Sage Spa: Free Massages for Those in Need

I just heard from Susan at Sage Spa about their unique way of giving back to those in need in the community.

I’m hoping you’ll help us get the word out.  Sage Spa has
a charity program every year during the holidays.  This year we are
giving free massages to needy persons and are asking everyone to submit
deserving candidates.  These candidates can be people with illness in
the family, deaths, financial losses, etc. 

We hope to give back by
letting four people have a time to be taken care of here in our peaceful
environment.

The Where and When

Susan Stratton, owner
Sage Spa
405 Fifth Ave. Brooklyn NY 11215
718 832 2030
s.stratton(at)sagebrooklyn(dot)com
www.sagebrooklyn.com

Henry Lowengard’s Top Ten Imaginary Sound Events of 2008

WFMU’s Webhamster, Henry Lowengard, offers his annual list of the Top 10 Imaginary Sound Events of 2008. He writes:

Hello Music Lovers!

It’s that time again – time to imagine what I could have been listening to (or composing) in 2008!

http://www.wfmu.org/~jhhl/Best/

All previous years’ lists are also there for your imaginary listening pleasure.

  1. Blow This End! (Winded: 2008)
    A bouquet of experimental wind instrument solos and duets by "P. J.
    Lapmar" and "Kenny H." None of the instruments (flute, alto sax,
    horn…) are blown in the proper embouchure, and in some cases, new
    holes were drilled into their bodies.
  2. Oil You Need is Love (ESAS Records: 2008)
    A quickly made techno-y single, from Environmentally Shaken and
    Stirred, featuring synth waveforms based on the erratic price of oil in
    2008.
  3. Your Call May Be Monitored For Quality Control (CommunicationBiz Training Tapes: 2008)
    Ever wonder about that little phrase you hear when you finally get to a human agent in an IVR call tree?
    Here’s an audio guidebook for supervisors to critique the agent’s performance, with real recorded examples.
  4. Synching of You (ZZZ: 2008)
    A catchy pop tune, featuring a little riff based on the GSM synch noise
    an iPhone makes every once in a while when it’s near a speaker.
    Makes your pals whip out and turn off their iPhones in embarrassment.
  5. C-r T-lk (Cl-k-n-Cl-k: mp3 2008)
    "Language Removal Service" –
    like work done on the Magliozzi brothers of Car Talk fame: only the
    guffaws and chuckles remain. A great companion to the WFMU "Shemp
    Meditation Tapes" put together by Dave the Spazz.
  6. "Fly Me to the Moon" and Other Hits of the ISS (NASA Media: 2007)
    What do they sing in the International Space Station? These monitor recordings tell you!
  7. Paleo News Supplement Vol. XXXVII (Journals of Expensive Science: 2008)
    Ancient
    Mammals: giant sloths, mastodons, titanotheres — what did they sound
    like?
    In this special supplement, Dr. Cornelia Leonard and Dr. Misha Verbena
    recreate the sound of vanished mammals by modeling the internal spaces
    in their fossilized skulls.
  8. Semiotics of Palintology: I Don’t Know – Alaska! (ThesisGal08@myDissertations.com: 2008)
    In the best tradition of backward masking "decoding," we have here a
    deep dissection of every word, every nuance, every possible meaning of
    the sum total of all publicly available speeches of Sarah Palin from
    the announcement of her vice Presidential candidacy to election day.
    Annotated video by "ThesisGal".
  9. My Lobster Is Grinning, Barbara Jane, Barbara Jane b/w [Tacit] (1-2-3-4-5-6-7": 2008)
    I
    sincerely hope this hypnotic collection of tuned syllables gets some
    airplay somewhere. I can’t decide which side is better. I can’t even
    tell them apart since the disk has no label. Not only is "Lobster" cut
    with 12 intersecting elliptical lock grooves, [Tacit] on the B side has
    a hard to count number of partial drone tracks of various lengths,
    almost literally "cuts", which end abruptly — forcing a jump to some nearby groove or other.
  10. Bow Brass Bars and Bosses (Polarity Recordings: 2008)
    C. P. Ohrfeiger spent a lot of time in the forges of the Far East and
    came back with ideas and time tested formulas for building a better
    gong. Each of her gongs is a sandwich of denser metal over thin,
    flexible laminated steel. After she learned how to grind away the
    nodes, she found she could make a gong in any shape and have its sound
    evolve through time with a long sustain. By carefully combining rows of
    these metal plates over resonators and bowing them, the sound space in
    this 5.1 quintaural recording breaks open and then nestles into your
    head.

It’s Official: JJ Bryne Park is Now Washington Park

Apologies to the late Borough President JJ Byrne. The park, located on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets, formerly known as JJ Byrne Park, has been officially  renamed Washington Park, restoring the park to its true place in history as the site of the first battle of the Revolutionary War.

The playground, however, will now be called JJ Byrne Playground.

In the shadow of the Novo, the new Fourth Avenue high rise condo, Brooklyn politicians, officials and locals gathered to commemorate the renaming of the park and to cut the ribbon on the completion of the first phase of work, which includes a new skate park, two new basketball courts, six handball
courts, a new dog run, new fencing, gates, pavement and landscaping.

I arrived just as Borough President Marty Markowitz was about to speak. That means I missed the welcome from Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe and the Pledge of Allegiance led by second graders from PS 321

"Borough presidents don’t get no respect. Borough President JJ Byrne had the whole place to himself. But I think he would understand our naming it for the father of our country. If he had to yield, he would yield to that," Markowitz told the crowd.

"About Kim Maier [the executive director of the Old Stone House] you can’t say no to her when she flashes that smile. There’s not a public official who can say no."

City Councilmember Bill De Blasio, who was up next, spoke to the historical significance of the day.

"The renaming of this park helps us to think about the history of this place and what it means. What happened on this historic site is important for the whole world to understand. To the children of PS 321 I ask: if the the Maryland 400 had not held off the British here we’d all be talking with a British accent. What a sacrifice people who fought made. It was a make or break moment in American history. An inspiration…"

Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe, a lively master of ceremonies, then introduced Kim Maier, who was beaming. Today was truly a dream come true for the executive director of the Old Stone House, who has, with the board of directors, reinvigorated the Old Stone House and the Park.

"It such a special day for us and such a beautiful park," she said.

Borough Commissioner Julius Spiegel, dressed as George Washington, had this to say:

"I have a newfound respect for our forefathers. It’s painful to wear these boots. And how do you keep the hair out of your mouth?"

After the speeches there was a countdown, led by Commissioner Spiegel in hearty Brooklyn accent, and a ribbon cutting ceremony. And then a skateboarder, dressed in Revolutionary War gear, came roaring down the ramp and broke through a banner that said, Washington Park.

Now that was cool.

Later there was groundbreaking for the next phase of the
project, which includes a synthetic turf green, new fencing,
landscaping and the plaza area opening the view of the Old Stone House
to Fourth Avenue.

 

The Sky Report From Scott Turner of Rocky Sullivan’s

Here’s the latest from Scott Turner at Rocky Sullivan’s in Red Hook. He sends these great emails to publicize the Pub Quiz.
 
This really hasn’t been a happy week for, well, the world.  The Mumbai attacks…the fiscal meltdown melting downerer…the continual parade of athletes wearing the Idiot’s Crown…consumerism running so rampant that temp worker Jdimytai Damour was crushed to death by pre-dawn WalMart shoppers desperate for holiday bargains…the Benny and Hank Bailout Show, a.k.a Not So Secret Billionaires, continue to flair blindly, clueless to do much besides bailout Wall Street
giants ans the rest of us wonder if there’s anything to eat in
those bags we’re left holding…and pirates, arrrgh, ruling at least
one of the high seas.
 
In chaotic times — which is, to say, every single
moment of the history of the universe — we sometimes look for signs.
Some of us, because we believe.  Others, because we’re told to
believe.  And the rest of us, because it’s better than dwelling on
Mumbai-attack New-Depression dopey-ass-blinged-athlete poor-Jdimytai
Demour bailout-fiasco pirateering.
 
This was the sky last night:
 
venus jupiter moon photo
 
Venus (left) and Jupiter (right) cozied up to our very own Moon
for a once in relatively short liftetimes photo-op.  A heavenly happy
face.  Well, in the southern hemisphere it was an ode to celestial joy.
 
Up here in the Northern Hemisphere, it looked different:
 
 
Not so smiley, or facial.  But still, way frakkin’ cool.
 
And it cheered me up.  Because, astronomically, it’s exceptional,
magificent.  You could see it with the naked eye.  Both naked eyes,
actually.  It felt wildly etherial, like something on the cover of a
1950s sci-fi novelization.   The wonder is that it was also real, so
close we could see it without a telescope, t.v. set or Internet
connection.  We’ve gotten so used to traveling the world with the click
of a mouse that when other worlds come see us, showing up on our
doorstep like long lost friends visiting on a whim, it takes us by
surprise.
 
Here at Pub Quiz Actual, Diane, the dogs and I stood watching the Extraterrestrial Three dangle over the rooftops near Green-Wood Cemetery.
Well, the dogs watched us with the wonder of canines baffled by human
behvior.  "Like, our Peoples, what’s with standing on the street for no
good reason?  Hey, is that Steakums cooking next door?"
 
Maybe the moon, Venus and Jupiter convened because a star down here burned himself out.  Alex Gomez died last week.  He jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge
and has yet to be found.  A lot of us knew Alex, a fellow-mohawked punk
rocker and human roulette wheel who kept friends and strangers guessing
whether he’d brighten your day or darken your doorstep — sometimes in
the same heartfelt caterwaul of joy and fury.  At his memorial service
on Sunday, many Alex-dotes were traded.  One woman told of a
snowy-night she and Alex spent making snow angels on a deserted Prospect Heights
street.  Viewing their angels from a stoop, as the snow warmed to rain
and started eating away the angels’ wings, Alex asked "do snow angels
feel pain when they die"?   The woman related a few more stories about
Alex, then finished up by saying "Well, Alex, tell me — do snow angels feel pain when they die?  Do they?!"

It would be maudlin and embarrasing to conflate Alex’s death with
last night’s cosmic convergence.  It wasn’t Alex up there messing with
the laws of physics — though there were few laws Alex left alone.  It
was just a splendid, rare moment our night sky gave us.  One that only
the longest-suriving of us will see again in 2052.  And it cheered me
up, for no good reason other than it was pretty and made me stop,
breathe, and feel my eyes widen for reasons not gut wrenching.
 
This week, Rocky Sullivan’s Pub Quiz is  back after a two-week Thanksgiving break.  It’ll be a different quiz for three, count ’em, THREE, reasons:
 
1) We’ll be holding the quiz in Rocky’s main bar area,
not the back room.   There’s an event being hosted in our normal
home, so we’ll try the bar area.  The Good News?  We’re right there by
the bar and kitchen — even easier access to Rocky’s scrumptious edibles and delectable drinkables.
 
2) It’ll feel like a camp-out in the woods…or spending the night
in the local high-school gym under hurricane conditions.  We’ll hunker
down and answer questions and photo rounds and music rounds and
free-prize queries until the storm passes.  Cozyness and safety under
unusual circumstances.  Except, you know, without the hurricane part.
 
3) We’re starting A HALF-HOUR EARLIER, at 7:30.  Really.  We’re gonna try and start at 7:30.  REALLY.  7:30.  I’m not kidding.
 

Give Where You Live

Header_2

Brooklyn ’s Independence
Community Foundation has created
Brooklyn Gives to
encourage Brookynites to give where they live.

There are so many things to love about Brooklyn: our neighborhoods, our parks, our culture, and most importantly our people. But you may not realize it is the creativity, attitude and heart of our nonprofit community that really make a big Brooklyn difference in the lives of so many people and institutions. You can help these great organizations provide emergency food, care for the homeless, build affordable housing, educate our young people, green our neighborhoods, bring pleasure and insight through culture, and so much more.

As you consider your holiday and end-of year charitable giving, why not include a few of the outstanding non-profits working in and for Brooklyn.

Want to know more? Check out www.brooklyngives.org for a sample list of groups working to build a better Brooklyn for ALL of us.

Give where you live Brooklyn, and happy holidays to all.

Local Holiday Highlight: PS 321 Craft Fair

Hey everybody: the annual 2008 PS 321 Holiday Craft Fair Park Slope is this Saturday. This Saturday!!!

I wouldn’t miss it for the world.

–Over 80 artists of
–Extraordinary hand crafted creative gifts and d
–Decorations for the holiday season
–Family fun –
–Gourmet food –
–Kids make-your-own craft area to
keep the little ones entertained while the big people shop
–indoors rain or shine
–Free admission

The Where and When

The 2008 PS 321 Holiday Crafts Fair
Saturday, December 6
11am-4pm
180 Seventh Avenue @ 1st Street
Park Slope, Brooklyn 11215
Contact tel: 347-446-8254
Closest subways:  B/Q to Seventh Avenue, 2/ 3 to Grand Army Plaza, F to Seventh Avenue

·

Randy Kaplan Top Pick by NPR for Music for Kids

Randy_kaplan_hat_in_hand_2

Kudos to Park Slope’s Randy Kaplan who was picked as one of NPR’s Top Ten in Music for Kids (and Moms, and Dads).

Artist: Randy Kaplan

Album: Loquat Rooftop
Song: Loquat Rooftop

Singer/storyteller
Randy Kaplan crafts a brassy, old-timey collection with subjects from
"The Fire Engine" ("It’s big, it’s red / It’s metal with water") to
laundry camp ("Clothes Dryer"). "The Ladybug Without Spots" showcases
Kaplan’s bluesy storytelling.

Purchase this CD from CDBaby.

The Health Halo in Park Slope

This from Verse Responder Leon Freilich:

Giving his long-tired right wing a rest, Timesman John Tierney does
right nutritionally by coining the term "health halo."  His column in
today’s Science Times considers why eating lite often adds unwanted
pounds.

Tierney
(gossip alert but so juicy), onetime lover of Maureen Down, visits Park
Slope, that "nutritionally correct neighborhood," and discovers that
even Food Coopers are misled by food labeled low in transfat and just
plain fat.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/02/science/02tier.html?_r=1&ref=science

The
twisted thinking, he suggests, goes: This lite muffin must be OK, even
if it’s the size of a Frisbee, so I’ll eat it all.  Fat-foolish,
because the mammoth muffin probably has twice or even three times the
calories of a small regular muffin (which tastes better to boot).

But if  calorie consciousness is not your bag of lite
snacks, Tierney passes along the European tactic: Forget about
nutrition; remember to keep the portions reasonable.

Not even Maureen Dowd would barbecue that import..

Snowflake at Rosewater: Free Gift Certificates

Here’s what Rosewater Restaurant is doing to celebrate the Snowflake Celebration, as part of the Buy Local, Buy Late event on December 4 & 11: Free gift certificates!

This holiday season the Buy in Brooklyn campaign is once again sponsoring the support-yer-local-biz Snowflake Celebration here in Park Slope. Many local shops and restaurants will be offering promotions on the first two Thursdays in December. It’s worth having a peek at who’s doing what on their website.

This year, in an effort to break away from the "free cup of mulled wine" approach and offer up something that would get you off the couch on a chilly Thursday in hard times, we’ve hatched the following excellent idea in the hope that you’ll come keep us company later on this Winter…

Visit us this Thursday the 4th, or next Thursday the 11th. Have dinner, or buy a Holiday Gift Certificate, and receive a BONUS Gift Certificate for you (or anyone else) to use between January 2 and March 22. Spend $50 or more, and receive a GC for $25. Spend $100 and we’ll give you a GC for $50. (The only black-out date is February 14.)

There’s no limit. Spend $300 and get a GC for $150. Use it for Brunch. Use it for Dinner. Use it to rent out the restaurant for your Inauguration Party! The excellent possibilities are endless!

Call us if you have any questions. 718.783.3800

Urban Environmentalist NYC – Sustainability Beat

Here is a snapshot of the sustainability issues that faced the borough and city this past November.
The links were compiled by Rebeccah Welch, Senior Associate Director of
Communications at the Center for the Urban Environment (CUE). To learn
more about CUE, visit 
www.thecue.org.

Bird Fight Paths in Prospect Park [AYITP]

The Great White Way Tries to Turn Green [New York Times]

New Bike Lanes for the Willy-B [Streetsblog]

Center for Urban Future’s Report On Coney Island ‘Visions" [Kinetic Carnival]

Now, City Wants Red Hook to Follow ‘Maritime Roots’ to Revinention [NY Times]

Blue Plate Special: Bay Ridge Bluefish, Yummy or Deadly? [Gowanus Lounge]

How Trash Becomes Green Space [New York Magazine]

Yes, Virginia, There Are Parrots in South Slope [Brownstoner]

Environmental Movement’s Grandchild, Environmental Justice and Sustainability, Grows Up, Turns 30 in Brooklyn [Huffington Post]

Bushwick Looms as the ‘Next Big Place’ for Art [Washington Post]

Bloomberg to Push for Infrastructure Investment [Am New York]

Blue-Lit Cranes Near Ikea [Fading Ad Blog]

Red Hook Bike-Friendly Design Competition Winner & Finalists [Gowanus Lounge]

Next Victim in Crashing Market: Affordable Housing [Brownstoner]

State Says Concrete Company Polluted Newtown Creek [Queens Courier]

It’s Not Easy Being Green [New York Times]

Locals Want BQE Covered Over [Brooklyn Papers]

Cash-Strapped City Cancels Leaf Collection Program [Flatbush Life]

City Proposes Bike Parking Rules for New Buildings [Associated Press]

Saving Jamaica Bay’s Disappearing Marshes [City Limits]

City Reaches Agreement With State on Sewage [NY Times]

New Bike Share Program Coming to New York University [AM New York]

Q&A With CUE’s Director Sandi Franklin [Gowanus Lounge]

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: Yiddish Was Spoken At Home

More from Michael Nolan’s Brooklyn Memoir.

I notice that one of the things that drew President-Elect Obama to
choose Timothy Geithner as his Secretary of Treasury was their common
experience of growing up in various parts of the world. For Geithner,
it was Zimbabwe, India and Thailand. Timothy’s birth in polyethnic
Brooklyn in 1961 might have been a contributing factor, too.

"Foreignness"
can be a wonderful thing growing up, seeing people who look different
and talk funny. I was raised in Brooklyn with Yiddish spoken in my
home. It was my mom’s "mama loshen" or mother tongue. Just to say,
"mama loshen" warms "mein hartz". No wonder so much Yiddish endures in
English today. I smile with appreciation when my "goyishe" friends say
"chutzpah" or "kvetch" (it’s one syllable, denks, not two.)

I
heard a lot of numbers in Yiddish – "finniff und fertzik" —
eavesdropping from the top of the stairs as my Grandma Yidis, Aunt Etta
and my mom would argue about money.

My Tante Yitka, Yidis’
younger sister, moved from the Lower East Side to Bridgeport, CT, and
gained a certain Yankee inflection to her Yinglish. I stayed at her
home on Wayne Street during the summer. "Michael, you vant piece
vaterMalone?" she would say, offering me a piece of fruit.

Her
husband, my Uncle Herman Ostrofsky, was a Ukrainian-born cattleman and
butcher who would take me to his place of business. In a legendary
postcard, I wrote home to my mother about visiting the "shlaughter
house" with Uncle Herman. Must be why I’m such a superior speller today.

The
highest and best usage of Yiddish in my boyhood was my Mom’s uncanny
ability to translate popular American tunes into Yiddish and make them
rhyme. My Irish-American Dad had a great ear for languages and with his
lilting tenor would deliver these songs at Jewish family reunions and
bring the house down. They are etched in my memory. Ask me, and I’ll
sing for you, "Si du a kretchma en dem shtetl" ("There is a Tavern in
the Town") or "Oy, Kim a Heim, Bill Bailey."

I’m grateful for my bilingual upbringing and the study of English as a Yiddish dialect.

Methodist Responds to Park Slope Parents’ Discussion of Emergency Room Care

In the following letter, New York Methodist Hospital responds to a discussion on
Park Slope Parents about the quality of care in their emergency room,
as well as the attitude of some staff members.  The Park Slope Advisory
Board shared these posts with a representative from Methodist and invited a response.

In the following letter, Methodist Hospital responds to a discussion on Park Slope Parents about the quality of care in their emergency room, as well as the attitude of some staff members.  The Park Slope Advisory Board shared these posts with Methodist and invited their response.

December 1, 2008

Dear Park Slope Parents:

We at New York Methodist Hospital understand that there has been a recent discussion
about the service in the Emergency Department at NYM on the PSP listserv and that
several people have posted messages that express significant concern about the care they
have received and/or the attitude of the staff.

The Hospital has been invited to respond by the PSP Advisory Board and we are grateful
for the opportunity.  We take community comments very seriously and were especially
disturbed that, in many cases, there was a sense that the staff of the Emergency
Department did not seem to care about the feelings of the patients or their family
members.  That is inexcusable and, to the extent that it is the case, we will make every
effort to address it.

In the past few years, partially in response to a flurry of postings on the PSP listserv in
2005, we have made many changes in our ED.  Chief among these was the renovation
and expansion of the entire facility, which opened last year.  The new ED has a dedicated
Pediatric Emergency Room and a private suite for women with obstetric or gynecological
problems and is 50 percent larger than the previous ED.

We also added ED physicians and ED staff in our Patient Relations Department and
implemented an ED patient survey, administered and analyzed by an independent market
research organization.  This has allowed us to focus on specific complaints and to
monitor our progress.  When letters of complaint come in to me or to the director of
patient relations, the chairman of emergency medicine or the senior vice president for
nursing, they are shared with all involved and thoroughly discussed before a response
(both in the form of an answer to the letter-writer and a possible change in policy,
procedures and/or counseling of an individual staff member) is determined.

That said, the readers of this listserv need to be aware that emergency rooms, especially
those in a city like New York, do best when the care needed is for a condition that is truly
emergent—life threatening.  We have had some wonderful letters of thanks from
individuals whose lives were saved in our ED.  Often, those lives are saved because
doctors and nurses divert their attention from other patients, some of who may be
extremely uncomfortable, but who are not in life-threatening situations.

This kind of
decision is often necessary and appropriate in an emergency room.  Judging an
emergency room by the amount of time that you wait on any particular visit may do it a
great injustice.

Sometimes we don’t know whether our symptoms are life threatening.  Or, we know that
an acutely painful condition is not life threatening, but still go to the ER because no other
medical care is available.  The ER is there for cases like this as well, but anyone not in an
emergent condition needs to understand that, while we try to avoid long waits, they do
sometimes occur.   

It may also be helpful for you to know that alternative help may be available and
accessible—for example, it may be much more expeditious to take a child with a need for
stitches on the chin or forehead to a neighborhood plastic surgeon or to take one who may
have a broken foot directly to an orthopedic surgeon.  However, because of liability
issues, once you come to an ED, neither the triage nurse, nor any other staff member can
direct you out of that ED to a private doctor.

A physician referral service (accessible by area of specialty) is available at 718 499-
CARE or at www.nym.org.  In addition, we have a pediatric urgent care center, staffed by
a pediatrician, that is available weekday evenings between 6 and 11 p.m., at 263 Seventh
Avenue (between Fifth and Sixth Streets).   

In the fall of 2005, the Hospital hosted a session for interested parents at which members
of the ED staff (in particular, our chief of pediatric emergency medicine) spoke about the NYM Emergency Department, and at which parents had the opportunity to ask questions,

voice concerns and tour the ED.  Clearly it is time for us to schedule another meeting at
which the Hospital and interested community members can come together to listen to
each other.  We will schedule our “listening session” shortly after the holidays.

In the meantime, I hope that you will feel free to contact me (lhill@nym.org) if there is
any way in which I can assist you or if you have any questions you would like to ask.
You may also want to contact Joanne Lagnese, Director of Patient Relations, at
jor9006@nyp.org.

Sincerely,

Lyn S. Hill
Vice President of Communication and External Affairs
and Mother of two children who grew up in Park Slope (one born at NYM!)

Why Shop Local?

Tarzians
Paula Tarzian-Ciferni, Harry Tarzian, and John Ciferni are owners of Tarzian Hardware.  John is also
President of the Park Slope Chamber of Commerce. Tarzian Hardware will be
participating in the Snowflake
Celebration
during the first two Thursdays in December (12/4 and 12/11)
by offering 15% off of everything in the store, raffles for children’s toys,
and holiday refreshments.

Q: When did you open for
business and why did you choose Park Slope?

A: The store was opened by my grandfather, Charlie Tarzian, and his brother
Marty in 1921.  They had apprenticed for their brother-in-law in his store
on Fulton Street.  When it came time for the brothers to open their own
store, they recognized the diversity and potential in Park Slope.  The
original location was at 203 7th Ave.  After 15 years the
brothers moved to the store’s present location at 193 7th Ave.
Then my father Harry expanded next door to 195 7th Ave in
1972.  In 1999 my mother Paula completed the expansion and redesign into
our current layout.

Tarzian Factiod:
During WWII, Charlie volunteered to become an air-raid warden.  Going
door-to-door, Charlie would ensure that each house had proper air-raid
equipment.  If they were out, luckily he could recommend a dependable
store for supplies.  This service kept the store afloat in the early 40’s.


Q:
Which of the Sustainable Business Network NYC’s "Top
Ten Reasons"
to shop locally resonate most with you & your business?

A:
Reason #2: "Our one-of-a-kind businesses are an integral part of Brooklyn’s
distinct character."  In the 1960’s there were six hardware stores open on
7th Ave b/w Flatbush and 16th Street.  With the
continued expansion of big box and chain retailers, our numbers have dwindled
to one.  Tarzian Hardware has remained viable by focusing on our
customers, community, and fellow merchants.  Over the years we have been
approached by many large retailers interested in our space.  Although
these offers were fair, we take pride in our relationship and position in the
community.  As long as there is a family member to run things, Tarzian
Hardware will remain a fixture on 7th Ave.

Shop
Local Factoid:
Shopping at local businesses will help maintain Brooklyn’s
unique landscape. Residents have a "social contract" with local businesses — they
help define their sense of place, yet communities often forget that their survival depends on local patronage.

"Why Shop Local?" is a communication initiative of the Buy in
Brooklyn team. To learn more about Park Slope’s Buy in Brooklyn campaign, visit
their website at
http://www.buyinbrooklyn.com/ The site, with its ever-growing list of participants and partners is updated regularly.

Interview conducted by Rebeccah Welch

 

Brooklyn Co-Housing in the Times

30cover_600
I’ve been hearing about this Brooklyn co-housing group for quite a while. I’ve even announced info sessions on this blog. Well, it sounds like they’ve made a lot of progress in a fairly short amount of time.

So what is co-housing? A group of utopian Brooklynites have pooled their money and bought a nice piece of real estate in Fort Greene (a former church that was set to be transformed into condos). They plan to turn that property into a cooperative housing situation sort of like a kibbutz. Actually, it’s more like Food Coop but it’s a life coop—a village where neighbors share meals and hang out together and let their children roam  wild and free. They also have to make decisions about just about everything together. This will be the first co-housing project in NYC. Here’s an excerpt from the NY Times:

They envision an
arrangement called “cohousing,” a place where neighbors sit down to
share meals several times a week, where children roam freely from home
to home, and where grown-ups can hang out in a communal living room.
They plan, in short, to create a village within a single development,
and their chosen site is in the middle of a tree-lined brownstone block
in Fort Greene.

The group, which has been incorporated as
Brooklyn Cohousing L.L.C., is in contract to buy an unfinished project
known as Carlton Mews, whose developers had planned 40 high-end
condominiums. The developers drew up plans for apartments surrounding a
common courtyard, with the units to be built in an long-abandoned
Episcopal church, its former rectory and a new building with a facade
that mimics the stately town houses on the block.

Brooklyn
Cohousing has bought the rights to the site, the plans and all the city
approvals that the developers spent two years amassing, including a
go-ahead from the Landmarks Preservation Commission. The group hasn’t
settled on a project name yet, but it plans to build more modest
apartments than the original developers intended and to fill them with
families whose lives revolve around the courtyard and 6,000 square feet
of common space where residents can cook together, play together, do
woodworking or take an art class together.

December 9: Binibon, A Music-Theater Piece at Issue Project Room

Issue Project Room presents a free preview reading by Elliott Sharp and Jack Womack of Binibon

Deborah Harry, William Gibson, Robert Longo, Tony Conrad, Toni Dove,
Jonathan Lethem and ISSUE Project Room invite you to a special free
reading of excerpts of BINIBON, the new music-theater piece by Elliott
Sharp with text by Jack Womack and direction by Tea Alagic that will
premiere at The Kitchen in May 2009.

BINIBON is a work of both musical theater and alternative history based on
the 1981 murder by Jack Henry Abbott of Richard Adan. Richard was a waiter
and the night manager at the Binibon, a cafe and 24-hour hangout on 2nd
Avenue at 5th Street in the East Village, a nexus for artists,
musicians,neighborhood characters and bohemians true and faux. It was a
place that E# spent many an hour drinking bottomless cups of terrible
coffee during 1979-81.

The Where and When

December 9 at 8 p.m.
Free
Issue Project Room
232 3rd Street
Brooklyn, NY

.

Tragedy on the B46 Bus

A sad and disturbing incident on the B46 bus in Bed-Stuy. Edwin Thomas was the first bus driver murdered in NYC in more than 27 years. Here’s an excerpt from the story in the New York Times:

A New York City bus driver was fatally stabbed in Brooklyn on Monday after refusing to give a transfer to his assailant, who had not paid his fare, the police said. Witnesses said the killer jumped off the bus, slipped the hood of his black sweatshirt over his head and ran away.

New York City Transit officials said it was the first slaying of a city bus driver in more than 27 years, although from time to time subway token-booth attendants have been attacked, some viciously. It was also the 476th homicide of the year in New York, 29 more than at this time last year. In 1981, there were more then 1,820 killings.

Investigators said the victim, Edwin Thomas, 46, driving the B46 route, was attacked at a bus stop on Malcolm X Boulevard at Gates Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant shortly after 12:30 p.m. by a tall, thin black man about 35, who had boarded the northbound bus about half a mile away.

The police said the man inserted an invalid MetroCard into the fare box two or three times, and, despite its rejection, walked back and took a seat beside a woman. The driver, following rules to avoid confrontations, said nothing. But when the man came forward and asked for a transfer at Gates Avenue, the driver refused, saying he had not paid his fare and was not entitled to one.

Enraged, the assailant punched Mr. Thomas twice in the head, witnesses said. He then stepped off the bus. The driver was about to close the door behind him when the man suddenly turned, stepped back onto the bus, pulled out a knife with a slashing motion and drove the blade repeatedly into the driver’s chest and torso.

Snowflake Celebration: Shop Local, Shop Late!

On December 4 and 11 (two Thursdays): local retailers are staying open late, until 10
pm, offering discounts and throwing a party, to help you keep it close
to home.
Login in to www.buyinbrooklyn. com
to check out the much more than 100 local shops that will be  open late on
these two nights.  And remember there will be carollers, snow machines,
free food and goodies all along the way. Catherine Bohne of the Community Bookstore had this to say:
 
Times are tough, ladies and gents, but such as times are, we’re
all in ’em together.  So lets keep it close to home, and enjoy it all
together, too.
 
Stay tuned for more news. And yes, Virginia, the bookstore will have snow machines again.
 
Lotsa love,
Catherine.
 
PS.  Don’t forget the Tree Lighting ceremony on Saturday December
6th, 5 pm at J.J. Byrne Park (aka:  Old Stone House, corner of 3rd
Street and 5th Avenue), which threatens to feature yours truly and Tod,
dressed as elves (or, to be strictly truthful, Elf and elf-dog).
Festivities and refreshments abounding!

Thoughts on a Young Teacher’s Memorial Service at Beth Elohim

I was reading Old First, Reverend Doctor Daniel Meeter’s blog, and came across this post by Heather Johnston about Karen  Rothman-Fried’s memorial service at Beth Elohim on November 19th. Here is an excerpt:

A young 3rd grade teacher at 321, Karen Rothman-Fried, died
suddenly on Sunday of what might have been a cerebral aneurism (note: an autopsy revealed that it was not an aneurism). She was
6 months pregnant and her unborn son died as well.

PS
321, with Principal Liz Phillips at the helm, responded beautifully.
Should you ever doubt the spirit and leadership of that school, don’t.
It is an extraordinary community I am proud to be part of.

I
attended the service at Temple Beth Elohim today (November 19). She
never taught my girls, but because it is a small world, my mother is
quite friendly with Karen’s mother in Florida. They play bridge several
times a week. Mrs. Rothman was so excited about her daughter’s recent
marriage and pregnancy, they were over the moon with joy. I just wanted
to share how perfect I thought the service was.

Your
collegue, the rabbi of Beth Elohim, did a wonderful job in sheparding
the family and the mourners. As a Christian, I found the service
particularly comforting. It’s a wonderful thing to feel comforted by
another’s tradition. We are all connected. When her brother-in-law
raged at the injustice of her death and then pivoted so quickly to the
meaning of her life, I felt so gratified.

Karen was a passionate, free spirit and committed teacher. He
reminded us to honor her memory the next time we are offered the
blessing to do something spontaneous.

Karen’s
husband, Andrew Fried, was devastated at the service. This was the love
of his life, and his first child. He comes from a strong and good
family, as does she. They will need each other. But when Andrew Fried,
broken and in tears, delivered the W.H. Auden poem, Stop All The Clocks, at the end of the service, it was a moment like I’ve never seen.

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: One Good Teacher Makes All the Difference

Michael Nolan returns with this installment of his Brooklyn memoir.

For me it was Miss Melsha, my 4th grade teacher at PS 99 who taught me
my enduring love of trees and maps. Out the window from our classroom,
on the other side of the schoolyard fence, stood a row of stately
Lombardy Poplars. Poplar’s Latin name is "Alamo" from which we derive
the place names of Los Alamos or Alameda, a grove of poplar trees.
Credit here to Mr. Humbert, my French-Canadian Latin teacher at Midwood
High School from whom ("preposition takes the objective case") I
learned English grammar, etymology, plus a passion for palindromes,
crossword puzzles, Anagrams, Scrabble, and writing.

In Miss
Melsha’s class, we made spatter-prints of leaves collected on field
trips in the neighborhood: a leaf pinned down on construction paper, a
bottomless cigar box with screen mesh placed on top, green India ink
spattered across the screen with a toothbrush, then lift the box and
the leaf, and voila a lovely outline of the leaf.

In front of my
house was a Norway Maple which I could climb by age 10. We made
"pug-noses" from the winged seeds. Mother Nature pre-scored an easy
break point containing the sticky white glue to attach the decorative
up-turned wing on your nose. Across the street was a tall Sycamore,
identified by its broad leaf, chipped bark, and "itchy ball" seeds,
which we would mischievously drop down the backs of our buddies. These
were tree applications not taught by Miss Melsha but learned through
the inherited folklore of East 10th Street.

In geography
homework, I remember diligently drawing (not tracing) the Hawaiian
Islands by hand while looking at an Atlas. I suppose I could have
chosen Wyoming, but savored a challenge. I spent hours drawing the
boroughs of New York City until I figured out how the index finger of
northern Manhattan fit under The Bronx at Spuyten Duyvel. What a fine
feeling of accomplishment. I marked the location of the Polo Grounds at
Coogan’s Bluff on the Harlem River where my beloved Willie Mays played
centerfield for the New York Giants.

Two days ago, I was in my
backyard digging up the remaining bulbous root of a dying black cherry
tree (Prunus serotina) as my booming pine (Pinus ponderosa) claimed
unrivaled prominence in the garden. Thank you, Miss Melsha. "Ave" Mr.
Humbert!

Candlelight Service at Park Slope Church for World AIDs Day

Tonight the Gay and Lesbian Ministry of Saint Augustine Roman Catholic Church holds its second annual World AIDS Day Candlelight Service and
Memorial Ribbon Project.

The Candlelight Service will take place tonight at 7:00 pm in St. Augustine Roman Catholic Church, 116 Sixth Avenue,
between Park and Sterling Places in Park Slope, Brooklyn and will
feature a talk by designer and teacher Jim Morgan co-founder of Friends
House in New York City, which offers housing and support to persons
with AIDS, and Kisangura Friends Secondary School in Tanzania for
children orphaned by AIDS.

The exuberant and inspiring Gay Men’s Chorus of Manhattan, a group
of choral musicians dedicated to educating through song, who use the
gift of voice to promote tolerance and acceptance for GLBT and all
peoples, will perform.

The Where and When

Monday, December 1 at 7:00 pm
St. Augustine Roman Catholic Church,
116 Sixth Avenue,
between Park and Sterling Places
Park Slope, Brooklyn