Deep Joanna Once More: Trader Joe’s Opens on Friday

Deep Joanna had more to share about the new Trader Joe’s at 130 Court Street.

According to our source, changes to the double brass door on Atlantic Avenue side of the old bank needed to be modified for receiving Trader Joe’s deliveries proved troublesome.

Naturally it required approval from the landmark commision, as the building has landmark status. landmark
status and that always takes time. The original door was just a huge
single door. The slight revision was for an expanded double door. They finally did get the approval required to make the changs.

The building, a former bank, is officially the property of Two Trees Management As reported in the New York Observer, Trader Joe’s signed a lease 14,500 square feet
in the building. Retail space like that can go for more than $100 per square foot for the year.

Deep Joanna did the math: "Therefore
potentially within five years Two Trees Management will have 130 Court Street paid off in full. Afterrwards, it’s just pure profit for them. i’m sure
TJ’s has at least a 10 or 15 year lease although I don’t know for sure…"

Thanks Deep Joanna for info from the new Trader Joe’s.

Oct 3 & 4: Art Obama and Writers Speak Out

Organizers of Art Obama have learned of another Obama benefit on the same weekend as their event. But no worries. They’re suggesting that you make a weekend of support for the Obama campaign. Here’s a note from David Konigsberg, one of the organizers of Art Obama.

One of the Art Obama artists, Karen Maston, an activist in the Williamsburg art world,
alerted me to another event, October 4, involving literary lions
reading for Obama.  She suggested making a weekend of it, combining
artObama on Friday night and Writers for Obama on Saturday.

Here’s the
pitch to her mailing list:

I am happy to be part of the creative community of NYC coming together
to raise money for Obama. Money is what’s needed to counter all the
sleazy Republican lies and get the Obama message out loud and clear in
the swing states. Bloomberg News had a scary story
last week about how McCain and the RNC now have TWICE as much money to
spend as Obama. With the news and polls a constant roller coaster and
the republican smear machine desperate and willing to say anything to
win, we have to keep our support strong

Here’s something positive we can do with our political anger and frustration:


Please join me at these two upcoming events, make a weekend of
supporting Obama, and make reservations–these are sparking lots of
interest and buzz,
space is limited at both and they will sell out so don’t wait:

• Friday, October 3rd, 7 pm, Art Auction:

Art Obama
I am donating a painting along with 99 other excellent artists, support the cause and take home some art!

62 18th Street, Brooklyn

Silent auction bidding from 7-9 pm, $25 entrance, reservations recommended

Get more info, see the art, make a reservation, get directions at: www.artobama.org

   • Saturday, October 4th, 6-9 pm, Literary Stars Reading:

Writers Speak Out
Salman Rushdie
Jhumpa Lahiri
Kiran Desai
Suketu Mehta
Manil Suri
Akhil Sharma
       

Le Poisson Rouge
158 Bleecker Street
New York, NY 10012
www.lepoissonrouge.com

Tickets:
$100 – General Admission
$250 – VIP Admission (reception begins at 5:00 pm, have a drink with Salman!) Ticket prices rise on Wednesday October 1st.

These tickets are going fast, buy now online and tell them I sent you! Even if you can’t come, make a donation here (just be sure to say zero tickets so you don’t take a seat from someone who wants to hear the reading).

More Deep Joanna: Trader Joe’s Opens on Friday

Deep Joanna, our source inside the Brooklyn Trader Joe’s store, has more information about the opening on Friday:

Opening:

At this weekend’s opening of Trader Joe’s in the landmark bank building on Atlantic Avenue at Court Street, the first 100 people on line will get PRIZES. Crew members have been asked to line the entryway at opening on Friday to cheer the customers on. There will be tastings a-plenty—even in the aisles—during the opening.

A Caribbean band, which is costing the company about $3200, will perform at the opening. Marty Markovitz, the store manager and the regional manager will be speaking on Friday. Senator Chuck Schumer’s attendance is in question; he may be a bit busy this week with the mother of all bailouts.

Here are some facts about this private company that is now about to become a major player in the Brooklyn grocery scene:

–Trader Joe’s has grown from a 6 million to 10 billion dollar company.

–There are plans for a vast expansion within the NYC area alone, including a few more stores in rooklyn, even more in Queens, and even more all over Manhattan. Look out NYC, Trader Joe’s is-a-coming all over.

— This California company is debt free, everything inside the store walls is paid in full.

–No managers or upper management were hired from outside the company.

About the Brooklyn Store:

–Yes, the rent on Court Street is huge, more than Trader’s usual price point.

About Home Delivery:

–For the time being, there will NOT be home delivery at the Brooklyn store; it is not cost effective for Trader Joe’s to do it. However, this might change, the store will make a decision based on customer demand. That is what happened at the Manhattan store and they now have home delivery. Another reason not to do it: Because there are less or no preservatives in Trader Joe’s product, it is more likely for items to spoil before getting delivered home.

Eric Shoes and $5 Margaritas at Barrio

My sister spotted it first. We were coming out of the fish shop on the corner of Third Street and Seventh Avenue.

“Look there are shoes in the window,” she shouted out noticing that there were boots in the window of the new shoe shop, Eric on Seventh Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets.

We crossed the street.

“I’m not buying anything. I don’t need anything,” she told herself.

When we got to the store we realized that the boots in the window were the only shoes on display in the shop, which is set to open on Thursday.

“Where are the shoes?” my sister asked the owner .

“Keep walking into the back,” the owner joked.

“What size do you wear? You wear an 8 and a half? ” another man said.

“No, I’m a size 7,” she said.

My sister told Eric that she’d been in his shop on the Upper East Side.

“I’ve even been in Eric, Jr., too.”

A friendly grey haired man, Eric seemed pleased to meet someone likely to be a good customer. The boots in the window looked like stylish and streamlined ski boots.

Walking toward 3rd Street, we noticed the black board A-frame in front of Barrio: $5 Margaritas. Priced to sell, my sister and I couldn’t resist.

“Do you have this special every day?” I asked.

“Every weekday,” the bartender said.

Did you hear: $5 Margaritas and Sangrias at Barrio most afternoons. Eric Shoes to open on Thursday.

Pete Seeger at the Chile Pepper Fiesta

Peteseeger_smFYI: Folk music legend Pete Seeger will be at the Chile Pepper Fiesta this Saturday at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Here are the ‘tails:

The  annual Chile Pepper Fiesta is upcoming on Saturday (the 27th) from 10-6 – and we are EXTREMELY excited that this year, folk legend Pete Seeger is performing at our annual Chile Pepper Fiesta in a very rare public appearance. Pete will be performing with his grandson Tao Rodriguez-Seeger and Guy Davis, a bluesman in his own right who also happens to be the son of Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee. It’s going to be a very special performance.
The best part is that this is all in addition to the spicy culinary demos and workshops that have become beloved to Chile Pepper Fiesta attendees. And this year we’re psyched to have our magnificent borough represented by:
·         Brooklyn Petro hot sauce company – whose venture was inspired by a trip to the Fiesta a couple of years ago, when they bought their first chile plants;
·         the Sesame Flyers Steel Pan Orchestra – Bklyn teens and youth who lead the West Indian Day parade each year with their incredible steel drumming;
·         the Brooklyn Chili Takedown – a bigger and badder version of this beloved borough-wide event.

Phone Call

My cell phone was ringing and I looked down at the phone. It said “Dad”. It was my stepmother calling. She was using the Nokia cell phone I’d tagged as “Dad.”

It’s the phone my father barely used. He never liked cell phones; never remembered to turn it on. It was strange to get the call more than two weeks after his death.

I’ve heard about signs; messages that come from the dead. When I looked down at the phone it said “Dad” and my first thought was: I wonder what he has to say.

Brainy and Charming Poets at Ceol on Smith Street

Saints Alive!!
Greg Fuchs and Joanna Sit
Come hear these brainy and charmant poets wax rhapsodic
!
6:30. Wednesday, October 1, at Ceol

Ceol       
191 Smith Street
(between Baltic and Warren in Cobble Hill) Brooklyn
(2 blocks from the F train stop @ Bergen)

Excerpt from Songs of December
You said once I was your twin…
who knew when we were
separated? Once the eye
blinks, the parting done, nothing
quite the same after. Seems like we’ve had
lifetimes of practice, years of rehearsals,
to offer up ourselves, to be
torn apart, cut away, again
brushed together, two fires
ablaze then die
out in frigid winter,
leaving one body
aglow with some knowledge
of the other. Who else knows
that sting of brevity?
And I don’t know
how to tell it —
And I don’t know
how it happened.
I’m only the magician’s assistant
in crystal bra and harem pants
busy carrying knives, arrows, torches.
The careless prophet who made us
had since gone. Reason too, gone.
What remains: a rusty scalpel,
a handful of tangled wires
and tiny clumps of clay, proof
of amputation. No one remembers
how long ago that was, but we both
know the body has its own memory
of being there. Now,
it’s December in the drifting city.
It’s my birthday, and our origins flash,
disintegrate, a lost pearl glows
like rapture. What am I made for
if not for you? …’
                                                          

-Joanna Sit

Joanna Sit has taught literature and creative writing at Brooklyn College, NYU, the State University of New York and now teaches writing at Medgar Evers College. Her work has appeared recently in The Tonapah Review, The Relief Journal, Natural Bridge, Fickle Muses, and Poem. Her long poem Bitten by an Unusual Fly was included in the anthology Monologues From the Road, published by Heinemann Press in New Hampshire. She has work forthcoming in Seneca Review. She translates Chinese poetry and recently traveled to Hong Kong to study Cantonese Opera.
                              
                                                                       Say Goodbye
                                                                                        For Gianna Chachere & Valerie Massimi

Never ever acted our age
You too can have a secret blog
But to what end, when you are only cat
With cool tiger stripes makes you Beckett faced
The man with muscular calves
Loves men half his age
Even if he didn’t tell him that the bed
Was wet, the girls partied until the bottles empty
The hurricane caused a disturbance in all our minds
Music of angels only temporarily salves
What is lost in the memory
A city forms identity
The city is gone, so what can we be
In the dispersion it is leveled and understood
That the powerful will keep power
At all cost, the cost of any living being
Tender is the night, journey to its end

-Greg Fuchs

Greg Fuchs is a writer and photographer living in New York City. He has published and exhibited his photography widely. Fuchs’ latest book is Metropolitan Transit, a collection of poems, published by Isabel Lettres, a Brooklyn-based small press. He is the author of Bored of Education (Rock Heals, Baltimore, 2007), Came Like It Went (BD Books, Washington, DC 1999), New Orleans Xmas (Range, Eureka, CA 2002), Rolling Papers (Furniture Press, Baltimore, 2005), Temporary (Unarmed, Minneapolis 2004), Pieces of the Sky (Dusie, Switzerland, 2006) and Uma Ternura (Canvas and Companhia, Portugal, 1998). His poetry is included in the following anthologies: An Other South: Experimental Writing in the South (Loyola University Press, New Orleans, 1999) edited by Ralph Adamo and Bill Lavender; DC Poetry Anthology 1999-2000 edited by Alison Cobb and Jennifer Coleman; Thus Spake The Corpse: An Equisite Corpse Reader 1988-1998 (Black Sparrow, Santa Rosa, CA 1999) edited by Andrei Codrescu and Laura Rosenthal. Fuchs has performed at Beyond Baroque in Los Angeles, Small Press Traffic in San Francisco, the Writers House in Philadelphia, and the Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church In-the-Bowery in New York among many other venues.
.

De Blasio Drafts 5-Point Plan to Reduce Homelessness

I just got this press release from Bill Di Blasio’s Office about his 5-point plan to reduce homelessness in the city. Any responses to this from OTBKB readers?

Families in Shelter

1. Expand Homelessness Prevention Services

Advocates estimate that it costs approximately $33,000 to shelter the average homeless family. In fiscal year 2008, actual spending greatly exceeded this average, with the city budgeting $433 million to cover the cost of 8,848 families in shelter.

In contrast, according to legal services providers, providing anti-eviction legal services for renters in housing court costs approximately $1,785 per case (this is based on the cost of a mid-level attorney with a rigorous case load

While it is not possible to know whether every family that receives anti-eviction legal services would have otherwise entered a homeless shelter, we do know that many families would enter homeless shelters if not for the legal services they received. Providing these services for 5,000 families would cost the City approximately $892,500.  If this measure prevented even 20%, or 1,000, of these assisted families from entering shelter, the City could save a conservative estimate of over $32 million while helping 1,000 families remain in their homes.

2.  Target Federal Housing Aid to the Homeless through Section 8 and NYCHA

In late 2004, Mayor Bloomberg’s administration cut off homeless New Yorkers from longstanding priority for Federal housing programs, including Section 8 vouchers and public housing.

Over the past five years, the City has placed an average of 7,136 persons in housing through Section 8 per year – none of these vouchers were directed toward New Yorkers in shelter.  The City should earmark 10% of future placements for homeless families, which would give at least 300 – 700 families vouchers per year.

In 2008, the City placed 5,220 applicants in public housing through NYCHA.  Ten percent of future NYCHA placements should be earmarked for homeless families, giving approximately 500 families housing each year.

3.  Repair the Flaws in Rental Assistance Programs for the Homeless

The "Work Advantage" program has unrealistic, one-size-fits-all time limits that will cut off rental assistance to struggling families after two years – regardless of a family’s circumstances. This plan was originally offered to 750 families in shelter in the spring of 2007.

In contrast, acclaimed studies by the Vera Institute, the National Alliance to End Homelessness, and academic researchers have found that long-term, flexible housing assistance – like the Federal Section 8 voucher program – helps move families from shelter to their own homes and helps them stay there.

In spring of 2009, the first cohort who entered the Work Advantage program will see their benefits expire.  Not all of these individuals will be prepared at that point to afford their full rents and support their families.  The City should extend subsidies to any families that are still unable to afford their full rent, potentially helping hundreds of families remain in their homes and out of the shelter system.

Individuals in Shelter

4.  Accelerate Construction of Supportive Housing

In 2005, New York City and State signed a ten-year agreement to provide supportive housing for homeless people living with mental illness and other special needs.

However, more than half of the newly constructed supportive housing – 3,276 units of the planned 6,250 new units – will not be built until at least 2011.

City and State officials should accelerate the pace of supportive housing construction. If the city builds approximately 1,000 of these back-loaded units each year, all 3,276 could be available by 2011. 

5.  Halt Referrals of Homeless Adults to Illegal Dwellings:

New York City has referred hundreds of homeless adults – including many living with mental illness – to more than 100 boarding houses that have been identified as unsafe and illegal by advocates.

City inspectors have issued vacate orders to at least 11 illegal boarding houses due to health and fire safety risks – forcing the residents to return to shelters or the streets

City officials should continue to update and monitor the list of these illegal boarding houses, and immediately halt all referrals of homeless adults living with mental illness or other disabilities to them.

She Didn’t Know Starlings Ate Port Chops

Today over at Brooklynometry:

I didn’t know Starlings ate pork chops. I did know, from reading A Natural History of New York City by John Kiernan, that they like eating Japanese Beetles and put a big dent in the insect’s populations once they discovered the abundant larvae available at ground level. I remember seeing those metallic beetles when I was a kid. I don’t think I’ve seen one in a long time! For that matter, when was the last time I saw a telephone booth on a corner? Where is Superman supposed to change these days?

Trader Joe’s To Open in 3 Days: More From Deep Joanna

31_27_traderjoesinside_z_2Our pal, Deep Joanna, wrote with news from the first Trader Joe’s in Brooklyn, which is set to open on Friday September, 26th in the landmark Independence Bank building at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Court Street

Suffice it to say, Deep Joanna is relieved to report that it looks like the elevator should be completed by late Thursday the 25th, just in time for Friday’s opening. It’s been a real nail-biter as to whether it would be finished. This elevator brings products to and from the deep freezer in the basement or lower level of the store.

Our source reports that the brass doors on Atlantic Avenue—not the front doors—are said to have cost more than the elevator This high cost may have something to do with the landmark status of the building, she conjectures.

Because of its size, the Atlantic Avenue store will be the flagship store for the East Coast region. Much of the square footage is outside of the customer’s view: upstairs there are several office spaces and a huge area for crew member tastings.

Says Deep Joanna, the lower level is big enough to hold the Union Square store in, including two large conference rooms for training. There’s also an art department, which DJ says is about the size of a studio or 1BR apt.

According to Deep Joanna there is an old safe that the company still doesn’t know what to do with. She suggests that it be used for an indoor gym.

There will be about 18 registers to ring up orders from customers. Hey, that’s more than the Food Coop.

According to DJ, Union Square was the learning curve for New York City; mistakes were made with the layout and square footage allotted for both crew members and customers

For Friday’s opening, staff from other East Coast Trader Joe’s locations will be on hand to help out with the festivities.

I’m sure the Urban Outfitters just a few doors away is looking forward to the opening of this store which should bring many thousands to that street weekly.

Pix of the store pre-renovation courtesy of the Brooklyn Paper.

Read This: Experts See Need for Punitive Action in Bailout

Peter Goodman in the Times’ today:

As economists puzzle over the proposed details of what may be the biggest financial bailout in American history, the initial skepticism that greeted its unveiling has only deepened

Some are horrified at the prospect of putting $700 billion in public money on the line. Others are outraged that Wall Street, home of the eight-figure salary, may get rescued from the consequences of its real estate bender, even as working families give up their houses to foreclosure.

Most economists accept that the nation’s financial crisis — the worst since the Great Depression — has reached such perilous proportions that an expensive intervention is required. But considerable disagreement centers on how to go about it. The Treasury’s proposal for a bailout, now being negotiated with Congress, is being challenged as fundamentally deficient.

“At first it was, ‘thank goodness the cavalry is coming,’ but what exactly is the cavalry going to do?” asked Douglas W. Elmendorf, a former Treasury and Federal Reserve Board economist, and now a fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “What I worry about is that the Treasury has acted very quickly, without having the time to solicit enough opinions.”

No Two Buck Chuck at Brooklyn Trader Joe’s

The new Trader Joe’s coming to the landmark Independence Bank building at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Court Street will have most of the features familiar to Trader Joe’s shoppers.

But one important category will be missing.

According to a company spokesperson, this location won’t be selling alcohol. I’m guessing that has to do with New York State liquor regulations. In California, for instance, all supermarkets sell wine.

I know Trader Joe’s because of all my visits to the relatives in Northern California and we almost always buy wine there. In fact, my mother-in-law is a big fan of Two Buck Chuck, the really cheap wine they sell.

But cheap isn’t necessarily bad. Sometimes Two Buck is a really tasty wine. Sometimes it’s plain awful. Some of the slightly higher priced wines are more dependable.

But sorry folks. You won’t have that experience. Because the Brooklyn store will be sans wine.

Brooklyn Artist Receives MacArthur “Genuis Award”

Tdcolonyd_2Of the 25 recipients of the $500,000 “genius awards” to be announced on Tuesday by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, there is at least one resident of Brooklyn: Tara Donovan is a sculptor who transforms pencils, paper clips and Scotch tape into sculptures and room sized installations.

She joins a group of lucky artists and scientists, including a Nigerian fiction writer, an urban farmer who delivers healthy food to poor city dwellers; and an astronomer, a rural family physician, a plant geneticist, an infectious disease physician, a jazz musician and others, who will receive this coveted $500,000 that comes without warning and with no strings attached. Here’s a blurb from the MacArthur website:

“They include a neurobiologist, a saxophonist, a critical care physician, an urban farmer, an optical physicist, a sculptor, a geriatrician, a historian of medicine, and an inventor of musical instruments. All were selected for their creativity, originality, and potential to make important contributions in the future. Each received a phone call from the MacArthur Foundation with news of $500,000 in no-strings-attached support over the next five years.

“The MacArthur Fellows Program celebrates extraordinarily creative individuals who inspire new heights in human achievement,” said MacArthur President Jonathan Fanton. “With their boldness, courage, and uncommon energy, this new group of Fellows, men and women of all ages in diverse fields, exemplifies the boundless nature of the human mind and spirit.””

Photo Stolen From Bar Sepia

The owner of Bar Sepia (234 Underwood Avenue) in Prospect Heights sent this note about a stolen photo. She’d like her cherished photo returned — no questions asked.

I am the owner of Bar Sepia, a small bar in Prospect Heights, and I’m reaching out for your help. For those of you who have enjoyed and shared our space , you can most likely recall the lovely black and white and color photos hanging the brick wall. Donated to us by the generous and talented photographer Danny Clinch, the amazing photographs of Bob Dylan, Beasty Boys, and Ben Harper, to name a few, have adorned our walls since we opened our doors in 2004.

Unfortunately, someone felt the need to steal the beloved black and white photo of the late John Lee Hooker and Beck. As the owner of Bar Sepia I have always welcomed all to enjoy our space. It is outrageous that someone felt the need and right to walk in and help themselves to such a precious gift to our establishment.

We have only had one photo stolen in the nearly 5 years of doing business and, fortunately, with the help of our community it was returned. Again, I ask for your help. Whoever has the photo, just return it, no charges will be pressed, and no questions will be asked.

She Made Him Step in Ketchup

Brookynometry is one cool mom. Look what she did last Friday night. Go to the blog to see the pictures.

…This is part of my kitchen
occupational therapy series. All other weeknights have been for
homework lately, but Friday I reserve for flooding the senses.

He
never would have done this footwork had his little sister not happily
led the way. Once his feet were in the condiment booties, he got very
quiet. The reason for the fun here. But does fun really need a reason?

September 27: An All-Nighter At Bam

From 9pm until 4am, party like it’s 1999 at BAM. All night. It’s the second annual Takeover.

$20 in advance, $25 (cash only) at the door

TAKEOVER
returns this fall for a second sleepless night. Four bands, selected by
Sufjan Stevens, keep the Opera House full, while four movie marathons
screen in the cinemas. DJs spin all night long, setting the beat for a
nonstop dance party in BAMcafé, while video art, cheap beer, and
endless diversions take you from dusk ’til dawn.

Bands
Brooklyn Youth Chorus featuring Nico Muhly
St. Vincent
Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens
The Budos Band

DJs
King Britt
Vikter Duplaix

Films
Bring Back the Draught!
Featuring Beerfest, Strange Brew, The Saddest Music in the World, and The Fatal Glass of Beer

Up All Night in 1985
Featuring The Last Dragon, Perfect, Fright Night, and more

The Reel World: Brooklyn
Featuring Saturday Night Fever, She’s Gotta Have It, and The Warriors

Lars von Trier’s The Kingdom: Part I

Rec Room & More
Wii
Guitar Hero
Ping-pong
Lounge
Voter registration

Video Art
Deborah Johnson, CandyStations

            

Reinventing Grand Army Plaza Thank Goodness

Wondering what all that red signage is in the middle of Grand Army Plaza—where the fountain is??? Why, it’s an exhibit presented by the Design Trust for Public Space and the Grand Army Plaza Coalition, which will be there through October 13th. Check it out.

Grand Army Plaza should be one of the world’s great urban spaces. Designed in 1867 by Olmsted and Vaux, this magnificent 11-acre plaza is home to the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Memorial Arch, the elegant Bailey Fountain, the Greenmarket, and the entrance to Prospect Park. Despite its identity as the historic, cultural and geographic heart of Brooklyn, hazardous conditions for pedestrians and cyclists today impede access to neighborhoods, cultural institutions, and prevent use of the Plaza itself.

To catalyze Grand Army Plaza’s rebirth, the Design Trust for Public Space and the Grand Army Plaza Coalition, held an open, international ideas competition in spring 2008 to attract visionary designs for transforming the Plaza. Entrants were encouraged to create bold visions that express the spirit of Brooklyn right now, and did not have to be realistic.

The Reinventing Grand Army Plaza ideas competition resulted in over 200 proposals – from the feasible to the fantastic – submitted from around the world. A distinguished independent jury judged the submissions through an anonymous review, and selected the top 30 proposals to be included in the public exhibit, along with the 4 prizewinning designs.         

From September 13 to October 13, 2008, these visionary plans for a new and improved Grand Army Plaza will be on view in a free, outdoor, public exhibition in the center of the Plaza. Designed by the world-renowned firm Pentagram, this unprecedented exhibit allows the public to imagine the new plans while on site. Visitors to the exhibit will also have the opportunity to vote for their favorite ideas via text message in our People’s Choice Award; the results will be announced on October 8th.

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Tonight at BAM: Season Opener of Metropolitan Opera

 Tonight, September 22 at 6 p.m., opening night at the Metropolitan Opera will be on a screen at the BAM Rose Cinema.

Renée
Fleming stars in three of her most acclaimed roles for the Opening
Night Gala performance. Music Director James Levine and Marco Armiliato
conduct fully staged performances of the second act of Verdi’s La Traviata, the third act of Massenet’s Manon, and the final scene from Richard Strauss’ Capriccio. Tenor Ramón Vargas and baritones Thomas Hampson and Dwayne Croft join the soprano for this season-opener.

Kids Rx Should Be Opening Soon

I peeked through a rip in the plain brown paper on the windows of the space at 189 Seventh Avenue (at 2nd Street) that used to be Second Street Cafe and saw that the newcomers, Kids Rx are nearly finished with their transformation of that space from a restaurant into a drug store.

It’s beginning to look like a drug store albeit an unusual drugstore that specializes in traditional and natural healthcare for kids. Here’s their blurb from their website which is now touting their new Park Slope store:

KidsRx is a real community pharmacy that places special emphasis on the healthcare needs of children.

What makes us different from an ordinary "drugstore"?

KidsRx makes a shift from a product-based service to an information-base service.

KidsRx creates a fun and welcoming atmosphere for child and parent alike. Kids are welcome to play in our waiting area with Thomas The Tank & Friends or sit and watch our overhead train go!

KidsRx specializes in pediatric compounding which allows us to customize a formulation to best suit a patient’s needs. Flavoring, lollipops, transdermal gels (to treat nasuea/vomiting or fever), make hard to find items, custom doses, and create discontinued products.

KidsRx offers comprehensive counseling and follow-up with child and caregiver, always keeping in mind that medicines used improperly can cause a lifetime of consequences in a child.