REMINDER: GET YOUR TIX FOR LOUIS AND CAPATHIA AT JOE’S PUB

Get your TIX for the Louis and Capathia show at Joe’s Pub, where they’ll be performing the premiere of Southside Songs.

Both from Brooklyn: he’s an award-winning composer. She’s on Broadway in the new Martin Short musical. Tickets available at The Public Theater box office or By phone at 212-967-7555 Joe’s Pub Tickets.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                                                              
The team of outstanding Broadway vocalist CAPATHIA JENKINS and award-winning songwriter/performer LOUIS ROSEN returns to Joe’s Pub with their new band for three exciting concerts to celebrate the launch of their debut CD, SOUTH SIDE STORIES, a suite of songs of youth, coming of age and experience. The concerts will also include selections from the acclaimed TWELVE SONGS on poems by Maya Angelou, which debuted at Joe’s Pub last year in two sold-out concerts; and a preview from Rosen’s newest work for Ms. Jenkins, GIOVANNI SONGS, with words by the acclaimed poet Nikki Giovanni.

Ms. Jenkins’ is currently appearing on Broadway in "Martin Short: Fame Becomes Me," and has also been seen in "Caroline, Or Change," "The Civil War," and Bacharach and David’s "The Look of Love." Louis Rosen’s songs and theater music have been performed in concert halls, cabarets and theaters in New York and around the country. He was recently awarded a 2005-2006 Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship in Music Composition.

"Something quite magical can happen when a composer has a specific voice to serve as his muse. Consider the case of Louis Rosen, the Chicago-bred, now New York-based songwriter, and his songbird of choice, Capathia Jenkins…performing songs set to the poetry of Maya Angelou…and Rosen’s nostalgic, romantic, guilt-laced, emotionally charged song cycle, South Side Stories” – Chicago Sun-Times
                         
                                                 

TWO MEN CHARGED WITH MURDER IN BIAS CRIME

THIS FROM NY1:

Two men were charged Monday with second degree murder in an alleged
bias attack in Brooklyn last Sunday that claimed the life of a
28-year-old man.

Michael Sandy died Friday after doctors took him off life support.

The men are accused of luring the victim, Michael Sandy, over the
Internet to an isolated parking lot near Sheepshead Bay with a promise
of a sexual encounter, and then attacking him when he arrived.

The confrontation led him to run onto the Belt Parkway, where he was hit by a car.

SAY AMEN SOMEBODY: RABBI ANDY ON THE INTER-FAITH ANTI-WAR SERVICE LAST WEEK

Here’s something from Rabbi Andy Bachman’s blog about the interfaith, anti-war service at a Brown Memorial Baptist Church in Fort Greene.

Growing up in Milwaukee, I always admired that the rabbi and cantor
of one of our Reform synagogues had an exchange with an African
American church in the city that consisted of the rabbi preaching and
the cantor singing in the church on Sunday a year with the pastor and
choir of the church doing the same in the synagogue on a different
Friday.

Last week, at the invitation of my new friend Rev.
Daniel Meeter of Old First Reformed Church, I was a guest at Brown
Memorial Baptist Church in Fort Greene for an ecumenical anti-war
religious rally. There was Jewish (moi) Christian and Muslim
representation in the pulpit that night. I was invited to give a
“meditation” on Psalm 24 which was a terrific honor.

I can’t
emphasize enough the importance of these gatherings in this day and
age. I know interfaith services are an “old idea” in American religious
life but you know what? We could use a few more of them these days. We
need the mileage we get out of them for building a more tolerant and
open society.

I had to run out after preaching–we had a board
meeting at Shul–so I couldn’t hear everyone, unfortunately. But if I
may share a word about my own experience of speaking from the pulpit in
a context in which there is every expectation of “call and response,”
allow that word to be EXCELLENT.

Jews: you are put on
warning. I want more responses, more amens, more “that’s right, Rabbi,”
from you all on Shabbos because I’m liking the feel of that. It
enlivens the inspirational moments of preaching and brings Sinai down
to earth in a way I had never quite experienced before.

BROOKLYN READING WORKS: LEORA SKOLKIN SMITH, RICHARD GRAYSON

8 p.m. OCTOBER 19, 2006 at The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. 

It’s a good one:

LEORA SKOLKIN-SMITH will read from her book, “EDGES: O PALESTINE, O ISRAEL” published by “Glad Day Books” "Edges is an elegantly written,  quite moving novel that has a lot to say about love, identity, history and the meaning of nationality. The book is worth reading alone for its superb language, but it is gripping and unforgettable as well in its story telling and evocation of place and emotions. It is a wonderful novel by an author with a quite accomplished voice and style, one well deserving a wide and receptive audience. —
    Oscar Hijuelos, author of Pulitzer-prize winning novel, "The Mambo King Sings Songs of Love"

RICHARD GRAYSON reads from his new collection of short stories, "AND TO THINK HE KISSD HIM ON LORIMER STREET AND OTHER STORIES."

THE CASE AGAINST HOMEWORK AT BARNES AND NOBLE TONIGHT

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The authors of The Case Against Homework, Park Slope writers, Nancy Kalish and Sarah Bennett Holmes. will be at Barnes and Noble on Seventh Avenue at 6th Street tonight at 7:30 p.m.  Here’s what people are saying about this ground breaking book:

"Parents of America, unite! You have nothing to lose but your frustration. The Case Against Homework is an important book that takes on the 500-pound gorilla—homework overload—long ignored by educational policy makers. Every parent of a school-age child should buy it and follow the authors’ excellent advice in order to protect their children from an educational system gone haywire.” —Dan Kindlon, Ph.D., author of Raising Cain, Too Much of a Good Thing, and Alpha Girls

“A wonderful book that is not just about homework but about the sadness and futility of turning children into drudges who learn—if one can call it learning—without passion, without love, and without gaining independence. Every educator, every politician, and every parent should read this book and take it to heart.” —Mary Leonhardt, author of 99 Ways to Help Your Kids Love Reading

“Most parents have experienced the negative effects of homework on family harmony, family time, and play time, but they accept it as a necessary evil. Bennett and Kalish reveal that the homework emperor has no clothes; there is no good evidence to support piling on homework, especially in the younger grades. They  follow through with practical advice for managing homework meltdowns, negotiating with teachers, and advocating for policy changes.” —Lawrence Cohen, Ph.D., author of Playful Parenting

“The Case Against Homework sends a critical message about how to improve the health and well-being of our children by cutting back on busy work and focusing on meaningful assignments, a good night’s sleep, and the value of free, unfettered play time.” —Denise Clark Pope, author of Doing School,  Stanford School of Education lecturer, and founder of SOS: Stressed Out Students

“Bravo to Bennett and Kalish for having the courage to say what many of us know to be true! This book serves as an indispensable tool for parents who want to get serious about changing homework practices in their schools.” —Etta Kralovec, associate professor of teacher education, University of Arizona South, and coauthor of The End of Homework

“This very important book makes a powerful case that excessive homework is hurting family life and children’s full development. What’s more, the book does something that is very rare: It gives parents solid practical advice on how they can deal with teachers and schools to produce significant change. The authors care deeply about children and have a special understanding of what children and childhood are all about.” —William Crain, Ph.D., professor of psychology at the City College of New York and author of Reclaiming Ch

CAROUSEL IN DUMBO

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Jane Walentas, wife of DUMBO real estate mega developer, David Walentas, purchased a
1922 carousel at an auction in 1984. After years of restoration
work on the 48 carved horses, the carousel was  unveiled
during the DUMBO Festival this past weekend (pictured at left).

It wasn’t open for the public to take rides. That’s all I know because I can’t get onto Gowanus Lounge today — there seems to be a technical glitch over there and I’m thinking it’s connected to all the video he’s got.

I found this picture at FLICKR

Robert, what’s up at Gowanus Lounge? Anyone know more about the carousel?

US POPULATION SET TO HIT 300 MILLION TOMORROW

The US population is set to hit the 300 Million mark tomorrow at 7:46 a.m. Here’s the story from the New York Daily News.

No one, of course, knows for certain who that baby will be, but all eyes will be on the clock in New York delivery rooms.

"There will be an extra sentiment of excitement in the air as we watch
to see if we are the lucky ones who happen to usher in that 300
millionth individual," said Dr.George Mussalli, chairman of the
department of obstetrics and gynecology at St. Vincent’s Hospital
Manhattan.

Still, the baby likely to claim the distinction will be a Latino boy in
Los Angeles County, said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings
Institution.

Half the growth in the U.S. is among Hispanics, and within that group,
most of the increase is in Los Angeles County, Frey said. More boys are
born each year than girls, he added.

"We’re coming back to a new American melting pot. We’ll infuse our
population with people whose parents are from Latin America, from Asia,
who are going to change the mix," Frey said.

As it did in 1967, when the U.S. population reached 200 million, the
new high has ushered in warnings that producing too many people will
have drastic consequences.

Thirty-nine years ago, forecasters predicted mass starvation.

Today, they warn that land is being developed twice as fast as the
population is growing, especially in Southern and Western states with
vulnerable ecosystems, according to a recent report by the Center for
Environment and Population.

Tomorrow’s projection stems from the expectation that one person will
be born every seven seconds and one will die every 13 seconds.
Immigration adds one person every 31 seconds.

Do the math, and the U.S. population grows by one person every 11 seconds, according to the census formula.

The U.S. population will clock in at 400million in 2043, Frey said.

The census population clock is at:

www.census.gov/population/www/popclockus.html

DOES ANYONE KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THIS?

I got this in my in-box:

In the 70’s a major explosion and fire happened in Sheepshead Bay , East 16 Street  Avenue U. Many died in that event. I’m trying to help a woman who lost her husband in that fire.
I’m looking for the exact date of the fire and a list of those killed that day. I would be greatful for any help you could give. Please send info to: amcgee3478@earthlink.net

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              

MANHATTAN BRIDGE COMMUTE: HOW’D IT GO?

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Here’s the word from NY1 on today’s Manhattan Bridge commute, first since they closed the lower level for repairs. BIG FUN. DOT is advising alternate routes.

Drivers headed to the Manhattan Bridge this morning are being urged to
take alternate routes, because the lower level of the bridge is closed
for repairs.

While traffic ran smoothly for the first day of the closure
yesterday, today is the first time rush hour commuters will have to
deal with the change, which is expected to last for a year.

The Department of Transportation is urging drivers to use alternate
routes and roadways, even though the upper level of the bridge will
remain open during construction.

The work is part of an overall upgrade that should be complete in time for the bridge’s 100th anniversary in 2009.

Pedestrians and bikers are now sharing access along the bridge’s south walkway. The north walkway is closed.

Meanwhile, the Brooklyn Bridge is going under the microscope starting today.

The State Department of Transportation will begin a three week
inspection of the bridge starting today, with a complete look at the
bridge’s masonry towers.

The DOT says this is a routine part of a plan to inspect every bridge on a two-year cycle.

PICTURE BY ALTHEA ON FLICKR

CHANGE OF SCENE: UPSTATE FOR THE DAY

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Yesterday, we drove up to Kingston for Dadu and Red Eft’s party to celebrate the 13th and final Lemony Snicket book. Red Eft’s brother, a supernumerary at the Metropolitan Opera, was supposed to come dressed as Count Olaf, but he couldn’t make it.

So we met up with him in Manhattan and picked up the make-up and disguise (prepared by the make-up artistat the opera), so that Dadu could wear it.

We made it to Kingston in record time, just enough time for Dadu to become a perfect Count Olaf.

The enormous dining room of their grand Victorian home was decorated with a festive circle of all the Series of Unfortuante Events (SOUE) books. Lots of friends, most from the local home schooling community, were in attendance

There was a bountiful feast of dishes based on the book, including a menu taken from various volumes: Pasta Puttanesca of
course, Parsley Soda, Aqueous Martinis, Mango/Black Bean Salad, Aunt
Josephine’s Chilled and Chapfallen Cucumber Soup and a
Quaff-the-Bitter-Cup Coconut Cream Cake inspired by Uncle Monty), a
magnet fishing game for Stricken Salmon, and a Dewey Decimal hunt
borrowed from The Penultimate Peril’s Hotel Denouement. All these dishes are mentioned in the books.

Dadu’s daughter was very frightened when she first saw him in diguise. Red Eft had to take her another room until she calmed down. Later, she was positively giddy about Dadu’s new face.

After the party, adult scragglers talked and the kids engaged in "extreme" imaginary play in costumes, while listening to the SOUE soundtrack. Red Eft and Dadu’s nine-year-old son, WM Thing, showed  the movies that he makes. You can see some of them at his website.

We ducked out to get OSFO some BIG pumpkins at a farm stand. The drive back to the city was slow but not as bad as we expected.

Big day in the country. Great party. Fabulous autumnal leaves. Too much driving. Worth it to celebrate with friends.

BROOKLYN READING WORKS: THIS THURSDAY

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On Thursday, join me at BROOKLYN READING WORKS  at the Old Stone House. Fiction. Non-Fiction. Memoir. Poetry. Drama. Curated by me, the series is at the Old stone House, located in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street. 8 p.m. $5.00 includes light refreshments. Books are sold at all readings.

COME SEE OUR BEAUTIFUL NEW POSTER!!!

LEORA SKOLKIN-SMITH will read from her book, “EDGES: O PALESTINE, O ISRAEL” published by “Glad Day Books” a small literary house founded by GRACE PALEY and Robert Nichols. Ms. Paley was the editor of “Edges” . The novel has recently been nominated for a PEN/Faulkner Award. It was also,  selected by The Jewish Book Council for a National Tour and will be featured at this year’s Virginia Festival for the Book.

RICHARD GRAYSON reads from his new collection of short stories, "AND TO THINK HE KISSD HIM ON LORIMER STREET AND OTHER STORIES."

BERKELEY PLACE BLOCK PARTY

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Berkeley Place’s annual block party celebrated a five-year-old neighbor who recently recovered from childhood leukemia. A big banner: Congratulation Aidan, signed by all the kids on the block, hung between two trees in front of Aidan’s brownstone. There was also a pizza and cake celebration in his honor.

Dan McMann, a local teenage circus sensation, who walks on stilts, juggles, and rides a unicycle, thrilled the kids with his entertaining antics.

A woman who travels with a  traveling reptile zoo introduced the kids to an alligator, a lizard and a host of other fascinating reptiles.

Back by popular demand, Hepcat and his photography-studio-in-a-box—a back drop, a strobe, and a digital camera—took group and individual portraits.  Many subjects from last year’s shoot came back for a brand new picture. Picture of OSFO and Teen Spirit from last year. My how they’ve grown. New pictures will be posted in the days to come.

Perfect weather made for an idyllic day on this particulary beautiful leafy brownstone street.

SMARTMOM: OTHER PEOPLE’S BROWNSTONES

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Here’s this week’s SMARTMOM from the Brooklyn Papers:

When Smartmom’s
Friends with Brownstone ask if the Oh So Feisty One would be willing to
water their plants or feed their pets while they’re away, she almost
always says “yes.”

“OSFO loves
taking care of pets,” Smartmom tells the FWBs. Or “OSFO is saving up
for a new Build-a-Bear, so she’ll be more than happy to make a little
change.”

But those aren’t the real reasons why Smartmom is so quick to accept these pet-sitting offers for her daughter.

It’s all about Smartmom and her brownstone envy. Truth is, she just loves to spend time in other people’s brownstones.

Call it
play-acting or a form of delusional behavior. Call it whatever you
want. While OSFO plays with the cat or fills the plastic bowl in a
birdcage with little pellets, Smartmom gets to commune with her inner
brownstone-dweller. She even cooks in the kitchen using her friend’s
All Clad pans or listens to their Glen Gould CDs sitting on one of the
parlor chairs.

Buddha knows
Smartmom would love to have her own brownstone. But having missed the
S.S. Real Estate as it sailed away, vicarious brownstoning is probably
the closest she’ll ever come.

Last weekend,
while OSFO shoveled cat poop into a garbage pail in their friend’s
roomy brownstone, Smartmom sat in the sun-drenched couch of the master
bedroom reading the New Yorker (and the always-scintillating Brooklyn
Papers).

Later, while
OSFO was re-filling the cat’s bowls with water and foul-smelling cat
food, Smartmom admired the colorful tiles on her friend’s shower wall.

“I’d love a bathroom like this,” Smartmom heard herself say aloud to no one.

Last summer,
OSFO and Smartmom took care of two guinea pigs and a pair of Mynah
birds in the lovely home of another brownstone friend. This one had a
fancy Jacuzzi in the bedroom — and you can bet she and OSFO took turns
taking bubble baths in there with the jet stream on high.

Ah, this is the life.

Shoveling cat
poop or rolling up newspaper from the bottom of a urine-stained cage is
small price to pay for this kind of temporary luxury.

Smartmom is the
first to admit that she feels marginalized in her own neighborhood,
where real-estate values have gone through those limestone roofs. It
hurts to have been one of the early settlers in Park Slope yet failed
to stake a land claim.

Back in 1991,
Smartmom, Hepcat and Teen Spirit arrived in Park Slope after being
priced out of Manhattan. She, for one, had to be dragged kicking and
screaming to their first apartment on Fifth Street.

But they needed
the space, and Park Slope was an oasis back then — even if your friends
and relatives treated the East River like The Great Wall of China.

Smartmom didn’t
live up to her name then, failing to buy a building because she and
Hepcat weren’t even sure if they were going to like it here. It was
Brooklyn, after all.

But the red
brick, the brownstone, the dogwood trees, the sense of community all
struck a chord with Smartmom. She fell in love with the scale of the
neighborhood, its architectural integrity, and its beauty.

All these years
later, Smartmom still enjoys walking down Garfield or Berkeley at night
staring longingly — OK, hungrily — into bay windows.

What a nice life
those people must have, she thinks. How lucky those children are to
grow up there; to romp in a leafy, green urban backyard; to eat festive
dinners by candlelight on the back deck.

But OSFO doesn’t see it that way at all.

Her reasons for
enjoying these pet-sitting jobs are very much her own. She likes the
money, of course — and she’s growing quite a savings account at the
fancy new Commerce Bank on Fifth Avenue. Plus, she loves animals and
dreams of opening a pet-care center when she grows up.

And she doesn’t seem to have a bit of brownstone envy. In fact, she hates it when Smartmom wanders around the house.

“This place is too big,” she says. “I don’t like to be on a floor without you.”

Last weekend,
while Smartmom fantasized about having a bedroom big enough for more
than a bed and a dresser, OSFO was impatient to go home.

“Don’t you want to stay here any longer?” Smartmom asked.

“Not really,” OSFO said. “I want to go home.”

Home really is
where the heart is. Similarly, Teen Spirit made his parents promise
that they’ll never, EVER move out of the apartment on Third Street. And
while OSFO sometimes says she’d like a bigger bedroom, she’d hate to
live in a building where her best friend didn’t live on the first floor.

Even if her kids
have good values, Smartmom is still besieged by crippling bouts of
brownstone envy. Luckily, the occasional pet-sitting gig is like a
soothing ointment on the pain in her butt called “the grass is greener”
syndrome.

One quick dose, and she’s back to life on Third Street.

KIDS FOR KIDS: THEY MAKE THEIR PARENTS PROUD

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THE SHOW: Teens for Phillippines

Set-up started at 4 p.m. just as the Harvest Festival in JJ Byrne Park was packing it up. As the  bands brought their instruments upstairs, there was still a fenced in area for ponies, a llama, a goat, as well as a group of bunnies in a big cage in the green outside the house. Apparently, more than one hundred kids took pony rides during the day.

After the set up, there was a sound check with Tomas, the uncle of a RATR band member, who did sound and ran a tight show. Food and soda tables were set up, as was an information table and slide show about the Manila street kids the concert was benefiting.

At 6 p.m., the crowd began to pour in: more than 140 people showed up eventually. Plenty of friends of the bands, parents, grandparents, siblings, even two teachers from Winston Prep, there to support their student in the band, RATR.

First up: Zachary Fine and Aman Modak, on sitar and tablas. The 13-year-olds dressed in beautiful Indian robes performed a stunning, improvised raga that lasted for 20-minutes or so and  thoroughly impressed the crowd.

Artful music.

Next up was RATR, a really fine band that describes itself this way: "David Pollack outa Manhatten writes the songs Donker from 125th gives
it soul and Tim from The Slope in Brooklyn gives it Heart. We all come
together to kickass on occassion."

The crowd loved ’em.

Somewhere There’s a Fix was up next up and talk about kick ass. They screamed, they wailed, the singer even took off his shirt. They were also really goooood. Here’s their My Space blurb: "Forming in 2005 and including current/former members of Calibre, Cool
& Unusual Punishment, and Butcher The Bridesmaid, Somewhere There’s
A Fix is made up of a bunch of awesome dudes playing music that’s
pretty melodic, yet tastefully brutal and in no way generic.

Tastefully brutal.

Cool and Unusual Punishment, the band that organized the show, played a great set, one of their best. Their tight musical sound, entertaining stage presence, and awesome songwriting abilities, make for a great trio that’s developing a very unique sound. To describe themselves the band put it like this: "While we all share the influence of bands such as Queen, Bright Eyes, and Arcade Fire we also have a wide range individually."

Heart throb.

Tetsuwan Fireball, who play under the influence of Television, Gang of Four, The Pixies, The White Stripes, and The Pillows, capped the show with power and panache.

Rock out.

A good night for a good cause. The audience was well-behaved, polite, and very supportive of this great effort by local teens to support teens in a place very far from Brooklyn.

BOB DYLAN’S AMERICAN JOURNEY: AT THE MORGAN LIBRARY

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I once saw Bob Dylan in Park Slope. It was on Eighth Avenue at Lincoln Place, right across from the Montauk Club. He was with a photographer and it was June 12, 2001—I remember because it was my son’s birthday—and we were on our way to the subway for an evening in Manhattan.

A small, polite crowd was standing on the corner, talking to Bob. As he walked away, I asked for his autograph and he obliged. He wrote his name on my Mastercard envelope (it was all I had with me).

It’s framed and on the bookshelf in the living room. Did I mention I said to him: "You’re my idol."

I can’t help it. I am such a Dylan fan and this show at the Morgan Library sounds good to me. I am so there. 


Bob Dylan’s American Journey, 1956–1966,
the first
comprehensive exhibition devoted to Bob Dylan’s early career, is on
view at The Morgan Library & Museum from September 29, 2006,
through January 6, 2007. The exhibition examines the critical ten-year
period that coincides with Dylan’s transformation from folk troubadour
to rock innovator during a momentous, turbulent period of American
history. Bob Dylan’s American Journey, 1956–1966, is organized by Experience Music Project, Seattle, Washington.

The
exhibition includes original typed and handwritten lyrics, rarely seen
photographs, concert and television footage, posters and handbills of
Dylan’s early performances in New York, and other artifacts. Several
Dylan manuscripts and typescripts of lyrics from a selection of more
than ninety songs given to The Morgan Library & Museum in the late
1990s by collector George Hecksher will also be on view. These include
such well-known songs as "Blowin’ in the Wind," "It’s Alright, Ma,"
"Masters of War," "Ballad in Plain D," and "Gates of Eden."

Bob Dylan’s American Journey
traces Dylan’s personal and artistic development, beginning in postwar
Hibbing, Minnesota, the industrial town where Robert Zimmerman (b.
1941) grew up as a store owner’s son inspired by early rock and roll.
The exhibition follows Dylan to his debut on the national stage of the
Greenwich Village folk scene—one of history’s most fascinating
intersections of art, politics, and lifestyle—through to his massive
fame as one of the first true rock stars and the man who "electrified"
contemporary songwriting. This ten-year span encompasses the release of
some of Dylan’s seminal albums, including The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, and Blonde on Blonde.

TONIGHT: TEENS FOR THE PHILLIPINES

Tonight’s the night.

What: Benefit concert for street kids in Manila

Where: The Old Stone House on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets

When: 6-9 p.m.

Who: Cool and Unusual Punishment, Tetsuwan Fireball, Somewhere’s There’s a Fix, RAPR, and Zach Fine and Aman on sitar and tabla.

Cost: $5 dollars for kids. $10 dollars for adults. Feel free to donate more.

BIAS CRIME VICTIM DIES AFTER ONE WEEK IN COMA

This from New York 1:

Twenty-eight year old Michael Sandy, who police say was assaulted by
three men in a hate crime last week, died Friday afternoon after being
removed from life support.

Sandy had been in a coma since being beaten on Sunday in Brooklyn.
He was removed from life support at the request of his family.

Nineteen-year-old John Fox, Gary Timmins, 16, and Ilya Shurov, 20,
were charged with robbery in the first and second degrees and assault
in the first degree, all as hate crimes.

There is no word yet whether police will upgrade those charges now that Sandy has died.

Investigators say the men used the Internet to lure Sandy to an
isolated parking lot near Sheepshead Bay with the promise of a sexual
encounter.

But when he got there, police say the men attacked him.

The confrontation eventually spilled onto the Belt Parkway, where Sandy was struck by a car.

 
 
 

KIWI RAZOR SERENE ROSE BLUE

Kiwi Razor
Serene Rose
Blue ____

Okay it sounds like beat poetry or a mis-guided attempted a a haiku but it’s the latest rag trade real estate news on Seventh Avenue.

Serene Rose and Razor of Fifth Avenue are adding a new shop called, Blue ____(I forget the second word – duh). The women’s and men’s clothing shop will be in the space  vacated by Lion in the Sun on 4th Street just east of Seventh Avenue.

Kiwi is moving from its spot on Seventh Avenue between Union and Berkeley Place to where Soundtrack used to be on Seventh Avenue between Carroll and President.

CHOCK FULL OF NUTS: COMING TO SEVENTH AVENUE

More real estate rumors: Chock Full of Nuts may be taking over the space vacated by Cinematique on Seventh Avenue between Union and President Streets.

It is the heavenly coffee. And I grew up with a CFON on Broadway between 86th and 87th Streets. We spent a lot of time there eating raisin date nut bread and cream cheese sandwiches and butterscotch brownies.

Ah, that really brings back memories. That place really was chock full of nuts. It won’t be the same without all the weird Broadway types circa 1960’s and ’70’s, who used to nurse a cup of Joe for hours on end. When they weren’ there they were sitting on the benches on the Broadway median.

Wow: dueling coffee corporations on Seventh Avenue. CFON, DD and S. Is there room for all of them?

BROOKLYN READING WORKS ON UNTIL MONDAY

Today on Until Monday, a newish Brooklyn blog, there’s a post about Brooklyn Reading Works. One of the editors of the blog interviewed me online and the results are there.

Until Monday is a beautiful new blog on the Brooklyn Blog block: it’s the fancy new house with the gorgeous paint job. I plan to stop there every day on my way to the blog.

Welcome to the neighborhood Until Monday and thanks for the call out!!! And here’s what’s going on next week at BRW next week:

OCTOBER 19, 2006 at 8 p.m.

LEORA SKOLKIN-SMITH will read from her book, “EDGES: O PALESTINE, O ISRAEL” published by “Glad Day Books” a small literary house founded
by GRACE PALEY and Robert Nichols. Ms. Paley was the editor of “Edges”
. The novel has recently been nominated for a PEN/Faulkner Award. It
was also,  selected by The Jewish Book Council for a National Tour and
will be featured at this year’s Virginia Festival for the Book.

RICHARD GRAYSON reads from his new collection of short stories, "AND TO THINK HE KISSD HIM ON LORIMER STREET AND OTHER STORIES."

INTER-FAITH ANTI-WAR EVENT

Yesterday Pastor Daniel Meeter, of Old First Reformed Church, told me about this inter-faith anti-Iraq war event. He was there and he said it was incredible. Clergy from churches all over Brooklyn, including Meeter and Rabbi Bachman from Park Slope’s Congregation Beth Elohim joined in talk and prayer against this war.  Here’s the coverage from New York 1:

It was billed as the first interfaith anti-Iraq war prayer rally in
Brooklyn. At an altar decorated with an image of Jesus, Rabbi Alan
Andy Bachman spoke to activists who were Jews, Baptists, Catholics and
Muslims among other faiths. Imam Farrakhan did the same, as did Father
Anthony Ozele at Brown Memorial Baptist Church Wednesday night.

"So, our friends, our purpose tonight is not only to identify the
wrong that has been done in Iraq but also to identify the wrong that
has been done in America,” said Reverend Clinton Miller, of Brown
Memorial Baptist Church. “And more specifically, in the place that we
now call Brooklyn."

One by one, the names of the 14 Brooklynites killed in Iraq were read aloud. 

"This war must end so that we may be filled with righteousness,"
said the reverend of The Church of the Open Door, Mark Taylor.

The religious leaders criticized the policies of the Bush administration.

"One has to wonder if we will continue as a nation to engage in
this schoolyard bully type of diplomacy,” added Reverend Karim Camara,
of the First Baptist Church of Crown Heights. “Or, can we show the
world that strength can also be displayed in sitting down at the table
with those you disagree with."

Religious leaders here charge funding for the war has taken away
from domestic programs like housing and education. And they say this
event is just the first in a borough-wide campaign.

“It is the task of religious communities to keep calling America to
its ideals,” said Reverend Daniel Meeter from the Old First Reformed
Church. “It is political ideals, its idealistic vision of human rights,
its civil rights, its vision of welcoming immigrants, and the poor and
the lowly of the earth, its vision of justice and equality.”

A collection of money was taken at the service with proceeds going to  www.anysoldier.com,
which provides care packages for those in the military, and to Black
Veterans for Social Justice, a local group which helps provide benefits
and other services for those who have fought for America.

TEEN BENEFIT FOR A GOOD CAUSE

Come to the show. Saturday. Tell your kids. Come along with them: rock concerts are a great opportunity for parent/child bonding.

Great bands: Zach Fine and Aman on sitar and tabla, Cool and Unusual, Tetsuwan Fireball, Somewhere’s There’s a Fix and RAPR.

For a good cause: Homeless kids in Manila

Nice location: The Old Stone House. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets. Go here for
directions: theoldstonehouse.org

For Tickets and donations:

http://www.nycharities.org/event/event.asp?CE_ID=736
 

HOUSE GUESTS

Hey, did ya hear? E and M are coming down to the Slope. For the weekend, that is. They used to live on Third Street. But then their PARENTS moved the family to a small town in Massachusets (okay it’s a really cool town) but they took them away from Third Street.

Teen Spirit was devastated when E left. He was in a real funk for months afterward about it. That about four years ago. He doesn’t say:  "I’m going down to E’s" anymore.

E doesn’t live here anymore.

E came to visit last year. He’s a big, teenager now. He shaves. He was very polite and sweet, as always. It was great to see him.

Now M is coming. M IS COMING. I am so psyched. She was like ten years old when she left. She’s a teenager now. She was always such a cool kid.

E and M are coming to visit. Did ya hear?

They’re coming down for TEENS FOR THE PHILLIPINES at the Old Stone House. Teen Bands for a good cause. Saturday October 14 from 6-9 p.m. Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.