All posts by louise crawford

OTBKB Music: Video: Or, The Whale – Call and Response

Honestly, there's absolutely nothing that links San Francisco based Or, The Whale to Brooklyn. They mostly play in California and nearby states. But I was quite impressed when I saw them about six weeks ago at the South By Southwest Music Festival in Austin. Not only does this seven person group have terrific songs, there is a wonderful, joyful energy when they play. There's a new album in the works and who knows, one day they may end up playing in Brooklyn. There are a bunch of videos of them floating out there, but this one shows what they look like on stage the best.

You literary-minded types will recognize that their name is the subtitle of Moby Dick. The rest of you now know that too.

–Eliot Wagner

DOT’s PARK Smart Program Begins Today on 5th and 7th Avenues

Park Slope Neighbors sent out information about the DOT's PARK Smart Pilot Program which takes effect today on parts of Fifth and Seventh Avenues. Park Slope Neighbors supports the PARK Smart pilot program, and
its goals:

–Increasing the availability of short-term, retail-oriented parking
–Increasing safety
–Reducing double-parking
–Reducing congestion and emissions from circling vehicles

Here is information about this program from PSN.

The New York City Department of
Transportation is launching a six-month test of its PARK Smart program
along stretches of Fifth and Seventh Avenues, starting this Monday,
May 4th.

PARK Smart is a pilot program intended to
make metered parking spaces more readily available while also reducing
congestion and improving safety.  The Park Slope trial was
developed by DOT in consultation with local merchants, Community Board
Six, the Park Slope Civic Council and Park Slope Neighbors.  DOT
surveyed parking utilization and capacity and queried shoppers in
order to determine the parameters of the test program, and will
re-evaluate the pilot effort when it concludes in
November.

PARK Smart aims to increase the supply of
available metered parking spaces by encouraging drivers to park no
longer than necessary. The meter rate is higher when demand for
parking is greatest and decreases when demand is lower.  Rates
will be $1.50 per hour from Noon to 4 p.m., and 75 cents per hour at
all other times that meter parking rules are in effect.  Other
regulations – the hours in effect (for example, Monday – Saturday
for posted time periods) and duration (one-hour or two-hour periods) –
will remain the same.
While the new citywide base rate of 75
cents per hour will be implemented throughout the neighborhood, the
PARK Smart test area will be limited to Fifth Avenue between Sackett
and Third Streets and Seventh Avenue from Lincoln Place to 6th Street,
inclusive of the handful of metered spots just off Seventh Avenue on
President and Carroll Streets.
  The meters will accept
quarters, as well as NYC Parking Cards, which are available in
increments of $10, $20, $50 and $100.  PARK Smart meters, as well
as stores that sell the Parking Cards, will display this logo:

More City Council Forums (33rd and 39th Editions)

As you know I am following the local City Council races so I plan to make it over to the Park Slope Civic Council's two Candidates Forums for Local City Council Races, May
5th and May 12th!

Thanks to Park Slope Neighbors for sending out this information. The first candidate's forum is this Tuesday and next, featuring the candidates running for
the 39th District seat being vacated by Bill
deBlasio and the 33rd District seat being vacated by David
Yassky
, respectively.

These forums will be a great opportunity to
hear from the candidates in their own words, and to ask them about
their positions on the issues that most matter to you.


The 39th District forum will take place on Tuesday, May 5th, between
7:15 p.m and 9:15 p.m at:
–the
Secondary School for Law,
Journalism & Research (the former John Jay
Campus)
, 7th Avenue between 4th and 5th
Streets

The following Tuesday, May 12th, from 7:00
p.m. to 9:00 p.m., the 33rd District forum will be held
at:
–P.S. 282
, 6th Avenue between Lincoln Place and
Berkeley Place

–Both events are free and open to the
public.
  Come with your questions.

Smartmom Wonders: What Is A Good Mother?

Smartmom_big8 Here's this week's Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper.

OK. So, Smartmom knows what a bad mom is. And if she wants to know
more, she just has to read one of those hip new bad parenting books she
was talking about last week.

But what’s a good mom? Smartmom certainly knows plenty of them. Or
so she thinks. But what are the common qualities that define them? Is
there just one way to be? Is it like the first line from “Anna
Karenina”: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is
unhappy in its own way.”

Smartmom doesn’t think so. Good parenting, like bad parenting, is
not a cookie-cutter thing. Not all bad parents are bad in the same way.
Likewise, not all good parents are alike. There are so many flavors and
styles; so many ways to be.

But there must be some basics that insure entry into the Good
Mothers Club. For starters, you’ve got to have the “food, clothing and
shelter” part down pat, and it helps to have a real handle on health,
education and welfare part, too.

Sure, those are the minimum daily requirements. But there are other things, too: Intangibles. Special somethings. That je ne sais quois
that separates the good from the bad. Good mothering, like bad
mothering, is something that happens behind closed doors. There are
plenty of bad parents who do everything right on the outside, but don’t
get the emotional piece. By the same token, there are plenty of good
mothers, whose lives look like train wrecks.

So what’s a good mom?

Buddha knows, psychologists have been grappling with that question
for decades. Freud had his ideas about what constituted good parenting.

So did psychologist Donald Winnicott, who wrote about the
“good-enough mother,” the one who takes the time to carefully witness
(and mirror) her child’s play. And don’t forget Dr. William Sears, the
parenting expertwho coined the phrase “attachment parenting,” a theory
that emphasizes the importance of a child’s emotional bond with parents
during babyhood. According to Sears, secure attachment insures
fulfilling relationships in adulthood.

In other words: watch out, moms — those first few years are a
make-or-break time for your kid’s emotional life. And that’s a lot of
pressure for anyone, especially a postpartum woman.

In 1997, the year that the Oh So Feisty One was born, the work of
Dr. Sears was very much in vogue. For Smartmom, it felt like a non-stop
race to make it in the attachment sweepstakes. This was five years
after Teen Spirit’s birth, and it felt like a different era in terms of
parenting styles. There was pressure to breast-feed 24-7. There were
moms who thought that if they didn’t carry their kid around in one of
those weird sling things, their child would be psychologically damaged.
And those slings were so complicated that Boing Boing offered special
workshops to teach parents how to use them so that they could wear
their babies like a baby kangaroo.

Smartmom pushed OSFO around in a Maclaren stroller and worried that she wasn’t being nurturing enough.

As OSFO grew from newborn to toddler, Smartmom felt pressure to play
with her as much as possible. Even when Smartmom was bone tired and
wanted to nap, even when a really great issue of the New Yorker
beckoned.

Smartmom pushed herself to be the kind of mom who played with
Teletubbies on the floor or made make-believe breakfast at the
make-believe stove.

Now don’t get her wrong. Smartmom loved being around OSFO,
who was as adorable and feisty then as she is now. That’s not the
point. It’s just all this pressure to be a good mom was really getting
her. And making her wonder if she was any good at all.

And many of Smartmom’s friends felt the same way. Some worried
incessantly whether they were “good enough” moms. Her mother’s group
was sometimes a “Can You Top This” about how much time the moms were
spending with their kids and all the educationally fortifying
activities they were doing like Mommy and Me, Gymboree, Music Together,
Music for Aardvarks, gymnastics and even cooking for 1-year-olds.

The mommy group would sometimes reduce Smartmom to feelings of
inadequacy. She remembers being jealous of one mom who made her own
baby food; the one who was teaching her child sign language; and
another one who was still breast-feeding past the 18-month mark. These
were the signposts that Smartmom measured herself by.

And she often fell short.

At home, Smartmom felt guilty when she wanted to check her e-mail or
do some writing in the dining room. But OSFO took care of that. She
learned early on how to turn the computer off. Smartmom discovered that
in order to get some writing done, she could put OSFO in the kitchen
sink, where she loved to play with small plastic bowls in the bubble
bath.

And that’s when Smartmom had a revelation. She realized that she and
OSFO could do parallel play, that much-used phrase from developmental
psychology. They didn’t need to be joined at the hip all the time.
Smartmom could work on a short story, while OSFO engaged in water play
(while Smartmom supervised from a few feet away, of course). Smartmom
would check in on her little dumpling and splash her with some soapy
water and then get back to what she was doing on the computer.

Bingo. They were both happy.

Soon Smartmom was less hard on herself about attachment parenting
and quality time. Some days she would devote to playground play, trips
to the zoo or the children’s museum. Other days, Smartmom needed to
work, see friends, or take care of errands. Just like the baby, she had
needs, too.

Slowly, Smartmom realized that good mothering had less to with
whatever the experts were saying and more to do with what works for you
and your child. For some moms, it’s about wearing a sling. For others,
it’s baking cookies, reading every volume of “A Series of Unfortunate
Events” out loud to their children, or being creative with watercolors
and modeling clay. Still others just want to hang out in the apartment
and do things side by side.

In the final analysis, good mothering is about loving your children,
talking to them and listening to what they have to say. It’s also about
teaching them to be happy, creative people who care about others and
are in tune with themselves. Perhaps most importantly, it’s about
figuring out what works for you and not focusing too much on the way
other people live their lives.

Now, at age 12, OSFO is too big for the kitchen sink now. But she
and Smartmom do spend an inordinate amount of time in the same room
engaged in parallel play: reading, working on the computer, watching
TV. Sometimes they even talk. And sometimes, when Smartmom is very
lucky, they even hug.

And Smartmom likes those times best of all.

Smartmom in the New York Times: Parallel Play with Children

7_playground Lisa Belkin in her Motherlode blog over at the New York Times quotes a big hunk of my upcoming Smartmom column. I didn't know a thing about it until my friend emailed me: You're in the Times! Here's an excerpt from Belkin's piece. Read the rest over there:

"Over at the blog The Brooklyn Paper,
Louise Crawford writes about reaching the same conclusion several years
ago. I wish I had this essay to give to that troubled grandmother a few
weeks back, so she could pass it along to her son (NOT her
daughter-in-law). Crawford, a Park Slope parent, blogs every Tuesday
under the name Smartmom, and refers to her older child as Teen Spirit
and her younger child as the Oh So Feisty One (or OSFO)…

Today: Brooklyn Food Conference

Logo The Brooklyn Food Conference is TODAY (May 2, 2009)  and there are two sites for this ambitious event: adult and teen
events are at John Jay HS (Seventh Avenue between 4th and 5th Streets) and will run all day from 9-5 and end in a
dinner/dance. 

And the Kids Food Fair runs from 11-3 at PS 321 (180 Seventh Avenue). 

Here's a list of BFC activities for kids at PS 321. For more
information on the whole thing, you can
log onto brooklynfoodconference.org.

The following is a list of events for kids at the Kids Food Fair at PS 321
All children must be accompanied by an adult, please!

Keeping Chickens in the City: A Community Gardner Shares His Chickens and Expertise
Gregory Anderson, Walt L. Shamel Community Garden

Big Feast: A Menu-Building Game Using Food from the Farmers Market
Sarah Poten, Greenmarket Youth Education Project, CENYC

Making Yummy Guacamole!
Laura Stanley, The Sylvia Center

Breakfasts For Babies: Wholesome Baby Food From Around The World To Your Kitchen
T.I. Williams, Educator and Activist

Bread-ucation: Learn, Create and Interact with the Bakers of HotBread Kitchen
Jessamyn Waldman, HotBread Kitchen

Puppet Show: Alicia’s Adventures in Bodegaland
Anna Sobel, Talking Hands Theatre

YOGA!
Jen Henriquez, International School of Brooklyn
Amy Quinn-Suplina, Bend and Bloom Yoga
Lauren Maples, BijaKids

‘Ask Me’ Clinic: Educated Advice on Food, Health, Nutrition and Allergies
Danielle Green, Brooklyn College
Maurice Washington, Maurice Healthworks
Nancy Tanney, Mother and Kindergarten Teacher, Brooklyn Friends
Sung Uni Lee, Holistic Health Educator and Chef
Lillian Hope, Mother and Neonatal Nurse Practitioner, New York Presbyterian Hospital

Sweet and Savory Muffins: A Cooking Activity
Nadia Rohrs, Occupational Therapist, PS 261
Eila Masur, Occupational Therapist, PS 321

Farm to Table: An Art Mural Painting Activity
Isabel Cruz, PS 27 Art Teacher

Go, Slow, Whoa!: A Physical Exercise Activity
Dina Lipkind, MS, RD, CDN; Yeled V’ Yalda Early Childhood Center-Eat Well, Play Hard in Community Project

Butter Churning and Apple Cider Making
Wyckoff Farmhouse Museum

Making Vegetable Summer Rolls
Ellen Barker, Go! Healthy The Children’s Aid Society

Urban Organic Farming: A Seed Sprouting Tutorial
Anastasia Andreyeva, Brooklyn College
Alex Sherman, Brooklyn College

What Does Hunger Look Like?: Learning about World Hunger
Shelton Walker, Mercy Corps

Let’s Make Ice Cream!
Farmer Rick, Ronnybrook Farms

Story and Art Activities from the Librarians of the Brooklyn Public Library
Lana Adlawan,
Lauren Anduri,
Janet Conton
Rakisha Kearns-White

Wiggly Worm Composting
Michelle Piano, Brooklyn Center for the Urban Environment
Janet Pedersen, Children’s Book Author, Illustrator, and Composting Enthusiast

Scavenger Hunt for a Sustainable World
Barry Weinbrom, Environmental Educator

A Fair Trade Chocolate Tasting: Smell and Touch Real Cacao Beans and Learn How Chocolate Is Made
Ruthie Orland, Equal Exchange

Letter Writing Campaign/Art Project
Claudia Friedetsky, Parents for Climate Protection
Jacqueline Smith, Parents for Climate Protection

Dinneropoly: Travel the World to Gather a Sustainable Dinner
Katherine Borowitz, Green Mom
Marietta and Peter Brill, Green Parents

Story Pie: A Tasty Series of Readings and Activities
Robert Weinstock reads Food Hates You, Too and Other Poems and leads a poetry workshop

Emily Goodman reads Plant Secrets and we’ll plant a pizza garden

Janet Pederson reads Pino and the Signora’s Pasta and we’ll draw food portraits!

Green Smoothies!
Amie Hamlin, New York  Coalition for Healthy School Food

Brooklyn Bees: All about Beekeeping in the City from Brooklyn’s Own Artisanal Urban Honey Maker
John Howe, Brooklyn Bee

Acrobatics!
Big Apple Circus Afterschool Kids, Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Film
Preview: What’s on Your Plate? A Provocative New Documentary about City
Kids Exploring Their Place in the Food Chain.  Includes Q & A with
the film’s stars Sadie Rain Hope-Gund and Safiyah Kai Russell Riddle

Hip Hop Applesauce: Cool Moves from STATIC
Tilden High School’s Hip Hop Dance Troupe

Enter the Raffle at Brooklyn Blogfest

BLOGFEST_LOGO_1920_1080 This year there will be a raffle at the Brooklyn Blogfest (May 7th at powerHouse Arena in DUMBO) organized by Hip Slope Mama, who was able to convince quite a few generous sponsors to donate these awesome items.

A big thanks to all our generous rafffle sponsors.

Enter the raffle at Blogfest (look for the raffle table where prizes
will be displayed) . The winners will be announced at the after-party at
Galapagos.

And here are the prizes:

Casio Ditigal Camera

Casio Women's Watch

Babeland Goodie Bag

Peeled Snacks Gift Certificate

Whimsey & Spice Gift Package

Brooklyn Frameworks – Framed Ork Design – Brooklyn Poster

A framed photograph of Coney Island in the snow by Hugh Crawford

Dinner for two at MELT

One Free haircut/style at Slope Suds (by the owner, Karla Mironov)

One Free Professional Eyebrow Shaping at Slope Suds (by Elke
Von Freudenber a beauty blogger and resident makeup artist and eyebrow
guru. She has been compared the the famous Eliza for her eyebrow
shaping)

City Weekends by Alison Lowenstein (Book)

Create Good Karma: Be A Volunteer at Brooklyn Blogfest

BLOGFEST_LOGO_1920_1080 We are recruiting a volunteer crew
for Brooklyn Blogfest 2009, which is on Thursday May 7th at
Powerhouse Books in DUMBO. The after party is at Galapagos – right across the
street.

If you want to join this incredible team of people, email
ETraubman@aol.com

BENEFITS OF BEING A BLOGFEST
VOLUNTEER

  • Meet incredible people
  • Free exposure for your website or blog: we post a link to you on our
    website Brooklynblogfest.com

  • Half price admission – $5
  • Three free raffle tickets for all kinds of goodies
  • Create good Karma – what goes around comes
    around


The Shout-Out at the Brooklyn Blogfest

The
Shout-Out is a Brooklyn Blogfest tradition. And it’s a cool, fun way to announce your blog to the world. This year
the Shout-Out will take place during the party on the big stage at Galapagos.

If you
started a blog since the last Blogfest (or you’ve never done a
shout-out) you are invited to line up at the open mic and spread the
word about your blog. There are, however, a few important rules.

1. If you started a blog since the last Blogfest or you’ve never done a shout-out at Blogfest you may do a shout-out.

2. Limit your comments to five brief sentences.

3. Don’t forget to say the name of your blog and your URL.

4. Provide a very succinct description (in five brief sentences or less) of what your blog is about.

5. Exit the stage swiftly.

6. The M.C. has the right to ask you to leave the stage if you have exceeded the time limit.

OTBKB Music: Some Celebrate Brooklyn Highlights

BRIC Arts | Media | Bklyn will announce the lineup for Celebrate Brooklyn!’s 2009 season on May 4. In the meantime, here are some exclusive, not-yet-announced highlights.

OPENING NIGHT:
Monday, June 8, 8:00 P.M. (gates open at 6:30 P.M. for free performance)

David Byrne
In this free concert, David Byrne will perform Music of David Byrne and Brian Eno, featuring material spanning his collaborations with Brian Eno: three Talking Heads albums, 1981’s groundbreaking My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, and last year’s Everything that Happens will Happen Today. An ensemble cast including dancers, background vocalists, and a singular band will amplify the spectacle.
The concert will be preceded at 5:30 P.M. with Celebrate Brooklyn’s first Green Gala, which includes cocktails, dinner and reserved seats for Byrne’s performance. Gala tickets, for $325 and up, are available at 718.855.7882 x33. The show will be followed, at 9:45 P.M., by a dance party open to gala guests and Friends of Celebrate Brooklyn.

Saturday, June 20, 7:30 P.M. (gates open at 6:30 P.M.

La Nave de los Monstruos, with live score by Ethel and Gutbucket
Part of Celebrate Brooklyn!’s Music & Movies Series
In a special Celebrate Brooklyn! commission, the nation’s premier rock-infused, postclassical string quartet, the immensely acclaimed Ethel, teams up with the wild art-rock group Gutbucket to perform a new original score to the vintage Mexican science fiction classic La Nave De Los Monstruos (The Monsters’ Ship, 1959). In the film, the last male on Venus has died, and two Venusian hotties embark on a quest to find men on other planets. The bands premiere the new work this evening after developing the project at a BRIClab residency this spring. Gutbucket will also perform an opening set.

Friday, June 26, 7:30 P.M. (gates open at 6:30 P.M.)

Blonde Redhead
The vaunted NYC underground sensualists Blonde Redhead have shape-shifted from dissonant noise explorations to ethereal, dreamy pop over the course of their career, always inspiring intense devotion from their fans.  PopMatters says of them, “It is as if they are pressing on piano keys and each key is a trigger that tugs a wire within the listener. There are keys for longing, possession, despair, and ecstasy—and Blonde Redhead travel fast and skillfully over the whole keyboard.”

Saturday, July 19, 2:00 P.M.—9:00 P.M. (gates open at 1:00 P.M.)
African Festival with King Sunny Adé/Freshly Ground/The Mandingo Ambassadors/
Cheikh M’Baye & Sing Sing/Abena Koomson/Yasser Darwish
American Express Roots Music Series
Celebrate Brooklyn!’s annual all-day festival of music, food and crafts features a lineup of music selected to keep dancers moving into the night. This year’s headliner is the great King Sunny Adé of Nigeria. The bill also includes a rare U.S. appearance by South Africa’s Freshly Ground; The Mandingo Ambassadors, from NYC by way of Guinea, whose music “has been structured to make you feel good” (The New York Times); the wild Senegalese drum troupe Cheikh M’Baye & Sing Sing; the powerful Brooklyn-born, Ghanaian vocalist Abena Koomson; and whirling traditional Egyptian dancer, Yasser Darwish.

Saturday, August 1, 7:30 P.M. (gates open at 6:30 P.M.)

Music & Movies
Dean & Britta: 13 Most Beautiful…Songs for Andy Warhol’s Screen Tests/ Crystal Stilts
Dean & Britta, who are beloved as one of the sexiest duo’s in rock, in addition to being alumni of the groundbreaking alt-rock band Luna, perform original scores to Warhol's rarely seen short silent film portraits, which captured Factory superstars, celebrities, and anonymous teenagers in mesmerizing four-minute shots. The New York Times says, “The music unabashedly translates the ominous drone of early Velvet Underground songs like I’m Waiting for the Man and Venus in Furs into a more modern electronic mode reminiscent of Giorgio Moroder’s chic torture-chamber disco.” Commissioned by the Andy Warhol Museum, the project is like an archeological dig unearthing NYC’s 1960s art scene, complete with an unforgettable soundtrack. Brooklyn’s Crystal Stilts, whom Pitchfork describes as “moody-sounding fuckers who make fabulous stripped-down garage-pop,” will set the tone for the night.

Friday, Augusut 7, 7:00 P.M. (gates open at 6:00 P.M.)
Grace Potter & The Nocturnals/ Deer Tick
Fronted by the Joplin-like vocals and the Hammond B-3 playing of the group’s fearless frontwoman, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals play “blues-based rock with glorious passion.” The music of Deer Tick is hard to categorize—folk? indie rock? alt-country? Americana?—but easy to love. They “write and play some of the most soulful, inspired music around, littered with lyrics as sharp as a shot of whiskey and rapid-fire guitar solos strong enough to blow the dust off your boots.” (Brooklyn Vegan)

Gifts for the Zuzu Mom

Zuuzdog Another promo/poem from Fonda at Zuzu's Petals.

 the
zuzumom:

she can be impulsive but never
dangerously so.
she has lots of friends who also like
each other.
she has one friend she holds most
dear.
she loves to sleep late, but can't
resist getting up early.
she loves her house. it is an extension
of herself.
she has a great collection of take-out
menus.
she loves to cook up a storm in the
kitchen when she has the time.
she likes to be comfortable in her
clothes.
she is comfortable in her
skin.
she loves growing things out in the
garden as well as in the house.
she loves handmade, re-cycled, vintage,
collectible,  natural, unusual, simple, fresh, silly, original, clever,
sweet, funny, sentimental.
got a zuzumom in your
life?
celebrate her…we can
help.

Leon Freilich, Verse Responder: Middle School Trophy

Middle School Trophy

A sixth-grader dating
Is hardly anything new;
I did it on lots of occasions
In 2002.

I'd take a fellow student,
A girl who was smart or pretty,
To the
Brooklyn Museum

Or to the
looming city.

Just where depended on
Her interest and inclination,
Whatever turned her on
And grew to fascination.

I'd feed her Coke and pizza
While I chugged down a beer
And hoped her folks would never
Happen to appear–

A
girl who's in the sixth grade

Invariably is a tween
While I was a sixth-grade vet
Who happened to be seventeen.

May at the Old Stone House: Photos, Food, Jazz, Mothers, Bikes and Spring

Through June 30
Essence and Accident:
Photographs by Hugh Crawford
Upstairs at OSH
Fridays, 4-7 pm and by appointment
www.hughcrawford.com

Friday, May 1

  Jazz at OSH 
Christiana Drapkin, Vocals

 Charles Sibirsky, Piano; John DeCesare, Bass

Robert Weiss, Drums

8:00 pm. Tickets $12. 

Saturday, May 2

Brooklyn Food Conference – All Day Events at OSH

A Project of the Brooklyn Food Coalition 

11:45 Maureen O'Brien/Bin & Worm Composting

Keha McIlwaine/Keeping Bees in NYC

 1:15  Guided Tour of OSH/Washington Park Gardens;

Cory Finneron & Elisabeth Thomas/Mushroom
Cultivation 3:15  Defending Against Genetically Engineered Food: Saving
Seeds.  A Panel Discussion with Ken Greene; JP Harpignies; Howard
Brandstein; and Jean-Baptiste Bazelais. 

Moderated by Laura Karlen

Free/Donations Gladly Accepted.

Friday, May 8

Jazz at OSH
Tyler Blanton Trio

Tyler Blanton, Vibraphone

Richie Barshay, Drums/Percussion
Aidan Carroll, Bass
Guest Artist: Joel Frahm, Saxaphone

8:00 pm. Tickets $12. Under 12 Free.

Thursday, May 14 
 Brooklyn Reading Works
Edgy Mother's Day: Curated by Sophia Romero, Amy Sohn and Michele M. Somerville

8:00 pm.

$5 suggested donation

 

Saturday, May 16

 It's My Park Day Spring Fling
Celebrate Washington Park/JJ Byrne Playground with

the Old Stone House, Park Slope Parents

and the Park Slope Civic Council
Crafts & Face Painting, Clothing Swap, Food Drive
Noon:  Princess Katie & Racer Steve
1 pm:  Artichoke Dance Company Workshop
2 pm:  Olde Salts Bluegrass
3 pm: Artichoke Dance Company Performance
 Free.

Sunday, May 17

Fabulous Fifth Avenue Fair
11 am – 7 pm

Sterling Place to 12th Street

Saturday, May 31

Brooklyn Bike Rumble
Learn to Ride, Refurbished Bikes for Sale, Bike Mending, Music and More

10 am – 3 pm

For more information, please visit www.theoldstonehouse.org

or call us at (718) 768-3195, or by email at info@oldstonehouse.org

Daily Dish: Brooklyn Food Conference

Join WNYC's Leonard Lopate at one of the most fascinating tables in town as he hosts five of the City's most eco-sensitive and talented chefs, including Brooklyn's own David Shea of Applewood and John Tucker of Rosewater. No reservations required, but the early bird gets the best seats at the Brooklyn Food Conference on May 2, 2009.
For a look at the mouth-watering and thought-provoking menu of talks, workshops, and activities for adults and children at the Brooklyn Food Conference, visit www.brooklynfoodconference.com.
Free!
Brooklyn Food Conference
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Kids’ Food Fair at PS 321 (7th Ave @1st St)
Adult and Teen Programs at John Jay High School (7th Ave@4th St)
Children accompanied by caregivers only, please

deBlasio and Markowitz Call for Hand Sanitizers to Combat Swine Flu Threat

Everyone's reeling about this Swine Flu thing. It's scary and no one seems to know how worried to be. Are we getting all the information we need? Is the US version of the flu as mild as they say? Are we getting the real story. Last night President Obama was pretty straight forward about precautions. Hand washing seems to be the panacea that everyone's talking about. Even Boro Prez Marty and City Council Member deBlasio are calling for hand sanitizers in all NYC classrooms and the're urging speedy passage of legislation requiring this in schools and child care centers.  Here's the press release from Tom Gray at deBlasio's office…

NEW YORK – In the wake of the swine flu outbreak, Councilmember Bill
de Blasio is calling for New York City to install hand sanitizers in
all school classrooms.  De Blasio’s office describes the equipment as
a very low-cost yet effective way to help prevent further spread of
the illness, which has already infected at least 49 people in New York
City and led to the closure of five City schools.

“Swine flu in New York City started in classrooms and consequently our
children have faced the greatest danger.   As a parent and a New York
City Councilmember, I think it is crucial that we act now to protect
against this threat by installing hand sanitizers in all classrooms.
I applaud the Mayor and all of City Government for the speedy action
they have taken in the face of this crisis.  However, now it is time
for us put the right tools in place to prevent the further spread of
swine flu,” said Councilmember Bill de Blasio

Artic Ice at the Brooklyn Museum

201 It's getting icy over at the Brooklyn Museum.

There's a big block of ice and cooling system on view outside of the Museum's south
entrance.

The Distance Between What We Have and What
We Want (Arctic Ice Project)
by Tavares
Strachan goes on view today at the Brooklyn
Museum.

In 2005, Tavares Strachan journeyed
to the
Alaskan Arctic and worked with a skilled team
to extract a single two-and-a-half ton piece
of ice from a frozen river. This ice block
was shipped to the Bahamas (the artist's
birthplace) and exhibited there in hot summer
weather, kept cold in a specially designed
freezer powered by solar energy.

The very
same block of ice and cooling system are now
on view outside of the Museum's south
entrance.

Freelancers Union Opposes Unincorporated Business Tax

The Freelancers Union, located in DUMBO, opposes the unincorporated business tax (UBT), a tax freelancers are required t opay. FU proposes "tax justice for freelancers" by exempting them from this tax.

Yesterday, according to a press release from Freelancers Union, there was a large 
turnout at a City Council hearing on creating tax justice for
freelancers by exempting them from the Unincorporated Business Tax
(UBT). "We packed the room and still couldn’t get everyone in," FU writes in their press release.

Council Member David Yassky helped to organize this hearing.


Dating in 6th Grade?

A member of Park Slope Parents wants to know when it became the  norm for 6th graders to begin dating. She wonders if this is just something that is happening at MS51 or a Brooklyn thing in general.

This PSP member is clearly shocked. She's heard that parents are giving 6th graders money to go on dates.  6th graders
money to go out on dates.

What about allowances? Shouldn't you at least be earning an
allowance in order to date?

Finally, the mom, a self-professed "dinosaur," admists that her kids are only in kindergarten. But she has a nephew at a middle school in Park Slope.

What do you think?

Brownstone Voyeur: Small and Stylish in Carroll Gardens

Bv1 BROWNSTONE VOYEUR is a joint project of casaCARA and OTBKB.  Look for it every Thursday on both sites.

ROBERT FARRELL, an architect and interior designer, has lived since the mid-1990s in a 600 square foot rental on the ground floor of a Carroll Gardens row house, with lumpy plaster walls and a tiny, tubless bathroom.

five051

He stays mainly for the garden, a fifty-foot swath of lawn at the end of which he has constructed a romantic outdoor pavilion draped with nylon parachute cloth.

Garden-2

A corrugated plastic roof and waterproof parachute fabric make the garden room usable eight months a year.

Dining-3