All posts by louise crawford

The Oh-So-Prolific-One: Leon Freilich/Verse Responder

A Homemade Christmas

Paper, crayons, scissors, glue–

Make a card that’s wholly you,

For the stores that once were cluttered

You may find this year are shuttered.

                               

========================================================
An incomplete list of closing stores:
Circuit City (filed Chapter 11)
Ann Taylor- 117 stores nationwide closing
Lane Bryant, Fashion Bug ,and Catherine’s to close 150 stores nationwide
Eddie Bauer to close stores 27 stores and more after January
Cache will close all stores
Talbots closing down specialty stores
J. Jill closing all stores (owned by Talbots)
Pacific Sunwear (also owned by Talbots)
GAP closing 85 stores
Footlocker closing 140 stores mo re to close after January
Wickes Furniture closing down
Levitz closing down remaining stores
Bombay closing remaining stores
Zales closi ng down 82 stores and 105 after January
Whitehall closing all stores
Piercing Pagoda closing all stores
Disney closing 98 stores and will close more after January.
Home Depot closing 15 stores 1 in NJ ( New Brunswick )
Macys to close 9 stores after January
Linens and Things closing all stores
Movie Galley Closing all stores
Pep Boys Closing 33 stores
Sprint/Nextel closing 133 stores
JC Penney closing a number of stores after January
Ethan Allen closing down 12 stores.
Wilson Leather closing down all stores
Sharper Image closing down all stores
K B Toys closing 356 stores
Loews to close down some stores
Dillard’s to close some stores

This Tuesday: Marty and Other Pols to Blast MTA’s Proposed Fare Hikes

On Tuesday, November 25, at 8:30 am at Court and Montague Street in downtown Brooklyn, Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz will be joined by Brooklyn elected officials and Gene Russianoff of NYPIRG’s Straphangers Campaign to blast the latest round of proposed fare hikes, as well as service cutbacks by the MTA that impact Brooklyn neighborhoods.

Eliminating the M and Z trains, cutting service on the G line, increasing wait times on the B, slashing weekend service on the 27 and 28 express bus lines while hiking express bus fares, reducing service on the B7, B48, B57, B65 and other bus routes, and increasing fares for Access-A-Ride would have a disastrous effect on elderly or disabled passengers and other hard-working Brooklynites.

Eleanor the Organizer: She is the One!

Okay. So I finally succumbed. Last week I called Eleanor Traubman of Creative Times and a professional organizer and cried, SOS. I was feeling completely overwhelmed and disorganized and I could not face the big green tub of unopened mail I had to look at and file.

Luckily Eleanor had time the very next day to come over. Phew. What a life saver.

How to describe what Eleanor does. First of all, she is very calm and calming and she doesn’t judge. Maybe she was just being nice, but she didn’t faint when she saw my existing filing system or the huge tub of mail.

Then we sat down and began to organize me. Basically she taught me a couple of tricks. The first one is a wonderful acronym: RAFT.

I kept thinking life raft and what a life saver Eleanor is.

R means refer. A means action. F means file. T means toss.

So that’s what we did for the better part of two hours. And as we did this, Eleanor created these lovely file labels for me and I felt like a patient in a nice warm bed getting chicken soup in the form of organized files.

After two hours life saver Eleanor left me with a shopping list and a smile. Oh and an appointment for next week. Her number is this. Call her now if you need SOS: 917-499-7395.

First Year Blues: Earth Tonez To Close

An OTBKB reader sent this farewell note from Earth Tonez, the vegan cafe on Fifth Avenue near 5th Street.

    Greetings,

    It is with sadness that Earth Tonez Cafe will serve its last customer today Saturday, November 22, 2008 at 4 PM.

    A miraculous intervention (hey you never know) aside, Earth Tonez will be forced to close its doors. While we loved serving you delicious, meatless food, our beloved cafe has fallen victim to the first-year blues with tremendous help from a deepening recession.

    We will spend the next week trying to work on a plan to re-open, but alas, it looks grim. We welcome any suggestions or comments from you.

    We want to thank you for the time you spent with us. It made even the tough times a little more bearable.

    We wish everyone a happy holiday and a lifelong spirit of peace.

    Peace and Love,

    Earth Tonez Cafe
    www.earthtonezcafe.com

Affairs-of-state and Exchequer from Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn

Here’s a nice wrap up of the week’s news and views from Brooklyn Beat at Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn. When you go over to the blog check out BB’s reading list. It astounds me how much this fellow reads.

Hillary is it, evidently trading her junior US Senator from NYC status for the Secretary of State, according to the NY TIMES:

http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/21/clinton-to-accept-secretary-of-state-job/?hp

Will
David Paterson be the next US Senator from NY (my speculation) in some
version of the Sarah Palin scenario described for US Senator Ted
Stevens (R- Alaska) before he was beaten at the polls. Reportedly,
Senator Chuck Schumer is seeking a less high profile junior Senator as
a replacement.

There was a very interesting interview with
Malcolm Gladwell last night on the Rachel Maddow Show (on MSNBC). The
author of Blink, the Tipping Point, and Outliers, found merit in the
President-elect’s selection of experienced Washington DC -hands, which
balances well with Mr. Obama’s own confident and intelligence which
will enable him to use these experienced Washington-hands (see "the
10,000 hour rule") as the levers to accomplish his plans.

See discussion here:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#27831448

2025 – what the future holds for the US and the World, an intelligence report:

http://www.reuters.com/article/usDollarRpt/idUSN2041155720081120

The headline on yesterday’s daily news as the market dipped below 8,000 was both comic and tragic : "Only 7,997 to Go !"

Billion
dollar bailouts that go to corporations that spend the public mazuma on
massages and fine dining, while Detroit writhes… So we shouldn’t
enter the weekend without a little melancholy, as the tsunami of the
current world financial crisis begins to swell against the horizon,
like "The Last Wave," all we can do is keep breathing and wonder,
what’s next ?, a little reading:

Niall Ferguson on the whys and wherefores of the current mess/crisis, from December 2008 Vanity Fair:
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/12/banks200812

Mr. Ferguson in 2006, prescient wolf calls of inevitability in the night, VF, October 2006:
http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2006/10/empire200610

Absurdist Take on Contemporary Parenting by Playwright Michael Winks

An enthusiastic audience at the Old Stone House enjoyed Thursday night’s reading of Michael Winks’ Baby Love. This Ionesco-esque one-act play is a thoroughly enjoyable and absurd take on contemporary parenting.

Winks describes the play as "an acerbic look at two self-absorbed parents who can’t be
bothered to tend to a cranky baby.  They trade him in for a "grownup" baby
who progresses in his development at such a speed, they hope to have
him off to college in a matter of months!"

Baby Love takes the audience on a wild ride and the trio of professional actors was more than up for the ridiculous fun.

Linda Larson, an experienced Broadway actor, was manic and humorous as a careerist turned stay at home  mom. 

Jim Stanek, who’s roles on Broadway include A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, Indiscretions and Lestat, gave a funny and wacky performance as a new dad loathe to give up his obsession with televised baseball.

Steve Insolera, who played the title role of the veterinarian in the OBIE award winning musical Corfax, Don’t Ask was perfect as Malcolm, the infant-man these parents get in exchange for their real baby.

Michael Winks is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon’s MFA playwriting program. His plays have been produced in Providence, Pittsburgh and New York and he has received playwriting grants from the state of Pennsylvania and from the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation.  His plays, written for Miguel Paz, "Leaving La Paz" and "Mow, Blow and Go" will be read by the Sacramento Theater Company in January 2009.

Here’s an excerpt from Baby Love by Michael Winks.

HUSBAND
He came from your womb.

   WIFE
You sound awfully sure.

  HUSBAND
What’s that supposed to mean?

   WIFE
At
the hospital, you were out of the room while I was pushing.

   HUSBAND
So?

  WIFE
So
he came out…then they cleaned him up, took him to the nursery. I never got a good look at him, not
that I really wanted to at that point.

Even
if I had, it could have been a hallucination.

   HUSBAND
So then I went down to the nursery and they brought him out?

   WIFE
And
what did you see?

  HUSBAND
Baby, baby.

WIFE
And
what happened between the time they took him to the nursery and you got to see
him?

HUSBAND
You’re not saying?…

WIFE
Yep. The old switcheroo!

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: The Influence of Ethical Culture

A new episode of Michael D. Nolan’s Brooklyn Memoir, The actual name of his memoir is Proximity: What can happen when we live, work and love close together.

Back in my Brooklyn boyhood, there were two readily acceptable answers to the question, "What are you?" You were either Jewish or Catholic. We didn’t know what Protestants were. Over time, I would learn to respond to the question with "Ethical Culture," to the perplexed looks of my punchball buddies in the PS 99 schoolyard. They already knew there was something a bit different about me, since I went to school on both the Jewish and Catholic holidays.

Ethical Culture was founded in New York City in the late 19th century by a renegade rabbi named Felix Adler. It was non-theological in nature and emphasized the Golden Rule and common ethical teachings of all great religions. The founders were active in the establishment of various settlement houses on the Lower East Side which helped waves of immigrants who flooded New York.

My brother, sister, and I religiously attended the Sunday School of the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture at the corner of Prospect Park West and 1st Street. After we were dropped off, Mom and Dad attended the weekly service or "Meeting" right next door which featured a lecture by a "Leader" as the Ethical Culture ministers were called.

My radical politics were born of this experience. The Sunday School classes consisted of songs and stories which emphasized world brotherhood and interracialism. [Ask me to sing – "If there were no poor and the rich were content, if each of us knew what true brotherhood meant, it would be a wonderful, wonderful world."] We frequently went on field trips to visit the services of other religions. In high school, I became active in NEYO, the National Ethical Youth Organization, which included hotbeds of bohemianism, discussion groups, and folk dancing at the Brooklyn Society or the larger group at the New York Society at 2 West 64th Street in Manhattan. I was elected president of NEYO in the late 50s.

My mentor during these days was Eddie Gottlieb, the Sunday School principal. Eddie was a socialist and a pacifist, active in the Socialist Party USA (the Norman Thomas wing) and the War Resisters League. I began a life of demonstrating before I was in high school. I paraded for peace down Broadway alongside Pete Seeger on banjo. I marched with CORE, the Congress for Racial Equality, in Harlem. I stood in City Hall Park in defiance of Civil Defense air raid requirements. While at Midwood High School, I organized two busloads of students to attend the Youth March for Integrated Schools in Washington in 1957-58 in the wake of the Supreme Court desegregation decision of 5.5.54. In 1963, I worked with Bayard Rustin (a Socialist and pacifist comrade of Eddie’s) in bringing demonstrators to the historic March for Jobs and Freedom where ML King gave his memorable "Dream" speech. Twice, I brought Norman Thomas to my high school. The second time, they shut down classes and beckoned all students to an assembly to hear him speak.

In all of this I was probably fulfilling more of my Mom’s liberal Jewish heritage than my Dad’s moderate, apolitical Irish Catholic values. It was my Mom I went to to ask permission to break the law in the Civil Defense demonstration. She gave it. She was an activist, frequently subject to righteous indignation about one topic or another. On more than one occasion, I’d hear my Dad tell my Mom, "Lena, don’t get involved."

But I knew I didn’t completely belong in that world of New York liberalism and found balance in baseball, touch football, and hanging out with my Italian buddies. I played centerfield for the Avenue J Spartans in the Parade Ground League. We were invariably in next-to-last place in league standings. The Cadets dominated first place and featured a husky catcher named Joe Torre.

MS 88 Student Missing

Got this email on Friday from a local parent:

I was reading the newspaper today and saw this post about a missing
child 12 years old who attends MS88. I thought it would be a good idea
to post this to the group. I am not related in anyway or even know the
family. I just spoke with the grandfather who is her guardian. His last
contact with her was about 25 minutes before he got home around 5:30
and discovered she was missing. They have contacted the police.

One thing that is very scarier about this situation is that she was on
My Space and the grandfather feels she meet someone more than likely a
a male online. The subject online predators is so disturbing and a
reality for anyone

Missing since 11.14.08  named Julianna aka (Julian)
12
years old, 5’8, 125 lbs, long brown hair, caucasian, braces top and
bottom, last seen at about 5:30 getting into a black car at 604
Vanderbilt Street in Windsor Terrrace.

Yorkshire Terrier Stolen From Key Food on Montague Street

Here’s a story from Brooklyn Heights. If anyone can help please let me know.

Tonight, walking down Montague Street around 6pm, I heard a woman
scream outside Key Foods. She was screaming for her missing Yorkshire
Terrier, Midnight, whom she has tied up to the post while she went in
the store.

I walked around the corner to Remsen Street, where the woman lives,
and spoke to a man that was helping her during this crisis. He told me
that the Yorkshire Terrier is female, black with tan feet and her name
is Midnight. He also said that the stock boys that were unloading a
truck in front of the Key Foods when her dog was stolen said that a
medium build man wearing a green hat took her.

This is not quite as important, but I also have to note that I was
standing across the street watching as the woman was in panic. She got
very little help from the workers outside of Key Foods. After she went
away in shock, one of the boys started laughing and actually fell down
in some sort of performance for his co-workers.

This is all I know and just want to share this story to help this
woman find her dog. I don’t know what you would do with it but I feel
its important for the community to know that this has happened.

Ft. Greene’s Irondale Ensemble Company: A Podcast

So my friend playwright Michael Winks, author of Baby Love, which was featured at Brooklyn Reading Works on Thursday night, says that Irondale Ensemble Project is cool. "The ensemble company has been around for years," he told me. "But they recently got their own space at the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in Ft. Greene."

This morning I got this email from Joseph McCarthy, development director for Irondale and he sent along this podcast of an interview with Terry Freiss, the executive director of Irondale, which provides an good, broad-ranging discussion of what they’re up to.

http://www.nytheatrecast.com/wordpress/archives/187

Brooklyn Arts Newsletter Shut Down by AOL

3,000 loyal readers are doing without Not Only Brooklyn, a free, twice (sometimes thrice)-weekly eNewsletter/tip sheet about cultural events in Brooklyn, because it has been temporarily shut down by AOL for unspecificed reasons.

The account was suddenly shut down on November 7th and Neil Feldman, who runs NOB with an urgent and single-minded sense of purpose and passion, tried to find out why he’s been blacklisted at AOL.

Feldman assumes that it’s probably a computer error and thinks the matter could be resolved quickly if he could just get someone on the phone

In the past, if there was a problem with his account, Feldman would contact the company’s Community Action Team, where he could speak to someone on the phone about a service problem.

No more. "That department has gone black box," says Feldman. That’s why he enlisted the help of Borough President Marty Markowitz, who responded swiftly to Feldman’s call for assistance in resolving this matter.   

A legal counsel for the Borough President’s Office did leave several messages at AOL, without any response. Now Feldman is wondering if it’s time to leave a message for Ron Grant, AOL’s President and Chief Operating Officer.

According to Feldman, thousands of people are being inconvenienced and Brooklyn cultural institutions are experiencing reduced patronage as long as the cancellation of NOB persists. 

"The whole situation is preposterous; it should take no more than five minutes for an AOL executive with authority to resolve.  And isn’t it ironic that AOL algorithms, not humans, shut down a much appreciated public service that the company should be proud chooses to use it?" Feldman wrote in an email.

Not Only Brooklyn is a discriminating and well-written tip sheet about arts events in, but not limited to, Brooklyn. The mission is clear: To bring more people to the arts, to bring the arts to more people. It’s a win-win for audience members and cultural institutions who are struggling during these tough economic times and don’t have big marketing budgets.

Feldman, whose newsletter is an unpaid labor of love, is rigorous in his efforts to keep abreast of  what’s going on in the music clubs, art galleries, performance spaces, and other cultural institutions in Brooklyn.

But for Feldman, the issue is even bigger than the temporary termination of his eNewsletter, a much appreciated free and non-commercial community resource, one that its users had all requested in writing. He asks:

"How is it that AOL allows its algorithms to terminate customer accounts without human oversight. And why AOL customers get no explanation or recourse, as AOL has removed and blocked the access to its Community Access Team that it did allow its customers until a few years ago."

Good questions all. Feldman hopes this matter will be resolved quickly  as he  is desperate to get back to work writing and researching NOB.

"This is my life," he told OTBKB. "This is what I do."

The Black List: 25 Faces of Drive and Determination

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The Black List Project, a collaboration between photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders and cultural critic, Elvis Mitchell, opened yesterday on the first floor of the Brooklyn Museum.

Striking.

Housed in an intimate exhibition space within the voluminous first floor space, 25 large-scale color portraits of a wide-range of subjects from the world of politics, arts, sports, religion and business makes quite an impression. In addition, flat screen monitors play selections from the HBO documentary that was made as part of this project.

The Black List includes dancer Bill T Jones (left), actor Chris Rock, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, sports legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, actor Keenen Ivory Wayans, artist Lorna Simpson, Reverend Al Sharpton, playwright Suzan Lori-Parks, author Toni Morrison, author Zane and others.

I asked Mitchell, a former film critic at the New York Times and the host of the public radio show "The Treatment," who was at the press preview, "Why Brooklyn?"

"What better place," was his quick reply. "This museum has a commitment to the community of color that it is in."

Later he explained his motivation for doing this project.

"We created this for people like me, people who are curious about culture. I wanted to present a different take on African-American culture. Most images of African-Americans are reductive and archetypal. They are portrayed as victims. For this we wanted to show people who are not cowed by oppression, those who put destiny in their own hands. Those who have a sense of history and their place in it."

Making a list of this kind is always a challenge, especially when limited to only 25 names. Mitchell agreed but said that it actually wasn’t that hard to choose the people they wanted to put in this first iteration of the project (a second volume is already in the works).

"We want the The Black List Project to be a catalyst; we want people to say why didn’t you choose this person or that person," Mitchell told me.

In this way, The Black List Project opens the conversation and raises the question: Who’s missing and who else should be on it?

Indeed, there is one very conspicuous absence in the show. No Barack Obama. Mitchell and Sanders tried to get him but that was more than a year ago "at a time when he needed to raise $80,000 every hour that he was awake," Mitchell says.

Asked what he would say by way of an introduction to one of the many Brooklyn school groups that will attend the exhibition

"Anything is possible with drive, determination, and perseverance. Despite obstacles, you can’t be stopped because of the amount of your own energy."

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: My Parents and Their Thrice-Blessed Marriage

Another installment from Michael Nolan’s Brooklyn memoir.

Proximity certainly contributed to how Harold Francis Nolan and Lena Zelda Porgoman (nee Pergament) met. Mom was a graduate of the Columbia College of Pharmacy and Dad had taken courses in chemistry at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. In the late 20s, they both found themselves working at Schieffelin & Company on the Bowery in lower Manhattan, just south of Cooper Union. Lena worked in the laboratory; Harold operated tablet machines.

As a young boy, when we would drive by the place in our 1936 Plymouth, my parents would point out the place to me. The sign out front read: "Schieffelin & Company, the oldest drug house in America. Founded 1794." Today, they are a major liquor distributor – so still in the same line of business of alleviating pain.

Lena and Harold were married in a quiet civil ceremony at Brooklyn Borough Hall on September 5, 1931. My Aunt Etta, my mom’s younger sister, was a witness. After the ceremony, Lena went home to live with her father Beryl, a baker, in Jersey City, and Harold with his parents, James and Rosanna, in Brooklyn, pending two additional ceremonies by a rabbi and a priest.

I have my parents’ correspondence from this period. Here’s an excerpt from a letter from my Dad to my Mom on Sept. 17, 1931. They’re married but still not living together.

"My Dear Mrs. Nolan, I admire the way you stay home in anticipation of my phone call. It just cost me 15 cents to have your Dad tell me you were not at home…. All joking aside for the present darling. What I really want to to find out is, how soon can we be married by the Rabbi. This week? I’d like to get the ceremonies over with before I start school.

"You see kid, the technicality of my ceremony depends on the performance of yours first. Let’s get it over with. My mother will loan us the money. I’m afraid we’re going to need it. The dispensation costs $10, the Priest gets $5 besides and the Rabbi $10. It’s worth every bit of it. I’ll be ever so much more happy as I’m sure you’ll be. Get busy on the matter kid and give me a ring (at home) Thursday evening. Yours lovingly, Hubby"

Happily the ceremonies took place and my parents moved in with my paternal grandparents on East 2nd Street in Brooklyn. It was the depths of the Depression and it would be several years before they could afford their own apartment.

Shades of Grey in Berkeley Carroll Child Care Center Controversy

When Berkeley Carroll closes its Child Care Center at the end of his school year, 57 1-3 year-olds will be deprived of what has been a very successful early childhood experience. This is a loss for them and their parents who love the center’s approach and hours. There is really nothing else like it in the Slope.

So why did Berkeley Carroll decide to close its doors?

My assessment after talking to someone familiar with the situation is that it just didn’t make sense economically or otherwise.

A little history. Until nine years ago, Methodist Hospital ran the Child Care Center and it was called the Methodist Hospital Child Care Center. The building is owned by Methodist and the center served the community, as well as employees of Methodist Hospital.

Nine years ago, Methodist Hospital wanted out of the day care business and Berkeley Carroll, a private pre-k through 12th grade private school decided to take it over. Methodist gave Berkeley Carroll a five year lease at a below market rate and the school was good to go.

Obviously, Berkeley Carroll did an exceptional job running the program. Every year people line up on a specific day to apply for admission to this program for 1-3 year olds. There are only 57 spots and even at the cost of $24,000 per year, there is no shortage of people in Park Slope who are willing to pay for it.

Four years ago, the lease was up and Berkeley Carroll wasn’t offered another long term lease by Methodist Hospital. Clearly, Methodist had plans for this building.

At the time, officials at Berkeley Carroll began to rethink the idea of being in the day care business. Not surprisingly, the school makes no money on the child care center as running expenses are quite high.  For four years, it seems, the school knew that it was highly likely that the school would eventually close. Yet, they remained committed to providing this service in the meantime.

Thus the charge that they should have said something. But what could they have said: We’re thinking of closing the center but we don’t know when.

Push came to shove when Methodist Hospital told Berkeley Carroll last summer that they wanted their building back. Bingo, the decision, which Berkeley Carroll officials had been struggling with for years was made.

It seems with heavy hearts and a spread sheet.

I happen to know quite a few people on the board over at Berkeley Carroll (though I did not speak to them for this article). These are not big, bad corporate types who only think of the bottom line. But it is their job to do what is prudent both financially and philosophically for the school.

Yes, they knew they were providing a service to 57 families willing to pay top dollar for child care.

Contrary to some accusations, they explored many options to keep the school open. But over time it became clear that it just didn’t make sense economically or otherwise for the school, which is primarily pre-K through 12th, to do day care. And contrary to some claims, the child care center is not a feeder school for the 4-year-old program at BC.

In researching options to keep the school open at another location, school officials found that the costs were astronomical for a part of the school that is not a money maker to begin with. There’s the cost of

–costly real estate
–renovation
–retrofitting to make the school work spatially
–costs to meet licensing requirements
–salaries
–supplies
–and more

The board, after much hand wringing I am told, decided it was time to do the inevitable. In a sense, they did what Methodist Hospital didn’t do 9 years ago. At that time, Methodist was able to pass it on  to Berkeley Carroll—and avoid the negative publicity such a closure would have generated. Back then, Berkeley Carroll was probably viewed as the heroic saviors of the Methodist Child Care Center.

My question now is this: if there is such a great demand for a child care center of this kind for 1-3 year olds, why hasn’t anyone else come forward?

Probably for the same reasons that Berkeley Carroll wanted out of the day care biz. Yet, isn’t it possible that some entity might be in a position to provide these much needed services to this community?

Obviously, any cost analysis will reveal what BC found out: opening a child care center is very expensive. It would take an institution or an existing school with a big pockets, a commitment to early childhood education and vision to take on a project of this kind.

Some parents have discussed taking over the school and it will be interesting to see what happens on that front. 

There has been much discussion of this situation on Park Slope Parents, in local newspapers and even the New York Times. There’s been a lot of bitterness and accusations that Berkeley Carroll misled parents and betrayed their responsibility to this community.

While this is obviously an enormously frustrating experience for the parents of the 1 and 2 year olds, who hoped that their children would continue at the school, it must be said that the school did give the parents a heads-up in time for them to apply to other schools.

I have also heard that the head of lower school admissions at Berkeley Carroll has been working hard to help parents place their children elsewhere.

Finally, when a private institution decides that it wants to go out of business or change direction, it is the right of that institution. In the same way that a parent might decide not to continue at a particular school.

Okay, time for the positive spin. Maybe this whole controversy demonstrates what an engaged and vocal community we live in. Seventh Avenue has always been a space for free discussion, dissemination of information and gossip. Now add to that blogs and list services like Park Slope Parents. In sum, this very democratic community suffused with avenues for free expression gets to dissect everything in a free and hopefully intelligent way.

Sure, some feelings get hurt and mud gets flung this way and that. Perhaps, the lesson is this: It’s important to read between the lines, ask questions, and not be too quick to point fingers. There’s always a lot of gray in most situations.

And that makes life equally interesting and wholly frustrating.

Four Sundays in Ft. Greene: Gifted Holiday Market

Looky here: For 4 Sundays: Nov. 30, Dec. 7, 14 + 21, Brooklyn Flea (partnering with Time Out New York) will take over the Brooklyn Masonic Temple at 317 Clermont Ave. (at Lafayette Ave.), Fort Greene (across from the Flea) from 11 am to 6 pm. www.brooklynflea.com. Here’s the word from Eric Demby, one of the founders of Brooklyn Flea.

Brooklyn Flea has partnered with Time Out New York to present Gifted: A Holiday Market, featuring 40 vendors curated by Flea co-founder Eric Demby and Time Out Seek Editor Erin Wylie. Gifted will take place inside the majestic auditorium of the Brooklyn Masonic Temple—a historic, gorgeous building located directly across the street from the Flea—on the 4 Sundays Nov. 30, Dec. 7, 14 + 21, from 11am to 6pm. (The “regular” Flea will continue at the schoolyard during this time; Dec. 21 will be the last date of the season.)

The mix of vendors at Gifted is similar to the Flea: stuff you can only find there; folks selling beautiful, unique items they made themselves; vintage/antique objects that are distinctive and affordable; snazzy jewelry; cool, quality art; and of course yummy foodstuffs. Our tagline is “Edited + Eclectic for Everyone"–dudes, dames, dads, diaper-clad, discerning, doddering.

Highlights include: Layla, the gorgeous jewelry and Indian textiles shop in Boerum Hill; Acorn, the classy toy shop on Atlantic Ave.; Els Walleyn’s beautiful mohair teddy bears—all the way from Belgium!; Flea regular David Sokosh, who will be featuring amazing antique clocks (“the gift of time for Christmas”); Jezebel Stationery, Moontree Letterpress, Perch! Design, and Mollie Dash’s Brooklyn-made cards, necklaces, and ceramics; Ornaments + Objects’ mid-century jewelry and design pieces; I Lampe’s recycled lights made from found Saarinen designs and the like; Pop Judaica’s “Shlep” totes and subway-map menorah cards; The Flubber Gallery’s vintage toys; Reiter8’s totes made from recycled sails; and Fine + Raw’s scrumptious raw chocolate gift packs. (The full lineup is below; visit www.brooklynflea.com for images and weblinks.)

DJ Moosaka will provide holiday tunes from the stage, and surprise holiday-theme events will pop up every Sunday, like on December 7 when artist Davina Feinberg will set up a "My Fantasy Portrait" booth for children to be photographed in their princess dresses or football uniforms. (Prints can be ordered at a later date.)

Gifted is a local one-stop holiday-shopping alternative to, say, big boxes or, gasp, Manhattan. Make a connection with the person you’re buying from; support someone who lives in your neighborhood; give a gift there’s only one of. That’s what 2008 New Yorkers want, right? Right.

.

Tonight at Brooklyn Reading Works: Play About Self-Absorbed Parents

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TONIGHT: November 20 at 8 p.m. at Brooklyn Reading Works:

Michael Winks’ absurdist comedy “Baby Love,” takes an acerbic look
at two self-absorbed parents who can’t be bothered to tend to a cranky
baby.  They trade him for a “grownup” baby who progresses in his
development at such a speed, they hope to have him off to college in a
matter of months!  But to quote Radiohead,  the “Karma Police” will
have their way with this couple.  Oh, Baby!

The Where and When

Thursday, November 20 at 8 p.m.
The Old Stone House
in Park Slope’s JJ Byrne Park Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
718-768-3195

$5 donation much appreciated. Includes wine and light refreshments.

Photo by King Kong 21 on Flickr

Pie Demo at Brooklyn Public Library by Sweet Melissa

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Just got this note from Melissa Murphy, owner and baker of Park Slope’s Sweet Melissa’s:

Hi Louise, I was googling for an event I’m doing at the Brooklyn Public Library, and
I came across your Park Slope 100 list for 2007. I had no idea I was on
it!  Thank you: I am thrilled!  These mentions from my customers and
neighbors, mean more to me than anything else.

So I am doing a baking demo at the Brooklyn Library this Sunday, the
23rd at 1:30 p.m. Here is the link
http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org/events/culturearts/. 

I am going to do PIE DOUGH!  And my Pear Cranberry Pie with Gingersnap Crumble. 

There will be a tasting, demo, and audience participation.  It was
in the Times yesterday, and I think it will go into Time Out New York
this week, but there are 200 seats to fill, and I am scared to death
that I won’t fill them! 

The Where and When

Sunday November 23, 2008 at 1:30 p.m.
Brooklyn Public Library (Grand Army Plaza)
Dweck Center

Photo by qmchenry’s photostream

How To Get An Obama Staff Job

An OTBKB reader has been sending me items related to a post a few weeks back about getting a job in the Barack Obama White House. Here’s an excerpt about Jim Messina, director of personnel, and his deputy, Patrick Gaspard from a blog called the Politico.

Whatever you do, don’t expect Messina to be impressed with your fancy degree.

“I believe that politics is truly a merit-based world,” he told High
Country News magazine in August. “If you work hard and you’re honest —
and you keep winning — you’ll get to rise. [In my early political
jobs,] I was the kid who was the first in the office and the last to
leave. And it’s still kind of true. … I’ve been chief of staff to
three famous members of Congress and I work for a fourth, and when
[each] hired me, I don’t think any of them even asked me where I went
to school — they just asked me what I had done, and I love that.”

Says Barrett Kaiser, communications director for Sen. Max Baucus
(D-Mont.) and a longtime colleague and friend of Messina’s: “He’s a
brilliant guy who walks around with a pocketful of long knives for his
enemies and big bearhugs for his friends.”

Which suggests that you might want to know Messina’s résumé as well as
you know your own: A veteran of political campaigns from Alaska to New
York and a former chief of staff to Baucus, Dorgan and Rep. Carolyn
McCarthy of New York, Messina has been in Democratic politics since
1991. He was Obama’s campaign chief of staff, and he’ll be a White
House deputy chief of staff.

McCarthy, who counts Messina as a friend, says there’s one “don’t” when
dealing with him: Don’t oversell yourself. “Jim has terrific instincts,
and if someone is trying to gloss over their qualifications, he will
sense it.”

Kaiser puts it this way: “If you’re friends with Jim Messina, you have a friend for life. But if you cross him, God help you.”

(On second thought, cancel that pizza.)

As for Gaspard, he’s also a runner. But if you run with him, make sure you don’t tell a soul.

Those who know Gaspard say he’s an under-the-radar guy who doesn’t like
name-droppers or showboaters. One former colleague describes him as
“hardworking, loyal and very private” — with an emphasis on the
private. 

Gaspard comes to the Obama team from Local 1199 of the Service
Employees International Union, where he was executive vice president
for politics and legislation. The “loves of his life are his family
[and] his workers,” says Anna Burger, secretary-treasurer of SEIU. So
try talking about your kids, public schools or that time you were shop
steward.

Or you might want to bone up on Haiti, from which Gaspard proudly hails, or Park Slope, Brooklyn, where he lives now.

How to impress him? Be like him: smart, committed, disciplined and low-profile.

“He is very discreet, very professional and all about results,” says
Jennifer Cunningham, a New York lobbyist and political consultant who
was Gaspard’s boss at 1199 for seven years. “He has an enormous work
ethic.”

Why Shop Local?

Buy_in_brooklyn_pix2
Once again OTBKB is thrilled to bring you the latest installment of Why Shop Local?

Daphne Scholz and Benjamin Granger are owners  Bierkraft. They will be participating in Buy in Brooklyn’s
Snowflake Celebration during the first two Thursdays in
December (12/4 and 12/11) by offering a 10% discount off any purchase over $15
with a receipt from that day from any fellow Park Slope merchant participating
in the Snowflake Celebration, free hot chocolate to sip as you shop and a free
mini spreader with any 1/2 lb or more purchase of cheese (as long as supplies
last).   

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

A: We opened in November 2001 and
my husband and I chose Park Slope because we live here.  We have a home
between Fifth and Sixth Avenues and we were excited to see the restaurant
selection expanding on Fifth Avenue.  It seemed logical to have a business
within easy commuting distance and where we would know our customers and they
would know us.  Though Ben does not live in Park Slope, he is engaged to
our daughter, who grew up here, so the neighborhood ties are strong. 

Bierkraft Factoid: Their cheese
case is inhabited! They keep little plastic animals, dinosaurs and Mardi
Gras crawfish (come see for yourself) amongst the cheeses in their cheese
case.  Although they are very serious about our cheese, they don’t take
themselves seriously. Customers are welcome to play with and rearrange the
beasties while they are at the shop as well as take a creature home with them,
as need be. 

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

A: Reason # 7. Local business owners invest in community.
When folks come to us looking for donations for fundraisers we are often happy
to oblige with a gift certificate.  That way we get to support worthy
causes within the community and the gift certificate brings people into the
shop.   

Shop Local Factoid: Local businesses are owned by people
who live in this community, are less likely to leave, and are more invested in
the community’s future.

"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/.

Interview conducted by Rebeccah Welch

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: The Block Party

Here’s more from Michael Nolan:

  I love street life. There was more of it growing up in Brooklyn than I can find in my adopted city of San Francisco. Certainly, front-stoop architecture, warm evenings, less TV-addiction were contributing factors. And my mom, bless her heart, didn’t call me in from a tough game of Ring-a-Levio or Hide-and-Go-Seek to do my homework. She knew I would get to it and do it well and excel at school.

And yet the yearning is there to connect. We had a wonderful block party on Elsie Street – the 2nd annual – last month here on Bernal Heights. Featuring a bouncy house for the kids (and then us adults), a bake-off contest (Liz’s lemon tart won), salsa lessons, a hula dancer, and a clarinet-flute-accordion trio of neighbors. We relocated our cars, and officially closed the street to traffic.

We have abundant commmunity glue, or "social capital", here on Elsie Street and yet the demands of daily life, two-income households, childcare, long commutes, the convenience of automated garage-door openers, remodeled homes that face more to the back of the house, make casual and frequent serendipitous encounters and conversation difficult.

At the age of 7 in Brooklyn, I could walk around the corner, buy a quart of milk for my mom, a pickle for myself, or at the corner of Coney Island Avenue, have a lime rickey or a chocolate malted at Phil & Jack’s, and then wait at the trolley stop for my Dad to come home from work. I pressed my ear against the pole to hear the rumbling sounds of the approaching trolley.

Nov 20 at Brookyn Reading Works: Can We Trade In Our Kid for a New One?

November 20 at 8 p.m. at Brooklyn Reading Works:

Michael Winks’ absurdist comedy “Baby Love,” takes an acerbic look
at two self-absorbed parents who can’t be bothered to tend to a cranky
baby.  They trade him for a “grownup” baby who progresses in his
development at such a speed, they hope to have him off to college in a
matter of months!  But to quote Radiohead,  the “Karma Police” will
have their way with this couple.  Oh, Baby!

The Where and When

Thursday, November 20 at 8 p.m.
The Old Stone House
in Park Slope’s JJ Byrne Park Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
718-768-3195

$5 donation much appreciated. Includes wine and light refreshments.

Black Friday Renamed Brooklyn Friday

Marty Markowitz,
along with the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, Brooklyn Economic
Development Corporation, local Business Improvement Districts (BIDs),
elected officials and others are launching the “Shop Brooklyn”
initiative today at the Fulton Mall.

So what is Shop Brooklyn?

“Shop Brooklyn” is an awareness campaign highlighting the uniqueness
of Brooklyn’s neighborhoods and thriving shopping corridors,
re-introducing Brooklyn to Brooklynites and inviting tourists and
visitors to experience this cultural and shopping destination—not just
during the holidays, but year-round.

Not only will there be holiday discounts borough-wide as
part of the “Shop Brooklyn” campaign, many Brooklyn retailers,
restaurants, bars, and other service providers will offer special
“Brooklyn Bonuses” on November 28 (“Black Friday”—now renamed “Brooklyn
Friday”) and each weekend from November 23 through December 21.

Sounds to me like a borough-wide version of "Buy in Brooklyn," which was started right here in Park Slope.

The program will feature a website aggregating information from all
participating BIDs, merchant organizations, and local development
corporations. The site will be designed by the creative team at
Brooklyn- and Manhattan-based NPower New York, an information
technology nonprofit that provides other nonprofits with high-quality
and affordable technology assistance.

Look for a Shop Brooklyn” logo in the window of participating stores.

Brooklyn’s Jailbreak Toys, Makers of Obama Action Figures and More

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Just got an email from artist Jason Feinberg, founder of the Brooklyn-based *Jailbreak Toys, who explore" the intersection of popular art and history with his original line of Toys for Smart People." 

In the last few months Feinberg has had great success with his Obama action figure, subtitled "The Figure With the Power to Transform a Nation." In his own words:

The Obama Action Figure hit the retail market in June and has enjoyed
phenomenal success. Created as a way for Feinberg to support the
candidate, ($1.00 from each figure sold went directly to the campaign)
the 6” figure includes 8 points of articulation and is packaged in a
window box with original Obama illustration art.

The figure retails for $12.99 and is available on the company website,
such online destinations as Amazon.com, Gifts.com and Target.com as
well as in over 700 retail outlets throughout the nation.

According to his publicist, Feinberg also created a John McCain Action Figure. However, after
the election Feinberg decided to giveaway his extra surplus instead of
continuing to market the figures.

Last week on Late Night with Conan O’Brien. Conan gave each member of the
audience a bag with 30 McCain figures. 6,000 figures were given away in
all.

Feinberg has also created the Oddfellows collection, which includes three-inch, expertly sculpted vinyl figurines representing historical icons from the world of Art, Literature, Science and Politics.

Perfect for that special someone on your gift list who happens to be obsessed with Malcolm X, Salvador Dali, Frida Kahlo, Andy Warhol, Ghandi, Picasso, Sigmund Freud and many others.

I know what I’m getting Hepcat for Hannukah/Christmas: The Nicolas Tesla action figure. Alright.

*(Thanks to JanetG and Printer’s Devil for catching the error in the headline)