Store Robberies in Slope

From the Brooklyn Paper:

• The reign of terror began on Oct. 13, when two women entered a
Seventh Avenue shoe store, and one asked to use the bathroom. While the
first perp was pretending to seek relief, the second perp went behind
the counter and stole an employee’s bag. The pair then used the
pilfered credit cards to go on a $591 shopping spree near the store,
which is between Second and Third streets.

• Three days later, a man in a yellow jacket entered a tax return
service on Fifth Avenue at around 12:30 pm, stole a fancy cellphone and
left. Cops tracked the smartphone to the corner of Seventh Avenue and
Lincoln Place, but the perp finally turned off the device.

• The scariest of the workplace robberies came on Oct. 18, when
three men in their late 30s stormed into the Cohen’s Fashion Optical on
Seventh Avenue at around 2:40 pm and announced a stickup.

“Get on the floor and don’t move!” one of the men yelled while his accomplices stole 70 pairs of frames.

Teen Spirit Doing Well at Gap Year University

Smartmom_big8
Teen Spirit’s first semester at Gap Year University (GYU) is moving
along nicely. Well, it’s not like they send out a progress report or
anything. But from what Smartmom can tell, Teen Spirit is learning a
lot about himself and maybe even life.

Of course, there are no formal classes at GYU. And there are neither
classrooms nor professors. Like the School of Hard Knocks, another Gap
Year college, the learning takes place in the real world. The
instruction? It’s whatever you pick up on the way.

At GYU, the only requirement is getting a job. Teen Spirit took the
most basic course he could find: Grunt Work 101, which turned out to be
a job at a warehouse in Red Hook for 30 hours a week.

And what a great learning experience that was. TS had to get to work
on time, follow orders and spend the day on his feet packing and moving
boxes. He came home from work exhausted, hot and sweaty.

Work. Real Work. What could be better?

There were other learning experiences, too. He tried to open a bank account, but found out
that you need a passport or driver’s license to do that. He had to
figure out where to get his checks cashed in lieu of a bank account.
Aside from the First Bank of Mom, he learned that there are check
cashing places all over the city that charge a fee.

And he had to learn how to save his new money, and that what used to
seem like a lot of money isn’t all that much after you buy yourself a
new Xbox and pay for your own food, transportation and entertainment
expenses without an allowance.

He is not, however, being charged rent. Not yet anyway.

Alas, the job at the warehouse was a temporary stint. And now that
it’s over, he’s looking for a new one — and in this economy that can be
a bit daunting.

So that’s a learning experience, too.

You’ve got to network and make phone calls. You need to check
Craig’s List, talk to friends, write a resume and to learn how to
present yourself in a job interview.

What about the social life at Gap Year University? It’s not like
there’s a student center or a cafeteria. And there don’t seem to be
school dances or clubs. Luckily, he has plenty of friends who are still
in high school and quite a few friends at local colleges.

And the food.

Teen Spirit has been making good use of the family’s panini maker,
something he disparaged just months ago as “terribly bourgeois.”

You can’t say much for dormitory life at GYU when the dorm room is
actually the room you grew up in and the kids down he hall are his
parents and his sister, the Oh So Feisty One.

So in a way, Smartmom, Hepcat and OSFO have become Teen Spirit’s suite mates.

He and Hepcat have even developed all kinds of fun nightly rituals
like watching David Letterman and Craig Ferguson and ordering
cheeseburgers from Purity Diner at midnight.

They’re practically a fraternity.

At GYU, Teen Spirit has really thrown himself into his music and is
writing a lot of great songs for his solo act as well as his band, Bad
Teeth.

So all in all, what does Smartmom think about GYU? Would she recommend it to her friends?

Sure. Why not? The price is right. While she’s not sure if it would
score very high in US News and World Report, it does seem to be the
right place for her creative and independent son.

And the best part is that he’s definitely coming home for Thanksgiving.

Mumps in Brooklyn Confirmed by the Dept. of Health

From New York 1:

The New York City Department of Health says it's investigating a mumps outbreak in Brooklyn.

Officials say 57 confirmed and probable cases of the virus have been reported since August 21.

The
outbreak was traced to a child who traveled to England, where the
illness is more common. Officials believe that child infected others at
a summer camp upstate.

The mumps outbreak continued in Borough Park once the school year began.

Cases ranged in age from 1 to 42 years old, but most have occurred in children ages 10 to 15.

Officials
say three-quarters of the children who have come down with the mumps
were vaccinated against it, which is supposed to protect against the
illness 90 percent of the time. They stress the importance of getting
vaccinated.

"If these children had not been vaccinated, if we
didn't have as high a vaccination level as we do, we would likely be
seeing many more cases,” said Dr. Jane Zucker of the New York City
Department of Health.

Mumps is spread via large respiratory
droplets. Any one in close contact with someone with the mumps runs the
risk of catching it.

The infectious period is from two days before the onset of symptoms to five days after symptoms appear.

Symptoms
include swelling and pain in the salivary glands, high fever, headache,
earache, sore throat, difficulty swallowing, tiredness and aching in
muscles and joints, and a loss of appetite and nausea.

Residents
are being urged to report all possible cases of mumps to the Bureau of
Immunization at (212) 676-2288 or x2284 or (212) 764-7667 after hours

Sunday Night: Party/Date Auction at The Bell House

Flyerwithlfilogo
PARTY DATE/AUCTION: 
On Sunday at 7:30 PM at the Bellhouse: In the romantic spirit of Black Bag's latest film, "Single Male Survivor", we'll be hosting the Last Night On Earth Date Auction of eligible New Yorkers of all tastes and persuasions.  Free Lighthouse Ale. Each date comes with a fabulous prize, including donations from MoMa, Whitney, BAM, FreshDirect, Asics, MAKE UP FOREVER and more.  To find out more about who you can win a date with and how the auction works, check out http://www.blackbagpictures.com/Date_Auction.html

“Bravura 8th Novel” From Jonathan Lethem

Chronic_city
First he was trashed by the NY Times chief book reviewer, Michiko Kakutani for Chronic City, his latest. But that was then. Now he's being hailed Gregory Cowles in Sunday's New York Times' Book Review for his "bravura 8th novel." All hail Brooklyn's great Lethem!

"By now, Jonathan Lethem is so identified with his native Brooklyn that when he chose Los Angeles as the setting for his last novel — the modest “You Don’t Love Me Yet,” in 2007 — it felt like a vacation or a willful act of misdirection. In fact, though, Lethem’s reputation as a hometown booster rests on the strength of just two books, “Motherless Brooklyn” and “The Fortress of Solitude,” each of which applied a cartographer’s loving attention to the borough. But in four earlier novels and two story collections, Lethem has traipsed all over creation, from Wyoming to the San Francisco Bay Area to the distant Planet of the Archbuilders. Now, in his bravura eighth novel, “Chronic City,” he visits what may be his strangest destination yet: the Upper East Side of Manhattan."

Makers Market at (OA) Can Factory

 

 
Il_155x125.81376232 Stimulusbillladies Mos-1

Every Sunday 11am until 6 pm: curated makers market of art and design
with lots of interesting artisans and designers including Miss Wit, the t-shirt queen of Red Hook, come together at  The Makers Market at (OA) Can Factory on Third Street at Third Avenue. Check out these vendors and more:

Ugly Duckling Presse

uglyducklingpresse.org


May Luk Ceramics

takemehomeware.com


Christine Vasan Jewelry

christinevasan.com

Ugly Duckling Presse

uglyducklingpresse.org

Wabisabi Brooklyn
Jewelry
wabisabibrooklyn.com


Lynn Goodman Porcelain

lynngoodmanporcelain.com


Meow Meow Tweet
Soaps
meowmeowtweet.com


Swayspace
Letterpress
swayspace.com

SchoolHouse Kitchen

schoolhousekitchen.com

Pictured:

earrings: Wabisabi

T-shirt: Miss Wit

Bike bag: MOS Atelier

Nov 19 at 7 PM: Brooklyn Reading Works Presents Young Writers Night

Writing_journal
Brooklyn Reading Works presents Young Writers Night curated by novelist Jill Eisenstadt. A night of original fiction, poetry and music
from teenagers across the city, featuring Hannah Frishberg, Lily
Konigsburg, Maria Robbins Somerville, Ben Waldman, Lucio Westmoreland
and other surprise guests.

Thursday, November 19th at the Old Stone House at 7 p.m. (note early starting time!). Fifth Avenue and Third Street. $5 suggested donation includes refreshments.

Bloggers Meet at Leonard Cohen Show

 
Leonard-cohen
On Friday night, it was great fun to run into Katia Kelly, the wonderful blogger who writes Pardon Me For Asking, at the Leonard Cohen concert at Madison Square Garden.

Kelly attended the show by the 75-year-old singer with her husband and two college-age children. I attended with Hugh and my dear college friend,  Andrea.

Since February, Cohen has been performing in first American tour in 15 years. He travels with a fantastic band that includes vocalist and composer Sharon Robinson (who collaborates with Cohen on songs) and the Webb Sister, who contribute harp, guitar and ethereal vocals.

The rest of the band is absolutely stellar: Roscoe Beck (bass, vocals), Neil Larsen (keyboards & accordion), Bob Metzger (electric, acoustic & pedal steel guitar), Javier Mas (bandurria, laud, archilaud, 12 string acoustic guitar), Rafael Gayol (drums, percussion), Dino Soldo (sax, clarinet dobro – keys).

During the 3+ hour show, Cohen delivered sustained, full-hearted excellence. At 75 (and after a recent heart attack) Cohen is spry and limber. He is able to deliver many songs kneeling and gracefully leaped offstage at the end of each set

He still has the Buddhist monk quality about him after years living in a California monastery. A monk who passionately loves—and respects—women.

An incorrigible wordsmith, Cohen graciously introduced each band member with a poetic introduction. During the show he recited quite few of his poem/songs (10,0000 Kisses Deep) to fantastic effect.

Last night, Cohen received so many standing ovations I lost count but he delivers on each one giving the audience more than they expected. The man has stamina that's for sure. He also has a calm, measured quality about himself that is lovely and soothing.

The following is the set list for last February's show at the Beacon but I think it's very close to what he did last night. I happen to be a big fan of his recent albums  like I"m Your Man" but I was thrilled that he did many from "Songs of Leonard Cohen" and other early albums.

Dance Me To The End of Love
The Future
Aint No Cure For Love
Bird on the Wire
Everybody Knows
In My Secret Life
Who By Fire
Chelsea Hotel
Hey That's No Way/Sisters of Mercy
Anthem

Tower Song
Suzanne
The Gypsy's Wife
The Partisan
Boogie Street
Hallelujah
I'm Your Man
Poem
Take This Waltz

So Long Marianne
First We Take Manhattan

Famous Blue Raincoat
If It Be Your Will
Democracy

I Tried To Leave You

Whither Thou Goest

Park Slope Novelist in the Guardian, The Linewaiter’s Gazette

The Linewaiter's Gazette , the bi-weekly publication of the Park Slope Food Coop, has a nice profile of Amy Sohn, author of the recently published satiric novel about Park Slope, "Prospect Park West." 

And in the Guardian, Sohn pens her own article about Park Slope and writing a satiric novel about where you live:

"I hate it because there are too many pushy people – parents oblivious
to their badly behaved children; crazy dog people; militant vegans."  But she loves the child-friendly restaurants

"I began to see the risks of skewering a neighbourhood of loyalists:
they don't realise you can love and hate a place at the same time."

"I don't want to move – we haven't started that great school hunt yet,
but the main reason is there'll never be any place else quite as much
fun to satirise."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2009/oct/24/neighbourhood-watch-amy-sohn

Stay Tuned: The Linewaiters Gazette Responds to Amy Sohn’s Novel

An OTBKB tipster overheard the editors of the Linewaiters Gazette talking about an article that is forthcoming about Amy Sohn's novel Prospect Park West. Sohn in her satiric novel savages a food coop in Park Slope called the Prospect Park Food Coop. The location is different and so is the name. Sohn—or her editors—were obviously scared of Coop revenge. Probably not a lawsuit but…

Suspension!

Can't wait to see what the Linewaiters Gazette has to say.  Stay tuned.

Food Coop Flunkie

Popup Oh the humiliation. The sense of failure. The exasperation and the annoyance: getting suspended from the Food Coop is SUCH A DRAG.

This is an excerpt from Saturday's NY Times courtesy of Verse Responder Leon Freilich, who was obviously speechless.

I doubt he's ever been suspended.

The picture is pricelss.

"I BOUNDED off the Q train in Brooklyn one night last winter and
headed to Union Street, past the yogurt shop and the firehouse, to do
some grocery shopping. But my plans soon went awry.

“You’re suspended,” the entrance worker at the Park Slope Food Coop announced as I swiped my membership card. Some entrance workers speak
softly, but not this one. Worse, there were a dozen other shoppers
within earshot."

Flushed, defeated and taken aback — I knew I owed the co-op some work,
but I didn’t know I had been blacklisted — I slunk around the corner
for a takeout burrito. But no amount of mushrooms and spinach could
diminish my shame and guilt.

RIP: Soupy Sales

1_61_a320
When I was a kid I LOVED The Soupy Sales Show, a real NYC local TV institution.

Soupy Sales, who died yesterday in hospice at the age of 83, was corny, funny, sweet and sometimes a little too adult for kids. But that was part of the fun. In fact, he was thrown off the air for a week because of a joke tellling listeners to go to their mothers'
purse and mail him all the pieces of green paper bearing pictures of
the presidents.

The show included puppets with names like White Fang, Black
Tooth and Pookie, and off-camera characters, including the
infamous naked girl.

And the best best part of the show: when a co-star lobbed a pie into Soupy's face. According to Soupy, he was hit by more than
25,000 pies in his lifetime

I was just reminded of a classic Soupy Sales schtick: The Mouse. The Mouse was Soupy's dance. He would bare his upper teeth,
raise his hands to his ears and wiggled his fingers while chewing in
time to the music.

Omigod: I just remembered he was often a contestant on What's My Line? a local game show I used to watch, too. Great, great show.


New York Times Magazine: The Gowanus Canal, A Disreputable Gash

Popup
In this Sunday's NY Times Magazine, an article about the Gowanus Canal. Here an excerpt:

"THE GOWANUS CANAL runs one and a half miles through brownstone Brooklyn,
cutting a disreputable gash between two of the most desirable
residential neighborhoods in New York City. Sunken below street level,
no more than 100 feet across at most points, the canal does not really
flow — it skulks. On sunny days, its waters take a greenish hue and are
clear enough to afford glimpses of rotting bulkhead timbers, mud-caked
tires and other submerged detritus. When it’s overcast, the water turns
an inert gray. In the lawless old days, industries along the canal’s
banks fouled it with all kinds of pollution. Today, the canal is mostly
disused, a corridor of warehouses and razor wire, and the most enduring
reminders of its colorful past emanate from several underground
deposits of coal tar, which belch up oily bubbles. The residue forms a
prismatic sheen on the canal’s surface, reflecting shimmering visions
of the landscape."

The Weekend List: Amelia, Cocomama, Date Auction & Kidstuff

CocoMama_pdp
MOVIES: 
BAM: Amelia, The Informant!, Coco Before Chanel, Capitalism: A Love Story. Pavilion: Where the Wild Things Are, Toy Story, Toy Story 2 in 3-D, Amelia, Paranormal Activities, Whip It…

PERFORMANCE:  BAM: Meredith Monk: Songs of Ascension; The Legend of Ichabod Crane thru Oct. 31 at the Brooklyn Lyceum. Performances: Oct 17, 18, 24, 25, 31. $10 each, or $30 for 4.

MUSIC:  BAM Cafe: Cocomama, an international group of women based in New York City.
Originally from as far flung places as Cuba, France, Argentina, Israel,
Puerto Rico and Wisconsin, they play "hard-hitting", original Latin
music deeply rooted in Afro-Caribbean rhythms: Saturday at 9 PM.

Barbes: Ljova and Kontraband: Eastern-European and Gypsy melodies, Latin rhythms, Jazz-inspired
improvisations, and deeply rooted Classical forms are given new
meanings in original compositions with a nostalgic gaze towards the
past on Saturday night at 10 PM.

Union Hall: The Loom and Mia Riddle and her band on Saturday night.

At Irondale Center 85 South Oxford Street in Fort Greene on Friday and Saturday at 8 PM: Mississippi based artists
M.U.G.A.B.E.E  will
bring their unique blend of hip hop,
jazz, spoken word to the Irondale center for an exclusive, two-night engagement
.featuring exceptional jazz pianist Courtney Bryan and a host of guest
musicians in a return engagement to Brooklyn’s Irondale Center.

Flyerwithlfilogo
PARTY DATE/AUCTION:
On Sunday at 7:30 PM at the Bellhouse: In the romantic spirit of Black Bag's latest film, "Single Male Survivor", we'll be hosting the Last Night On Earth Date Auction of eligible New Yorkers of all tastes and persuasions.  Free Lighthouse Ale. Each date comes with a fabulous prize, including donations from MoMa, Whitney, BAM, FreshDirect, Asics, MAKE UP FOREVER and more.  To find out more about who you can win a date with and how the auction works, check out http://www.blackbagpictures.com/Date_Auction.html

KIDSTUFF:  Monster Mash Festival at the Brooklyn Children's Museum. Many events and parties, including storytelling, arts & crafts, and Where the Wild Things Are projects. Now through October 31st. Free with museum admission of $7.50. Not-so-Spooky Halloween at BAX for preschoolers on Sunday, October 25th at 11 AM. Songs and stories. $7.50 for one adult and a child.

On Saturday from 10 AM until 2 PM: It's
My Park! Day events bring thousands of New Yorkers to over 150 sites in
all five boroughs. Come pitch-in and keep Prospect Park beautiful! Meet
at Lookout Hill.
Click here for more information about volunteering.

More Halloween events at Brooklyn Frugal Family Examiner.


West Coast Style Beer & Poet Philip Levine at Pacific Standard

So there's this cool new bar on Fourth Avenue called Pacific Standard, a Brooklyn riff on a Northern California micro brewery with a large room in the back decorated with bookcases, a California flag with a bear on it and a UC Berkeley flag all very evocative of a San Francisco area bar.

At the bar, there are not less than sixteen American craft beers, most
from western breweries, on tap as well as a selection of West
Coast wines and snacks "sure to please not only expatriates from that
pleasant, somewhat pointy shore, but even the most Trentonized East Coast
palates."

So it's all very convivial and cool in there. And in the back room, a standing room crowd gathered for Philip Levine, the Pulitzer Prize winning poet who divides his time between Fresno California and Brooklyn Heights. A master poet, he is the author of 20 superlative books of poetry about American workers, World War 11 soldiers, Detroit, the central valley of California and much subject matter in between.

He writes with a pure, joyous, universal voice that has a Whitmanesque sweep. His new book, News of the World from Knopf,  contains many great new poems, including one about Brooklyn called Islands. Here's an excerpt:

On the streets of Manhattan & Brooklyn
people of all ages walk, & as they do they speak—often in private,
imaginary languages—so there is a constant music. If they are
alone they will speak to pigeons & sparrow—mainland birds
are a constant presence…


The room was packed so I stood in the back and couldn't even see the poet I had come to see. I stood next to the bathroom and the poems were punctuated by the toilet flushing and more people pushing into the large room.

No matter. It was a great night. A great reading. A great poet.

Fourth Avenue Discovery: Zuzu Ramen

Photo(22) Photo(20)

There's a new Zuzu in town. And it ain't no flower shop. It's a ramen restaurant called Zuzu Ramen located at 173 Fourth Avenue. They're open Tuesday through Saturday 5-10 p.m. Closed Mondays.

It's owned by the folks who brought you Sheep Station also on Fourth Avenue. Zuzu is meant to emulate the sound of someone slurping soup I was told. And soup is the thing at Zuzu Ramen.

I discovered this corner restaurant walking up Fourth Avenue. I noticed from across the street some Noguchi paper lanterns in a softly lit storefront.

I'm a sucker for Noguchi paper lanterns.

When I crossed the street I had that feeling that I was embarking on a great discovery. All the signs were there: an interesting crowd, a serious looking chef in the kitchen, an enthusiastic waitress, wonderful ktchen smells. 

The incredibly comfortable stools at the counter were the real deal maker. I had the ‘ZuZu’ Ramen with Charshu, Slow Cooked Egg, Bamboo Shoots & Seasonal Vegetables  in a Smokey Dashi Broth for $14.

I said to the waitress. "What is this? I've never tasted anything this good before. I mean I've had ramen but I guess this is how it is supposed to taste."

The soup portions are large and I took half home and shared with the family. They all agreed. Very, Very tasty.

The chef's name is Akihiro Morot and he grew up helping out in his father's ramen restaurant before moving to New York where he worked at Lespinasse and Jean Georges. Says Village Voice Foodster Sarah DeGregorio:

Now, he comes back to noodles. Despite his
classical training (both Japanese and French), Moroto isn't afraid to
mess with tradition: Several dishes on the menu, such as green
curry–miso ramen and hot-and-sour ramen, are his own invention.

What a great discovery. Fourth Avenue is SO happening.

Here's the menu at Zuzu's Ramen:

Noodles in Broth:

Green Curry-Miso Ramen with Charshu, 
Slow Cooked Egg & Seasonal Vegetables  $10
Hot & Sour Ramen with Shrimp, 
Tomatoes, Thai Basil & Lemongrass  $11  
Garlic Soy Ramen with Bok Choy, Slow Cooked Egg 
& Bamboo Shoots in a Vegetable Broth  $9.5             
‘ZuZu’ Ramen with Charshu, Slow Cooked Egg, 
Bamboo Shoots & Seasonal Vegetables 
in a Smokey Dashi Broth  $14

Noodles in Sauce:

Slow Cooked Beef Curry 
with Noodles & Vegetables  $14

Tasty Morsels:

Pan Seared Pork Dumplings with 
Shiso Seed Dipping Sauce  $7
Seaweed Salad with Mesclun Greens, 
Cherry Tomatoes and Citrus Vinaigrette  $6  
Edamame with Green Tea Salt  $5.5  
Vegetable Dumplings with 
Shiso Seed Dipping Sauce  $6  
Mini Pork Buns with Braised Pork Shoulder, 
Scallions, Cucumber & Sweet Chili Sauce $8

Rice Dishes

Slow Beef Curry with Carrots, onions & Potatoes $13    

Babeland Workshop Next Wed: Raising Sex Positive Kids

This special workshop is part of the free monthly Sexy Mom series at Babeland. i went last year and thought it was great and very thought provoking. I wrote about it in the Brooklyn Paper.

Sexy Moms: Raising Sex Positive Kids
Wednesday, October 28, 07:00PM, FREE!

at Babeland Brooklyn, 462 Bergen St Brooklyn

This
is one Sexy Moms meeting no parent should miss. Whether you're
expecting, a new parent, or raising teenagers, talking to your kids
about sex and sexuality is a crucial part of parenting. And October is
National Sex Education Month of Action, so there's never been a better
time to talk about educating your kids about sex.

At
this meeting, Sexuality Educator Amy Levine will talk to parents about
raising sexually healthy children and how to keep open lines of
communication about sex and sexuality. What's age-appropriate? What's a
teachable moment? How can you talk about sex without feeling
uncomfortable? Levine will answer these questions and more, at a
meeting that every parent should attend. For more information about
Levine, visit her website.

This meeting is co-sponsored by The New Space for Women's Health and Babeland. Free refreshments will be served.

Friday and Saturday: MUGABEE AT IRONDALE


 On October 23 and 24th at 8 p.m. at Irondale Center 85 South Oxford Street in Fort Greene, Mississippi based artists
M.U.G.A.B.E.E  will
bring their unique blend of hip hop,
jazz, spoken word to the Irondale center for an exclusive, two-night engagement
.featuring exceptional jazz pianist Courtney Bryan and a host of guest
musicians in a return engagement to Brooklyn’s Irondale Center.  M.U.G.A.B.E.E is the combined talents
of the brothers Carlton and Maurice Turner- singers, songwriters, playwrights,
producers and teachers, who
se explosive style of performance is sure to
move your soul
.

Cost: 20 bucks gets you in and one free drink.

The mission of
M.U.G.A.B.E.E. is to encourage and actively promote, through thought provoking
human interaction visualization and in turn an actualization of a just Earth
filled with equitable rights for all of its inhabitants. Through music,
workshops, lectures, open dialogues, spoken word and poetry M.U.G.A.B.E.E has
worked
in numerous communities across the South with youth groups, adult learners,
community centers, churches and schools. Their work has taken them to the metro
areas of New York, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Chicago, Atlanta, Miami and to the
small towns of Putney, VT; Natchez, MS; Pine Lake, GA; and Bethlehem, PA.

Fun Halloween in Prospect Park

In case you want to know what's going on on Halloween (Saturday, October 31) in Prospect Park!

SATURDAY OCTOBER 31 & SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1
Creepy Crawly Halloween
12 – 5 p.m. Audubon Center
Take
a second look at the creatures that give you the creeps, you may find
you like them. Spiders and worms are just a few of nature's wonders the
would have a tough time with out. Crafts and experiments! Free.

Scary Stories from the Past
2 & 3 p.m. Lefferts Historic House

Make
sure you’re sitting next to someone braver than you! Form a circle and
listen to master storyteller Tammy Hall keep the tradition of scary
stories alive with tales from old Flatbush. Free.


Skeleton Cut-Outs
1 – 4 p.m. Lefferts Historic House
Make your own Halloween headbands using the traditional Scharen-Knippen paper-cutting art form.

Haunted Carousel!
12 – 5 p.m.
Take a spooky spin on the Carousel. Creepy bats, scary cats, and spiders will watch you ride to the sounds of chilling Halloween music. $1.50 per ride.

Boo at the Zoo!
Come to the Zoo for a frighteningly good time with the animals.

Tonight: Philip Levine at Pacific Standard

Tonight Pulitzer Prize winning poet Philip Levine reads at Pacific Standard, the new California style micro brewery with an  excellent reading series. 82 Fourth Avenue between Bergen and St. Marks at 7:30 p.m.

NEWS OF THE WORLD is the 20th
collection of poetry from Philip Levine, a Pulitzer Prize-winner and two-time
recipient of the National Book Award. Joyce Carol Oates has heralded his work “extraordinary”
and the New York Times Book Review
has recognized Philip Levine as a true “great American poet.”

Born in Detroit, the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants, Philip Levine met his
muse while working in the city’s auto plants in the 1950’s. “I saw that the
people that I was working with . . . were voiceless in a way,” he explained in Detroit Magazine. “And as young people
will, you know, I took this foolish vow that I would speak for them and that’s
what my life would be.” Five decades later, Levine’s vow has culminated in an
astonishing, award-winning and ever-evolving body of work.
 
In this latest effort, NEWS OF THE WORLD, Philip Levine brings us news from
everywhere: from Detroit, where exhausted workers try to find a decent
breakfast after the late shift, and Henry Ford, “supremely bored” in his
mansion, clocks in at one of his plants . . . from Spain, where a woman sings a
song that rises at dawn, like the dust of ages, through an open window. . .
from Andorra, where an old Communist can now supply you with anything you want—a
French radio, a Cadillac, or, if you have a week, an American film star. The
language continually skirts obscurity and remains accessible, clear and
poignant. As Richard Hugo noted in the American
Poetry Review,
through Levine’s poetry “we hear and we care.” Publishers Weekly promises that “fans
will happily get what they came for” in this rich, deeply felt new collection.
 

Brooklyn Frugal Examiner: Halloween & Gardening

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Whether your garden is for pleasurable viewing only, or whether you'd
like to grow some of your own food to save money, now is the time to
start…
Keep Reading »

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Goodwill Industries is sponsoring the ultimate in Halloween costume
swaps right here in New York City for those who want to choose
creativity over…
Keep Reading »

Friday, October 16th, 2009 · 1 comment

Here is the complete list of free (and cheap) Halloween events in
Brooklyn for 2009: The Gravesend Inn Haunted Hotel produced by Theatre
works is…
Keep Reading »

Tom Martinez, Witness: Wallace Shawn Joins Fahad Protest at Brooklyn College

IMG_9953 Actor and playwright Wallace Shawn participated in a protest calling attention to the plight of former Brooklyn
College student, Fahad Hashmi.

Fahad was born in Karachi, Pakistan in 1980, the second child of Syed Anwar
Hashmi and Arifa Hashmi.

Fahad immigrated with his family to America
when he was three years old. The large Hashmi family settled in Flushing,
New York and soon developed deep roots throughout the tri-state area.
Fahad graduated from Robert F. Wagner High School in 1998 and attended
SUNY Stony Brook University. He transferred to Brooklyn College, where
he earned a bachelor’s degree in political science in 2003.

A devout
Muslim, Fahad established a reputation as an activist
and advocate. In 2003, Fahad enrolled in London Metropolitan University
in England to pursue a master’s degree in international relations,
which he received in 2006.

On June 6, 2006, Fahad was arrested in
London Heathrow airport by British police based on an American
indictment charging him with material support of Al Qaida. He was
subsequently held in Belmarsh Prison, Britain’s most notorious jail. Since extradition to the United States he has been held in solitiary confinement in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan for two years without due legal process.

His parents
were at the vigil, along with activists from Brooklyn for Peace, one of
his Brooklyn College professors, and others.

Photo: Tom Martinez

Loom at Sycamore and Union Hall

F-l-08-10-cmj-loom
Loom will be playing a shows in Ditmas Park and Park Slope this week, in honor of the CMJ music festival
(http://cmj.com/ – both shows are "unofficial" in terms of the festival) that's happening all around the city.

TONIGHT: they'll playing at the wonderful Sycamore with their friends in the excellent Rescue Bird
(http://www.myspace.com/rescuebirds):

9 pm – Rescue Bird (http://www.myspace.com/rescuebirds)
10 pm – The Loom (http://www.myspace.com/theloommusic)

They'll also be  playing on Saturday night at Union Hall as part of a wonderful bill that also includes Mia Riddle (http://www.myspace.com/miariddle),
Pete and J (http://www.myspace.com/peteandj), Pacific Theater
(http://www.myspace.com/pacifictheater), and their riends in La Strada
(http://www.myspace.com/lastradanyc).

Says Loom guitarist & composer John: "This will be our last group of shows before we hole up in the studio
for the month of November to record our first full-length album, so we'd love it if people wanted to come out this week as we won't be playing again for a while and we'll also be playing all of the songs from the
forthcoming album."

http://www.myspace.com/theloommusic