De Blasio Announces New Hotline to Help Stop Discriminatio

Councilmember Bill de Blasio, the Legal Aid Society, and Russian community leaders held a press conference on Friday to introduce a new hotline that provides legal assistance to victims of housing discrimination. The hotline number is 212-577-3639. Here’s an excerpt from his press release.

"As the cost of living continues to skyrocket in New York City, it is becoming increasingly difficult to find an affordable, safe place to live," said Councilmember Bill de Blasio. "Landlords who refuse tenants based on their source of income are breaking the law, and we must do everything possible to combat this blatant discrimination."

Immediately after the legislation passed, Councilmember de Blasio’s office was flooded with calls from tenants who were being told they could not use Section 8 vouchers or other lawful sources of income, like Social Security, to rent apartments. In response, Councilmember de Blasio teamed up with Legal Aid, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, and AARSA (American Association of Russian Speaking Attorneys) to form a hotline that people can call if they believe they have been discriminated against. The hotline number is 212-577-3639

Special Price for Vespas for OTBKB Readers

Summerspecial1
Didn’t you always want a Vespa? A friend in the building next door has a red Vespa—a gift from her husband for her 50th birthday. Hint. Hint. There’s a new Vespa dealership in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Here’s the blurbage:

I wanted to make contact with you and your blog!
Vespa Brooklyn is the
newest dealer serving the NY Metro Area with a wide variety of
Vespa/Piaggio, Aprilia and Moto Guzzi products. Located in the heart of
Fort Greene, just steps from the historical Brooklyn Navy yard and
minutes from downtown Brooklyn Heights,
Vespa Brooklyn offers a full service showroom, accessories and service department.

We
wanted to offer a Summer Special to anyone reading your Blog!

Hope to see you scooting around Brooklyn,
Liza Miller
Sales
Vespa Brooklyn
215 Park Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11205
p. 718.254.0808 x2
f.  718.228.9442

If You Must: Mama Mia at the Pavilion

Today’s Mama Mia movie times at the Park Slope Pavilion are: 11:40 AM, 2:15 PM, 4:45 PM, 7:15 PM, 10:05 PM

You might be better off seeing the miraculous Wall-E (even for a second time): 1:00 PM, 3:10 PM, 5:20 PM, 7:35 PM, 9:50 PM

Other theaters:

The Wackness is at BAM: 2:20 PM, 4:45 PM, 7:15 PM, 9:30 PM

The Dark Night is at the UA Court Street Stadium (9:45 AM), (10:20 AM), (12:30 PM), 1:00 PM, 1:40 PM, 3:45 PM, 4:15 PM, 4:50 PM, 7:00 PM, 7:30 PM, 8:10 PM, 9:40 PM, 10:20 PM, 10:50 PM, 11:30 PM, 12:50 AM, 1:30 AM

RIP: Architect and Preservationist Paul Byard

“Every act of preservation is inescapably an act of renewal by the light of a later time, a set of decisions both about what we think something was and about what we want it to be and to say about ourselves today,” Byard wrote in his book “The Architecture of Additions: Design and Regulation” (W.W. Norton, 1998).

The obituary of this architect, who lived in Prospect Heights, is in today’s New York Times.

Town Hall Meeting on Mayoral Control of Schools

Wednesday night’s Town Hall meeting in Brooklyn was the first of many that will address issues raised by mayoral control of the city’s schools — a state law that’s slated to end in 2009.

My friend, who is a Parent Coordinator at a local school, said there were many frustrated parents present, who wanted to express their grievances about the way that Mayor Bloomberg has not addressed issues of concern to parents  of special needs children and others

Inside Schools had this report on their website. Here’s an excerpt.

Most speakers described the erosion of public influence on public education
due to mayoral control: Community Education Councils as weak
substitutes for elected school boards; policy decisions (and PR
disasters) enacted by remote DOE leadership; and the
mayorally-appointed (and thus beholden) Panel for Educational Policy in
lieu of the former Board of Education, whose antagonism to the Mayor —
any mayor — was legion.

Parents brought specific and legitimate
complaints about the high-school admissions process and the exclusion
of special-education parents and students from many policy-level
conversations. Martine Guerrier, head of the Office of Family Engagement, as
present; more than a few charged her office with "Orwellian" practices
and a dismissive, "we’ll get back to you" philosophy. Notably, veteran
school leaders said that parents are reluctant to step into leadership
roles because of fears that their questions will lead to repercussions
for their children.

IKEA Ferry: Hand-Stamping Popularity

Apparently the free IKEA ferry that goes from Pier 11 in Lower Manhattan to the great big box store in Red Hook is a very, very popular ride.

It’s amazing that it took a big box store to get some new transportation to MTA-starved Red Hook. There are also big, air conditioned shuttle buses that leave from Fourth Avenue and 9th in Park Slope, Smith and 9th Street in Carroll Gardens and Court Street in Brooklyn Heights.

IKEA is now hand-stamping customers so that they get first dibs on the ferry ride back to the city. The New York Post had this to say:

The ferry service offered by Brooklyn’s new IKEA to and from lower
Manhattan is so red hot that the Swedish home-furniture giant this week
quietly began hand-stamping customers to ensure they get first crack at
the free boat rides.

The move has Red Hook residents fuming, some telling the Post
yesterday they were denied service or forced to miss rides to
Manhattan’s Pier 11 because they didn’t shop in the new superstore,
which opened on the Brooklyn waterfront last month.

To get city approval to open its first Big Apple store, IKEA agreed
to fund the service and even offer it to non-customers to help ease the
burden of extra traffic the store would bring.

But resident Brian Sietz said his daughter was "harassed" and
stopped from getting on the ferry in Red Hook because she was not
stamped and that three of his neighbors "had similar accounts."

IKEA spokesman Joseph Roth said the free service is "still open to
everyone" — provided there is room on board. The general public, he
said, can board if there’s still room after the customers get on.

  He also said "you don’t have to buy anything to be stamped."

Brian Wilson at Seaside, American Roots at Celebrate Brooklyn

Thanks to Neil Feldman of Not Only Brooklyn, his informative and discriminating e-newsletter about free cultural events in Brooklyn and elsewhere. If you want to subscribe email Neil: arbrunr(at)aol(dot)com
directly with the message "Subscribe to NOB" and your first and last name, so it is legal to add you  to his subscription list.

Tonight: 7:30: Celebrate Brooklyn presents a night of Americana roots with Jerry Douglas multiple Grammy winning master of the Dobro resonator guitar and Chicago blues master Luther "Guitar Junior" Johnson. FREE, but $3 at the gate keeps it great. Prospect Park Bandshell near 9th St & Prospect Park West

Tonight: 7:30: Seaside Summer Concerts presents Brian Wilson the iconic founder and main songwriter of The Beach Boys who seems, please God, to have recovered from life threatening mental illness and substance abuse. Although he and his his brothers sang of California girls, we should still welcome him warmly to Coney Island beach. ASSER LEVY PARK FREE! Surf Ave & W 5th St Coney Island (Q to Ocean Parkway) 222.0600

I Hate Valentine’s Day Shooting in Elementi

Benjamin Kaback of Second Avenue Sagas sent word of the I Hate Valentine’s Day shoot. I heard from the owners of Elementi that the production would be shooting in Elementi on Seventh Avenue near Garfield this week.

Not sure if you saw the signs but at least along Carroll St. between
6th and 7th Aves this morning, officials were out in force urging no
parking tomorrow for this movie: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0762105/

Looks like Nia Vardalos (of My Big Fat Greek Wedding) is moving her act from Carroll Gardens to the Slope.

New Musical Discovery: Krystle Warren

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I happened upon her music at the Zebulon website and then went over to her MySpace page. She’s got this sultry, low, expressive voice that blew me away immediately. Wow. There’s a song on her page called "An American in Paris" that is just gorgeous!

I’m not sure if she lives in Brooklyn but she does play in Williamsburg. According to her MySpace page, she travels to Paris and San Francisco (she’s got good taste places, that’s for sure).

Here’s a review by Margaret Coble from Curve Magazine:

With phrasing that reminds me of India. Arie, but with a much deeper,
smokier voice that sits somewhere between Nina Simone and Erykah
Badu–particularly on this six-song EP’s pop-friendly, lead-off track,
"I’ve Seen Days"–Krystle Warren totally does it for me. The Kansas
City, Mo.,-bred singer-songwriter uniquely melds jazz and folk in a way
that’s taken New York City by storm: Mark my words, she’s going to be
huge. This debut EP is just a teaser to get us going while Warren and
her band, the Faculty, finish their full-length album, entitled
Circles, to be released later this year. In the meantime, these six
songs (plus a few more on her MySpace page) will have to do. From the
languorous bass lines of the slow-burning, jazzy bump-n-grinder "The
New Astrologer" to the funkier tropicalia interludes of the more
up-tempo "A Song for Holly," the EP showcases Warren’s diverse skills
and instantly memorable vocals. Do yourself a favor and search YouTube
for her videos–she’s a hottie, too.

Communicate With Power and Purpose

Here’s a shout out for two new workshops that Jezra Kaye is running. One is on July 29th, the other is on September 13th. Take it from me, these are REALLY useful workshops. I took Presto Presentation and it was an immensely valuable three hours. Unforgettable.

Here’s the blurbage from Jezra Kaye who would love to help you become a great speaker:

Lately, I’ve heard from lots of people who think that, because they feel uncomfortable when they give a presentation, they must be doing it wrong.

The truth is, you should feel uncomfortable; you’re making a SPEECH!

Think about it:

There you stand in front of your peers.  Your boss.  A prospective client.  Your dissertation committee.  Your community group.

Everyone expects you to be brilliant (or, at the very least, superbly well-informed).

Everyone feels free to judge (or, at the very least, comment on) your performance.

And, just to add insult to injury, everyone thinks you should "act natural."

Could there possibly be a more twisted instruction than "act natural"?  I can’t think of one, except perhaps "be yourself"–something that people also think you should be able to do with a spotlight shining in your eyes!

Burgers, Burgers, and More Burgers

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A slew of new burger joints are popping up all over the Slope. OTBKB friend and reader Elliot tells me that The Brooklyn Burger Bar on the corner of Seventh Avenue and Ninth Street now has a new name and owner.

What is the name, Elliot?

The old place was owned by Greg, of Greg’s Express.

Then there’s Corner Burger which has taken over the space formerly occupied by Mediterra on Fifth Avenue and 6th Street.

Finally, who can forget Five Guys, the burger chain going into part of the vacated D’Agostino space on Seventh Avenue between 6th and 7th Streets.

Music at the Bridge Welcomes Zebulon

Thanks to Not Only Brooklyn, the great, great weekly e-newsletter produced by Neil Feldman about free cultural events in Brooklyn and other parts of the city, I know about this event in Brooklyn Bridge Park. You too can get Neil’s fantastic cultural resource, which is a labor of love and a great service to everyone who loves the arts in NYC. In fact, I urge that you subscribe. Here’s Neil’s pitch:

If you know of anybody who might enjoy receiving Not Only Brooklyn, make sure to tell them to email me directly at arbrunr(at)aol(dot)com with the message "Subscribe to NOB" and their first and last name, so it is legal to add them to the subscription list.

6-9 p.m on Wednesday night, Brooklyn Bridge Park: Music At The Bridge Welcomes Zebulon  Rain or shine.

The Park continues its new music series, inviting Brooklyn’s best music clubs to curate an evening in the Tobacco Warehouse tent. Tonight, Zebulon the Williamsburg club owned by two French brothers presents Stuart Bogie reedsman and his Superhuman Happiness project; Charles Gayle at All About Jazz the avant-gardist who spent some twenty years homeless but often playing saxophone and bass clarinet on Lower East Side streets, accompanied tonight by Shanir Blumenkranz bass and Michael Wimberly drums; Colin STETSON master of the amazing bass saxophone and neo-folk singer-songwriter Sharon van Etten. FREE! Dock St & Water St

Movies Al Fresco in Park Slope: Manchurean Candidate Tonight

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Tonight in JJ Byrne Park on Fifth Avenue and Third Street in Park Slope. This critically acclaimed film, which is part of BFW’s Democracy in Action series, starts at sundown but there’s usually a fun short beforehand.

The Manchurian Candidate (1962) is a Cold War political thriller film adapted by George Axelrod from the 1959 thriller novel, by Richard Condon.

It was directed by John Frankenheimer and stars Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey, Angela Lansbury, and Janet Leigh. T

Quick synopsis: The son of a prominent, right-wing political family has been brainwashed as an unwitting assassin for the International Communist Conspiracy. The Manchurian Candidate was nationally released on Wednesday, October 24, 1962, at the zenith of the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Fitness Collective Opens Third Location

In 2003, four Brooklyn personal trainers decided to leave their gyms behind and create a new kind of health club focused on one-on-one personal training and specialized exercise classes set in a
non-competitive environment.

Their brainchild, Fitness Collective, consists of a team of professional personal trainers, coaches, and nutritionists dedicated to motivating and inspiring their community to live stronger, healthier lives.

The Fitness Collective is opening its third location at 42 Fifth Avenue in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Residents of Park Slope, Prospect Heights, Crown Heights, Fort Greene, and Boerum Hill are invited to take part in a grand opening celebration on August 2nd with fun activities and healthy snacks and beverages for the entire family.

Everyone is welcome to participate in any of the Fitclub exercise classes that day and also schedule a free, trial personal training session for the opening week!

They will be offering childcare services on-site from 12pm–4pm, and the service is free for the first 20 guests.

Chhhhhanges: Closing of F Train Station Entrance at 2nd Place and Smith Street

An informative note from Tom Grey, District Director for City Council Member Bill de Blasio.

This is to inform you that MTA NYC Transit will be closing the Carroll
Street F station’s plaza entrance at 2nd Place and Smith Street on
Monday, July 28, 2008 due to the construction development which is
currently being performed by Oliver Developments at 360 Smith Street
(a.k.a. 131 2nd Place).  Because the safety of our customers is of
utmost concern, this closure will be in effect on a 24-hour, 7 days per
week basis for 6-8 months (subject to the progress of the construction
project).

Please note this is only an entrance closure, and the station will be
open for business at all times.  Customers will be asked to use the two
other station entrances at 2nd Street and President Street.  We have
installed two additional high-wheel entrances/exits for customer usage
at 2nd Street, and a station agent will be on duty at all times at the
2nd Street entrance.  We will be posting signs at the station in short
time which will notify our customers about the entrance closure and
alternate entrances.

NYC Transit will have an engineer on site at all times during this
construction project in order to ensure the structural integrity of the
station and the safety of our customers.  We will be happy to provide
you with periodic updates on the station-entrance reopening schedule as
more information becomes available.  In the meantime, you can always
contact me via e-mail or by calling me if you have any questions or
concerns regarding his project.

Sincerely,
Tom Gray
District Director
City Council Member Bill de Blasio
(718) 854-9791
(718) 854-1146 Fax

Tonight: Columbia Summer Winds at Old First

The Columbia Summer Winds will be playing at Old First Church on 7th Avenue and Carroll Street in
Park
Slope, Brooklyn at 8pm on Wednesday evening, July 16.  That’s tonight folks.

The Columbia Summer Winds was formed in 2002 as an offshoot of the Columbia
University Wind Ensemble.  Based in New York City, we have among us one of
the finest collections of talented amateur musicians in the world, from which we
draw our membership.  We thus strive to play the finest literature
available, from orchestra transcriptions to classic Sousa marches; from Broadway
showtunes to the most current movie soundtracks.  Since its inception, CSW
has been committed to playing free concerts of the best wind music in the parks
of Manhattan.  We have given concerts in such diverse outdoor venues as
Riverside Park, East River Park, Washington Square Park, Battery Park, South
Street Seaport, Morningside Park, and Columbia’s own Low Plaza.

This is a rare indoor performance for this group. The performance is free and open to the public.

Outside.In Launches Geo Toolkit

Outside.in, the brainchild of Park Slope’s Steven Berlin Johnson, author of Emergence and Interface Culture, and a generous sponsor of the Brooklyn Blogfest is launching Geo Toolkit, a major geo-analytics tool for local content publishers and bloggers. In this email from Outside.in, Josh Mack outlines what the Geo Toolkit offer place bloggers:

We’re launching with two key pieces:

* My Feed: We show you
your feed and posts and how our systems have geotagged them — we’ll
show you regions and places that we’ve found in your posts.  You can
add/edit etc…  In due course we’ll let you grab this new geo-enabled
rss feed for future syndication

* My Stats: We show you all the local metadata from your site:
what places and regions your write about most and how that compares to
other publishers in your area; how you rank in each market; which posts
get the most links from your others and to whom you are linking the
most.

We will be following up soon with some more features, like
embedable widgets that showcase this metadata in meaningful ways for
users (think "top places" and "nearby places").

But for now, we’re really excited about what we see as the first and only analytics tool focused on local publishers.

As anyone who’s ever worked at a computer start up knows, this launch follows several months of very hard work. But now they’re breaking out the bubbly to announce what they call the first and only set of tools designed specifically for local content creators.

Since the beginning, Outside.in has focused on celebrating and promoting placebloggers and
others who write about neighborhood faces and places.

They hope that by using GeoToolkit, bloggers and other Internet content publishers will become even better at what they do. Apparently, they’ve  got lots more goodies on the way, so stay tuned.

GeoToolkit
helps both publishers who write full and part-time time (the occasional
story about a diner, a local policy meeting, new construction,
playground moment, or great new local store) get better distribution on
our site and our partners’ sites, as well as amazing stats to get more
connected to their neighborhoods. Still to come: gnarly widgets and the
option to start making some money.

Okay. Show me the money, guys.

http://outside.in/toolkit

Dept. of Too Much Information: More Colonoscopy

The whole thing was much ado about nothing.

The prep wasn’t that bad: I had to fast the day before the procedure and swallow 32 laxatives and loads of water. Think colonics, purging, Buddhist letting go, emptying out.

The procedure itself is no big deal because I was tranquillized. The doctor said, "You’re going to feel very sleepy…"

The next thing I know, I’m waking up in a recovery room and the procedure is over. It only took about a half hour.

I am happy to report that the doctor found no polyps or any worrisome signs of colon cancer. Phew. I urge anyone who needs to have one to Just Do It (we’re a Nike commercial now).

I did feel a little woozy afterward and very hungry. Within an hour I was pretty much back to normal.

Smartmom and Hepcat: Married 19 Years Today

2cbw4167Nineteen years is a long time to be married. Consecutively, that is.

Yes, it is definitely something worth celebrating. In 1999 when we hit the ten year milestone, we started to make a big deal about our anniversary.

Spending the night at the Paramount Hotel on West 46th Street in Manhattan became our annual ritual.

The first five years at the Paramount were fine. But in 2005 when we arrived, they
told us there were no rooms left (even though we had a reservation) and
then proceeded to give us what must’ve been the tiniest room in a hotel
full of tiny Phillipe Starck-designed rooms. And the crisp white design
– white everything except for the gilt-framed artistic headboard –
wasn’t so crisp and white anymore. There were cigarette burns on the
white carpet and a soft patina of gray everywhere else.

And, to make matters worse, a clock radio went off FULL BLAST in the
room next door at 4:30 a.m. Hotel security came upstairs immediately
and knocked vigorously on the door until the guest turned it off.

So it wasn’t exactly the perfect night away from the kids that we always fantasize about.

In 2006, we decided to take a low key, even blase approach. We figured: why make such a big
deal about it anyway? It was only 17 years after all. Plus making a big tadoo
always arouses expectations and sets you up for disappointment. So we decided: take it easy, take it slow. Let’s just wish each other a happy anniversary and have a nice dinner in Brooklyn.

And that’s exactly what we did. At Brooklyn Fish Camp on Fifth
Avenue at Warren Street, the chilled bottle of reasonably priced white
wine from Australia was all we needed to enjoy the sultry summer night
sitting in the restaurant’s large, lovely backyard. We reminisced about
our wedding 17 years ago, remembering what we were doing when…

Last year I was on Block Island alone. I think we did something the following week. And tonight, for our 19th, we haven’t decided yet….

We will be doing our Park Slope Food Coop shift together today and that’s always really romantic.

 

Bastille Day on Smith Street: See the Video

Last Sunday, there was a great celebration of Bastille Day on Smith Street, sponsored by Bar Tabac. Here’s the report from Streetsblog. Go on over there to see the video.

Every year, on the Sunday closest to Bastille Day, Brooklyn bistro
Bar Tabac helps put on one of the city’s finest carfree events, turning
two blocks of Smith Street into a neighborhood party. As restaurants
take over sidewalks with café seating and shady tents, the center of
the street transforms into a sandy arena for a tourney of Pétanque (bocce’s French cousin). Streetfilms’ Nick Whitaker caught the festivities yesterday,
with the Open Planning Project’s Nick Grossman guiding the way and Bar
Tabac’s Christophe Chambers explaining what goes into the event. Says
Whitaker:It’s not just the action and attraction of the tournament that makes it
special. People lounge about, eat great culinary delights, kids
skateboard, friends play foosball, and listen to great music — the
kinds of things that we need to happen more to make the sometimes
hectic, noisy streets of NYC more palatable. If livable streets
advocates are looking for a good model of what draws people to an
event, look no further.

Park Slope Folkie Releases New Album

Park Slope’s Leah Lawrence, who’s singing voice has been compared to Joni Mitchell, Alanis Morisette, Laura Nyro and Jenny Lewis, is releasing her second album, “Everywhere To Go, Folk by Foulke Vol.II” with a CD release party at the Perch Café in Park Slope at 365 Fifth Avenue between 5th and 6th Streets on Wednesday, July 23rd at 7pm.

At the party, Leah will perform songs from the new album.

Leah’s first album, “Folk by Foulke, Vol.I” is available on ITunes. For more info,visit:  www.leahlawrence.com

Dept. of Too Much Information: My Colonoscopy

Sorry folks. But today is going to be a light day blog-wise, because I’m going off to have my first, yes my first, colonoscopy.

Why, in just a few hours, there will be a huge endoscope up my…

But it’s not necessary to explain any more.

No, I’m not going to be the Katie Couric of the Blogosphere and webcast my colonoscopy for all to see but I did think I would share all the excitement with you.

It’s the preparation for this exam, which can detect colon cancer and is prudent when you reach the ripe old age of 50 and/or have colon cancer in the family, that’s interesting.

In fact, the prep for the procedure is what everyone moans and groans about. Yesterday I was on a liquid diet which meant lots of water, green jello and chicken broth (leftover wonton soup without the wontons from Sczhuan Delight).

At 4 p.m. I had to take 20 huge laxative pills and 50 ounces of water. This was followed by a cleansing of my colon in the bathroom. At 8 p.m. it was 12 more pills and lots of water…

Now I’m off to the doctor office on the Upper East Side and should be back in Brooklyn by noon. Hepcat is all a-twitter because I’m going under anesthesia and that makes him very nervous.

"I’m used to you being the old reliable one," he cooed. It was very romantic and all.

For those of you putting off having this exam — don’t. Colon cancer is very treatable when detected early and colonscopy is the best way to find it.

Today Would Have Been My Grandmother’s 110th Birthday

My grandmother Anna Rudnick Wander was born on July 15, 1898. This great woman of Brooklyn would have been 110 today.

Born in Cohoes, New York a small town near Albany, my grandmother moved with her father to Brooklyn after her mother died. Her mother’s death was the great tragedy of her life.

As a girl, she lived in a big, green Victorian house on Westminister Road with her father, her stepmother and three stepbrothers. The house is still there and it’s still painted green with a billiard room on the third floor.

About ten years ago, my mother and I introduced ourselves to the current owner of that house which is between Rugby and Albermarle Road. She knew of the Rudnick family and told us that they were the first occupants of the house.

Hepcat and I once looked at a pink house practically across the street. I always thought it would have been cool to live across from the house where my grandmother grew up.

Anna attended Adelphi College and trained to be a nursery school teacher. She married Samuel Wander in 1921 and wore a flapper-style wedding dress to her wedding. My grandfather was a wonderfully industrious, elegant and kind-hearted man. He started a plumbing chemical business, owned a building on Canal Street and later, a factory in New Jersey.

After their two daughters, Edna Mae and Rhoda Hortense, were grown up and married, my grandparents moved out of Brooklyn to an apartment at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Although my sister and I spent the first year of our lives in my grandparent’s house, I have no memory of it.

I do, however, have wonderful memories of their three room apartment at the Fifth Avenue Hotel,  which later became a co-op apartment building. Who can forget having dinner with my grandmother, or Nanny as we called her, at One Fifth, the iconic Manhattan restaurant—the first one started by the McNally brothers in the 1970’s—that was located in the lobby of her apartment building; we used to enter through a secret door.

A treasured nightly customer, she was welcomed by Richard, the tall, impossibly dapper maitre’d who would invariably say, "Mrs. Wander, how wonderful you look tonight."

Indeed, she was a familiar face to the trendy crowd, which included Patti Smith, Robert Mappelthorpe and Andy Warhol, who frequently dined there; Nanny was usually departing by the time the cognoscenti came in.

An unusually loving grandmother, Nanny made each of her five grandchildren feel like her favorite. Growing up, my sister and I would meet her just about every Saturday  at Schrafts on Madison Avenue, for turkey sandwiches and hot butterscotch sundaes. She took us to see Thoroughly Modern Millie, Funny Girl and many other movies at the Ziegfield, and to the stuffed animal department at FAO Schwarz. My mother says she’d always buy us new underwear at Best and Company on Fifth Avenue.

In 1964 she told me that the Beatles were on the steps of the Plaza Hotel and asked if we wanted to see. We were right across the street at FAO Schwarz.

"Beatles?" I remember saying. "Giant bugs?"

Well, we didn’t see the Beatles on the crowded steps of the Plaza Hotel that day. My loss. But I probably got a great Steiff stuffed animal courtesy of Nanny that day.