Young, Gifted & Black (Men) with James Hannaham, Victor LaValle and Clifford Thompson

Brooklyn Reading Works presents: Young, Gifted and Black (Men) with Clifford Thompson, Victor LaValle and James Hannham. This reading is curated by Martha Southgate.

Where: The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue and 3rd Street in Park Slope

When: October 1, 2009 at 8 p.m.

James Hannaham's stories have appeared in The Literary Review, Open City and Nerve, and one is about to show up in One Story.
He has received fellowships from The MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, The Blue
Mountain Center, Chateau de Lavigny, and Fundacion Valparaiso. He
teaches creative writing at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn and lives
near there. His first novel, God Says No, came out through McSweeney's Books in late May of 2009. An excerpt from the book appears in McSweeney's 31, which looks a lot like a yearbook, binding-wise.

Victor LaValle is the author of slapboxing with jesus, a collection of stories, and two novels, The Ecstatic and Big Machine.
He has received numerous awards including a Whiting Writers' Award, a
United States Artist's Ford Fellowship, and the key to Southeast
Queens. His website is victorlavalle.com

Clifford Thompson grew up in Washington, D.C., and attended
Oberlin College, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing. His
essays on literature, film, jazz, and other subjects have appeared in
publications including The Threepenny Review, Commonweal, Cineaste, Film Quarterly, The Iowa
Review, Black Issues Book Review, and The Best American Movie
Writing. He is the editor of the H.W. Wilson publication Current
Biography. Thompson lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife and two
children. Signifying Nothing is his
first novel.

Martha Southgate is the author of three novels,
most recently Third Girl from the Left
which was published in paperback by Houghton Mifflin in September 2006.
It won the Best Novel of the year award from the Black Caucus of the
American Library Association. She received a 2002 New York Foundation
for the Arts grant and has received fellowships from the MacDowell
Colony, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Bread Loaf
Writers Conference.  Her July 2007 essay from the New York Times Book
Review, “Writers Like Me” appears in the recent anthology Best
African-American Essays 2008.  Previous non-fiction articles have
appeared in The New York Times Magazine, O, Premiere, and Essence. She
also has essays in the recent anthologies Behind the Bedroom Door and
Heavy Rotation: Writers on the Albums That Changed Their Lives. She is
working on her next novel, to be published by Algonquin Books. You can
visit her website at www.marthasouthgate.co

And here's the schedule for the 5th anniversary season of Brooklyn Reading Works:

October 15:  POETRY PUNCH curated by Michele Madigan Somerville
November 19 at 7 p.m.  YOUNG WRITERS curated by Jill Eisenstadt (note: earlier start time)
December 10:  FEAST: WRITERS ON FOOD curated by Michele Madigan Somerville. A benefit for a local soup kitchen.
January: 21:  TIN HOUSE READING curated by Rob Sillman
February 11:  MEMOIRATHON curated by Branka Ruzak
March 18:  BLARNEYPALOOZA curated by Michele Madigan Somerville
April 15:  TRUTH AND MONEY Curated by John Guidry
May 13:  4TH ANNUAL EDGY MOTHER'S DAY
June 13: FICTION IN A BLENDER Curated by Martha Southgate

The Old Stone House is located on Fifth Avenue at Third Street in Park Slope, 718-768-3195. Directions here.

Kansas Group Sang Filthy Abhorrent Lyrics to Havah Nagila

IMG_1195

A reader of OTBKB sent in this report  about Saturday morning at Beth Elohim:

After much to-ing & fro-ing about whether to
pay attention or ignore that hate group, I wandered up to the demonstration this
morning.  When I saw the rabbi taking part I decided to stay – since it had
been his suggestion that no one react to the provocation.  As your friend
said, ours was a very quiet group.  The rabbi led us in a few chants
& cheers, a small group did a hora on the steps of the temple & there
was a general feeling of gemutlich.  The odious Kansans sang filthy,
abhorrent lyrics to Havah Nagila & the Israeli national anthem but
they were a pathetic, ugly assembly of sorry souls.  Marty Markowitz was
inevitably there but very much in the background.  The police were
pleasant.  I'd estimate closer to 500 of "us" but wouldn't bet on it. 
Notably, there were no video trucks & not much media that I could
see.

One does wonder why they choose to do this kind of
thing unless they're hoping to recruit on the coattails of the far-right hate
mongering that's been rampant recently.

Smartmom Wants a New Couch! Is That So Bad?

Smartmom_big8

Smartmom wants a new sofa. She’s had the same green leather couch
for, like, 18 years. She and Hepcat bought it just after Teen Spirit
was born in 1989 at Ikea.

In those first months of Teen Spirit’s life, Smartmom and Hepcat
spent an inordinate amount of time at IKEA in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
They were nesting in Park Slope and they needed everything: a crib, a
changing table, sheets, kitchenwares, and a couch.

Hepcat spotted a couch one day on the IKEA showroom. It was called
the Tulka and he thought it looked like “the Warner Brothers couch.”

“You know,” he said, “the couch in the Bugs Bunny cartoons? When you think of couch, this is what you think of.”

Smartmom sort of knew what he meant. It was an Art Deco couch with a curved back that did have a kind of classic look.

They tested it out. Sat on it. Lay down on it. Stared at it and
finally decided to buy it and then waited eight weeks for it to arrive
from North Carolina. And when it arrived, they were thrilled.

Skip ahead 18 years. That couch has fared remarkably well
considering that the Oh So Feisty One used it as a trampoline for much
of her early life. Not to mention the meals that have been eaten on it;
the bowls of popcorn consumed and the number of teenagers who have
slept on it — and Buddha knows what else.

Needless to say, the family is very attached to the green leather
couch. Trouble is, its springs are starting to stick out. And the
fabric underneath the cushions is ripping and it’s a holy mess down
there.

For those reasons and more, Smartmom wants a new couch. Is it too much to ask for something new?

When Smartmom told Hepcat, Teen Spirit and OSFO that she was
thinking of getting rid of it, everyone got mad. There was an atonal
chorus of “What? No! Are you kidding? You can’t!”

“Why don’t we just get it fixed? Do you want me to throw you out when you get old?” Hepcat said.

Smartmom knows that fixing the green couch isn’t the answer. It
would probably cost around $1,000 to have the couch fixed, and that’s
practically what the couch cost in the first place.

Smartmom did some Web window shopping and found a couch she liked at a store called Room & Board

It was called The Andre. The blurb on the Web site said it was
“reminiscent of mid-20th-century modern furniture with its beautiful
welting, tailored button back and dark wood stretcher base.”

Smartmom fell in love with the Andre and stared longingly at the
pictures. She looked at in every color and every fabric texture.

Then last week, Smartmom just happened to be on Broome Street and
made a bee-line for the Andre. She lay down on it just as if it was in
her living room. She wanted to make sure that she’d be comfortable
reading the New Yorker on it; OSFO and Hepcat would be comfy working on
their computers on it; and Teen Spirit’s friends would be comfortable
sleeping on it.

Before she knew it, Smartmom was buying it (She also found out that if everyone hates it she can return it and get her money back).

When Smartmom got home she told Hepcat.

“You what?” he screamed.

Smartmom was hurting. She hated the fact that Hepcat was so
resistant to change. After a few days of arguing, Hepcat got even more
adamant about not wanting the new couch. Finally, Smartmwom cancelled
the couch and told Hepcat that she was leaving.

OK, she wasn’t leaving him. She was merely departing for a long
weekend in Michigan with a friend. They would discuss the couch again
when she got back.

Read all about it next week.

Even the Grass is Listening: Mamalama at Caravan of Dreams on Friday

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My friend Henry Lowengard is a new member of this cool band from Saugerties, New York. It's an ethereal, psychedelic folk, world music kind of sound. I like it a lot and can't wait to hear them live at Caravan of Dreams, an East Village club, on Friday, October 2nd at 7 pm. 

They should really get a gig in Brooklyn. Dontcha think? Maybe Barbes.

Okay. Check out their songs on their Myspace page. The combination of instruments and players is positively enticing. There's composer and vocalist Elizabeth Clark-Jerez on harp; Tim Allen, an old friend and alumni of Jamie Livingston's Photos-of-the-Day playing ballaphone, frame drum and clarinets; Charlie Shikowitz on violin,chin
cello,guitar,voice and let's not forget our soulmate Henry Lowengard on hammered dulcimer and pianica.

Caravan of Dreams is located at 405 East 6th Street, (212) 254-161

This Morning at Congregation Beth Elohim

Charlie

An OTBKB reader had this report about Saturday morning's protest by the Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) at Congregation Beth Elohim.

"I was there this morning as the WBC folks—all 6 of them—arrived at
the corner of Garfield and 8th Avenue. They held up numerous signs and sang
ridiculous anti-semitic songs; one of which was even set to the tune of
a John Lennon classic.

"The whole "event" was peaceful enough and
actually rather un-eventful. Maybe 200 or so counter-protesters stood
across the street in front of the synagogue shouting random things and
chanting, etc.

"Frankly, I'm glad Park Slope didn't react to these morons
in a grand manner as that would have been giving them too much credit
and undeserved attention.

"I must commend Beth Elohim Rabbi Andy
Bachman, who handled the situation gracefully and beautifully, by
having the counter-protesters turn their backs on the WBC crew and join
him in celebrating the Jewish new year as he repeatedly blew the
shofar.

"He also put forth messages about inclusion and even managed to
poke fun at the "small group of visitors" from Kansas, who he added
"give the Midwest a bad name." Bachman apparently is from Wisconsin."

Oct 1: Brooklyn Reading Works Presents: Young, Gifted & Black (Men)

BRWPOster-final

Brooklyn Reading Works presents: Young, Gifted and Black (Men) with Clifford Thompson, Victor LaValle and James Hannham. This reading is curated by Martha Southgate.

Where: The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue and 3rd Street in Park Slope

When: October 1, 2009 at 8 p.m.

James Hannaham's stories have appeared in The Literary Review, Open City and Nerve, and one is about to show up in One Story.
He has received fellowships from The MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, The Blue
Mountain Center, Chateau de Lavigny, and Fundacion Valparaiso. He
teaches creative writing at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn and lives
near there. His first novel, God Says No, came out through McSweeney's Books in late May of 2009. An excerpt from the book appears in McSweeney's 31, which looks a lot like a yearbook, binding-wise.

Victor LaValle is the author of slapboxing with jesus, a collection of stories, and two novels, The Ecstatic and Big Machine.
He has received numerous awards including a Whiting Writers' Award, a
United States Artist's Ford Fellowship, and the key to Southeast
Queens. His website is victorlavalle.com

Clifford Thompson grew up in Washington, D.C., and attended
Oberlin College, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing. His
essays on literature, film, jazz, and other subjects have appeared in
publications including The Threepenny Review, Commonweal, Cineaste, Film Quarterly, The Iowa
Review, Black Issues Book Review, and The Best American Movie
Writing. He is the editor of the H.W. Wilson publication Current
Biography. Thompson lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife and two
children. Signifying Nothing is his
first novel.

Martha Southgate is the author of three novels, most recently Third Girl from the Left
which was published in paperback by Houghton Mifflin in September 2006.
It won the Best Novel of the year award from the Black Caucus of the
American Library Association. She received a 2002 New York Foundation
for the Arts grant and has received fellowships from the MacDowell
Colony, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and the Bread Loaf
Writers Conference.  Her July 2007 essay from the New York Times Book Review, “Writers Like Me” appears in the recent anthology Best African-American Essays 2008.  Previous non-fiction articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, O, Premiere, and Essence. She also has essays in the recent anthologies Behind the Bedroom Door and Heavy Rotation: Writers on the Albums That Changed Their Lives. She is working on her next novel, to be published by Algonquin Books. You can visit her website at www.marthasouthgate.co

And here's the schedule for the 5th anniversary season of Brooklyn Reading Works:

October 15:  POETRY PUNCH curated by Michele Madigan Somerville
November 19 at 7 p.m.  YOUNG WRITERS curated by Jill Eisenstadt (note: earlier start time)
December 10:  FEAST: WRITERS ON FOOD curated by Michele Madigan Somerville. A benefit for a local soup kitchen.
January: 21:  TIN HOUSE READING curated by Rob Sillman
February 11:  MEMOIRATHON curated by Branka Ruzak
March 18:  BLARNEYPALOOZA curated by Michele Madigan Somerville
April 15:  TRUTH AND MONEY Curated by John Guidry
May 13:  4TH ANNUAL EDGY MOTHER'S DAY
June 13: FICTION IN A BLENDER Curated by Martha Southgate

The Old Stone House is located on Fifth Avenue at Third Street in Park Slope, 718-768-3195. Directions here.

Momasphere: Here’s Your Chance to Go Inside Meier’s Glass Condo

27meierspan.600

Here's your chance to go inside Richard Meier's glass condo on Grand Army Plaza. Lots of people are mucho curious about what the apartments looks like and Momasphere (www.momasphere.com) had a great idea.

They're hosting author, Amy Sohn for a book reading of her latest novel Prospect
Park West (Simon & Schuster; September 1, 2009; $25.00)
 on  October 8th, 2009 from 7-9pm at the Richard Meier
On Prospect Park (www.onprospectpark.com).  Book Court will offer discounted copies of the book at the event for $20.

Date:   Thursday, October 8th, 2009
Time: 
  7 to 9pm
Place:  Richard Meier On Prospect Park (1 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, NY) 11238)
Price:  Tickets will be $10 online & $15 at the door. For more information and to RSVP/purchase tickets please visit www.momasphere.com/upcoming-events.

Here's the blurb:

The event will showcase two Brooklyn icons in one exciting evening: a reading,
signing and Q&A by Brooklyn mommy author Amy Sohn from her new book, Prospect
Park West in the minimalist architectural masterpiece,
Richard Meier On Prospect Park.  “I could not be more excited to be
reading form Prospect Park West, a novel that takes place almost entirely in
the Slope, in Richard Meier’s building- a setting that will surely
complement my book.” Sarah
Jessica Parker’s production company has optioned the story in conjunction
with HBO for a half-hour show.
 In the same way that "Sex and the City" examined the lives of
four independent women who live and love in contemporary Manhattan, Sohn's
latest novel delves into the scandalous, sexy lives of four different mothers
as each goes through a crisis adjusting to parenthood in the picturesque haven
of Park Slope, Brooklyn.  

Amy Sohn’s private reading of Prospect Park West is sponsored by
Richard Meier On Prospect Park. The newly-completed condominium residences at
Richard Meier On Prospect Park gracefully overlook the location of the
book’s title, Prospect Park West, with spectacular cityscape,
harbor and park views from the signature floor-to-ceiling, wall-to-wall glass.
The building’s design by Pritzker Prize winning architect Richard Meier
celebrates the convergence of classic architecture and modern living. Guests
will be treated to an insider’s view of this modernist landmark while
enjoying wine courtesy of Sip Fine Wine (www.sipfinewine.com) and sumptuous hors d'oeurves served
up by Brooklyn's own Melt restaurant. (www.meltnyc.com).The
evening will be capped off with live music by jazz guitarist, Chad Coe (www.chadcoe.com), raffle prizes and gift bags.
  

 Momasphere
creates innovative programs and events that serve to empower, enrich and
enlighten moms, while giving back to the community.  Momasphere offers a forum for activities that promote
personal growth, fun and replenishment, for moms at any stage of life. “Mom groups often focus on children of a certain age range,
but we found that moms with children at any stage have so much to share,”
said co-founder Melissa Lopata. The goal of Momasphere is to address the
"whole mom" (mind, body, spirit) and reawaken & celebrate the
multiple aspects of mothers as multi-faceted women with interests and skills
that go beyond their roles as moms. “We're getting
fabulous feedback. Our mantra, whole women make whole moms, seems to be
striking a resonant chord,” said co-founder Ellen Bari.  A
portion of the proceeds from this event will benefit www.childrenofthecity.com.
 For more information and to purchase tickets please visit www.momasphere.com/upcoming-events.

How Low Will the Meier Glass Condo Prices Go?

The building sits grandly on Grand Army Plaza across from the beloved Brooklyn Public Library and diagonal from Prospect Park West. To me it represents the affluence and luxury mentality of this decade's real estate madnes. It is also a gorgeous building as far as I'm concerned and it manages to blend into its surroundings with admirable grace. Indeed, I have fantasized about having a little pied a terre in there for me and only me.

And maybe that will be possible if, as reported in today's New York Times, the prices are being slashed and the glass building remains half full. Here's an excerpt from the Times article:

But
10 months after the much-publicized — and much-debated — Meier building
opened, most of that stage remains devoid of actors. On the side of the
building facing their terrace, Mr. Vader and Mr. Henderson said, there
is not a single person living on the 9th, 10th, 12th, 14th or 15th
floors. While the developers say half of the building’s 99 units have
been sold, the real estate Web site StreetEasy.com
documents only 25 closings through public records. When the sun falls,
the view from Mel and Bob’s terrace — or, for that matter, from the
storied Grand Army Plaza — is not unlike a Christmas tree stripped of all but a handful of lights.

“You see that there are people there,” Mr. Vader said. “But you don’t see the amount of movement that you would normally see.”

When
Seventeen Development L.L.C. announced in 2005 that Mr. Meier would
erect one of his elaborate glass and steel sculptures on a $4.75
million parcel in Prospect Heights, it was seen as a test of New York’s
real estate boom. Could the starchitect best known for designing
Manhattan condominiums for the likes of Calvin Klein and Martha Stewart sell $1 million one-bedrooms in a still-gentrifying zone without a reliable public school?

Today, the Meier building — officially, On Prospect Park — is a wall of windows into the real estate bust.

Faced
with anemic sales, the developers have slashed prices by as much as 40
percent. They combined units — there were originally 114 — to boost the
percentage sold in order to ease the path to mortgages. But potential
buyers have walked away from at least $20 million worth of contracts.

Dr. Philippa Gordon Answers FAQs Regarding Flu Season

Park Slope's Dr. Philippa Gordon has taken the time to answer some urgent questions about this flu season and the vaccine. This appeared on Park Slope Parents and with her permission is on OTBKB. She writes: "I am already working triple time fielding questions, and I anticipate
it only getting worse as the vaccine is released and as flu cases
start  occurring.   So the more info out there, the better.  I will
continue to post answers to questions that psp'ers send me off line,
and you may feel free to use them also, also to let me know if there's
any other info you think is needed."

1.Why is this flu different from all other flus? 

The flu virus changes (shifts) slightly every year, enough to cause
annual  epidemics — the normal community-wide outbreaks that we 
experience every winter.  But every once in a while — 3 times per
century on average –a major change (drift) occurs, resulting in a 
novel strain.  It is so different from all other strains that even if
you've
been exposed to or vaccinated against all previous flu strains in your
lifetime, you are unlikely to be immune to it.  Therefore there are
widespread outbreaks all over the world — a pandemic.


2.  Will there be a vaccine for this novel pandemic flu?  Will it be
safe since it is so new?

Yes
— in October.  Since the strain was first isolated last year, the 
vaccine makers have been working on it.  Although it is a new strain,
the vaccine is made just the way other flu vaccines are made —
immunologically, every flu vaccine is specific to the strain expected
to emerge that season, and therefore new every year –but the  basic
recipe, if you will, for the vaccine is exactly the same.  So it is
neither newer nor more experimental than the  annual flu vaccine, which
has a good safety record.  Moreover, since the H1N1 strain has remained
very stable since its emergence, we know that the vaccine is a good
match for the virus, whereas the annual vaccine may sometimes miss the
mark a bit.


3. Will there be special chemicals that are untested added to this vaccine?

No.   Some
vaccines have immune- stimulating compounds called adjuvants added to
them, and there was some discussion of adding these compounds to the
H1N1 vaccine in the event that the vaccine supply fell short, butthe
discussion was theoretical  only and these technologies have not been
implemented in the US.

4.Does the H1N1 vaccine contain mercury or thimerosal?

All flu vaccines are available in thimerosal-free  formulations.

5. Who should get H1N1 vaccine and will seasonal flu vaccine protect
against the H1N1 strain?

Eventually,
as supplies permit it, widespread vaccination will truncate this
pandemic (the first of the century).  For the present, vaccine  is
being triaged to pregnant women and children, as well as those with
chronic illnesses.  This is because so far, more cases have been
occurring in children, perhaps because older people have partial
resistance, and because pregnant women are at higher risk for
complications.  An added benefit  is that the infants of vaccinated
women
will be born with some immunity to this strain.     Seasonal flu
vaccine is recommended for everyone age 6 months and up, especially
pregnant women.  Seasonal flu vaccine does not appear to give any
protection against the H1N1.

6.  Since seasonal flu is usually mild, and since so far the H1N1 is
tending to be clinically mild, is it necessary to be vaccinated?  Why
not just catch the flu, and  take anti-flu drugs such as Tamiflu
(oseltamivir)?

 
    Influenza is usually a mild and self-limited disease. It tends to
be more severe in young children, the elderly, pregnant women, and
people with chronic illnesses. However, the majority of the 40,000
deaths
and 200,000 hospitalizations  per year from influenza in the USA occur
in previously healthy people.  Since flu is so highly contagious,
eating well, taking supplements, and following guidelines for healthy
living, are not helpful strategies for preventing infection , or for
preventing complications of infection which may lead to
hospitalization, severe illness, or death. In the current pandemic,
more deaths would be expected in the pediatric age group as more cases
are occurring in children.  Another factor in the estimated burden of
disease has to do with the number of acute or intensive care beds
available, and the number of respirator machines available throughout
the country.  In a serious pandemic it is possible that the nation's 
capacity for acute respiratory support  would simply be overwhelmed.

 
   Currently, anti-flu medications are recommended only for children
under age 2, hospitalized patients, and those with underlying chronic
disease. It is desirable to restrict use of these drugs to prevent
viruses from developing resistance to them.  Widespread use of
currently available vaccines will decrease the number of cases and the
duration of outbreaks, and thus the overall burden of disease in our
communities.

     In recent years, especially in Great Britain and the USA,
vaccination
has taken on other social meanings, associated with fear of
environmental toxins, suspicion of the government and pharmaceutical
industry, fear of neurologic damage or long-term side effects, or the
desire to raise one's children in a simple or more natural fashion. It
is legitimate for individuals  to take these issues into consideration
as long as the risks are clearly understood — this is informed
consent.  Those choosing, with full knowledge of the facts, to decline
the flu vaccine, are making an acceptable decision both ethically and
legally, as this vaccine is not mandatory.  Those who do not have such
fears or objections should feel comfortable in taking the vaccine,
because the more uptake of vaccine, the less disease, and the less 
disease, the fewer adverse outcomes will occur. Widespread uptake of
vaccine not only safeguards individual health, but contributes to the
health of the community.

7.  How much will the vaccine cost?  Will insurance cover it?  How will it be administered?

All
doses of the H1N1 vaccine have been purchased by the government, and 
will be distributed through state and local health departments. 
Strategies
for distribution will vary from place to place.  There is no charge for
the vaccine itself, although there may be an office visit or
administrative fee charged by clinics and private offices.

Both
seasonal and pandemic flu vaccines are available in an injectable form
which is made from killed virus, and in a nasal spray containing live
virus which has been weakened, or attenuated, so that it cannot cause
infection.  Nose spray can be used in healthy patients aged 2 through
49 years, who do not have asthma or egg allergy.

As regards
co-administration of the vaccine, most patients age 9 and up will
receive one dose of each vaccine, in either or both modalities.
Children age 8 and younger will need 2 doses  of the H1N1 vaccine, and
1 dose of seasonal flu vaccine, and children receiving the seasonal flu
vaccine for the first time in their lives will need two doses of that
vaccine as well.  Final details regarding the timing of multiple doses
in young children and the mixing of the two forms of the vaccine will
be determined and made public when the vaccine is released for
administration in the next few weeks.

Sources:  Red Book of the American Academy of Pediatrics, CDC.gov,
Mandell's Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases,Elsevier 2005.

Submitted by Philippa Gordon

Today and Sunday at 3 pm: Brave New World Presents The Tempest in Coney Island

09-19-M8-0056

Brave New World is presenting two free performances of The Tempest by William Shakespeare today and Sunday afternoon on the Boardwalk
and beach at Coney Island.

The Brooklyn-based company, which has done site-specific versions of "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "On the Waterfront" has made a name for itself performing plays in cool and unusual places around Brooklyn.

This time all the world's a stage, and Coney Island is the place. There will be 1,500 folding chairs on the Boardwalk near the NY Aquarium.

The BNW website warns audience members to remember that there's no Q train service and to leave plenty of time to get to Coney Island.

The show is at 3 pm today and Sunday.

Angels & Accordians at Green-wood Cemetery: Mark Your Calendars

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On Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009 at 12 Noon & 3:30 p.m:

Angels
& Accordions, a site-specific, live music and dance
performance will, held in conjunction with openhousenewyork, guides
audience members through historic Green-Wood Cemetery’s rolling hills,
highlighting its unparalleled collection of sculpture and monuments.

This unique event, choreographed by Martha Bowers of Dance Theatre
Etcetera, features a cast of 30 dancers, original music by Guy
Klucevsek and Bob Goldberg (played live by a band of accordionists),
singing, and a visual installation inside the Catacombs designed by
photographer Alexander Heilner. Several tombs will be open to the
public.

More info here.

Mike McLaughlin in the Daily News: The Bible Teaches To Love Thy Neighbor

 Mike Mclaughlin formerly a reporter with The Brooklyn Paper is now a Daily News Writer. But he's still an avid reader of OTBKB, where he got tipped to this story.

The bible teaches to love thy neighbor.

That's exactly what one Brooklyn
church plans to do Sunday for a synagogue that needs an emergency space
for Yom Kippur services, the holiest day of the year for Jews.

In a show of interfaith unity, the Old First Reformed Church in Park Slope will open its doors to Congregation Beth Elohim Sunday after a ceiling collapse closed the temple's sanctuary.

"Hospitality is part of our church's mission," said the Rev. Daniel Meeter. "We didn't even have to think about sharing the space."

The synagogue, which counts prominent members such as Sen. Chuck Schumer, was sent scrambling when workers discovered Thursday that a chunk of plaster crashed onto the pews in the main sanctuary.

For help, they turned to Old First, which sits just an avenue away.

Read the rest at the Daily News.

Roof Collapse at Beth Elohim: High Holy Day Will Be At Local Park Slope Church

As reported Friday morning on OTBKB, a large section of the balcony of the main sanctuary of Congregation Beth Elohim collapsed on Thursday. Services for the holiest day of the Jewish calendar have been moved to Old First Dutch Reformed Church. Here is a statement from Rabbi Andy Bachman's blog, Water Over Rocks.

Something happened today that presents challenges for us on so many
levels as we prepare for Shabbat and Yom Kippur. Sometime last night, a
large section of our Main Sanctuary's balcony ceiling collapsed. The
pieces of plaster are large and quite heavy. We are all so extremely
lucky that no one was hurt. After House Committee Co-Chair Susan Doban
called in a structural engineer for a full assessment and
recommendations for next steps, we were advised that several other
sections of the ceiling are compromised and that it is unsafe to sit in
certain sections of the Sanctuary until repairs have been made. As it
has been in other times of crisis, we have rallied and are fortified by
the good work and tireless optimism of so many people. Chief among them
to be named upfront is our friend Reverend Daniel Meeter of Old First
Reformed Church, who has cleared his congregation's own sanctuary for
us to use for Yom Kippur. So much can be said about the spiritual
implications of the events of the day, but that is not for now. This
moment, we focus on where and when we gather to celebrate together.

Go to Water Over Rocks for a full schedule for Yom Kippur services.

Kansans Picket as Rabbi Makes Speech on Steps of Synagogue

The Kansans were true to their word. They showed up at Congregation Beth Elohim sometime between 9 and 10 am on Saturday morning and picketed, as promised, the Saturday morning service.

This topped off a three-day
assault on Brooklyn, which started with a brief rally at Brooklyn Tech in Fort Greene on Thursday. They also planned to picket three other Brooklyn synagogues.

Apparently Brooklyn has been targeted because the borough has the largest Jewish population int he country as well as a huge number of gay people.

Double whammy for the Kansans who believe that Jews—and homosexuals—are the devil incarnate. You can read more about this group from the Westboro Baptist Church. The name of their website says it all:  www.godhatesfags.com,

Friends who were at Beth Elohim during the protest, said that the Kansans were spewing anti-Jewish slogans and holding anti-semitic and anti-gay signs. Rabbi Andy Bachman is said to have made an eloquent speech on the steps of the Garfield Place synagogue. I am hoping that the text of that speech will be forthcoming to OTBKB. 

Any first hand reports would be much welcome!

OTBKB Music: Saturday at The Bell House: Eight Bands, Free Food, Five Bucks

15anniv_250px

Bloodshot Records in Chicago is an indie label with an always
interesting roster.  Saturday Bloodshot celebrates its 15th Anniversary
at The Bell House with the following line up: Bobby Bare Jr, Exene
Cervenka
, Dex Romweber Duo, Cordero, Scotland Yard Gospel Choir, The
Silos
, Ben Weaver and Rosie Flores.  The admission is just $5.  There's
free food provided by Redhook's The Good Fork to the first 150 people
admitted.  The party gets started at 4pm and the music begins at 5.

Bloodshot Records Quinceanera, The Bell House, 7th Street near 2nd Avenue. 4pm (doors/food), 5pm (music)

 –Eliot Wagner

Oct 3: Shred Your Documents at Shredzilla

Shredzilla! 2009 returns to Flatbush so save the date.  This
event is for business owners, people cleaning out their homes
and individuals who want to rid themselves of sensitive paper
and combat identity theft. Half the proceeds go to benefit
Flatbush Development Corp and the important work they've
been doing in Flatbush for over 30 years.  Don't miss the
PS 139 Parents Association sponsored bake sale. Details below.

Date:    October 3rd, 2009, raindate October 4th, 2009

Time:    9am-2pm

Location: Cortelyou Road between Argyle and Rugby Roads in Flatbush

What:  Shredzilla!  Watch all of your sensitive documents get
       shredded into confetti and recycled.

Cost:    $10 per banker's box (10" x 12" x 15") or two standard
        size plastic shopping bags.

Bonus:    PS 139 Parent's Association Bake Sale

Benefit: Flatbush Development Corp.  Over the past 30 years
     FDC has been working with Flatbush  residents to
     improve their community and lives.  Through it's
     youth, housing, immigration, economic development
     and community improvement programs, FDC helps
     make Flatbush a vibrant, diverse and healthy
     community.    http://www.fdconline.org

The Comeback: From Career to Family and Back Again on Oct 5

–Is it good for women to work—above and beyond the economic necessity to?

–How does the rhythm of your day compare to paid employment before children—it is really possible to get anything done?

–What do you see as your next life/career transition?

–Can a non-working woman and a working woman stay close friends?

Whether
you’re thinking of going back to work, you never quit or you’ve been
there and done that – motherhood changes everything. Park Slope Parents and DoubleX present Emma Gilbey Keller, author of "The Comeback: Seven Stories of Women Who
Went from Career to Family and Back Again." http://www.thecomebackbook.com/

Come along and share your thoughts and stories about this life-altering transition.

Date: Monday, October 5th

Time: 7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Place: The Old Stone House – in Washington Park (between 3rd and 4th streets) www.oldstonehouse.org

Admission:

–Park Slope Parent FREE (with membership card)

–Non-members: $5.00

Please RSVP at http://www.evite.com/app/publicUrl/XEMNVEGZMDEDZSJDAWLF/thecomeback

DoubleX
is a new Web magazine, founded by women but not just for women, that
Slate launched in spring 2009. The site spins off from Slate's XX
Factor blog www.doublex.com

Harry and the Potters on the Steps of the Brooklyn Public Library

On Saturday there will be an outdoor concert on the steps of the Brooklyn Public Library featuring Harry and the Potters. Here's the blurb from the BPL:

Imagine if Harry Potter quit the quidditch team and started a punk rock
band. Take that one step further and imagine that he stole a time-turner and
decided to start that band with himself from a different point in time.
Imagine that he needs you to rock out with him in order to save Ginny
Weasley. In case of rain, this event will take place on September 27. This
concert will last approximately 90 minutes.

Saturday, September 26, 3:30PM
Central Library<http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/branch_library_detail.jsp?branchpageid=265>

Learn More About Park Slope Library’s Closure for Renovation

The Park Slope branch of the Brooklyn Public Library invites locals to learn more about the closure for renovation, which begins October 30th at a community forum on October 3rd. 

A representative from the library will discuss improvements including: a new elevator, ramp, and bathrooms; new lighting and flooring; and installation of machines for self-check out. Work is estimated to be complete by Fall 2011.

Community Forum about Improving Park Slope Library
Date: Saturday, October 3
Time: 11 AM
Place: Park Slope Library
431 Sixth Avenue (between 8th and 9th Streets)
718-832-1853, ext. 107

Park Slope’s Old First Church To Host Beth Elohim’s Yom Kippur Services

A Kansas-based anti-gay Baptist church may be planning to picket three Brooklyn synagogues—including Congregation Beth Elohim—on Saturday but one local church is lending a helping hand to the Park Slope synagogue on the holiest day of the year.

On Yom Kippur, Park Slope's Old First Dutch Reformed Church will roll out the welcome mat to Congregation Beth Elohim and let them use their church on the high holy day because the ceiling of their synagogue is falling down.

Here's the story:

On Thursday afternoon, Rabbi Andy Bachman of Congregation Beth Elohim telephoned Pastor Daniel Meeter of Old First Dutch Reformed Church to inform him that the ceiling of the Beth Elohim sanctuary had just come crashing down. He feared that it would be impossible to hold Yom Kippur services in the sanctuary on Sunday night and Monday.

Rabbi Bachman asked Pastor Meeter if he would be willing to let Beth Elohim hold their Yom Kippur services at Old First Church. Not surprisingly, Pastor Meeter told him that he would be honored and he was confident that his congregation would agree.

A structural engineer visited the synagogue on Thursday afternoon to determine the extent of the damage.  After a thorough investigation, the engineer recommended that they close the synagogue because he deemed it unsafe to have people sitting on the upper balcony.

At 5 p.m. on Thursday, Rabbi Bachman came over to Old First Church and met with Pastor Meeter, who told him that he would delighted to host services at his church.

Pastor Meeter expressed his excitement about hosting Kol Nidre on Sunday night and a second service on Monday morning in an email to his congregation. "Yom Kippur is the highest of the High Holy Days of Judaism and it's an incredible thing for us to host our Jewish neighbors for these two services."

Pastor Meeter is reaching out to members of his church to help get the church ready for 1,000 people expected on Sunday night for the Kol Nidre service. "Starting Friday morning, the church custodian and I will start to get the balcony ready," Meeter said in his email. "We need to clean it up, relocate storage boxes, move pew cushions, move some of the pews and stabilize them, clean them, move the harpsichord, and set up the wooden chairs."

Pastor Meeter hopes to have the church ready by Saturday night. On Sunday afternoon at 1 pm—after Sunday morning church services—Beth Elohim will send a volunteer crew  with 100 folding chairs over to the church to begin setting up for the Kol Nidre service.

Rabbi Bachman has invited Pastor Meeter to say some words at the Sunday night service. Bachman also invited church elders and deacons to attend. Pastor Meeter attends the Kol Nidre service at Congregation Beth Elohim every year.

"I consider this a landmark event for Old First, and such an expression of our Third Mission. I believe it's a gift of God to us," Pastor Meeter wrote in his email.

Another Superfund Site in Brooklyn?

The Brooklyn Paper reports that the Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday that it may classify Newtown Creek in Greenpoint as a
Superfund site.

This comes on the heels of a plan to classify the Gowanus Canal as a Superfund site. The EPA will decide in the next few weeks whether to do this.

If Newtown Creek is classified as a Superfund site, the agency will have the ability to
charge polluters and the owners of polluted land for the clean-up.

A representative from the EPA called the creek one of the "most grossly contaminated waterways in
the country. “By
listing the creek, EPA can focus on doing the extensive sampling needed
to figure out the best way to address the contamination and see the
work through," said said the Acting Regional Administrator of the EPA George Pavlou.

Joint Statement from Local Pols and a Rabbi on Planned Protests by Kansas Christian Group

  Here is the joint statement issued today by Brooklyn Borough President Markowitz, Council member Bill deBlasio, Rabbi Andy Bachman, Brad Lander, LAMBDA Independent Democrats on planned protests in Brooklyn by Westboro Baptist Church:

“ Brooklyn ’s diversity is
at the core of our strength as a borough, and Brooklynites are never shy about
expressing who they are. While we support the right to peacefully gather, we
must denounce hate in any form—especially hate from a fanatic cult based
in Kansas
that has shamefully selected these sacred days observed by the Jewish community
around the world to spew its intolerance. Because Brooklyn is home to the
largest Jewish population outside of Israel ,
and has one of America ’s
largest LGBT populations, we know first-hand that these communities and others
often face discrimination and even violence or death at the hands of those who
don’t share our belief that there is more that unites us than divides us.
Therefore, we must be especially vigilant in condemning hatred and discrimination
not only here in Brooklyn , but around the
world.”