UDGEWINK: MY FIRST BLOGGER FRIEND

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I check in with Udgewink about once a week. He was my first friend in Blogland. He lives in Stuttgart and we started reading each other’s blogs in October 2004. I feel like I know him even though I wouldn’t recognize him in a line-up. He took this gorgeous picture on a recent trip home to Canada. Here is a recent post that I enjoyed.

Drunk Blogging

Hello and welcome, my dears.

It’s
2:13 am Saturday morning / Friday night and I’ve just got home from an
impromptu party-type event, my hands smell of perfume and cocoanut oil.
Ageing Yuppie
called me up three hours ago to ask whether I wanted to drop in for a
drink. I said no (too tired, too late) so he handed the phone to Jana,
the young (very) woman who is subrenting his apartment while he is at
the college Oop Noorth. She said that it’s her birthday, I should
please come by for a glass to celebrate. Such an invitation is of
course compulsory, one may not refuse a birthday drink. Three hours and
far too many glasses later, I’m home again drinking water and cooking
hot chocolate (the party continues without me).

Jana is Russian,
studying something that I can never remember, pretty and sweet and very
high-maintenance. She requires constant attention: not just that she
dances on the table but that we must all watch and applaud. It’s at
moments like this that I realize that I am indeed getting older: the
young have so much energy, and they waste it on such futile things!
Pascal famously said that our miseries derive from being unable to sit
alone in a quiet room, and this is something that one can hope to
acquire with age. (AY hasn’t got there yet, he is if anything even more
frenetic than when we met twenty years ago.)

Still, a happy and
pleasant event. It’s nice to associate with the young once in a while,
strenuous as they are. I got into a long discussion with a marketing
type from a Quite Well-Known Automobile Company about the meaning of
life, and why he is unhappy in a job that contradicts all of his
ideals, values, hopes and ambitions. Well. I tried as politely as
possible to suggest that maybe his unhappiness is a thing worth
noticing, and that the discrepancy between his job and his ideals etc
might just worth considering. What benefit it a man that he gain the
whole world but lose his soul? to coin a phrase.

Actually it’s
not about age as such. (Stop reading, please! The drunkenness has
turned from merriment to pontificating (an interesting word, actually:
"to speak like a Pope." Before the Reformation, when the whole of
Christianity was Catholic, it must have been the highest of
compliments).) Jana is probably no younger than Noorster who said
"Given a choice, I’d rather watch an interesting biopic on TV than go
out to drink alcohol and rub up against strangers" and "if I fall
asleep after midnight, I’m knackered the next day." N has already
figured it out, while J and AY are still worrying about the
externalities.

Enough. Sweet dreams be yours, my dears, if dreams there be.

THE PEN AND THE POOP: A BLOG THAT’S NEW TO ME

Heard about this Brooklyn blog, The Pen and the Poop, from Sunset Parker. The blogger is Elise Miller, the author of the Star Craving Mad, a book about "motherhood, minutiae and mayhem." Miller’s blog  looks like fun. Here’s an excerpt:

This is what’s so special about blogging versus writing in a journal
the old fashioned way. In my journal I kvetch and whine and do the
whole self-loathing thing without anyone ever reading what I’ve
written, without any sort of reality check or rationality barometer.
With the blog though, I’ve got people to tell me, in a public forum no
less, how maybe I’m not in my right mind to think such horrible things
about myself and it almost brings me to tears of gratitude and regret
for all the ink I’ve used up on such matters. So thank you Hubby and
Amelia’s Plum. It really makes me uh, it just, I guess I am pretty hard
on myself. You should see my journals. Or maybe you shouldn’t. Some
entries have that psychological thriller look, you know those scenes
where the cops stumble upon the serial killer’s notebooks? Like that.
And it takes up so much time and energy hating on myself, because then
I have to think up all the ways I can fix myself. And then I stress out
because the only way to fix the monster is to become Gwyneth Paltrow,
but without the fashion sense lapse. Or Kate Moss without the drug
habit. Or Angelina without the homewrecker rep. And I doubt that’s
going to happen. Although it is Halloween and I do have a long blond
wig somewhere, so you never know. This is just the possibly deranged
risk I take opening up about my insecurities, seeking some meaningful
connection in a hopefully artistic way, while fishing for subject
matter for a future novel. But I really do have a receding hairline,
with those shiny blue scalp spots where hair used to grow, which is
yucky. Will it grow back? I think it might.

NICE SHOUT OUT FROM GOWANUS LOUNGE: THANKS

Thanks Gowanus Lounge for mentioning BRW on your blog. This should be a red hot  reading. Incredible writers! – OTBKB

Blogger and Smart Mom Louise Crawford emails to remind us (and posts about it over at Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn) that the next Brooklyn Reading Works is taking place on November 16. The featured authors are Elissa Schappell, Ilene Starger and Darcey Steinke.
Elissa Schappell wrote Use Me, which was nominated for a Pen/Hemingway
award. She is co-editor with Jenny Offill of The Friend Who Got Away
and the forthcoming Money Changes Everything. She also writes the Hot
Type column in Vanity Fair.

Ilene Starger is a poet whose work
has appeared in Bayou, Oyez Review, Georgetown Review, and other mags.
She was a finalist for the 2005 Ann Stanford Prize.

Darcey Steinke is the author of Suicide Blond (a New York Times notable book of the year), Up from the Water and Jesus Saves.

Brooklyn Reading Works–which is curated by Louise–takes place at the Old Stone House
in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Street. The event
starts at 8 PM. Admission is $5.00 includes some refreshments. Check it
out.

THIS WEEKEND: ROCK THE HOUSE WITH PHONE PARTIES

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There are dozens of Rock the House (and Senate) Phone Parties in Brooklyn this weekend. Go to moveon.org and find a party near YOU. All you need is a cell phone to convince someone to vote. VOTER TURNOUT IS CRITICAL THIS YEAR. CRITICAL!

From Moveon.org: Dozens of congressional races are tied. We’ve identified over a million progressives in these districts who don’t always vote. If we call them and make sure they get to the polls, we’ll win.

Your host will provide everything you need. Grab your cell phone and join your neighbors on the weekend of Nov. 4-5, and again on Election Day (Tuesday, Nov. 7) and help us “Rock the House (and Senate)” at a party near you.

Go here for more information

ORTHODOX JEWISH TEENS CHARGED IN HATE CRIMES

THIS FROM NEW YORK 1:

Five Jewish teenagers are expected to appear in court Friday in connection with the beating of a Muslim man in Brooklyn.

The suspects were arrested Sunday after police say they shouted racial slurs before punching Shahid Amber with brass knuckles and breaking his nose outside an area Dunkin’ Donuts.

According to a court document obtained by NY1, the teens also shouted "…terrorist mother-[expletive,] you [expletive] our country. Why are you here? Go back to your country and never [expletive] with the Jews."

The District Attorney classified the assault as a hate crime, and three of the five suspects are being tried as adults.

"The man was attacked by these people who identified him as a Muslim and claimed that was the reason they attacked him and that’s of tremendous concern to us because he wasn’t attacked just as an individual, but as a member of the Muslim community," said Joel Levy of the Anti-Defamation League.

"We have to send out a message cohesively that this, we are not going to tolerate," said Mohammad Razvi of the Council of People Organization.

"We have been building a coalition in this community since after 9/11 and prior to as well – we are all Brooklyn – and we have been able to meet with and work with different leaders in the community and make sure that this sort of stuff just doesn’t hang," said Rabbi Bob Kaplan of Jewish Community Relations.

But, according to Ari Murkoff, who owns a nearby restaurant on Avenue A, this was not a hate crime and he said he did not hear any racial slurs.

“I saw a bunch of teenagers having an argument and one tried to have bravado and tried to call each other names and it escalated from names to hands,” said Murkoff. “This was definitely not racism; this was a bunch of wild teenagers.”

Razvi, on the other hand, said there are other witnesses who back up Amber’s account.

Amber was taken to Bellevue Hospital where he is awaiting reconstructive surgery. He is expected to make a full recovery.

TONIGHT: KLEZMER GENUIS AT BARBES

Tonight at Barbes (9th Street and Sixth Avenue):

Saturday November 4th at 8 p.m.      

ANDY STATMAN. A truly extraordinary artist, Andy Statman began his career in the 70’s as a virtuoso Mandolinist who studied and performed with David Grisman, went on to study clarinet with the legendary Dave Tarras and became one of the main architect of a Klezmer revival which started out 30 years ago and has since informed and influenced folk, Jazz and improvised music forms. Andy draws equally from hassidic melodies, folk tunes from new and old worlds alike and Albert Ayler-influenced free-improv. The result reads like a very personal search for the sacred based both on traditions and introspection. He will be joined by Greg Burrows on percussion. $8

SMARTMOM: KEEPING TABS ON SLOPE’S AFFAIRS

HERE’S THIS WEEK’S SMARTMOM FROM THE BROOKLYN PAPERS:

The new film with Kate Winslet and hunky Patrick Wilson, “Little Children,” reminded Smartmom of something she’s known for a long time: extra-marital sex just isn’t worth the bother.

The film, which follows Sarah and Brad, two dissatisfied parents in a high-end suburb not unlike Brownstone Brooklyn, makes hanky-panky seem even more transgressive than Smartmom ever expected. Why, it’s right up there with being a pedophile or something.

Sure, “Little Children” is meant to be a broad satire about marital infidelity among the stroller set. But it’s also a watershed cultural moment for parents of small children: a referendum on what happens when privileged Yuppies let their mid-life blues and marital blahs get the best of them.

And the unmistakable conclusion is this: Don’t let your libidinous selves get carried away, Slopers. It won’t solve any of your real relationship issues: kids, money, sex, career unhappiness or bad communication.

In the film, Sarah married the wrong guy, an older man who’s obsessed with Internet porn. When she falls head over heels for Brad, a former jock, who is easy to talk to and easier to land in the sack, it’s just lucky she has a gigundo suburban house with a tiny attic room with a mattress on the floor.

There, Sarah and Brad can hump and moan as loudly and passionately as they want because their toddlers take long naps in the afternoon.

But life doesn’t imitate art.

When Smartmom’s pal Tofutta had a massive crush on a stay-at-home dad she met at Tots-on-the-Go, she barely had enough time to go to the bathroom, let alone plan an afternoon interlude.

And there was just nowhere to go for their intimate interactions. His wife worked at home and  “doing it” in her marital bedroom would have been just plain weird. Plus, Tofutta’s husband’s dirty socks on the floor were probably not much of an aphrodisiac.

She considered trying the new Holiday Inn Express on Union Street, but realized that it was too close to the school where Mrs. Kravitz sends her children — and Mrs. Kravitz, with her vivid imagination, is always walking by that hotel.

Too bad The Lincoln Hotel got turned into condos. That old mansion/brothel between Seventh and Sixth avenues was no Brooklyn Marriott, but it did the trick. A friend (really, she was a friend) frequented the place when she was having an affair with You Know Who.

See, it’s tough keeping secrets in chatty Park Slope because all everyone does is talk, talk, talk and write, write, write. You can’t even have a juicy, tell-all conversation in the back room of Sweet Melissa’s without someone (sometimes even Smartmom herself!) running home and blogging about it.

Take what happened to Big Foot, when her husband had an affair with their babysitter while she was pregnant with their second child. She was devastated. But when she got back on her feet again, she started blogging about it big time. Everyone laughed — except her, of course.

Not everyone gets caught. But some get smart.

Stayathoma had a fling with that cute freelance writer with the lonely, bedroom eyes who picks up his third-grader at PS 321 every day.

Big mistake. They used to do it in his two-bedroom apartment every fourth Tuesday afternoon while his wife was doing a double shift at the Food Co-op and his son was at school.

Trouble was, Stayathoma knew three people who lived in his building and the walls were wafer thin. But that wasn’t all: the spark went out when she started to wonder why her lover wasn’t doing his own Food Co-op shift. She soon realized he was just as much of a do-nothing creep as her own husband. And not even as cute.

It would be so much easier to have a fling with another parent of the same sex. Who would suspect a couple of dads going off to “play tennis” at the Parade Grounds or “take a jog” in Prospect Park?

Or take the case of Jaded Mom and Lonely Mom, two heterosexuals — at least they were, until they became disciples of Sappho while their workaholic husbands were working late and their toddlers were asleep.

They took a much-deserved “mom’s weekend” at a Dutchess County B&B for some R&R. Aroma therapy, pilates class, hotel sex, facials.

But then Lonely Mom’s husband found a torrid email from Jaded Mom on the computer desktop.

Things got ugly. Fights. Divorce. Loneliness. And to this day, Lonely Mom says she’s not gay. She just wanted a little love and attention.

And that’s pretty much what any marital infidel wants (plus, perhaps, the thrill of doing what you’re not supposed to be doing).

Still, Smartmom doesn’t need a movie to tell her that, in the long run, it’s plain stupid to fool around. Having an affair is a cowardly way to deal with the real problems in a marriage (and we all know Smartmom does the right thing, what with her once-a-week couples therapy and twice-a-night Cabernets).

Marital infidelity is really just a temporary escape from what ails a marriage. And boy is it tough to recover from such a tumultuous breach of trust.

As for the sex, the illicit thrill wears off after a while and then it’s just another relationship with all of the inherent problems that come along with that.

So Smartmom is going to stick with her “until-death-do-us-partner,” whom she loves and adores anyway.

It’s hard enough adjusting to someone new. Especially when you’re just getting used to your spouse’s snoring, toenail clipping, and annoying habit of leaving his dirty laundry on the floor next to the hamper rather than in it.

Imagine getting used to a bunch of new bad habits.

Tough to admit it, but marital life is much like it’s depicted in “Little Children”:  the person who seems so right from a distance is probably an awful lot like the person you’re already married to.

TABLA RASA: TODAY: MUSIC TO MY EYES

Audrey & Joseph Anastasi, the couple who run TABLA RASA GALLERY IN SUNSET PARK, emailed me to say how happy they are that MUSIC to MY EYES was listed this week in TimeOutNY.

“In conjunction with the exhibition, we are pleased to host a presentation this afternoon, Saturday, November 4, 2006, at 2:00 pm, by Brian Young entitled, “With Thee I Swing, Poetry and Painting.”  I hope you will join us for this event.”

Brian Young is a published poet and oil painter. Through humor and his bold use of color, Young paints an absurdist vision of the world that resonates with quirky innocence and pathos.  In his unique artist’s presentation, Mr. Young will discuss the inspiration of his painting, “With Thee I Swing,” and also read poetry related to the painting.
 
CURRENT SHOW at Tabla Rasa Gallery
MUSIC to MY EYES
through November 19, 2006

Gallery hours:
THURSDAY through SATURDAY
Noon – 5:00 pm
Additional hours: by appointment

718. 833-9100
718. 768-0305
audfa@aol.com
http://www.tablarasagallery.com/
TABLA RASA GALLERY
224 48 Street
Brooklyn, NY 11220
North end of “R” train to 45th Street exit.  Street parking is available.

VOTE WORKING FAMILIES PARTY: ROW E

Peter Seeger, Gloria Steinem and others have emialed me about the Working Famiies Party. Remember VOTE ROW E ON TUESDAY.

Pete Seeger has recorded a special election message for you.
It’s 38 seconds long, and it’ll make you smile. Please take a moment to
listen to it, and if you agree with his message then forward this email to everyone you know.

You can hear Pete’s message at:

http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/countonme/seeger.html

See who else is voting Working Families and why at:

http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/countonme/endorsements.html

Vote Working Families!

Sam Williams, Bertha Lewis, and Bob Master

WFP Co-Chairs

Dan Cantor

WFP Executive Director

http://wfpjournal.blogspot.com/

http://www.workingfamiliesparty.org/

P.S. Check out our election event calendar and add election events at
http://freecal.brownbearsw.com/WFP

CHOCOLATE CHIP MUSIC

Parents with babies, toddlers, young children, and even older children won’t want to miss CHOCOLATE CHIP MUSIC at the Old First Reformed Church on Saturday.

Local piano and flute teacher and kid’s music dynamo, Helen Richman, put together this series of fun, informative, and entertaining concerts for kids.

What:  How DOES an Elephant Dance?  Featuring Classical Violin and Piano works with area
professional and student dancers

Where:  Old First Reformed Church; Lower Hall; 126 7th Ave. at the corner of Carroll St. in Park Slope, Brooklyn

When:  This Saturday, November 4th at 10 and 11:30 a.m.

Tickets:  $5 each at the door (free for babies under one)– available 30 minutes prior to concert start times

More information available on our website:  www.chocolatechipmusic.org
By email at: info@chocolatechipmusic.org or by phoning (718) 638-8300.

We hope to see you Saturday!

BROOKLYN READING WORKS: NOV. 16 at 8 p.m.

THREE GREAT WRITERS YOU WON’T WANT TO MISS ON NOVEMBER 16, 2006 at 8 p.m.

ELISSA SCHAPPELL, ILENE STARGER and DARCEY STEINKE

Elissa Schappell is the author of USE ME, which was nominated for a
Pen/Hemingway award. She is co-editor with Jenny Offill of THE FRIEND WHO GOT AWAY and the forthcoming MONEY CHANGES EVERTYTHING. The  co-founder of TIN HOUSE with Rob Spillman and Win McCormick, Elissa also writes the HOT
TYPE column in Vanity Fair.

Ilene Starger, is a poet whose work has appeared in
Bayou, Oyez Review, Georgetown Review, and numerous other magazines.
She was a finalist for the 2005 Ann Stanford Prize.

Darcey Steinke is the author of SUICIDE BLONDE (chosen as a New York Times notable book of the year), UP FROM THE WATER and JESUS SAVES.

BROOKLYN READING WORKS  at the Old Stone House. Fiction. Non-Fiction. Memoir. Poetry. Drama. Curated by LOUISE G. CRAWFORD Go here for a map and directions to the Old Stone House.
The Old stone House is 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.

COUNT DOWN CROSS WALK SIGNAL BEING TRIED OUT ON KINGS HIGHWAY

Yesterday, the city unveiled crosswalk signals that count down the
seconds before the light changes.

In addition to the traditional dual display — a person walking and a
raised hand — the new signals contain timers that display the number of
seconds before the raised hand stops flashing and stays steady.

The signals will be
used at five intersections — one in each borough — in a six-month pilot
project. If the project is shown to improve safety, many of the more
than 100,000 pedestrian signals citywide could eventually be replaced
with the countdown signals.

Cities including Albany, Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, Las
Vegas and Washington use them, as well as smaller cities and towns. But
in New York City, crossing the street is no simple matter.

They’ve got them in San Francisco, too and they work beautifully there.

Standing
yesterday on a sidewalk at Kings Highway and Coney Island Avenue in
Brooklyn,
where one of the first five signals had been installed, Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg
said, “It would take a world-class psychologist to understand and
describe the way New Yorkers cross busy intersections such as this one.”

At the Brooklyn intersection, pedestrians have 18
seconds. The length of time to cross — which is based on street width
and traffic activity — is not changing at those intersections.

The Mayor said: “We hope the countdown will
cause people who haven’t stepped off the curb to think twice before
doing so, and also reassure those who are already in the crosswalk that
they don’t need to panic, but should consider picking up the pace."

Yeah, right.

The four other intersections
with the new signals are Southern Boulevard and East 149th Street in
the Bronx; Avenue of the Americas and West Eighth Street in Manhattan;
Hillside Avenue and 179th Place in Queens; and Hylan Boulevard and New
Dorp Lane in Staten Island.

ARTFUL HOMES MAKE PEOPLE BETTER, FAMILIES HAPPIER AND SOCIETY STRONGER

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Karen Zukowski sent me information about her beautiful new book, CREATING THE ARTFUL HOME: the Aesthetic Movement.

This book is the first in-depth look at late 19th century American home design and its cultural context. Average housewives transformed the radical premise of the Aesthetic Movement — art for art’s sake — into beautiful, nurturing homes. They believed that artful homes made people better, families happier and society stronger.

You can purchase the book HERE.

YOUR LAST RUN BEFORE THE RACE

Advice for your last run before the marathon on Sunday from the ING NYC Marathon website.

In this final week before the ING New York City Marathon 2006, you
should run no more than 15 or 20 miles all together, not including the
race, and take one or two days off completely. When you choose to do
your last run before the marathon is a matter of personal preference.
Some runners feel looser and more confident if they run the day before
the race, others find taking that day off gets them to the starting
line with maximum energy. Just make certain that you last run is as
planned and deliberate as all the training that has come before it.
Here’s how your last run can serve as the perfect cap to your months of
training.

Keep it positive. The last
run serves a few purposes, mostly mental. It can help you physically to
work out the kinks of waiting, and mentally to reconnect with your
inner runner. The final run warms up your muscles, says coach Mike
Keohane, but it also gives you a chance to soak in some of ambiance of
New York during race week. “Run a little of the course at the lower end
of Central Park—it’s exciting to see the banners up on the lampposts,”
he says.

      

WHAT NOT TO DO IF YOU’RE RUNNING IN THE MARATHON

On the ING New York City Marathon website, there have been daily tips for runner’s in training. Here’s today’s tip.

Last Minute Pick-Me-Ups

We’ve
already told you what not to do in these last days before the ING New
York City Marathon: no long walks through famous museums, no
experimenting with new shoes or energy gels, and don’t even think about
indulging in a new and exciting ethnic cuisine! But if you’re looking
for something to do during these last pre-marathon days, look no
farther than the ING New York City Marathon Health and Fitness Expo.

      
      

       

ONE MARATHON: 37,000 STORIES

I found this on the New York Road Runner’s site: The big day is on Sunday. The runners run down Fourth Avenue…

ONE RACE: 37,000 STORIES
        [Watch]
        [Read the Stories]

Follow all the action of Race Week right here. [Gallery]

Have You Read Your Daily Tip? [Daily Tip #29 ]

Get official ING New York City Marathon 2006 gear now! [Store]

       

Our spectator guide is the insider’s way to watch the marathon. [Spectator Guide]

Race Day Tracker will be available on November 5

GREEN BROOKLYN

Look what’s happening next week:

GREEN BROOKLYN 2006:  The Sustainable City
Date: Thursday, November 9th, 11:30 am – 5:30 pm
Location: Borough Hall (209 Joralemon Street Brooklyn, NY)
Directions: Take the M/R Train to Court Steet, or the 2/3/4/5 Train to
Borough Hall

Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment is excited to present the
2006 Green Brooklyn Conference: The Sustainable City, sponsored by
Consolidated Edison. With keynote speakers, discussion panels, hands-on
workshops, and exhibitor tables; the conference will bring new energy
and excitement to discourse on the built and natural environments and
how to transform Brooklyn and all of New York into a more sustainable
city. Keynote speakers include: Jeffrey Hollender (CEO of Seventh
Generation) and Matthew Berman (Winner of Global Green USA Sustainable
Design Competition for New Orleans and co-founder of workshop/apd
architecture studio).

   The moderated discussion panels are entitled, "The Built Environment:
Sustainable Development for the 21st Century" and "The Natural
Environment: Conservation, Energy and Sustainable Food for a Cleaner
Greener Environment." Workshop topics are: Transportation Alternatives
and Worms: Turning Waste to Wonder. Panelists and Exhibitors will
include representatives from: Council on the Environment of NYC, NYC
Office of Sustainable Design, NYSERDA, Earth Pledge, Slow Food USA,
Bettencourt Green Building Supplies, Jonathan Rose Companies, Green
Maps, Food Change, Sustainable South Bronx, and many more. Product
donors include: 3R Living, Annie’s Homegrown, Equal Exchange, Keeper
Springs, and more.

   Admission is FREE.

STOOP SERIES TONIGHT AT ROTUNDA GALLERY

Stoop
The first Thursday of the month STOOP SERIES meets tonight.

7PM: At the Rotunda Gallery (33 Clinton Street in Brooklyn Heights), New York Magazine contributing
editor Logan Hill moderates a conversation with New York artists
Wangechi Mutu and Michalene Thomas. A set by Brooklyn’s own DJ
Naturally follows at 9PM. Free admission, and free beer from Brooklyn
Brewery.

BELOVED PARK SLOPE BARTENDER DIES

This from the New York Times:

One of those New York City bar guides prints helpful little symbols
to describe each spot, and beside the entry for O’Connor’s in Park
Slope, there is a silhouette of a man diving into the water.

A
dive bar. Patrick O’Connor, the owner, hated that label. He didn’t
stand here all day, every day, running a cheap dump. And by the way,
when his was the only place around for blocks and blocks, when the drug
dealers outside outnumbered the old men on the stools, he didn’t hear
anybody complaining.

“We don’t do much here,” said Mr. O’Connor’s
son Joseph, 42, sitting at the bar’s dark wood. “What you do, you do
well. Here, you get a good drink in a clean glass at a reasonable
price. He hated the word ‘dive.’ ”

A good drink: Patrick kept the
liquor lined neatly behind the bar. On the way out the door after
closing time, he would dump fresh ice on the bottles of beer. Nothing
colder on a hot day. He always used a shot glass to make drinks, so the
customer knew just what he was getting. And on Sunday, it is worth the
trip just to watch the 78-year-old bartender, Charlie Campbell of
Ireland, make a bloody mary. His back ramrod-straight, he pumps the
tumbler out and down, out and down, looking like Jack La Lanne with one
of his health juices.

 
   

Continue reading BELOVED PARK SLOPE BARTENDER DIES

YOU CAN DRESS UP AS THE DEVIL BUT YOU CAN’T WEAR A HITLER COSTUME?

A Brooklyn high school student, who attends the elite Leon M. Goldstein High School caused quite a a stir Tuesday when he showed up for school on Halloween dressed as Adolph Hitler.

The student, Walter Petryk, said it was a parody of the Nazi dictator.

But some students and officials didn’t get the joke.

The school ordered the junior honors student to remove his coat, his swastika armband or possibly face spending the day
in the office, according to Wednesday’s editions of the New York Post.

Petryk refused, saying his parody was protected by freedom of expression rights.

Petryk’s
stepfather is Jewish and lost relatives during the
Nazi genocide, told the Post he was initially ‘very disturbed’ by the
costume but nonetheless defended his step son’s rights.

To get to school, Petryk disguised his
Hitler costume with a costume of Charlie Chaplin, with a bowler hat and
cane.

GET IT AT COMMUNITY BOOKS: SOUTH SIDE STORIES

For those who can’t make it to either of their shows at Joe’s Pub on Sundays November 5th and 12th, you can buy Capapthia Jenkins and Louis Rosen’s new CD, South Side Stories (Rose Cap Records) at Community Bookstore on Seventh Avenue. It’s got all my favorite songs on it: the first cut is worth the CD price alone: Lucky, Lucky Girl

To My
Brooklyn Friends,

 

Just wanted to let everyone know who’s interested that Catherine at the
Community Bookstore on 7th Avenue is generously stepping in and filling the void
left by the closing of the music store, Sound Tracks, and is now selling the new
CD that Capathia Jenkins and I just released, SOUTH SIDE STORIES. And of course, Capathia (another
Park Sloper) and I are very grateful for her support.

 

If you prefer to shop online, the CD will continue to be available at
http://cdbaby.com/cd/jenkinsrosen;
or
for those who don’t use a computer, at 1 800 BUY MY CD (1 800 289 6923),

 

By the way, for those who like to read what critics have to say, we just
picked up our first review for our current Joe’s Pub engagement from Jeremy
Gerard at BloombergNews.com—its Arts section comes under the heading of
"Muse"–and we’re delighted that he loved the show and the new songs.

 

Best Regards,

Louie

GOLF FOR KIDS IN BROOKLYN

A groundbreaking for junior golf center in Dyker Heights. This from New York 1:

Local school children and avid golfer Mayor Michael Bloomberg were
on hand to break ground on the new project Wednesday. By next year at
this time, Dyker Beach Park in Brooklyn will be home to the first ever
public junior golf center in the city and in the nation.

“This is a great investment in our city’s future because for years
to come it’s going to help young New Yorkers develop their love for the
game and their sportsmanship,” said Bloomberg.

The 11.8 acre space will hold a six-hole golf course, driving
range, and practice facility with free golf instruction. A clubhouse
featuring a classroom learning center and an outdoor seating area will
also be in store.

“We now have a lot of kids that can really play the game,” said
City Parks Foundation Sports Director Mike Silverman. “We decided if we
could find a piece of land in New York that was available and free, we
would try to build a facility just for kids.”

“Ever since Tiger Woods hit the scene, every city kid wants to
learn and play golf so this is meeting the need and it teaches them a
great sport for life,” said David Rivel, executive director of City
Parks Foundation. “And even if they don’t become great golfers, they
will become comfortable on the course and learn about etiquette and
sportsmanship.”

The $6 million Junior Golf Center is expected to be completed and
open to the public in September of 2007 and avid junior golfers are
already anxious to give this new course a try.

“I think it would be really great because I think we can now
practice during the whole year,” said Jessica Plotnikov, a golfer. “And
we don’t have to travel anywhere and it’s really close.

“It’s an active sport that kids like and they want to join it,”
added another young golfer, Elijah Broderick. “It’s a good idea for
them to build this place.

The City Parks Foundation has been sponsoring free golf programs
for kids since 1999. Come next fall, there will be a new place for kids
from ages five to 17 to swing away.

-Michelle Yu

BISCUIT NOW OPEN ON FIFTH AVENUE

Posted on Chowhound:

Just walked by the former Night & Day and noticed they had put
up the "Biscuit BBQ" sign and there was a notice saying they’re opening
for dinner tonight (Oct. 30th). Also included in the notice was a
lengthy explanation of why Night & Day was converting to Biscuit –
I can’t remember all of it but it basically said that they went through
several "self-important" chefs before hiring Cohen and seemed to
suggest that maybe he persuaded them to go the BBQ route since N&D
had never really turned the corner (to profitability presumably).
Anyway, looking forward to the reviews!

   

      
   

HERE’S WHY MARTY WASN’T AT THE HALLOWEEN PARADE

He was in London. This from New York 1:

Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz is in London this week to
encourage tourists to include a trip to Brooklyn on their New York
itinerary.

Markowitz will sell the land of fish and chips on Brooklyn’s great
fare and trumpet the borough’s museums, parks and diverse
neighborhoods.

He will meet with the London deputy mayor to share common successes and challenges.

He will also be doing a little touring. He’s been invited to attend
"Evita" at the Adelphi Theatre and also attend a New York wine tasting
event.

SOPHIE’S CHOICE AUTHOR DIES

This from bloombergnews.com

William Styron, whose novel “The
Confessions of Nat Turner” won the 1968 Pulitzer Prize for
fiction, died in Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, aged 81.         

Styron died yesterday of pneumonia following years of
illness, the New York Times said, citing his youngest daughter,
Alexandra, 40.         

Author Kurt Vonnegut, a longtime friend of Styron’s, told
the Associated Press, “He was dramatic, he was fun. He was
strong and proud and he was awfully good with the language. I
hated to see him end this way.”         

Styron’s last novel, “Sophie’s Choice,” was published in
1979. The story of a Holocaust survivor’s mental struggles was a
best-seller and became a movie for which lead actress Meryl
Streep won an Academy Award.         

Since then, Styron became known for his 1990 memoir of
depression, “Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness.” A review
in the American Journal of Psychiatry suggested making the book
required reading for new psychiatrists.         

      
      
      
      
      

PARADE NOTES

Did you see that guy dressed as Elvis Preslety in a red jumpsuit. It was City Councilman David Yasky.

No sign of Marty Markowitz at the parade.

Paprika, as always, played their percussive hearts out at the head of the parade.

Blinking devil ears were the hot $5 dollar item.

Funniest: The Devil in a Blue Dress (our friend and neighbor outdid himself).

OSFO added devil ears to her princess costume = devilish princess.

Was there more dancing than usual? I thought so.

Those skaters with the white masks, black robes, and long, extending arms were no where to be found.

Creative costume: Two girls: one washer and one dryer.

In a similar vein: Friend of OSFO dressed up as a box of Ritz crackers.

Best family costume: A leprachan holding a pot of gold; the baby as the gold, mom as the rainbow.

Best sandwich board costume: "Got kids into middle school and high school. Finaly have time but no energy left. Sorry no costume."

No Brooklyn Brides or Brooklyn Angels. Overall, the parade was low on architectural or anti-development costumes.