2008

The 2008 Park Slope 100

Ps100_logo_3
The 2008 Park Slope 100:
100 stories. 100 ways of looking at the world. 100 inspiring people,
places and things. The list is in alphabetical order. There are no
repeats from last year. There are always serious omissions. I left two slots open for latecomers. The link above is the list’s very own blog.

Zen_logo ART OBAMA because you were a creative and organized group with a great idea, energy and spirit. Heck, you raised $48,000 for Barack Obama at
a fun and festive art auction. Yeah!

FLORIAN BALHAUS because you are quietly building an
impressive filmography as Director of Photography forThe Devil Wears Prada, Definitely, Maybe, the upcoming Marley
and Me
and The Time Travelers Wife. Whoa.

MARIATERESSA BAZZI because you’ve got two sets of twins born
one year apart. Enough said right there. They are now 11 and 12 and a
great bunch of talented and well-behaved kids. But you are also a
spirited, fun, involved person who oversees the recess crowd at PS 321.

BRENDA BECKER because in 2008 you decided to visit Prospect
Park every day as an urban adventure (and, not least, as a drug-free
antidepressant!), and to chronicle your discoveries. And you’re still
trying to get to the park every day, and posting about it on your blog,
A Year in the Park,
a site the New York Times called "witty and engaging" in a profile last
July. "It was fun getting some Old Media attention for 15 minutes,"
comments Becker, "but the real gift was connecting to so many other
people, from cyclists to dog lovers, who are also passionate about
Prospect Park. The calendar is a way to share that passion."

SALLY BERMANZOHN because you were a labor organizer at the
Duke Hospital cafeteria with your husband Paul, who was critically
wounded in the Greensboro Massacre in 1979. Currently you are professor
and chairperson of the Political Science Department at Brooklyn
College, where you research and teach courses on the international
phenomenon of truth and reconciliation commissions. And that’s not all. You’re the author of Through Survivors’ Eyes: From the Sixties to the Greensboro
Massacre (2003),
for which you received the Brooklyn College Award for
Excellence in Creative Achievement. You are also featured in Adam
Zucker’s documentary, Greensboro; Closer to the Truth.

ANDREA BERNSTEIN because as political director for WNYC and
The Takeaway, your reporting of Hillary Clinton’s primary campaign was always top notch, as were your stories from battleground states. Kudos for
being one of 12 top U.S. journalists to win a Knight Fellowship at
Stanford University in 2006-2007.

BILL DI BLASIO, City Council member and neighborhood advocate. Have you never been on this list?

Blow190v_2CHARLES BLOW because as the New York Times’ visual Op-Ed columnist and an award-winning art director, you
bring a decidedly graphic style to that page, a great writing style and
a distinctive point of view.

BROOKLYN FOR BARACK because of the phone banks. And everything else you did to bring Barack to the White House.

BROOKLYN GREEN TEAM
because you’re a community group in Park Slope devoted to reducing your
environmental impact and you inspire others to do the same through
small changes which make a big difference. Founded in 2007, your major
activities include a blog site with local and national green news,
resources, upcoming events, and tips as well as informative emails
pertaining to a particular environmental issue such as local food or
bottled water. Green Team members include: Jennifer Bartels, Melissa
Browning, Amanda Gentile, Noelle Gentile, Johanna Voutounou, and Robert
Weinstein.

BROOKLYN MERCANTILE because
you’ve turned your eclectic, fun Fifth Avenue store,which features an unusual mix of home goods and notions into a community
workshop for crafters of all stripes.

BROOKLYNOLOGY because you’re a new blog run by the Brooklyn Public Library and you present a treasure trove of interesting stories and images of Brooklyn.

BROOKLYNOMETRY because your take on things is so unusual and interesting and it’s never boring to read your words or look at your photographs. 

Mighty_2COOL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT /  THE MIGHTY HANDFUL because
you’re not just rock and roll bands. CUP raised $6,000 for New Orleans and for an orphanage for street children in Manila with annual concerts at the Old Stone House.
And on December 19th The Mighty Handful (with the help of CUP alums and moms) did it again: this time in support of action.org, advocacy to control TB internationally.  And let’s not forget that CUP was a pioneering member of the
all-ages rock scene in the neighborhood.

PHYLLIS COOPER because you are da bomb as a physical
education teacher and administrator at MS 51, a good citizen of Park
Slope and Third Street neighbor.

HERMINE CHARLES AND GILBERT MIDONNET because you’re entrepreneurial and community minded and your shops, Serene Rose and Razor, combine elegance with a sense of fun. We know you comb Park Slope for the best of local artists, artisans and craftspeople.

DOUGLAS J. CUOMO because
you compose music for concert and theatrical
stages, television, and film. Your music, with influences from jazz,
world music, classical, and popular sources, is as personal,
distinctive, and recognizable as it is wide-ranging. Your compositions
range from well-known television themes — for Sex and the City and Now
with Bill Moyers, among others — to evening-length works for theater,
including Arjuna’s Dilemma, an opera-oratorio based on the story of the
Bhagavad Gita, which was at BAM this fall.

D’VINE TASTE because you’ve been providing this community
with delicious cheeses, breads, middle eastern specialties, condiments,
olives, sweets, and more at reasonable prices for many years in a
friendly atmosphere with good service and even better conversation
while WNYC plays on the radio.

Girlguidesusa CAITLIN DEAN because
you decided to start Girl Guides, a non-profit outdoors program or
sixth through tenth grade girls in Brooklyn. A graduate of Yale
University in 2007, you worked for Sen. Dick Durbin on Capitol Hill in
Washington, D.C., but left your job to get this inspired project off the ground.

Fall08_cover_sm_2 EDIBLE BROOKLYN because you’re an attractive and well-written magazine that celebrates, defines and honors Brooklyn’s diverse cuisine.

JENIFER EPELBAUM because of your efforts help your neighbors, an elderly man and a mentally disabled woman, who are being evicted from their Slope apartment where
the woman has resided for 19 years. You wrote: "She and her partner have been our
neighbors in the Slope for these many years, and as a community, I
believe we have a responsibility to make sure they are treated fairly and
decently." Nicely put.

Thumbelina_2
BARBARA ENSOR because you’re the scissor girl, the paper lady, the mad genius author of Cinderella (As If You Didn’t Already Know the Story) and Thumbalina, Tiny Runaway Bride and headmaster of the Little School of Moving Pictures.   

FAMOUS ACCORDION ORCHESTRA because  your quartet spans the traditional and the modern. You perform original material, as well as tunes from many different
traditions, including Stephen Foster, Jacques Offenbach, Paolo Conte, Leonard
Bernstein, Yiddish, Basque, Italian, Balkan, and beyond.

BRADLEY FELDMAN because your geeky weather tower is working
24/7/365 days a year to bring Park Slopers the temperature, the
wind chill, the humidity and a live image detailed weather,
radar/satellite map, 5-day forecaster and pollen levels. Your weather site is quite a service to the community.

SANDI FRANKLIN because since joining the Center for the Urban Environment (CUE) in
2001, you’ve brought this esteemed 30 year old organization into the
21st century. You’ve honed the agency’s mission, expanded its
programming, and cultivated new partnerships to allow CUE to become the
leading educational guide to a greener New York City. Under your
direction, the Center relocated its headquarters from the bucolic seat
of Prospect Park to its more gritty cousin, the Gowanus Canal, on 7th
Street— in what is on schedule to be the first green building of its
kind in the borough. Under your leadership, you’ve increased
discussions around sustainability and access to ‘green’ education by
helping launch the Sustainable Business Network NYC, worked in nearly
every school in Park Slope, established three environmentally-themed
high schools, and spearheaded Brooklyn’s first and largest green
conference, Green Brooklyn…Green City. For your efforts you have been
awarded "Citizen of the Year" by the Executive Council in 2008 and
"Brooklyn Woman of Distinction" by Con Edison in 2003—and changed the
lives of thousand of residents from Park Slope to Bushwick by providing
them with the tools for greater involvement in the future of their
communities.

LEON FREILICH because you truly are the-oh-so-prolific verse
responder with your funny and smart observations about national and
local politics, as well as daily life in the Slope. Once a day and
sometimes 3 or 4, you bring wisdom, levity, good sense and poetic craft to
the many readers of OTBKB.

ELLEN FREUDENHEIM because you were the author of the first
guidebook to Brooklyn in something like 50 years, and then updated
twice since. If anyone has done something to help put Brooklyn on the
map we think you have.

ANDREW FRIED because you lost your wife suddenly and
tragically and we feel for you. You have been very eloquent in your
expression of grief on your blog, Fry Guy’s Thinkerings. "Our life was going amazingly, like a dream come
true. We spent days together and never argued. We kissed constantly and
couldn’t spend enough time with each other. We laughed, loved, and
talked about our future, including our expectant child."

KAREN ROTHMAN FRIED, a beloved teacher at PS
321 known for her commitment to and appreciation of each and every
child in the classroom. Brooklyn Heights born, she received her Master
of Science in Elementary Education and Post
Master of Science in Reading from Bank Street College of Education and
taught 2nd grade at the Special Music School of America as well as 2nd
grade at the Lycee Francais de New York before coming to P.S. 321 in
2007. In memoriam. 

PATRICK GASPARD because Barack Obama appointed you national political director of his  presidential campaign and the rest is history.

3060318454_dd591e1094_o RICHARD GIN
because you are the self-designated photographer of the Brooklyn
all-ages music scene and you get the shots that everyone loves.
Pictured left: Fiasco.

GINO’S COLLISION because you fixed my father’s Subaru for a reasonable price and we love the adorable bright orange Fiat 500 that you park right outside. Classy.

CAROLINE GHERTLER because you are the best mom I know and
that’s not faint praise. I admire your way with S and think she’s a
very lucky girl to be your daughter. You’re a great sister, a great wife, a great daughter and a great friend. All this working full
time with crazy hours as a set decorator on cool movies and TV commercials. How do you do it?

FRANK GIORDANO because you are a first class middle school
principal at a first class middle school (New Voices) and you return emails faster than
any educator in New York and that’s amazing.

MARTY GOLDIN because you run Goldin Management, which provides customized management plans for Co-ops,
Condos and rental buildings You are a great landlord at Montauk Office,
the coolest office space in Park Slope (in the coolest building).
You’re an involved parent, citizen, member of your community, and a fun
guy to have as a landlord.

040280_std
MINDY GOLDSTEIN
because of the many roles you play in your life,
including Joanne in Charlie Libin’s indie film, American Combatant, a
recurring muse in Jamie Livingston’s Photo of the Day
project, a wonderful mother, a nursery school teacher at the Plymouth
Church School, a specialist in special needs education, a former editor
of Pandamonium, PS 321′s poetry magazine and a graceful volunteer
wherever help is needed.

SARAH GONSER not just because you’re smart, cool, and
accomplished but the  real reason is that you embody  what we believe
are the best facets to Brooklyn living. You helped a newcomer to the
Slope when she needed it most. You invited her to the Ladies Night, for
companionship and conversation of some pretty incredible women. but
what she represents. One friend writes, "I’d heard that Park Slope was
a neighborhood of community and warmth and civic pride, but had not
experienced it until I was introduced to it through Sarah.  She
captures these incredible attributes in the best, nonsnarky or
judgmental, incredible way."

Opening_08 AMY GRAVES, executive director of Brooklyn Children’s Theater,
because, simply put, Brooklyn Children’s Theater is a Park Slope
treasure.  You have introduced scores of neighborhood kids to the
wonders of musical theater in a setting that brings out the best in our
community.You and your team, including several middle school interns,
have worked this fall with more than 80 kids from elementary and middle
school to create five short yet spirited musicals in a non-competitive,
purely joyous productions. Cash donations at the door enable the school
to offer "scholarships," so children who can’t pay for the program
still can find their way onstage.

Kathphoto_2
KATHRYN HARRISON
because
you write deeply, bravely and honestly about your own experiences in
your memoir work and you bring beautifully rendered fictional worlds to
life in your novels, including Exposure, Poison, The Seal Wife and The Binding Chair.   

JENNIFER HENRY who blogs as The Henrys in New York because
you left a perfectly nice, ordered, well-connected life in arguably the
world’s most liveable city, to relocate halfway around the world to
live in arguably the world’s most exciting city. We love to read your
take on all the things you are discovering in NYC and Brooklyn. Your
enthusiasm is infectious.

FORBES HILL was the retired Chairman of the Department of
Media Studies at Queens College. He taught Christian education at the
Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims and was involved with the Independent
Neighborhood Democrats, a local political club. A singer, he was also a
member of the Brooklyn
Community Chorus, the Congregational Beth Elohim Singers and the
Plymouth Church Choir. "For my father, music was a chance to
seek truth, experience beauty, relieve suffering, love and be loved and
achieve something of lasting worth," said Steffanie Hill Wilchfort, his
daughter. In memoriam.

Hodgman_3
JOHN HODGMAN because you play
the PC guy in those funny Apple commercials and we love your hilarious,
and completely fake, trivia books (“The Areas of My Expertise” and the
new “More Information than You Require”), your regular appearances as
the resident expert on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and your description of Park Slope as a "utopian commune ruled by children."

08freelance_span_2 SARA HOROWITZ,
because as executive director of Freelancers Union and CEO of
Freelancers Insurance Company you’re trying to bring affordable health
care to us freelancers. A lifelong resident of Brooklyn, NY, you come
from a long line of
labor advocates, including your father, who was a labor lawyer, and
your grandfather, who was vice president of the International Ladies’
Garment Workers Union. You studied at Cornell University’s School of
Industrial and
Labor Relations and later
earned a
master’s degree from Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.You
are the recipient of a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Fellowship (also known a genius award). 

6a00d83455999069e200e54f3ad79788335
ALISON HOUTTE because you are the flamboyant and fabulous owner of Hooti Couture,
a vintage store at 321 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, that specializes in
women’s and men’s clothes and accessories. Before getting into the
vintage business you worked as a model for more than 10 years in Paris
and Manhattan, appearing in everything from Vogue magazine to a Dr
Pepper television commercial—and you still look like one. Your store
has been featured in Women’s Wear Daily, The New York Times and many
other publications

JAKE the panhandler who stands in front of ACE Supermarket on Seventh Avenue and Berkeley Place because you’ve had a tough life, you always ask so nicely and you have such a big, warm smile.

JOYCE JED AND JANE BECKER because of the hard work
and inspiration that led 8th Street between 8th Avenue and the Park to
win 2008′s Greenest Block in Brooklyn. This was the first time a block
in Park Slope won the award sponsored by the Brooklyn Botanic Garden
.The two of you were able  able to unify a block and inspire dozens
of people to take an interest in street trees and caring for tree beds
and putting up window boxes. You represent the best of Park Slope with your commitment to the neighborhood and the people who live here.

Dsc_7215_small
NATE KENSINGER because we know that you’re a documentary filmmaker, photographer, film festival programmer and a location scout but it’s your pictures of the industrial edges of NYC that grab our hearts. Photo left: under the boardwalk.

DEDE KAVANAUGH because some call you the mayor of Park Slope.
We loved your costumes for Piper Theater’s production of Midsummer
Night’s Dream in Washington Park right down to the Victorian underwear.
We notice all the decorative things you do at benefits, weddings, and
school events.

PAMELA KATZ because you always have the time to be an amazing
friend despite your multi-tasking life teaching screenwriting, writing screenplays, writing novels, being a superlative mom, an excellent conversationalist, a voracious reader, and a backyard gardener.

Photohom
JEZRA KAYE because in
your public speaking workshops you teach how to communicate with power
and ease so that people really listen. You’re on the board of directors
of Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn , and are author of Kicking: Love Poems, which is one woman’s grapple with the
ever-changing face of love. You’re also a jazz singer, a Food Coop member and one heck of a people connector. 

ADAM KLEIN AND ISABEL REBOH because we still can’t believe
that you moved away from Third Street, your home for 15 years. Each of
you in your own way, was an integral part of life in the Slope. We ask:
How are you surviving in a small town more than an hour from
Toronto? We miss running into you both on Third Street or Seventh
Avenue. Thanks for the emails, the  excerpts from the Toronto Globe and the literary musings. But most of all we
envy your new neighbors!

Artwork_images_1111_163957_davidkon
DAVID KONIGSBERG
because
you’re the original idea man whether it’s coming up with an inspired way raise money for Barack Obama’s campaign (Art Obama), writing annual
reports or painting gorgeously lush narrative paintings of strange
autos, flying machines and imaginary cities.

THE HANDY LANDLORD OF LINCOLN PLACE because you watch over your properties like a proud papa and you’re a whiz with power tools. You do your creative carpentry in front of Stitch Therapy, Paper Love and One of a Find on Lincoln Place creating attractive planters and benches, which you then hand paint.  Name to come.

6a00d8341d651053ef010535cfc8d6970b1PAUL LAROSA because on your blog, The Murder Book 2008, you
created a record of all the murders in NYC that appeared in the city’s
three newspapers. You’re also a TV producer for CBS’s 48 Hours and a
true crime author of Tacoma Confidential and other page turners.

CHARLES LIBIN because you’re usually behind the lens as
director of photography or camera operator on films like Able Danger,
Be Kind Rewind and Neil Young: Heart of Gold.
Your film, American Combatant, was selected for numerous film festivals, including the San Paulo
International Film Festival and is now available at Amazon. Most
of all, we love that you were on screen as an extra during the euphoric party
scenes in Rachel Getting Married, a film you also worked on.

RABBI ELLEN LIPPMANN because as founding rabbi of Park Slope’s Kolot Chayeinu/Voices of Our Lives
you bring a spirit of serious Judaism, spirituality, social activism
and human rights to your pulpit. A tireless organizer, you played an
instrumental role in the now annual Children of Abraham Faith Walk and
more recently have been an outspoken advocate against torture (bringing
a petition to our local Congresswoman, Yvette Clark).  How Rabbi
Lippmann manages to organize and advocate in addition to leading a
thriving faith community is anyone’s guess.  Rumor has it that she’s
getting some help from above.   

THE LITTLE ROOM because you’re a nationally recognized program for 3- and 4-year-olds with
speech and language delays and one of the things that makes the Brooklyn Heights Montessori School special. Your fate is unclear but a lot of people are fighting for you. Update: I hear they’ve decided to keep you through the spring of 2010. Your ultimate closing is a loss to the educational landscape of Brooklyn.

LIVING ON SEVENTH  because we love your friendly shop and all
the beautiful things you’ve got in there. Eva, you have impeccable
taste in home design, accessories and clothing.

LUCY because you sell vintage clothing at the PS 321 Flea
Market and anybody can see the woman has style from that long
blond wig against the ebony skin. And you’re  willing to share it!
Slopers in the know have been fighting over the stash you bring to the
flea market at 321 for years now. And you never forget to ask after our
kith and kin as you get us to wriggle in and out of your swanky stuff.
WIthout you we’d have to walk around naked: Lucy, you are the empress!

Mighty_2COOL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT /  
THE MIGHTY HANDFUL
because
you’re not just another rock and roll band. You raised more than $8,000
over the last four years for New Orleans and for an orphanage for street children in Manila with your annual concerts at the Old Stone House.
And on December 19th you’re doing it again: this time in support of TB vaccines. And let’s not forget that you are leading members of the
all-ages rock scene in the neighborhood. Nominated by Kim Maier.  

Img_0107 KIRSTEN MARINO of Slope Sports because
we love that your shop is always a fun spot for conversation. And when
we’re buying running shoes there’s no one we’d rather talk to or buy
from. And thanks for organizing the New Year’s Eve run in Prospect Park
coming up. Oh yeah, your weekly free running groups are a major
addition to the nabe.

JULIE MARKES because you multi-task as a PTA president, a talented photographer and the author of children’s books like Good Thing You’re Not an Octopus and the ever-popular, Where’s the Poop? and all the others from HarperCollins.

RACHEL MAUER because you are the blood and guts of Park Slope Parents.
You keep PSP running like a well-oiled machine and that includes the
website and two Yahoo! groups! You help local businesses get the word
out about classes, activities, and community events. We know you don’t
like being in the spotlight. But you deserve to be here. That’s for
sure.

JOSEPH M. McCARTHY because when Jim Niesen and Terry Greiss moved the Irondale Theater Center to
Brooklyn, they teamed up with you to be their director of development
because you are an incredible advocate for any project that you’re
involved with. Now you’ve put  Irondale onto the Brooklyn map as a
place for strong education and innovative theater, as well as the
guardian of the beautiful Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church.

ERIC McCLURE because you are the quintessential ardent
civic and community activist who can enter all worlds and lend a steady
voice of reason, intellect and comfort. Your civic involvement is
invaluable to Park Slopers for the steady hand, integrity and strategic
thinking you offer. A skilled community organizer, you walk steady in
the worlds of politics, transportation and environmental advocacy, and
community development. Effective both in leadership roles and working
in the background, you have taken  leadership positions on the
Executive Committee of the Central Brooklyn Independent Democrats
(CBID), the Executive Committee of the Park Slope Civic Council, both long time fixtures on the Park Slope scene. He also sits on the Steering Committee of the Council of Brooklyn Neighborhoods (CBN),
a newcomer on the block, which has brought together 42 community
organizations to advocate for transparency and environmental oversight
for development at the proposed Atlantic Yards site. you are also an an
active volunteer with Develop Don’t Destroy Brooklyn.
When you saw a gap and a need for vigorous activism in the Park Slope
community, you founded what has quickly become a well-known,
established fixture in Park Slope—Park Slope Neighbors (PSN).
PSN advocates for community dialogue, contextual and environmentally
responsible development, pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods, small
businesses and diversity in the community.  And let’s not forget the
way you utilize your wit and writing skills as part of the team that
churns out copious amounts of coverage of the Atlantic Yards fight on
the inestimable NoLandGrab.org

Il_430xn42838249MOIRA MELTZER-COHEN because you make everyone feel so welcome when they enter Fifth Avenue’s Bar Reis and you keep the level of cocktail conversation very high. Your Etsy shop, Good Head, is
a great place to find hats and gloves. Your qualities as an
intellectual, a cultural critic, a knitter and a good bartender are  obvious to all.

MATT MITLER because for ten years we’ve loved the black light
magic of your Halloween puppet shows in the ground floor window of your
apartment on  Garfield Place. Your theater troupe, Diezi, sounds pretty
wonderful, too. Not only for its artistry but because the group
performs in hospitals and believes that helping others "generates a
profound healing effect that not only serves the patient but also
strengthens the ensembles work."

THE NEWCOMERS TO THE SLOPE, including Barrio, Playa, Babeland, Eric Shoes, Pure Essentials, Yogo Monster, Five Guys Burgers, Paper Love, One of a Find, the Tibetan Store, Primo Atto, Bussaco…more to come

NANCY NANCY because
you lost the lease on your beloved Fifth Avenue shop that was mecca for those in search of funny chotchkas and cards; we understand that you are
reinventing yourself and moving on. Good luck to you. And keep in touch.

250pxobamaposter_2 BARACK OBAMA

DAVID PECHEFSKY because you used your experience in the New York City Council to help the new parliament of Sierra Leone. And you peddle your mother (and your 4-year-old daughter) around Prospect Park in your bicycle rickshaw.

The PSP PUPPET MAKING TEAM because you gave the Halloween Parade
new life with gradiose puppets that floated down Seventh Avenue this
year. Led by Theresay Linnihan of the Puppeteer’s Cooperative, helpers
included, Kiera, Toby, Brent, Ariel, Holly, Susan, Amber, Joan, Jim,
Dalien and Havona. We salute all of you.

NERINA PENZHORN because your well-crafted segments for your
series, A Walk Around the Blog on Brooklyn Independent Television
really made the Brooklyn blogging community visible.

ANN PRESCOTT because as a kindergarten and first grade
teacher extraordinaire you have influenced legions of Brooklyn kids at
The Children’s House (now Rivendell) and at Packer Collegiate, where
you continue to leave your mark.

PROSPECT PARK TRACK CLUB because of the Turkey Trot, the Cherry Tree Run and all the other running events you do in and around prospect Park.

MALLORY Y. RUTLEDGE because you opened tiny MYR on Seventh Avenue and we love the custom blended foundation and your natural-looking cosmetics and make overs for weddings, proms, parties, special events and
just for every day. Thanks.

JON SCHAEFER because you’ve hosted and produced the popular
shows, Soundcheck and New Sounds on WNYC radio for years. Your program
was called "The #1 radio show for the Global Village" by Billboard
magazine. Recently, you went to North Korea with the New York
Philharmonic and wrote a moving blog about the experience.

6a00e54f9552a3883400e553f9fd4a883_2
ANNE SCHWARTZ
because
you were the midwife to Olivia, that feisty pig, confidante to
Lincoln, fictional and factual children’s editor extraordinaire of
Schwartz & Wade at Random House Children’s Books, proving profits
in publishing keep on coming when we honor children’s intelligence and
imagination and the deity who is  in  the details.

Jon_an2_2
JON SCIESZKA because your wacky, zany books, including The True Story of the 3 Little Pigs! have been translated into a bunch of language, won a bunch of awards and have sold over 11 million copies worldwide. Not bad.

CARLY ROSE SILBERMAN, a 2-year-old South Slope toddler who
enjoyed everything her neighborhood had to offer. Going to Wantana for
her sticky rice, attending Music Together taught by Kevin, getting
fresh buttery croissants at Parco, and lets not forget visiting Annette
at Toy Space to get a balloon. A sweetheart who died suddenly with no
warning. A tree has been planted and a bench will be made in her honor,
next to one of her most favorite of all Park Slope destinations, the
9th Street Playground at Prospect Park. (In memoriam).

Freerangekidsparentshelicoptervlver
LENORE SKENAZY  because
you did the unthinkable: you let your 8-year-old son ride the subway
home from a department store on the Upper East Side. You didn’t expect
to get hit with a tsunami of criticism from readers. But you did and
you handled it well; you even came out to Park Slope to tell the tale.

S’NICE because you decided to give the picturesque corner of
Third Street and Fifth Avenue a go and made it the kind of vegan
cafe/restaurant, where locals can dine daily, take meetings, work on
their blogs and novels, and leave keys for house guests.

ROB SPILLMAN because as editor of Tin House, a bi-coastal (Brooklyn, New York and Portland, Oregon) literary magazine,
you publish special issues devoted to themes like Work and African
Literature in Exile. We like how smart and articulate you are
especially leading panel discussions at the Brooklyn Book Festival especially the one called: Movements
and Visions of Identity in the African Imagination with African
authors Binyavanga Wainaina, Patrice Nganang and Breyten Breytenbach.   

DANIELLE SUCHER AND DAVE TURNER because you run Jack, an occasional restaurant at the Brooklyn Lyceum. You blog about food at Habeas Brulee and you run your own law firm. Get down girl.

THE BLOG THAT MUST NOT BE NAMED because, as you wrote, "you were black every day for 33 years; Never a nigger until Wall St. moved to Brooklyn." On your blog, you’re funny, you’re nasty and you insult just about everyone, including yourself. You say it like you see it and we love you for that.

CHERYL THOMAS because as Event Coordinator at the Old Stone House of
Brooklyn you are ever fair and steadfast in your Ever commitment to
crowd control, you are OSH’s secret weapon for event management. And
when bestowed upon you, your brilliant smile and departing blessing of
"be careful, be safe" make the world a better place.

JANE TOMKIEWICZ because you’ve been teaching the Alexander Technique to
groups at the 92nd Street Y since 1992 and privately in Manhattan since
1990. You served as the Executive Director of the American Center of
the  Alexander Technique from 1996-2008 and are now very pleased to begin
teaching group and private lessons in Brooklyn at the Feldenkrais
Center of Park at 375 5th Avenue.

ELEANOR TRAUBMAN because you are a writer educator, culture maven, and community-builder whose
passion is connecting people to each other, and connecting people to
tools and resources for living an inspired and effective life. You write that your mission is to "bring people together through the arts, creativity,
and humor." It is also your work as a professional organizer that is highly worth noting:  "I assist busy New York women to
cut down on clutter and to create systems of organization for home and
office." And let’s not forget your indispensable leadership of the 2008 Brooklyn Blogfest and your dedication to the The Brooklyn Blogade, a monthly
gathering of Brooklyn bloggers. Go girl Go.

JOHN TUCKER because we love dinner and brunch at Rose Water,
a seasonal American restaurant with a commitment to local,
regional, organic and sustainable food.

Ywc_finalcover600
SCOUT TUFANKJIANA
because of your sweeping, intimate portraits of Barack Obama’s historic campaign in  "Yes We Can," from PowerHouse Books.

Covercomponent
PEG TYRE
because
you’re a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, who was, until recently, a
senior editor at Newsweek. But your book, The Trouble with Boys, addresses some important and vexing questions: why do boys lag
behind girls in academic achievement? Why are schools failing boys? You
are a godsend to mothers of boys!

Medusa_2
MEDUSA SALON because of your inspired fundraising effort for
Barack Obama, Up-do’s for Obama. Photos of your Sarah Palin
look-alike contest made their way around the world. Good work girls!

 

40635103_2 ED VELANDRIA because
you are the subway sketcher. You use a computer tablet and touch pen
for your sketches and try to capture people on the F Train. It’s your
therapy, your meditation, and your only chance to draw during a very busy day.  “Everyone
is so different, no matter how much you lump people together,” you told
the LA Times, who did a front page article about you last summer. “I guess my
ultimate goal is to really capture the soul of a person.”

DARREN VON STEIN because in your shop, Prints Charming,
you steer your customers toward frames that make the Francis Bacon
painting  soar—- or the hand print by our second grader sing—and
then lets us imagine we found it ourselves! Like any good frame  you
never draw attention to yourself. You don’t brag, don’t whine, you
don’t even charge a lot—although you’re a master craftsman who has
been at this for a couple of decades There’s something so darn slopian
about this kind of unassuming respect for tradition, not to mention
good old neighborliness.

CYNTHIA WADE because
you won the Academy Award for your short subject documentary
"Freeheld," the story of Detective Lieutenant Laurel Hester, who spent
25 years investigating tough cases in Ocean County, New Jersey,
protecting the rights of victims and putting her life on the line. She
had no reason to expect that in the last year of her life, after she
was diagnosed with terminal cancer, that her final battle for justice
would be for the woman she loved.

REBECCAH WELCH because as Senior Associate Director of Communications at the Center for the Urban Environment you work hard so that everyone knows and understands what’s going over there. You are also involved with the Buy in Brooklyn initiative and you personally contributed to the Community Bookstore
in its greatest time of need. You also wrote those wonderful Why Shop
Local? profiles of local entrepreneurs, which delighted the readers of OTBKB. For your community mindedness,
your environmental smarts, your devotion to local issues, It was a no-brainer putting you on this list

WASHINGTON PARK (formerly JJ Byrne Park) because you got a new name and thanks to the Parks Department, Boymelgreen Developers, Kim Maier and a a whole slew of pols, you got game—and a new skate park, two new
basketball courts,
six handball courts, a new dog run, new fencing, gates, pavement and
landscaping. Coming soon: a synthetic turf green, new fencing,
landscaping and the plaza area opening the view of the Old Stone House
to Fourth Avenue.

JOYCE WATSON was the crossing guard at the corner of First
Street and Seventh Avenue, with the angelic voice, she will be
remembered by students and parents for the lovely way she spoke to the
children. Hello beautiful. Good Morning, my sweet angels. Hello lovely
lady. In memoriam.

31_03_mowillems_z MO WILLEMS  even though you don’t live here anymore we still LOVE the Knuffel Bunny: A Cautionary Tale and Knuffel Bunny: A Case of Mistaken Identity. You brought a small dose of fame to the laundromat on Sixth Avenue and 5th Street (which is under new ownership now).

31_37_psfuelcoop01_i
MICHAEL WINKS
(with the beard) because
whether you’re writing plays or calling for alcohol-based
fuels and a members’ only alternative fuel club to supply fuel made
almost entirely from ethanol, an alcohol distilled from grains like
corn, you are a creative guy with a lot to say. We love your play,
Baby Love (performed at Brooklyn Reading Works), an absurdist take on contemporary parenting. Photo courtesy of the Brooklyn Paper.

GILLY YOUNER because you’re a talented architect, a great
mom, a board member of the Park Slope Civic Council and Develop Don’t
Destroy Brooklyn
and you recently appeared in The Civilians’ Brooklyn
At Eye Level, a lively performance of theater, music and dance that
took its
inspiration from interviews with the real life players in the story of
Brooklyn. And in March you are curating a retrospective of paintings by your late father, Chaim Herbert Youner, at the Upstream Gallery in Dobbs Ferry.

AARON ZIMMERMAN because you run the New York Writers Coalition, the largest community-based creative writing program in the country. And we love your beliefs:
"Everyone is a writer, regardless of prior writing experience and
formal education;
Through encouragement and support, people grow as writers and
artists;
In the value of the uniqueness of every individual’s voice;
Each person’s experiences are a source of strength and power as a
writer and an artist;
In creating and maintaining a non-judgmental, open and respectful
community where everyone is encouraged to support and listen to each
other and to take risks and grow as writers;
Each person, through writing, can shape and influence the lives of
others; and
We can achieve social change by providing access and opportunity for
all writers, regardless of race, ethnicity, class, age, gender, sexual
orientation and physical ability."

And that, Dear OTBKB readers, is the fitting end to this year’s Park Slope 100.

Filed under: park slope 100  by louise crawford · 10 Comments
Tags:
December 17, 2008

Thursday Dec 18: Savory Syllables on Sustenance. Writers on Food

DECEMBER 18 at 8 pm: FEAST, Savory Syllables on Sustenance. Writers on Food

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Feast, Savory Syllables on Sustenance. Writers on Food.   Curated by Michele Madigan Somerville. With Tom Rayfiel, Ame Gilbert, Nava Renek, Sharon Mesmer, Sohpia Romero, Michele Madigan Somerville and Louise Crawford.

A
benefit for the Helping Hands Food Pantry. Suggested donation: $5 (but
pay what you wish). Includes drinks and snacks.

The Where and When:

Feast: Writers on Food
Thursday, December 18, at 8 p.m.
The Old Stone House
in Park Slope’s Washington Park (formerly JJ Byrne Park). Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
718-768-3195 or 718-288-4290.

Filed under: Postcard from the Slope  by louise crawford · Comments Off
Tags:

« Previous PageNext Page »