All posts by louise crawford

Landmarks Preservation Commission Under Fire in NY Times

So why does it take forever for the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission to take action on historic neighborhoods and buildings?

Historical preservationists and pols have long been frustrated with the agency, which is meant to preserve the city’s architectural heritage, because of
its slow response time and lack of accountability

Today the New York Times presents the first in a series of articles examining how the famously mysterious commission works and details about a recent Supreme Court ruling that the agency’s inaction is "arbitrary and capricious."

The New York Times conducted its own six-month examination of the
commission’s operations. They discovered "an overtaxed
agency that has taken years to act on some proposed designations, even
as soaring development pressures put historic buildings at risk. Its
decision-making is often opaque, and its record-keeping on
landmark-designation requests is so spotty that staff members are
uncertain how many it rejects in a given year."

Yay. Maybe this will help bring about change to the commission, which is in desperate need of an  overhaul. Here’s an excerpt from the Times’ article.

For years, preservation advocates have pleaded with the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission to consider enlarging its protective mantle in Park Slope, one of Brooklyn’s most scenic brownstone neighborhoods. In 2000 they proposed that the commission extend the 44-block Park Slope Historic District eastward and southward, preserving 19th-century residential architecture like the handsome houses on Garfield Place, with their two-sided bays and original stoop ironwork.

The initial response was encouraging: in a June 2001 letter to the Historic Districts Council, the commission said, “We will review the material and keep you informed of the process.”

And then the preservationists waited. And waited. This month — seven years later — a State Supreme Court judge in Manhattan decided that they had waited long enough.

Ruling on a lawsuit filed in March against the landmarks commission’s top officials by a preservationist coalition, the judge called the agency’s inaction “arbitrary and capricious” and ordered it to start making timely decisions on every designation request. To allow such proposals “to languish is to defeat the very purpose of the L.P.C. and invite the loss of irreplaceable landmarks,” the judge, Marilyn Shafer, wrote.

Dec 4 & 5: Brooklyn-only Documentaries Screening at Brooklyn Historical Society

Atlanticavenue
The organizer of this event asked me to share this information about an upcoming two-day all-Brooklyn-focused Brooklyn Film & Arts Festival documentaries festival at the Brooklyn Historical Society on December 4th and 5th:

We are pleased to announce a two-day festival of Brooklyn-only documentaries at the Brooklyn Historical Society in Brooklyn Heights. This extraordinary opportunity to view many aspects of Brooklyn’s rich cultural history from many perspectives will illuminate the unique stories of the people, neighborhoods and communities of Brooklyn as they live through great changes caused by ongoing economic and cultural developments.

These documentaries will shine a light on many different Brooklyn neighborhoods and will include docs about

–The crisis of Astroland’s demise
–Memories of the violent 1980’s in Bushwick
–Homesteading in Red Hook
–Combative senior citizens in Park Slope
–Streetlife on Atlantic Avenue in 1972
–1985 Trinidadian celebrations in Crown Heights
–Homeless racing pigeons in Williamsburg
–Youthful angst in East Flatbush
–A family romp at Coney Island in 1969
–Remembering Barbra Streisand 
–1981 in Flatbush and and many other short documentaries

The Brooklyn Film & Arts Festival is dedicated to presenting Brooklyn’s rich cultural history through film, art and performance. We look forward to presenting the works of filmmakers whose films feature Brooklyn’s cultural history, communities and the stories of the people of Brooklyn.

The Where and When

The screenings will be held on December 4th and December 5th, 2008 at the Brooklyn Historical Society located at 128 Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn Heights. The programs begin at 6:00 pm on both days and suggested admission is $5.00. Please call (718) 222-4111 or visit our website www.brooklynhistory.org for more information.

Kidverse from The-Oh-So-Prolific-One, Leon Freilich

Kidverse: Bagel, Bagel

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’d you get that funny hole?
Smeared with cream cheese piled so high
That it reaches to the sky!

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

Would  some butter do as well?
Fewer calories. docs yell;
Substitute some margarine
To avoid a double chin?

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

Who has got possession of
Middle pieces that I love?
Does it go to kids who’re poor
Or just fall upon the floor?

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

Can I make some into a necklace
Or is that considered reckless?
Squeeze one  with my mighty fist
So it fits my little wrist?

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

Children tell me, is it true,
Bagels help when someone’s blue,
And on Saint Patrick’s Day,
They’re all green from kelly spray?

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

What I’d really like to see
Is a bagel made for me–
Tasting sweet as sweet can be
Dough that’s sparkling with candee.

Bagel, bagel, little roll,
Where’s you get that funny hole?

Once a Lower East Side treat
Now you’re something that all eat,
Bagel, bagel, near and far,
Global crossover star.

Bagel, bagel, near and far,
Global crossover star.

He’s Back: Not Only Brooklyn on AOL Again

Not Only Brooklyn (NOB) is back on AOL. Below is Neil’s explanation of what happened.  Turns out it wasn’t some kind of weird cultural blacklisting. One of NOB’s subscribers clicked the spam button rather than the unsubscribe button, which resulted in AOL’s alogirthms shutting NOB down for a few weeks, causing Neil much undue agita.

Okay dude, time to get back to work: we need to hear about all the wondrous cultural events that are going on this weekend.

    Finally got a phone call from AOL. Exactly as I suspected, some disgruntled subscriber couldn’t be bothered to unsubscribe, clicked in report spam multiple times, and the AOL algorithms, without any adult supervision, took note and eventually took action to close the account of this egregious spammer.

    The AOL adult supervisor apologized, confirmed the legitimacy of my NOB newsletters and that they merit white listing as legitimate bulk email, overruled the algorithms, and restored full account access during our conversation.

    However, there is still a problem. The AOL algorithms remain programmed to shut down any AOL member who persists in sending unsolicited emails. Which means NOB remains at risk of being shut down again by the same disgruntled subscriber who prefers to click on "report spam" than send me an email saying unsubscribe. I suggested a common sense approach, contacting the

    AOL member who insists on identifying arbrunr@aol.com as a serial spammer and asking said individual to simply unsubscribe, so I will know to stop sending NOB  to that particular subscriber who has changed his or her mind. He told me that AOL does not do that. But he promised to pass my suggestion along to senior management. And he gave me his direct phone number in case this happens again.

    My plan is to ask subscribers with AOL com addresses to confirm their desire to receive NOB. And to look into sending NOB from a free bulk email service such as Dada Mail – Mailing List Manager Although my longer term plan remains to hire a web programmer to help me transform NOB Arts newsletter into a web site. One that will be so user friendly, interactive, informative, searchable and fun to use that it will attract sufficient traffic to also attract the tasteful paid advertising that will make NOB self supporting.

A Child Speaks at the Opening of PS 10’s Barrier Free Playground

An OTBKB reader sent in this link to a video of a speech by a disabled first grader, who happens to be a double amputee, at the opening of PS 10’s barrier free playground.

It is an astoundingly good speech — particularly coming right
before the Thanksgiving holiday.  I believe the child’s name is Jake
Lillis and he must be about six years old.  His remarks start about 30
seconds into this video.

 
 

It’s “Brooklyn Friday” Not “Black Friday”

On Friday, November 28, watch Marty Markowitz officially kick off “Brooklyn Friday”—formerly Black Friday—with a noontime “Shop Brooklyn” visit to The Spa & Wellness Center/Green Spa New York in Bay Ridge.

Sounds like he picked a nice spot to do the kick-off. I met the owners of this spa a the Gowanus Gren Festival last summer.

Founded in 1998, The Spa & Wellness Center is the city’s first all-green spa and first all-green building in Bay Ridge complete with ecycled natural furniture, walls, floors, and ceilings, solar power, and a selection of natural organic products and services.

So what is “Shop Brooklyn?"

    It’s an awareness campaign that highlights 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.

Look for the "Shop Brooklyn" logo in the window of participating retailers, restaurants, bars, and other service providers. Those establishments will offer special “Brooklyn Bonuses” this Friday and each weekend from November 22 through December 21.

Why Foundation Rwanda for Karen Rothman-Fried

Newsgraphics2007_650215aYesterday I got a note from Andrew Fried, the husband of Karen Rothman-Fried, the PS 321, teacher who died suddenly and tragically last week. Andrew Fried wrote that while Karen did not have a connection with Foundation Rwanda, they had recently been  speaking about becoming involved with
philanthropies.

According to Fried, Karen indicated that she wanted to support something that
was directed to helping women/girls in underdeveloped countries.

Foundation Rwanda, which pairs that desire with her love of teaching and
education, was, therefore, a perfect choice.

For information and donations in Karen Rothman-Fried’s name:
www.foundationrwanda.org
Foundation Rwanda
241 Avenue of Americas 14C
New York, NY  10014

Photo of a Rwandan woman with her daughter by JonathanTorgovnik.


Thurs at 9 am: The Turkey Trot in Prospect Park

 The Prospect Park Track Club sponsors the 5 M Turkey Trot beginning at 9 am on Turkey Day, to benefit the Bishop Ford Track Teams

You can register Tuesday and Wednesday after 4 p.m. at Jack Rabbit on Seventh Avenue between Garfield and President.

Walkers Welcome. Medals to all registered finishers.  Race souvenir guaranteed to first 1200 registered entrants!

Click here for a map of race start, parking, registration, etc. Race begins and ends near the
    Oriental Pavilion in Prospect Park. Same day registration is at the Wollman Skating Rink
    from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m.  Race begins at 9 a.m. SHARP

Just Confirming Registration?
Click here for the Confirmed Entrants List, as of November 21, 2008.

Please note, the list will be updated every couple of days.

 
The Course
    The race starts and finishes near the Oriental Pavilion, off the Park’s Lincoln Road entrance.
    One lower lake loop then a full loop of the park.

Smartmom: Divorce Thanksgiving Style

Here’s a Thankgiving Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper from few years ago.

Thanksgiving: that most American of holidays. Pumpkin pie. Football. Divorce.

For much of Smartmom’s childhood, Thanksgiving meant standing in
front of the Museum of Natural History waiting for Underdog and Mighty
Mouse to fly over.

The Macy’s parade would be followed by an enthusiastic gathering of
her extended family in the large, light-filled dining room of their
Riverside Drive apartment for a sumptuous meal, spirited discussion,
debate and her Great Aunt Beatrice’s delicious mashed sweet potatoes
with marshmallows.

Without fail, Nanny, Smartmom’s maternal grandmother, would say,
“Good eatin,’” plus a smattering of Yiddish words as a way to bless the
abundant feast that was topped off by too many slices of pie from
Greenberg’s Bakery on Madison Avenue.

But on the night before Thanksgiving the year she was 17, Smartmom
learned that her parents were separating. On Turkey Day, her father was
gone and her mother didn’t leave her bedroom.

It was sudden, it was quick. Her parent’s marriage was over and family life as she knew it was kaput.

Thanksgiving morning, Smartmom’s aunt picked up Smartmom and her sister.

“This is awful,” she said as she took Smartmom and Diaper Diva to
her home in Westchester where Smartmom’s maternal relatives were
gathered.

As she remembers it, nobody said a thing. It was the giant elephant; the great unmentionable.

Sitting at the huge Danish Modern dining table, Smartmom and Diaper
Diva felt like orphans as they worried about their mother and wondered
where their father had gone. The day went by in a blur of emotions. By
the time the football games were playing on the black-and-white
television, they already felt stigmatized by this unfortunate schism in
their domestic lives.

Back home, the apartment felt empty and sad. Her mother was asleep
and Smartmom sat in the living room and listened to the Laura Nyro
album, “Gonna Take a Miracle,” feeling too confused to cry and too
anxious to sleep.

Less than a year later, Smartmom left for college and an independent
life of her own. She can barely remember the next Thanksgiving or the
ones after that. Like most kids of divorce, she made a valiant effort
to adjust to the new normal: life without an intact family.

Over time, Smartmom and Diaper Diva got used to their holidays being
divvied up like portions of cake. Her mother always got Thanksgiving.
Her father got Christmas. Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Passover were
up for grabs.

Nothing was written down or settled in a legal way; her parents
weren’t legally divorced for years to come. So Smartmom and her sister
were basically winging it every holiday.

It often came down to which parent needed them more. In so many
ways, divorce forces the child to grow up fast and interpret the needs
of their parents.

This can make the child feel responsible for a parent’s happiness or
unhappiness in ways that are definitely not all that healthy for young
children.

Even in this enlightened day and age, when divorce is understood as
the monster it is, divorced parents continue to try to split their
children in two.

Nowadays, most of the divorced parents Smartmom knows have it in
writing which parent their children will be with on each holiday until
the child is 18.

Typically, the big-ticket holidays are divided up like a bucket of coins. Luckily there are eight days of Hannukah.

One thing’s for sure: Mom always gets Mother’s Day. Dad has Father’s Day.

Sometimes the children become a rope in the battle between the
parents. Some parents end up in court fighting over scheduling matters.

Smartmom knows some divorced parents who do unusual things to keep their child’s needs front and center.

One kid she knows spends Christmas morning with both parents and
their significant others. Mom, Dad, stepmom and stepdad open presents
together and even share some food.

But this kind of arrangement is very rare. Not every divorced couple is quite that civilized—or flexible.

Civilized or not, the more thought the parents give to the emotional
needs of their children the better off those kids will be. While many
parents are well meaning, the contentiousness sometimes clouds their
ability to do what is right for their kids.

Kids are resilient, and Smartmom is as resilient as they come. But
sometimes this so-called resiliency can cover up the pain that is
really going on inside.

Smartmom isn’t sure any child of divorce ever adjusts to the split.
Sure they go along with it because they have to. But in the end, it is
the children more than the parents who suffer because of it.

Smartmom’s parents’ divorce is the great before/after event in her
life. It has affected her relationships, her sense of self, and her
ability to love.

And the fact that the split occurred on Thanksgiving means her great
American holiday is still colored by that life-changing event.

It still hurts that Smartmom never gets to see her father carve the turkey or make the first Thanksgiving toast.

But she’s used to it. By now, she has spent many more Thanksgivings without her dad than with him.

Still, that doesn’t mean that she’s not thinking about him. It’s a
split-screen life for kids of divorce. You go through the holiday with
one parent while you imagine what the other parent is up to. You worry
about them, think of them, hope they’re doing well.

Children of divorce learn to be in two places at once: Where they
are and where the other parent is. In this way, they keep the family
together. If only in the mind.

Dec 7: Holiday Fun Fest with New York Family

Hanukkah_web2New York Family is throwing a Holiday Fun Fest for families in Brooklyn. At this fun shindig in groovy Williamsburg there will be:

–Live Music by Mr.Ray!

–Glitzy Chicks Face Painting!                

–Special Guest named Santa!

–Cartoon Portraits by Z-Man! Live Magician!

–Goodie Bags!

The Where and When

Sunday, December 7, 2008
from Noon to 3pm
at the Edge Sales Office
135 Kent Avenue at North 6th Street
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Take the L Train to Bedford Avenue

Register now at New York Family

Bonus: The First 150 families to register and attend will be eligible to WIN Broadway Show tickets for four! 

This free event will benefit Toys for Tots
Please bring a new unwrapped toy to donate!

Card by http://berkowhat.com/hanukkah

Paper Love Coming to Lincoln Place

Here’s the latest on continuing adventures of the three shops just east of Seventh Avenue on Lincoln Place (between 6th and 7th Avenues). At the moment there’s Stitch Therapy at 176 Lincoln and One of a Find, a resale and vintage clothing shop.

Now Paper Love, a lovely looking shop that sells cards, wrapping paper and other paper good is set to open on Lincoln Place in the shop that used to be Pickleboots, the children’s bedding and toy shop.

Pickleboots, which sells "unique and groovy custom bedding for kids" has moved to Maggie’s Threads for Kids. 411 Seventh Avenue in Park Slope between 13th and 14th Streets.

The building is owned by a lovely older man who spends a lot of time making customized wood planters for each of the shops. He paints the planters with special designs related to each shop. He’s a real master and takes great pleasure, it seems, in his craft.

We wave at each other most days. Here’s something I wrote about him in May of 2008:

White hair, ruddy face; he wears
green Wellington boots when it rains. He looks handy; happy with tools.

He seems like a very nice man. Just the other day, he was trimming
the magnolia or some such blossomy tree he’s got in front of his red
brick building over there.

He makes nice painted signs for the stores. He helps fix their
places up. He seems very involved in the day to day running of his
building.

 

Danny Hoch: Giving Voice to Gentrificaiton

 Sounds like a must-see for those interested in the social, economic, and psychological implications of gentrification in this borough.

Hip-hop theater pioneer Danny Hoch takes over the Public Theater stage, presenting a one-man show of characters who have experienced gentrification in Brooklyn first hand.

Blazing through a fierce spectrum of New Yorkers, Danny gives voice to
everyone from the developers evicting locals to make way for lofts, to
the bar-hopping career hipsters who buy them, and those left in the
wake of both. True to Danny’s signature style, Taking Over is a raw, explosive, hilarious, and heartbreaking study of the impact of our obsession with economic expansion.

Performance Schedule:
Friday, November 7 – Sunday, December 14
Tuesday at 7pm
Wednesday – Saturday at 8pm
Sunday at 2pm

Snowflake Celebration: Extra Days and Expanded Partnerships

For the second annual Snowflake Celebration this year, the Buy in
Brooklyn
team is going all out!

The "shop local-shop late" event– which falls
on the first two Thursdays of December (December 4th and
11th), will include over 120 businesses in the Park
Slope neighborhood and is growing at a clip.

Indeed, the stock market may well be playing an amplified role for organizers this year.
From nearly every corner of the economic landscape, the forecast is bleak—giving
this year’s call to shop locally added impact. "The Snowflake festival is more
important this year than ever," said John Ciferni, owner of Tarzian
True Value Hardware and President of the Park Slope Chamber of Commerce. "In
these hard economic times supporting our local businesses is one of the most
important things we can do to keep our local economy and community strong," he
said.

The cool fiscal winds may be giving Buy in Brooklyn’s educational
mission a boost too.  "We are excited to be partnering with a number of
nonprofit and local groups this year to broaden the educational mission of
Buy in Brooklyn," said Rebeccah Welch, who is running communications for
the campaign and working with some of its partner organizations. From the
Sustainable Business Network NYC (SBNYC) and Local Labels to the
Brooklyn Green Team and Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development
Corporation
(SBIDC), the breadth of participants speaks to the range– and
the imperative– of a thriving local economy.

"We hope to leverage greater support by
getting out the word on how many excellent organizations are out there working
hard on this issue," said Welch of the campaign.

The Buy in Brooklyn team
is particularly excited about their work with the Borough President’s Office,
whose Shop Brooklyn launch they whole-heartedly support.  "We see
this borough-wide initiative not only as a measure of our early success, but as
a sign that a broader understanding has taken hold," added Welch, "one where
people see how the health of small businesses has a direct impact on the health
of local communities."

About Buy in Brooklyn: Buy in Brooklyn is an original
initiative of the Park Slope Civic Council and Park Slope Chamber of Commerce
and was founded in 2007 to bring merchant and community groups together to
tackle local economic issues in greater collaboration. The "Snowflake
Celebration" is a shop local-shop late campaign of Buy in Brooklyn
organized by the Park Slope Chamber of Commerce in close partnership with a
number of organizations including the 5th Avenue BID and the Sustainable
Business Network NYC.

Dec 4: Annual Kindergarten Forum

The Park Slope Child Care Collective (186 St John’s at 7th Ave) is having it’s annual Kindergarten forum on Dec 4th at 6:30 p.m.

At this event, there will be representatives from local public schools and Pamela Wheaton from
insideschools.org will be speaking. 

It should be very helpful to people looking for more information about out-of-zone schools.

The Where and When

Annual Kindergarten Forum
December 4th at 6:30 p.m.
Park Slope Child Care Collective
186 St. John’s at 7th Avenue

In Lieu of Flowers: Donate to Foundation Rwanda in Karen Rothman’s Name

The family of Karen Rothman, the third grade teacher who died suddenly on November 16th in a Park Slope restaurant, requests that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to Foundation Rwanda, a
non-profit organization established to fund secondary school education
for children born from rapes committed during the genocide in Rwanda
and links their mothers to existing psychological and medical services.
 

The cause of Rothman’s death is still not certain. Someone familiar with the situation told me that the autopsy was inconclusive, but it was clear that Rothman did not die of an aneursym.

I’m not sure if Rothman had a direct connection with Foundation Rwanda, but it sounds like they do very valuable work.
         
Rothman, who grew up in Brooklyn Heights, taught at PS 321 since 2007 She received her master’s degree from the Bank Street College of Education and taught at the Lycee Francais de New York prior to PS 321. An article in the Brooklyn Eagle quotes PS 321 principal Elizabeth Phillips:

“She wanted to do her best for her kids; she worked very hard at that. She took work home, and she was always thinking and planning how to do the best possible job she could. “She had just written report card narratives for most of the kids. Reading them, you can see how well she knew her students, how dedicated to moving them forward. I gathered the kids together to talk about this tragedy, and they spoke about their memories of Karen. One child talked about how much he loved learning French from her. There were 23 kids; we went around the room, and each spoke something in French they learned from her. It was very moving. It’s something that will stay with them forever.

A memorial service was held at Congregation Beth Elohim. One friend who attended said that the room was packed with relatives, friends, and colleagues. Rabbi Andy Bachman presided over the service. Just last August he married the couple at the Picnic House in Prospect Park.

Rothman and her husband Andrew Freed were expecting their first child. Her son was delivered by emergency caesarian section, but died later.

To donate:
www.foundationrwanda.org
Foundation Rwanda
241 Avenue of Americas 14C
New York, NY  10014


.
 

My Father’s 78’s

78_3
Last week my sister and I went to my father’s apartment in Brooklyn Heights to pack up some more of the LP’s from the back of his closet. There were more than 100 in there and I went through them carefully and pulled out some for myself. The rest we packed up to take to Housing Works Thrift Shop on Montague Street in a variety of shopping bags.

The process was easier this time than last; it wasn’t quite so fraught for me emotionally. I actually enjoyed pulling out an eccentric and eclectic mix including Svajatoslav Richter (my father’s favorite classical pianist), Francis Faye, Nina Simone, Mahalia Jackson, Lotte Lenya, and Paul Robeson among others.

While in the closet, I noticed about 30 small boxes of jazz 78’s as well as two small duffel bags stacked with them. Jazz was my father’s passion. He loved Louis Armstrong, Billie Holiday, Sidney Bechet, Bessie Smith, Teddy Wilson, Duke Elllington, Charlie Parker. The list goes on…

These were his heroes, jazz was his passion and he knew a great deal about it.

When my stepmother asked that we pack up those 78’s and bring them to Housing Works, too I got a lump in my stomach. Later she told me that those were the 78’s my father collected in Los Angeles when he was a teenager.

At the mention of that I knew that I definitely didn’t want to make any decisions about those records; I just wasn’t ready. I didn’t really want to look at them let alone lift them out of the closet and bring them downstairs. It made me sick to even think about it.

I imagined all the places these records had been. He’d moved them from Los Angeles to Berkeley where he went to college and then back to UCLA, where he went to grad school. Then he moved them to various apartment in the West Village, where he was a young bachelor. Then he moved them to University Place where he lived with my mother; to Midwood Brooklyn when my sister and I were born (and we lived for a year with my mother’s parents). Then they traveled to Riverside Drive and finally Brooklyn Heights where he settled with my stepmother.

They obviously meant a great deal to my father but he never mentioned them to us or said anything about them in his will.

I was overwhelmed with confusion and sadness for those traveling records.

My sister felt differently. It’s not that she wanted to cart them off to Housing Works with the LP’s, but she wanted to find a good home for them. So she packed them up in two large blue IKEA totes and lugged them down the stairs.

I was furious because I thought they should stay in my father’s closet a little while longer. What was the harm in that? Time is a good thing. Perhaps we’d know better what to do in a few weeks or months. Maybe Teen Spirit would want them in the future. Or OSFO.

But when we got them into the car I understood my sister’s motivations.

"Let’s make some calls. Let’s find out what they’re worth, if anyone wants them." she said.

After dropping off the LPs at the thrift show, we had lunch at Theresa’s, the Polish luncheonette on Montague Street. Over bowls of cabbage soup, we agreed that we didn’t want to sell them but we wanted to give them to a place that would honor my father’s habit of collecting.

That evening, my sister already had a list of possible places, including the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University, Jazz at Lincoln Center, a jazz record shop on West 26th Street. She even called Phil Schaap at WKCR, Columbia University’s radio station.

The next day my sister got a call back from Phil Schaap. My father loved his jazz shows on WKCR, including the Louis Armstrong Centennial Festival Part I (June 30 – July 7, 2000; 184 hours), the Duke Ellington Centennial Festival (April 23 – May 1, 1999; 240 hours) and a two-week John Coltrane Festival is currently planned for the spring of 2004.

He also loved the 14 annual ‘Birthday Broadcasts,’ 24-hour marathons that celebrate the birthdays of the pivotal figures in jazz history as holidays, as well as the Memorial Broadcasts’ which pay tribute to musicians upon their passing and alert the jazz community to memorials and funeral plans.

Schaap said that he didn’t want the 78’s and that he was pretty sure that Lincoln Center, where he is a curator, wouldn’t want them. He did say that he could probably find some graduate students that would be happy to take them off our hands.

"My father really loved your show," my sister told him.

"Thank you very much," he said obviously moved.

In the meantime, I mentioned the 78’s to my friend Betsey who said that her partner Tom would be interested in keeping them. They have a house in upstate New York, where Tom has a turntable that plays 78’s.

It seemed like a good solution. I imagined that we could make occasional pilgrimages to their house and listen to the 78’s.

Later that day, my sister, who was eager to get the two Ikea bags full of 78’s out of her car, drove them over to Tom in Carroll Gardens, who seemed excited to go through the records.

Hours later I understood why bereavement experts say not to clean out closets, or give away clothing until you feel ready. I felt angry that we had to make a decision about the 78’s. I wanted to call Tom and say, I think we made a mistake, I want them back.

I felt bereft because this evidence of my father’s teenage self in the used record stores of Los Angeles was lost forever.

Thankfully, those feelings passed. Later I felt grateful that a friend had the 78’s and that they would stay together in a nice house in upstate New York. Sort of like a museum. A museum to Monte Ghertler as a teenager, obsessively going around Los Angeles looking for the music of his heroes on these heavy old records.

photo by Caroline Ghertler

 

Alicia Keyes is a Superwoman

Aliciakeys03
On Sunday nights OSFO and I like to watch ABC’s Desperate Housewives and Brothers and Sisters so you can imagine our disappointment that the American Music Awards was on instead. We slogged through performances by the Jonas Brothers and the Pussycat Girls but enjoyed watching Alicia Keys sing her hit, Superwoman with Queen Latifah and opera singer Kathleen Battle.

Superwoman by Alicia Keys

Everywhere I’m turning
Nothing seems complete
I stand up and I’m searching
For the better part of me
I hang my head from sorrow
Slave to humanity
I wear it on my shoulders
Gotta find the strength in me

Cause I am a Superwoman
Yes I am
Yes she is
Still when I’m a mess
I still put on a vest
With an S on my chest
Oh yes
I’m a Superwoman

For all the mothers fighting
For better days to come
And all my women, all my women sitting here trying
To come home before the sun
And all my sisters
Coming together
Say yes I will
Yes I can

Cause I am a Superwoman
Yes I am
Yes she is
Still when I’m a mess
I still put on a vest
With an S on my chest
Oh yes
I’m a Superwoman

When I’m breaking down
And I can’t be found
And I start to get weak
Cause no one knows
Me underneath these clothes
But I can fly
We can fly, Oooohh

Cause I am a Superwoman
Yes I am
Yes she is
Still when I’m a mess
I still put on a vest
With an S on my chest
Oh yes
I’m a Superwoman

Dec 4: Shorts 4 Dogs at the Old Stone House

2328855660_cafa5695dc
The Old Stone House, Willie’s Dawg’s and Seaworthy Films present an evening of award-winning short films to benefit the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation on Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 7:30 pm. 

The mission of the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation (SDF) is to produce the most highly trained canine disaster search teams in the nation.  The job of these teams is to find people buried alive in the wreckage of natural disasters and terrorist attacks.  To create these teams, SDF recruits rescued dogs from shelters and breed rescue groups, gives them professional training, and partners them with firefighters and other first responders at no cost to their departments.  SDF ensures lifetime care for every dog in its program: once rescued, SDF dogs will never need to be rescued again.

The Old Stone House is in JJ Byrne Park, between 3rd and 4th Streets, just off Fifth Avenue, in Park Slope, Brooklyn.  For more information, please call 718-768-3195, or visit the Old Stone House website at www.theoldstonehouse.org.

Willie’s Dawgs, a restaurant serving high-quality franks and sides, is named in homage to owners Ellen Lutter and Tom Anderson’s beloved late black lab Willie.  It is located at 351 Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn, New York.   Willie’s is committed to making the world a better place for humans and dogs.  For more information call 718-832-2941.

Pix by electronaut on Flickr

The Where and When

Shorts 4 Dogs
December 4th at 7:30 p.m.
The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and 3rd Street in Park Slope
Tickets are $20, available at the door and at
www.williesdawgs.com/events.html, including beer, popcorn and fabulous
hot dogs from Willie’s Dawgs.  Call 718-768-3195 for more information.

Dec 4 & 5: Observing Brooklyn, Encountering Change Docs

Observing Brooklyn; Encountering Change

The Brooklyn Film & Arts Festival
in partnership with the Brooklyn
Historical Society
will present a Brooklyn-focused documentary series
that illustrates past and present, social and cultural changes in
Brooklyn.

The Observing Brooklyn; Encountering Change documentary
series illuminates a broad range of Brooklyn life. Viewers will
explore a recently rediscovered, century old tunnel beneath Atlantic
Avenue; a sporting reunion of Brooklyn stickball players; a 1969 family
outing in Coney Island; period Brooklyn footage; Brooklyn senior
citizens engaged in some combative reminiscing and several other short
films.

This program is the second Brooklyn Film & Arts Festival screening
of Brooklyn documentaries in partnership with the Brooklyn Historical
Society

The Where and When

Dec. 4 Thursday & Friday Dec. 5
Films begin at 6:00 pm both nights
Brooklyn Historical Society
128 Pierrepont Street in Brooklyn Heights

Some in Park Slope Unhappy with Emergency Room Service at Methodist

There’s an intense discussion going on at Park Slope Parents about the emergency room at Methodist Hospital. Some local blogs have picked up the story. I’m wondering if Methodist’s ears are burning.

A member of PSP, a local list-service, had a bad experience there recently when her husband was experiencing acute dizziness.

According to her story, her husband signed in at the front desk and waited for two hours in the waiting room and was never called to triage. After two hours he couldn’t take it any more and had to go home. Luckily, he felt better a few hours later; it was probably vertigo.

A few others have written in with complaints.

One member of PSP, an emergency room physician, made an interesting point about the many factors that influence how quickly a patient is seen in any emergency room. According to her, the ER  physicians know exactly who is waiting to be seen and what condition they are in.   

She asserts that it may not seem to the patient that he or she has been "triaged" but in fact the physicians inside the ER know about him/her and have made the decision that that patient can wait to be seen. "People who arrive in the ER are not seen on a first-come, first-serve basis.  They are seen in order of acuity," she adds.

Certainly some days are worse than others in any ER. I’ve had mostly good experiences at the Methodist ER, especially the time OSFO’s head was bleeding because she ran into a gate at the 9th Street playground. Probably because she looked so awful and there was so much blood, they triaged her immediately and took care of her injury very quickly.

Another time, Hepcat went in with breathing difficulties after a severe allergic reaction to some bed sheets. Again, he was seen quickly.

Still another time, Hepcat was having arm and chest pains and he was immediately taken in. Both times with Hepcat were during the day.

But I’ve also waited hours in emergency rooms. The night before our wedding Hepcat was experiencing acute neck pain following an auto accident and we waited 6 hours at Beth Israel’s emergency room.

I tend to avoid emergency rooms whenever possible. When OSFO ran into another child in the sprinkler in JJ Byrne Park a stranger was able to stop the bleeding and I took her to a plastic surgeon in Manhattan to do the stitches on her mouth.

The question is this: is Methodist’s emergency room getting worse and why? Is it worse than other local emergency rooms. If so, which are the preferred emergency rooms?

Are there certain times of the week that are really untenable at Methodists like Friday and Saturday nights and holidays?

Are there other options? When Teen Spirit sprained his ankle our doctor told us to go to Urgent Ortho, an emergency care orthopedic facility that is part of Beth Israel Hospital. It’s a great place to go with any kind of sports injury.

Some one on PSP reccomended Park Slope Pediatrics Urgent Care right across the street above Barnes and Noble. A pediatrician named Dr. Bialik has opened this for care from 6pm-11pm.

That sounds good to know about. 

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: In Chicago’s Grant Park 40 Years later

Yet another installment of  Michael D. Nolan’s Brooklyn Memoir:  Proximity: What can happen when we live, work and love close together.

The compression of events and ensuing movement can create Proximity. In 1968 I was in the employ of the Public Broadcast Laboratory, a two-year news magazine show (emanating from NBC Studios at "30 Rock" in Manhattan) and funded by the Ford Foundation where Fred Friendly landed after he resigned as president of CBS News. "PBL" was Friendly’s brainchild, built on the "live interconnect" concept- using live television to bring contending points of view from distant locations into active dialog.

One example was a program devoted to Police-Community Relations with black psychology professor Alvin Pouissant speaking from Harvard, neighbors talking from a St. Louis storefront, and Police Chief Herbert Jenkins at his Atlanta headquarters. We went on an advance trip to prep the police chief for the show. "Y’all want some Coca-Cola," an affable Jenkins said as he welcomed us into his office and reached into his private refrigerator for the beverages. Jenkins was noted for his accommodating posture towards civil rights organizations and had been appointed by President Lydon Johnson to the National Commission on Civil Disorders established in the wake of the riots following King’s assassination in April.

Friendly wanted to cover the political conventions in the summer of ’68. I enthusiastically jumped on board the planning team, developing background information on the Mobilization demonstrations against the Vietnam War at the Democratic Convention in Chicago. For reasons not clear at the time, the plans for coverage were abruptly yanked. I always suspected the influence of McGeorge Bundy, then president of the Ford Foundation, who had been an architect of American military involvement in Vietnam while serving as an Advisor to President Kennedy.

With some vacation time from PBL, I called my friends at CBS News where I had worked for two years prior and was hired as a field producer to cover the demonstrations. I gleefully left for Chicago.

Through my own activism, I knew the lead organizers Dave Dellinger, Rennie Davis and Tom Hayden well and considered them political comrades. So when my CBS producer asked me to "Go find Tom Hayden", that was a fairly easy assignment. Tom was in disguise and among the demonstrators in Grant Park, across from the Hilton Hotel on Michigan Avenue where many convention delegates were lodged. I guided CBS reporter John Laurence and the camera crew to Hayden . Todd Gitlin, now a journalism-sociology professor at Columbia, stood nearby.

During that volatile summer week, I witnessed comedian Dick Gregory’s March destined for the convention center. Faced with police force and heavy doses of tear gas, Gregory and the demonstrators never left Grant Park. Later in the week, after the worst of the police violence, Eugene McCarthy came to address the demonstrators. On another occasion, Peter, Paul & Mary sang.

Tomorrow night, Barack and Michelle Obama, Joe and Jill Biden, and thousands of their supporters will be in Grant Park for what we can only believe will be a landslide Presidential and Congressional victory.

All against the backdrop of another unpopular American military invasion. Forty years later.

Michael’s Brooklyn Memoir: Shining and Defining in 8th Grade

A new episode from  Michael D. Nolan’s Brooklyn Memoir:  Proximity: What can happen when we live, work and love close together.

I walk by elementary schools these days and see parents waiting in double-parked cars to fetch their kids. It was not ever thus. P.S. 99 was and still is located on East 10th Street, between Avenues L & K, in the Midwood section of Brooklyn. I lived just down the block and across the street at 1181 East 10th Street, a semi-detached 2-story stucco-clad home which my parents bought in 1948.

I went home for lunch and my mother made it. Wow. A winter-time favorite was a grilled cheese sandwich dipped in tomato soup. "Ma, make it for me just one more time."

I never thought of myself as particularly smart or popular. But my teachers and classmates declared I was. I got A’s or 90% + on my report cards in every subject. Still have the original records to prove it.

Woody Allen graduated from P.S. 99 six years before I did. I never met him (Alan Konisberg) but my Mom would run into his mother at Waldbaum’s supermarket on Coney Island Avenue. In Woody’s 1983 film, "Zelig", the psychiatrist portrayed by Mia Farrow is named "Eudora Fletcher." Eudora Fletcher was the principal of P.S. 99 in Woody’s era and mine.

The tougher kids, as would befit the stereotype, were Italian. There were the Sirico brothers, Junior and Tony, who would shake down Jewish kids on their way to school. Their parents owned a popular candy store on Coney Island Avenue. Today, Tony Sirico plays "Paulie Walnuts" on the Sopranos.

As we entered the 8th grade, some friends suggested I run for President of the graduating class. I agreed. Running on the Blue & Gold ticket with Ellen Rather as my VP running mate. We won.

In June of 1955 at our 8th Grade Graduation in the Vogue Theater, I addressed the student body in my role as President: "It is with a heavy heart I greet you today…" Words composed by my speechwriter Miss Reilly, an elegant 8th grade teacher. My classmates also voted me All-Around Boy and Boy Most Likely to Succeed. Did I peak too soon? I’d like to think I’m still trying to fulfill the expectations of my fellow students.

50 years later, I helped convene my 8th Grade class for a reunion at our P.S. 99 alma mater. I contacted Woody’s agent to see if he might join us. He was filming "Hannah and her Sisters" in London and couldn’t attend, but appreciated the invitation. Tried to get Tony Sirico through his younger brother, a priest in Michigan, but it seems he’s shy off camera. Or maybe a few of the Jewish kids would like to have a word with him.

Smartmom: Turquoise Turmoil for OSFO

Here you have it, this week’s Smartmom from the award-winning Brooklyn Paper.

Smartmom admits it: She’s a coward!

    This all goes back to last week, when the Oh So Feisty One showed up at school with a large streak of turquoise in her hair. The entire class of middle schoolers made fun of Smartmom’s girl.

So what was Smartmom’s first reaction? You guessed it — panic.

Before she even had a chance to talk to OSFO, Smartmom made an
appointment for her girl at Medusa Hair Salon to get the turquoise dye
taken out in time for the next school day.

Talk about putting the colorist before the conversation.

“Everyone hates my hair and they keep making fun of it,” OSFO told
Smartmom. “Everyone is asking, ‘Why did you do it?’ and telling me that
I shouldn’t have done it.”

But OSFO wasn’t looking for Smartmom to make it all go away. She was
looking for support because she didn’t WANT to make it go away.

“I just called Medusa. You can cover it up if you want,” Smartmom told OSFO.

“No way!” OSFO shouted out. “That would be cowardly. Besides I like it and I want to keep it.”

Smartmom fell silent. You could have heard a plastic glove with Manic Panic dye on it drop.

And there it was: Smartmom was the coward, the person whose
self-esteem relied on the opinion of the group. Naturally, she had just
assumed that OSFO would want to undo what she’d done. How could she
have thought otherwise, considering that back to ninth grade at the New
Lincoln School, she and Jean Flegenheimer spent lunchtime making
collages in the art studio because they felt so unpopular?

But OSFO is not Smartmom. Sure, she was upset (who likes to be the
subject of negative attention?), but she’d already decided that she was
not going to be bulldozed by her class’s assessment of her new hair
color.

Smartmom simultaneously felt shame and pride. Shame because she had
revealed her own insecurities by offering OSFO an out before they’d
even talked about her feelings — and proud that her daughter refused to
plead guilty in the court of sixth grade opinion.

Whoa. Smartmom had some growing up to do and a lot to learn from OSFO.

Tellingly, Hepcat’s reaction couldn’t have been more different. He
was routinely ridiculed at school for being different. Growing up in a
small farm town in Northern California, his sartorial choices
frequently prompted incredulity and hostility from his classmates. He
sums it up this way:

“Like all real New Yorkers, I was the weirdest kid in the small town I grew up in. That’s why I moved to New York.”

He learned at a young age from his large extended family that being
different was a good thing. A clan of farmers, engineers, doctors, and
artists, they’re all proud of their iconoclastic and unconventional
ways.

So while Smartmom was making an appointment at Medusa, Hepcat was bolstering OSFO’s decision to follow her own star:

“She’s got a strong sense of herself. Sure, she pushed the envelope
more than she expected. But it’s one of those experiences that will
give her a good sense of herself. It will make her a little more
assertive and a little more independent.”

Later that night, Hepcat told OSFO that he was really proud of her.

“There’s nothing better than making choices and sticking to them,”
he said. “From this position, you can win people over and get them to
come around.”

The next day, OSFO was nervous about going to school. But Smartmom
noticed that she was wearing the blue Paul Frank hoodie that matched
her hair color. That was bold. As she readied to leave, Smartmom could
tell she was a little bit scared. Smartmom began to speechify …

“Your hair looks beautiful. It takes a lot of courage to be different … ”

At this OSFO ran for the door. Clearly, she’d rather deal with a
roomful of sixth graders than have to hear her mother make yet another
speech.

Then Hepcat called out, “Have a great day, I love you!” The door
slammed and Hepcat and Smartmom sat thinking of their sixth-grade
selves and how OSFO was years ahead of them.