Councilmembers Yassky and de Blasio To Unveil State-of-the-Art Computer Lab at MS 447

This school, also knows as The Math and Science Exploratory School, is a small, innovative middle school that is already very HOT. But now with this new computer lab…

The unveiling is tomorrow.

Councilmembers de Blasio and David Yassky provided funding for the technology lab. The grants were awarded to the school upon learning that the school would be moving from one location to another. The total cost of the technology lab which includes complete reconstruction, wiring, furniture and technological equipment was $335,000.00.

The new lab will have a total of 15 Apple desktops and 16 wireless laptops networked with the most current operating system, and application software. The lab also has an interactive Smartboard for whole class lesson presentation. MS 447 (The Math & Exploratory School) has grades 6 to 8 with a total of 457 students.

When: 11AM –Thursday, April 3, 2008

Where: MS 447, 345 Dean Street, 3rd Floor, Brooklyn, NY

Yesterday Was Sweet Melissa’s 10th Anniversary

She started the shop in Cobble Hill ten years ago yesterday. And tonight she’s having a book launch party, and that if anyone has a book they’d like me to sign, or wants to stop by for a glass of Champagne…

The book looks fantastic, complete with her recipe for her magnificent bread pudding. And there will probably be Sweet Melissa sweets at the party.

At the shop in Park Slope on 7th Avenue near 1st Street.

US Supreme Court Asked to Hear AY Eminent Domain Case

From the Develop Don’t Destroy press release:

BROOKLYN, NY— Eleven property owners and tenants have filed a petition asking the Supreme Court of the United States to hear their eminent domain appeal, which was dismissed on February 1 by the Second Circuit Court. The petition provides the Court with an important opportunity to address the appropriate constitutional limits on the government’s power to seize private homes for the benefit of powerful real estate developers like Bruce Ratner.

In 2003 developer Forest City Ratner’s (FCR) CEO Bruce Ratner targeted the plaintiffs’ homes and businesses (and many others) for acquisition and then convinced then Governor Pataki and Mayor Bloomberg to agree to seize the properties and transfer them to Ratner so he could build his proposed 16-skyscraper-and-arena complex known as Atlantic Yards in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn. Given the mammoth scale and footprint of the project, Atlantic Yards is dependent on the use of eminent domain; it cannot be built unless Ratner succeeds in wresting the properties from the plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs filed their original complaint in October 2006. Their suit, Goldstein et al v. Pataki et al, named former Governor Pataki, Mayor Bloomberg, the Empire State Development Corporation, Bruce Ratner and others as defendants. The plaintiffs argued that the use of eminent domain for the Atlantic Yards project violates the United States Constitution because the taking of their property is not primarily for the public’s benefit. While Ratner claims that the project is justified as a public benefit, in fact Ratner is the only who stands to gain and handsomely so from the seizure of plaintiffs’ homes and businesses…

Read more here.

Fiction x Three at Brooklyn Reading Works: April 10th

Sheila_2This should be a great reading at Brooklyn Reading Works. Renowned author Sheila Kohler will read from her novel of the French Revolution, Bluebird or the Invention of Happiness.

A radiant and artful novel based on the life of Lucy Dillon, an 18th-century French aristocrat. Her intelligence, beauty, and lack of pretension made Lucy a favorite of luminaries like Talleyrand and Germaine de Staël — and equipped her to survive the “Terror” that swept France in the wake of the Revolution. Possessed of considerable wit and practicality, Lucy manages to keep her beloved husband and small children safe while all her former circle, including King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette, are guillotined.

Barbara Ensor will read excerpts from her funny, modern twists on fairy tales, including Cinderella (As If You Didn’t Already Know the Story), Thumbalina; Tiny Runaway Bride, and Little Red Riding Hood.

Martin Kleinman will read from his new fiction.

Brooklyn Reading Works
The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope
info; 718-288-4290
louisecrawford(at)gmail (dot)com

Pretty Agnes and Handsome Floyd: Cats Need A Home

A woman needs to find a home for her two beloved cats:

Due to family circumstances, i must find a new home for my lovely cats. Please pass this along to ANYONE you can think of. I need all the help I can get! I am also attaching a word document flyer if you work some where that might be a good spot for posting it, and have the time to do so, i would really appreciate it. I am also listing it on a few websites. THANKS!

Img_1021Lovely Agnes is a gorgeous pale orange tabby. She is an amazing feline that is as sweet as she is pretty! Agnes is a very affectionate cat that loves to be loved. She is smart and will definitely be your best buddy! Agnes will quickly turn your gloomy day into sunshine with all of the warmth and love that she has to offer.

Agnes is 8 years young and is trained as an indoor cat. She does enjoy exploring the outdoors too. Agnes is spayed, current on vaccines … and very healthy! We keep her claws neat and trimmed and just doesn’t mind nail trims one bit.

Dsc_0312Meet Floyd … this dashing black/white tuxedo is simply the best cat ever! He is a beautiful and sleek cat that enjoys human (and feline!) companionship. Floyd is smart, curious, and an all around great cat. This cat will quickly melt your heart! He loves to cuddle and is gentle with everyone he meets.

Floyd is 8 years young and is trained as an indoor cat. Floyd is neutered, current on vaccines … and very healthy! We keep his claws neat and trimmed and doesn’t mind nail trims one bit!

If you are interested in inviting two cats into your life, they certainly make a lovely duo but they can be adopted out separately. Both beauties are neutered and up to date on all vet exams and shots. Asking adoption fee, for safety reasons.

If interested in finding out more about this fabulous felines,
please contact Jenny: jenny(at)jennyladen(dot)com

Brooklyn Councilmembers 9-7 Against Congestion Pricing

Thanks Brownstoner for the Brooklyn breakdown of who did and who didn’t vote for congestion pricing in Brooklyn:

For Congestion Pricing: 

Simcha Felder, Sara M. Gonzalez, Letitia James, Domenic M. Recchia, Kendall Stewart, Albert Vann, and David Yassky—voted for the plan. 

Against Congestion Pricing: 

Diana Reyna, Charles Barron, Bill de Blasio, Erik Martin Dilan, Mathieu Eugene, Lewis A. Fidler, Vincent J. Gentile, Darlene Mealy, and Michael C. Nelson

Note – the headlines were backwards for a while this morning , thanks to Kim for pointing out the error

Are You Having Trouble With Your Yahoo Mail?

I was having trouble last night, too. Hepcat was on an on-line discussion group and found out that other Yahoo users were also having trouble. Here’s a solution for now:

If you are getting an error message that says: “Your requested url was not found.” You will also see this in the address bar: mg2.mail.yahoo.com

add: us.
so that it reads: us.mg2.mail.yahoo.com

and you should get yahoo mail.

Paul Simon’s Monthlong Residency at BAM Begins Today

Love in Hard Times, The Music of Paul Simon, is produced by my high school friend, Chris Wangro. Go Chris.

This unprecedented month-long residency at BAM begins with Songs From Cape Man from April 1-6.

This month, Paul Simon collaborates with an extraordinary range of artists to offer three musical constellations from the career of one of America’s greatest songwriters.

Latin beats and 50s doo-wop fill New York City’s nights with Songs from The Capeman. In Under African Skies, Simon rekindles a love affair with the sounds of South Africa and Brazil which began with his masterpieces Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints. Finally, Simon revisits the quiet railway stations, urban rhythms, and immigrant dreams of his greatest American Tunes.

For tickets go here.

The Oh So Prolific One: Leon Freilich, Verse Responder

Racklock! When’s the last time you didn’t bash into a snarl of newsracks on Seventh Avenue? And snarkers gripe about Slope strollers. The situation’s even worse in the borough across the river, leading the Municipal Art Society to create a short documentary it calls “Outrage.” It’s now a YouTuber:

http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=OUTRAGE%21+Nasty+Newsracks+Movie&search_type=

And it starts–in hard-to-read white writing–with this:

RACKS & RUINS

I think that I shall never see

A corner that is clutter-free,

Especially now that newspaper boxes

Proliferate on all our blockses.

Open Letter to the Brooklyn Museum About Honoring Bruce Ratner

A member of the Brooklyn Museum is angry that the museum’s Board of Trustees is honoring developer Bruce Ratner at their annual Brooklyn Ball. He wrote a letter to the board of trustees that was sent to me yesterday and is posted on the Develop Don’t Destroy Website:

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway
Brooklyn, New York 11238-6052

Re: Inappropriateness of the Brooklyn Museum’s “Honoring” Bruce Ratner

Dear Brooklyn Museum Board of Trustees:

I write this as an open letter to the Brooklyn Museum.

My wife and I came home on Wednesday, March 12th, opened our mail from the Brooklyn Museum, an institution important to us, and were dumbfounded and aghast to discover that we were being invited to a Brooklyn Museum Ball “honoring Bruce Ratner.”

It is uncomfortable to step up and point out why it is inappropriate for the Museum to be “honoring” Ratner, but it is crucial. If it helps that I am not only a longtime Museum supporter but also a lawyer, an urban planner and have had a long career in government with the State Finance authorities, then it is probably all the more incumbent upon me to speak.

I do not believe it is appropriate for a respected public institution like the Brooklyn Museum to be honoring Bruce Ratner. To many of us this is obvious but I will explain the many reasons why.

A museum should be a good neighbor to its community. You cannot be a good neighbor by promoting the activities of someone who is a bad neighbor, and worse, to the community.

Where I come from in government, garnering public subsidy via influence and sidestepping a proper bid process can wind up with the perpetrators going to prison. Using influence and sidestepping a proper bid process is exactly the way that Bruce Ratner is proposing to develop the Atlantic Yards megadevelopment. As a lawyer, I could almost certainly make a distinction between what Mr. Ratner is doing and what sends people to jail but it would be so technical I am not sure most people would understand or regard it as important. And I am not sure if there would be an accompanying moral distinction. Nor could I assure you that, if the facts were fully known about Mr. Ratner’s influence and access, that there would be a legal distinction. I leave it for the people who want a special distinct status to set Bruce Ratner apart to explain what and why that should be. I will point out the main appreciable difference: Ratner’s proposed no-bid subsidy grabbing is on a sheer magnitude of scale that is incomparable. The proposed no-bid subsidies Ratner intends to collect from the public are easily in excess of $2-2.5 billion. That far exceeds anything I am familiar with in other analogous situations.

You can read the rest of this long, detailed letter here.

Plan Approved to Charge Drivers to Enter Manhattan Below 60th Street

Last night, the City Council approved the plan to charge most drivers $8 to enter a zone below 60th Street by a vote of 20-30, with no abstentions and one absence.

Next the vote goes to Albany. According to the Times’ Governor Paterson and Joseph Bruno are supporters but Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver hasn’t stated his preference.

City Council President, Christine Quinn, was quoted in the New York Times as saying that this vote would send a message to the Legislature that “the people who were elected to represent the New Yorkers who live in our five boroughs are sick and tired of our streets being clogged with traffic, we’re sick and tired of the children who live in our city literally having to fight to be able to breathe, and that we see congestion pricing as a solution to this problem.”

Streetsblog has a list of the roll call.

Stroller Bar to Open in Park Slope

A stroller bar is set to open in Park Slope this summer. The Boo Bar named for the infamous Bugaboo stroller, will serve food and drink for adults in a kid-friendly environment with all-organic kiddie cocktails, indoor and outdoor play areas, and, most importantly, an employee in charge of stroller parking.

“It’s a project we’ve have been working on for awhile, and the recent stroller ban at the Union Bar really just confirmed what we found in our research. Parents in Park Slope want a family-friendly watering hole,” says the owner who asked that her name not be used at this point.

Parents will be able to find anything they would at a normal bar plus all the little things that make life easier like sippy cups and a full children’s menu. There will be a special changing room with a diaper vending machine, as well.

Thursday thru Saturday nights after 10 p.m. there will be a weekend cabaret for adults. “We haven’t booked any acts, yet,” says the owner. “But I can say there will definitely be music and performance.”

The owner was reluctant to divulge the location of the Boo Bar but I am guessing it will be on Fourth Avenue.