Category Archives: Civics and Urban Life

F-TRAIN EXPRESS PETITION

I got this email from the Kensington Brooklyn blog. That blog ROCKS.

The F train ‘express’ meeting will be held in a week. We currently have over 1300 signatures on the petition but I fear many more will be needed to persuade the MTA. If possible please pass on and remind your readers of the F train petition!

Thank you!

The petition:
http://www.petitiononline.com/bkln4fnv/petition.html

F online petition post here…
http://kensingtonbrooklyn.blogspot.com/2007/06/improve-f-sign-petition.html

with details on why here…
http://firstandcourt.blogspot.com/2007/05/improving-transit-on-cheap-in-south.html

SUMMER SOLSTICE: KINDRED SPIRIT

From 1973 until 1989, Charlie Morrow and New Wilderness Foundation produced outdoor, site specific events with broadcasts designed to celebrate nature as a common elements in all human societies and all art. In the late 1970’s, I participated in one of his solstice celebrations, an ocarina festival in Riverside Park. My memory is dim but a group of more than one hundred people stood in Riverside Park near the boat basin and blew on ocarinas, which are small clay whistles. It was magical. This experience was much in my mind when I went to the first Stoopendous planning meeting.

Charlie Morrow (b 1942 Newark, New Jersey, USA), is a conceptualist and maple syrup maker whose music work ranges over many styles and forms, from events for media and public spaces to commercial soundtracks, new media productions. museum installations and programming for broadcast and festivals. Assembling expert project groups, Morrow employs a collaborative style that fuses arts, artists, and environment; technological expertise creates the basis for a significant portion of his work, much of which utilizes a combination of the newest and very old technologies. He is president and creative director of Charles Morrow Productions, LLC

Morrow’s later projects included broad participation by artists around New York and around the world. At first these events consisted of artists celebrating in New York with satellite connections to artists celebrating in international locations.

21 June 1973 – Got up early, with the smell of moisture and the likelihood of rain. Grey fog-clad clover is luminous and the sparrows are chirping. It is June 21, 1973 in Central Park fog. Musician, Carol Weber and I walk into the park, having announced our intention to celebrate the first moments of summer for the media.

We invited New Yorkers to join in from their rooftops. The results were so startling that we keep going for so many years, culminating in world broadcasts on radio, then TV. New York City Parks animated with our performances until 1989.

One sun celebration followed another: the sun in the Rockies, the sun on the Pacific, the sun in Lapland, the sun at the United Nations a solar energy event SUNDAY with Robert Redford & Leonard Crowfoot – what a combination, and (as an influence only) the ending of Black Orpheus, the children dancing as the sun rises. Bob Sullivan says “Nature is Robust and Dynamic, Humans are fragile.

For almost two years, NWPB gave a series of designed event concerts with diverse guest artists: poets, dancers, native Americans. From this grew public events, publications, broadcasts, festivals and especially the love of the summer solstice. They were characterized by strong performance art elements and conceptual design by the participating artists. These event concerts stimulated a wide range of activities and developed a community of artists who would participate a wide range of activities.

PARK SLOPE PAINTER PAINTS WHAT’S OUTSIDE HER STUDIO WINDOW ABSTRACTLY

Ninth_street2_home
Emily Berger, an abstract painter who lives in Park Slope, just launched her beautiful website, another great site designed by Good Form Design.

Berger’s site expresses the unique nature of Berger’s work, which often uses the shapes of the city and architectural structures as a starting point for her highly expressive, colorful work.

Berger uses poetry to describe what she she saw out her window at her old Nevins Street studio. Now she’s in another Gowanus art space and her work just keeps growing by leaps and bounds. It’s exciting.  The painting shown is called Ninth Street.

Shapes rise and fall.

A wooden wall folds into the soft dirt of a grassy hill.

Curved by shadows

Fences undulate across tar,

Black pipes curl like stiff plants

In a tropical garden…

HIDING PLACE IN PROSPECT PARK: ART BY LEONARD URSACHI

While running in Prospect Park on Saturday mornng, I noticed what looked like a hut made out of tree branches. On closer inspection, I saw that it was a piece of art, which I liked very much. There was a sign that said the piece was created by Leonard Ursachi and is called Hiding Place. Here;s some information about the piece from the Parks Department.

Parks & Recreation, in cooperation with the Prospect Park Alliance, is pleased to announce the opening of Leonard Ursachi’s exhibition Hiding Place. The sculpture will be on view from May 5 through August 31, 2007 at the entrance to Prospect Park facing Grand Army Plaza (Flatbush Ave., Eastern Parkway, and Prospect Park West). There will be a press preview with the artist on Saturday, May 5, 2007 at 3:00 p.m.; following the press preview, there will be a public reception from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.

Hiding Place, a cylindrical bunker made from willow branches, is over 8-feet tall and 8-feet in diameter. The shelter has three “windows” with mirrors instead of glass.

“Because Hiding Place lacks a door and its windows are reflective shields, viewers can only imagine its interior,” said Ursachi. “It is a receptacle for imagining and the yearning through which its simple iconic form may shift from bunker to refuge to nest-home. With this sculpture, I continue my investigation of the world of porous borders, vulnerable shelters, and mutating identities that is the 21st century experience of home.”

“Just as the birds are busy weaving their nests, Leonard Ursachi’s own willow nest in Prospect Park inspires contemplation about the meaning of home,” said Commissioner Adrian Benepe. “Hiding Place’s placement in Grand Army Plaza, home to the Soldiers and Sailors monument, is fitting as the work also resembles a bunker thus furthering Ursachi’s examination of the shifting definition of a shelter.”

“Prospect Park is such a wonderful setting to display art,” said Prospect Park Alliance President Tupper Thomas. “Especially a work like this that references nature and engages viewers’ imagination. We’re very happy to host Ursachi’s sculpture.”

Leonard Ursachi, a Brooklyn-based artist, left his native Romania in 1980 and has exhibited his work internationally. This is his third public art project with Parks & Recreation. Ursachi exhibited an earlier version of Hiding Place next to a 15th century stone fortress in Romania’s Carpathian Mountains.

Parks & Recreation’s public art program has consistently fostered the creation and installation of temporary public art in parks throughout the five boroughs. Since 1967, collaborations with arts organizations and artists have produced hundreds of public art projects in New York City parks. The program includes approximately 20 temporary art installations per year in New York’s flagship and neighborhood parks, playgrounds, and traffic islands.

NOT A WALK IN THE PARK: MARTY AND THE ATLANTIC YARDS

I saw Marty exercise walking with a friend around Prospect Park Saturday morning. He looked just like all the other runners and walkers going around the Park. And very thin, I might add. For the most part, his privacy was observed. One biker shouted, "Hey Marty." But then he got back to being a private citizen on an exercise walk in the park. I wondered if he craved the "Hey, Marty’s" or if he enjoyed the chance to be do his walk in peace.

I ran ahead of them and got to thinking about Marty now versus Marty in the old days when he was State Senator. He used to be Brooklyn’s best cheerleader. He never missed an event, a chance to add his wacky enthusiasm to a PTA meeting, a middle school graduation, Little League Day in the Prospect Park or the Brooklyn Pride parade.

The Atlantic Yards changed all that. One of the most heated and divisive urban controversies in recent memory, it  has divided Brooklyn; and for his support of it, Marty has been demonized by many.

While I don’t agree with his views on AY, I still have good memories of the old Marty. He may have been annoying at times but he exuded a passionate Brooklyn brashness and enthusiasm that brought a lot of attention and to a borough that was, at one time, pretty much off of the NYC radar.

Things are different now. The stakes are so much higher, much meaner, much tougher. The AY developer has lots of money and political support. The opposition has a lot of smarts — but not enough money or power to stop it.

Marty may have expected his fan base to support his push for the Yards — just like they supported the kinds of things he did as State Senator. But he was wrong. In an interview in City Hall, he makes a telling remark about his own inexperience and his inability to get people to go along with him on this one. And he sounds very bewildered by it all.

CH: When it comes to Atlantic Yards, have you been surprised by the process?

MM:
Well I have to tell you, this is my first experience at it. You
understand, when I was a state senator for 23 years, out of 62 state
senators, you’re pretty much hit by the group.  Then you become borough
president or mayor and you’re one out of one. And it really came as a
significant surprise that for the first time in my professional life, I
was not able to bring people together. I have to tell you, I tried my
best. I really did. I have to tell you I tried my best, my support of
Atlantic Yards and my enthusiasm for Atlantic Yards is based on my
true, sincere, full belief that it’s for the best of this and future
generations of Brooklynites, there’s no question about it. And yet in
the first time of my life, I’ve run into a number of people,
significant number of people, feel that anyone who’s for Atlantic Yards
is a sellout, is being schtupped, is being bribed, is being corrupt,
and those are nice words.
And never in my life have I met a group of
people that if you’re not with them, you’re the enemy. I’ve never had
that. I’ve had many disagreements when I first started Albany. Gay
rights, abortion rights, those were contentious issues, believe me. But
never with the hostility and hate that I’ve experienced during this
process.

EMINENT DOMAIN: PARK SLOPE CHURCH SERMON

That’s the topic of Pastor Dan Meeter’s sermon on June 17th at the Old First Reformed Church on Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street. Service begins at 11 a.m.

Read the Pastor’s blog about the Transformers, the young adults who came to Park Slope from Wisconsin to spruce up the church. The church looks incredible. Here’s an excerpt.

What a wonderful week it was at Old First. We hosted the Transformers, a young adults group from the Gibbsville (Wisconsin) Reformed Church. They refurbished our main chandelier, and did eight other projects too.

There are 108 light bulbs in that chandelier, but God’s love shone through 63 young adults from Wisconsin this week, filling our old church building with light and life and love. And music. And laughter. And scripture. And joy.

Let me recommend you go to a blog by Chris Wensink for more details.

CAPATHIA AND LOUIS: GREAT SHOW

I don’t want to make you to feel too bad if you missed the show — one of their best. I won’t go into too much detail about the incredible music, lyrics, piano, bass, and guitar…

I won’t attempt to describe Capathia’s breathtaking get-inside-the-emotional-story-of-a-song approach to singing that can make you cry, laugh, and kvell. Or mention Louis’ edgy and personal way with a song like “The Southside Jew Blues” or “Reincarnationist” two of my faves.

Or tell you how moved I was by the whole event, a benefit for the free summer arts programming at the Old Stone House.

You can catch them at Birdland next week or buy the CD. It is also sold at the Community Bookstore in Park Slope.

That’s all I will say.

SUBLIME MUSIC ON SATURDAY NIGHT: PICKLES ON SUNDAY

A note from Kim Maier, director of the Old Stone House, about tomorrow’s concert at the Old Stone House and Sunday’s opening of the Farmer’s Market

Capathia
Jenkins
, and Louis
Rosen
are scheduled to perform their second benefit concert on behalf of The Old Stone
House
this Saturday night, June
16th.
The proceeds will go to supporting our rapidly growing arts
programming, including this summer’s concert and film series and Piper Theatre
Company’s production of Macbeth — all taking place outdoors in JJ Byrne Park.

 

The performance will
mark the Brooklyn concert premiere of songs from their recently released and
highly acclaimed debut recording, South
Side Stories
, songs of youth, coming of age and experience, inspired by the
Chicago
neighborhood where Louis grew up.  They’ll also be offering a "sneak
preview" of a number of songs from Louis’s newest work for Capathia, Giovanni Songs, on words by the
renowned poet Nikki Giovanni. Capathia and Louis will be joined by two splendid
musicians, the pianist Kimberly Grigsby, currently the musical director and
keyboardist for Spring Awakening, and Dave Phillips on acoustic
and electric bass. 

 

There will be
champagne and dessert beginning at 8 pm, and the concert starts at 8:30
pm.  Tickets are $40 in advance, $45 at the door.  Reservations can be
made by calling 718-768-3195, or tickets purchased on-line at www.nycharities.org.  Click on the
Event Calendar, View All, then click on June 16. 

 


On Sunday, June 17,
welcome the Park Slope Farmer’s Market back to 5th Avenue! Thanks to the Fifth
Avenue Merchants Association for once again sponsoring the market.  Hector
Perez was here last week with a preview of this season’s produce from Alex Farm,
so come down for more fabulous strawberries, as well as goodies from other
vendors including bread, chutneys, pastries, and pickles.

 

RED HOOK VENDORS MEET WITH PARKS DEPARTMENT: POSITIVE SIGNS

Gowanus Lounge reports: No resolution yet, but it’s looking good…

Representatives of the Red Hook food vendors and City Council Member Sara Gonzalez met with Park Department Friday afternoon about the future of the vendors whose plight has drawn citywide attention. Red Hook Vendors Committee head Cesar Fuentes told GL that although “there is still no answer to our plight, we have good hope that there will be a positive outcome.” He described the meeting as “positive” and “good.”

IF YOU’RE TURNING 50 THIS YEAR: FREE ADMISSION TO THE CONEY ISLAND AQUARIUM THIS WEEKEND

That’s because it’s the New York Aquarium’s 50th Anniversary this week. This from New York 1:

The New York Aquarium will hold a two-day festival this weekend to celebrate its 50th Anniversary at Coney Island.

City officials and wildlife advocates re-dedicated the aquarium Thursday morning during a ribbon cutting ceremony.

Sea lion Otis hammed it up for the crowd, and performed tricks that prove the aquarium can be both entertaining and educational.

“The animals are very intelligent,” said sea lion trainer Joanne Sottile. “They’ve learned a lot of different behaviors to help highlight the natural history of the species itself.”

As part of the weekend’s festivities, anyone turning 50 this year will be admitted free of charge.

RENEGADE CRAFT FAIR: IN WILLIAMSBURG

This weekend is the third annual Brookyln Renegade Craft Fair. The annual DIY event, started in 2003 by Sue Blatt and Kathleen Habbley, welcomes over 150 vendors and thousands of shoppers from all over the country. Check out DIY knitting, jewelry, sewn items, paper goods, silkscreening, comics, zines and more. Saturday and Sunday, June 16 and 17, from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., McCarren Park Pool, Lorimer Street, between Driggs & Bayard Avenues.

FAIRWAY: CARE PACKAGES FOR TROOPS IN IRAQ

This from New York 1:

The Fairway Market in Red Hook and the USO of Metropolitan New York launched a care package program Wednesday to support troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

As part of the launch, 75 members of the Coast Guard were treated to a luncheon.

For $20 to $69, customers can order packages like “Mulberry Street on the Go” with goodies like Hebrew National Salami, Black and White Cookies, and sweet peppers.

“It doesn’t matter whether you’re for the war or against the war,” says Fairway Market owner Howie Glickberg. “This is going to the troops. They’re not politicians. They’re just over there doing all our dirty work.”

“When people get a package, even if you send it to an individual, they share it with everybody that’s with them, so it’s a great way to support the troops,” says Mike Berman of USO of Metropolitan New York.

A hundred percent of the proceeds go to the USO.

For more information, log on to: fairwaymarket.com.

WOMAN SEXUALLY ASSAULTED IN PROSPECT PARK

This from New York 1:

As of Friday night, police in Brooklyn were still searching for a man
who sexually assaulted a woman in Prospect Park overnight.

Investigators say the attack happened at about 2 a.m.

The victim was reportedly approached near the ball fields on the
south end of the park by a man who either had a gun, or said he had
one. The man then sexually attacked the woman.

The victim then called for help after the attack and was taken to
Methodist Hospital. Doctors describe her as being in good condition.

Women who say they use the park every day said they were being extra vigilant following the attack.

“Precautions, you know, common sense,” said one woman. “I don’t
think things happen all the time, but I don’t want to be the next one
that it’s going to happen to. So, I think the park is pretty safe. I
feel very sorry for this woman. That’s awful.”

Police are unsure if the victim was at the park for a Neville
Brothers concert in the park’s band shell, but that concert wrapped up
at about 10:30 p.m.

“Well, two o’clock in the morning. Even though the concert ended
about 10, 10:30, no one should be in the park at two o’clock in the
morning,” said another. “It’s not a safe time.”

"I’m not saying it’s her fault, there is no justification for
that," said a third. "But, at two o’clock in the morning I would never
do that."

Police are not describing the attack as a rape, but as a sexual
assault. They have not yet released a description of the suspect.

GOWANUS LOUNGE ON BRIAN LEHRER SHOW

Robert Guskind, who runs the Gowanus Lounge, took Pete Hamill to task for some comments he made on the Brian Lehrer radio show earlier this week.

Apparently Hamill doesn’t think there’s any real reporting or good writing going on in the blogosphere. He believes writers need to be part of the newsroom, with real editors; he believes they need to spend time rubbing elbows with the life of the city — not sitting at computers all day.

Robert Guskind was a perfect gent and a great guest on WNYC’s great morning talk radio show. He’s gentle, polite and also smart as a whip. A pundit in the making. He agreed that Hamill, Kempton, et al (he listed a bunch of Hamill’s journalistic contemporaries) are hard to top. That said, there’s still quite a bit of good reporting happening on blogs. Guskind, for one, doesn’t sit by his computer all day. Not by a long shot. He travels all over Brooklyn getting his stories, which focus mostly on development and city planning issues in Gowanus, Long Island, Park Slope, and Williamsburg.

Go to Gowanus Lounge for his story and the PODCAST.

DO YOU LIVE ON FULLER PLACE? WANNA BE IN A DOCUMENTARY?

Dana Kochnower, a video producer,  got in touch with me today. Her film project about the Greenest Block in Brooklyn Contest sounds really interesting. Email her if you’re interested in participating or just say hi when she’s on Fuller Place on Saturday.

Come take part in a short documentary about The Greenest Block in Brooklyn Contest sponsored by Brooklyn Greenbridge the community horticulture program of the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens.   
I am a professional television news producer (10+ years in local and national news), and this documentary is a personal project I am undertaking as part of a professional level workshop at The New School University.   
I am interested in speaking with residents of Fuller Place, a longtime contender and runner-up for Greenest Block in Brooklyn about their gardens and their experiences in the competition, as well as other past and current participating block associations.   
I will be on Fuller Place tomorrow, Saturday, June 16th to introduce myself in person.  If you are interested, or know someone who might be interested in this project, please contact me at greenestblockdoc@yahoo.com.

LET THERE BE LIGHT: OLD FIRST IN PARK SLOPE

I went into Old First Church this afternoon and I couldn’t get over the transformation by the Transformers, the group from Gibbsville, Wisconsin that’s spent the week sprucing things up.

Chris Wensink, one of the Transformers, writes about the process on his blog.

“The single most important job that we are here for is to lower and clean up and fix the chandelier in the center part of the sactuary. This project is being led by Mike Navis, Jenn’s husband, who is an electrician. Monday morning the chandelier was lowered to a height where we could take the lower sections off, then support the main lighting section with some wood on the bottom.

Once that was set, we got out all of the scaffolding in the basement of the church, and began building the scaffolding around the areas of the chandelier. Once we hd that in place, we began unscrewing all of the bulbs, then slowly taking the 100 year old glass enclosures off of the chandelier that were around the bulbs. There was about 100 bulbs / glass shields that were taken down. Some people then that afternoon started carefully taking those over to the kitchen area and washing them back to a clean / shining state. Once those were all all out of the way Mike began inspecting all of the chandelier wiring and all of the sockets, testing them to make sure they work, and that they have adequate wiring standards in place.”

After days of hard work, the Transformers have returned the chandelier to the ceiling. All the lightbulbs are in. It’s shiny, shiny. And I’ve never seen the sanctuary look so bright. Not in years.

It is so BRIGHT!!

“Is there a dimmer on that thing?” I asked Pastor Meeter.
“No, but we can control which row of lights is on,” he said.

The Transformers are also cleaning the sanctuary and doing construction and restoration work in other parts of the church.

They’re using the big room adjacent to the santuary as a mess hall/social/rest area. They’ve got tables set up in there, some with Bibles. When I was in there, it was obviously snack time. Chris, the blogger, was blogging away in a private corner. I introduced myself. He said Brooklyn couldn’t be more different from where they’re from. But they’re all having a great time.

Go to Chris’s blog for a detailed narrative of the restoration work the Transformers have been engaged in.

THE TRANSFORMERS IN PARK SLOPE CHURCH: “AMAZING,” SAYS PASTOR

I ran into Daniel Meeter, the pastor of Old First Reformed Church this morning. He had a copy of J.D. Salinger’s "Franny and Zooey" in his pocket.

"What a great book," he said. "I finally read it."

Pastor Meeter jokes that he reads OTBKB first thing in the morning. "After God " he says. "I turn to God then to Laurie." For some reason, he thinks my name is Laurie. It’s LOUISE, Dan. Louise.

Today he didn’t read OTBKB so it was nice to run into each other. I asked him how things are going with the Wisconsiners at the church.

"Have you been there yet? Have you seen the chandelier lowered to the floor?" he said with characteristic enthusiasm. Pastor Meeter loves the energy and generosity of the folks from Gibbsville, Wisconsin, who call themselves the Transformers. They have thrown themselves into the restoration of the chandelier: polishing it, replacing light bulbs, doing whatever needs to be done.

Meeter says that they can’t seem to drag themselves away from it: they stand, sit, talk, work around it all day.

"They are embracing the beauty of the chandelier," he says.

The Transformer’s one-week adventure in Brooklyn has been an eye-opening experience for many of them. Park Slope, Brooklyn couldn’t be more different than their hometown, but the Transformers are taking it in — hearts open wide.

Read the Transformers blog for a narrative of their days Brooklyn.

FIRST POST-MASSACRE MEETING OF CB6

For details on what people are calling the first post-massacre Community Board 6 meeting, check out Gowanus Lounge’s report. Here’s an excerpt.

Community Board 6 held its first meeting since theAtlantic Yards/Gowanus Massacre by Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz and City Council Member David Yassky that ended the service of nine longstanding members. The Board voted down a resolution criticizing the dismissals and suggesting that the "independence and, indeed, the fundamental value of Community Boards are undermined" by removal of members based on their position on controversial issues. The Board voted against the measure by a voted of 14-6 with a large number of abstentions.

On bike lanes…
On congestion pricing…

BALLOONS OR NO BALLOONS: BEN GREENMAN IN SOHO TONIGHT

He was in Park Slope last week at the Community Bookstore. They were giving out purple balloons. Not sure about this reading. But that’s okay. It’s in Soho.

Ben Greenman, an editor at the New Yorker, will be reading tonight at
7 p.m. at McNally Robinson in New York (52 Prince St.) with Jack
Pendarvis and Pia Z. Ehrhardt. Mr. Greenman’s new book of fiction, "A
Circle is a Balloon and Compass Both: Stories About Human Love" has
been receiving rave reviews. Here are some:

"Love in all its complexities, disappointments and reversals…Just when
you thought there was nothing more to say."
–Chicago Tribune

"Accessible, beautifully written, honest, and hilarious…Greenman’s
knowledge of popular culture is thorough and his rendering brilliant.
The best stories I found myself wanting to read again immediately,
then read again to a friend. Highly recommended."
–Library Journal

"At their best, the stories in ‘A Circle Is a Balloon and Compass
Both’ are serious works of realistic fiction. But then, the stories of
Kafka are serious realistic fiction too."
–San Francisco Chronicle

"Wildly inventive, sometimes surreal, but tenderly told, these stories
give a glimpse of what Philip K. Dick might have written if he’d
allowed himself a sincere broken heart."
–Paste Magazine

"Like Green Day did for punk rock, and The Matrix for kung-fu flicks,
this new collection from New Yorker editor Greenman could well become
an advocate for the short story."
–Time Out Chicago

For more information, visit www.bengreenman.com. If you would like to
interview the author, contact Melissa Little (melissa@macadamcage.com;
415-986-7502).

BRINGING TOMORROW: FIVE DAY THEATER WORKSHOP FOR TEENS

BRINGING TOMORROW is an amazing five-day, fast and furious theatre workshop created by, for and about teens, led by theatre professionals, and ending with a performance by the teens of the unique theatre piece they’ve created.

 

If you’re considering
having your child participate, or if you know kids who might be
interested, here are a few things we’d like you to know:

 

1. The workshop is for teens, ages 15 to 18.
2. Participation is free.
3. The
workshop will involve kids expressing themselves powerfully in a
theatrical format. We’re seeking applicants with strong ideas about
their future and/or an inclination toward creative expression.
4. Absolutely NO theatre experience is necessary (but imagination is required!)
5. Kids need to be available for the entire five-day schedule:
    Monday, 06/25 through Thursday, 06/28 — 9am to 5:30pm
    Friday, 6/29 —  9am to 9pm (including performance)
6. There
will be two short meal breaks each workshop day, with an additional
longer break the day of the performance. Snacks will be provided.
Participants must bring their own lunches.
7. The
current plan is to film the workshop process and the performance so
that the participants can have DVDs and share the experience and its
impact with others.
8. BRINGING TOMORROW is presented by Black Moon Theatre Company, and will take place at the Settlement House in Brooklyn.

 

If, after reading the attached, BRINGING TOMORROW sounds like a cool experience for your teen, please e-mail me at BringingTomorrow@yahoo.com to
apply (or ask further questions). A detailed phone conversation will
follow, then a phone conversation with the applicant. We’ll be making
decisions shortly, as the workshop dates are fast approaching.

 

Once
selected, you’ll receive a pre-workshop questionnaire, along with what
we call our "workability agreement," which guides the ethics of how we
work together, as well as a fact sheet and parental consent form.

 

Thanks very much for your interest. We look forward to meeting you all!

 

Patrick Richwood, Project Director
and the BRINGING TOMORROW Team

THE ELEPHANT IN THE PLAYROOM: AT COMMUNITY BOOKS

Thursday, June 14th at7:30 p.m. at Community Bookstore.
143 7th Avenue, Park Slope. (718) 783-3075

Note from OTBKB: I’ve read much of the book, a collection of personal, honest, and inspiring essays by parents of special needs kids of all types. A must-read for all parents, special needs or not, because of what it expresses about parenting and love.

Community Books sent this:

Candid, passionate, personal, and heartbreakingly
funny, a view from within the whirlwind of parenting a
child with special needs
Three years ago, magazine editor Denise Brodey’s
precocious four-year-old son, Toby, was diagnosed with
a combination of sensory integration dysfunction and
childhood depression. As she struggled to make sense
of her new, often chaotic, often lonely world, what
she found comforted her most was talking with other
harried, hopeful, and insightful parents of kids with
special needs, learning how they coped with the
feelings they encountered throughout the day.
In The Elephant in the Playroom, moms and dads from
across the country write intimately and honestly about
the joyful highs and disordered lows of raising
children who are “not quite normal.” Laying bare the
emotional, medical, and social challenges they face,
their stories address issues ranging from if and when
to medicate a child, to how to get a child who is
overly sensitive to the texture of food to eat lunch.
Eloquent and honest, the voices in this collection
will provide solace and support for the millions of
parents whose kids struggle with ADD, ADHD, sensory
disorders, childhood depression, Asperger’s syndrome,
and autism—as well as the many kids who fall between
diagnoses.
Offering readers comfort, community, and much-needed
perspective, The Elephant in the Playroom is sure to
become essential reading for parents of all sorts of
kids.
We’d love to see you there! Thursday, June 14th at
7:30 p.m. at Community Bookstore. 143 7th Avenue, Park
Slope. (718) 783-3075

NOTE TO NYACK WEED KILLER: LOCK YOUR WINDOWS

Nyack Weed Killer, AKA Mrs. Deserter, used to live across the street on Third Street. She now lives in a beautiful Victorian house in Nyack that I still haven’t seen. I feel terrible that we haven’t made our way up there, yet.

How many years has it been since they vacated their Third Street apartment? How many years has it been since NWK’s window boxes stopped gracing that second floor window ledge?

We still miss them. But we also know that they’re tremendously happy in their big house on the river.

I’m sure she knows about this but just in case, here’s something from n 1010 WINS. It’s really creepy.

New York — Police are advising people in Nyack to lock their windows after three incidents of an intruder getting inside a woman’s apartment while she slept.

Orangetown police say the latest incident was early Sunday on North Broadway. A man removed a screen, entered an apartment and began touching a woman as she slept. He fled through an open window when the women awoke and she and her mother started screaming.

1010 WINS Audio: Terry Sheridan Reports

Police believe the same man severely beat a woman inside her Hudson Avenue apartment during the early morning hours of June 6th. And there was an unsuccessful attempt to open another woman’s window last month.

Police say they don’t have a good description of the suspect because he strikes in a dark room. They say he has large hands and wears a dark hooded sweatshirt.

ONE BLOCK. FOUR NEIGHBORS. ONE VERY LOUD PROBLEM: READING AT COMMUNITY BOOKS TONIGHT

Gabriel Cohen sent me this book and it’s really good. I haven’t finished it but I highly recommend his reading tonight. Cohen, author of "Red Hook", reads from his new Brooklyn novel, "Boombox",

tonight, June 13th, at Community Bookstore at 7:30.

Black and white, young and old, men and women, they
live in Brooklyn’s Boerum Hill, sharing a courtyard in
relative harmony. It’s what a former mayor liked to
call “the urban mosaic.”

There’s Carol Fasone, a secretary enjoying her new
marriage to a Bosnian immigrant. There’s Mitchell
Brett, a Wall Streeter transplanted from Manhattan’s
Upper East Side, trying to get his wife pregnant.
There’s Grace Howard, hoping for a promotion in her
corporate job, surprised to find herself beginning a
romance with a member of the Board. And then there’s
teenage Jamel Wilson, who buys a big sound system to
impress his friends from the projects around the
corner, blasts gangster rap into the backyard gardens,
and—over the course of one hot summer—pushes the
block’s friendships and alliances past the breaking
point.

We hope you can come! Gabriel Cohen, author of "Red
Hook", reads from his new Brooklyn novel, "Boombox",
tonight, June 13th, at Community Bookstore at 7:30.

NEW YOGURT AND PASTRIES IN PARK SLOPE

New eats on Fifth Avenue in Park Slope:

–Oko, a new frozen yogurt shop with assorted teas, hot and iced, including a lip-smacking ginger with Asian pear, are $3 to $4 for 16 ounces. The name means “eco” in Hungarian. Oko is at 152 Fifth Avenue (DeGraw Street),
(718) 398-3671.

–A new bakery called Trois Pommes has opened at 260 Fifth Avenue (Carroll Street), (718)
230-3119.

AN OTBKB READER WANTS TO KNOW ABOUT LOCAL BANKING

An OTBKB reader needs information on local banking.

I need to open a new bank account and I had this idea that I should open it
at Independence Community Bank because their foundation funds so much
Brooklyn goodness, but they’ve been acquired by Sovereign and I don’t know
a thing about them. Williamsburgh Savings? Now HSBC.

So now I’m wondering, what do other Brooklynites do? Does anyone try to
bank locally? I’d go the credit union route, but they seem not to offer so
many interest bearing accounts. Or do they?

I’d love to hear from OTBKB readers about where they bank and how they like it.

I’m serious.

FORBES: TWENTY FIRST CENTURY CITIES

Cory Doctorow in Boing Boing reports that Forbes Magazine has put together a collection of articles about 21st century city, including Doctorow’s about the future of urban surveillance, called “Snitchtown.” Here’s an excerpt.

The key to living in a city and peacefully co-existing as a social animal in tight quarters is to set a delicate balance of seeing and not seeing. You take care not to step on the heels of the woman in front of you on the way out of the subway, and you might take passing note of her most excellent handbag. But you don’t make eye contact and exchange a nod. Or even if you do, you make sure that it’s as fleeting as it can be.

Checking your mirrors is good practice even in stopped traffic, but staring and pointing at the schmuck next to you who’s got his finger so far up his nostril he’s in danger of lobotomizing himself is bad form–worse form that picking your nose, even.

I once asked a Japanese friend to explain why so many people on the Tokyo subway wore surgical masks. Are they extreme germophobes? Conscientious folks getting over a cold? Oh, yes, he said, yes, of course, but that’s only the rubric. The real reason to wear the mask is to spare others the discomfort of seeing your facial expression, to make your face into a disengaged, unreadable blank–to spare others the discomfort of firing up their mirror neurons in order to model your mood based on your outward expression. To make it possible to see without seeing.