Welcome to the Brooklyn Blogohood, Zuzu’s Petals.
Fonda Sara, owner of Zuzu’s Petals and a rookie blogger, writes on her new blog, Zuzu’s Petals, about party dresses for your holiday table.
They’re real pretty and she’s got them at both the big (Fifth Avenue) and the little (Berkeley Place) Zuzu’s.
She also has a funny post about it being not PC to sell aprons in Park Slope.
Check out her new blog.
My apologies for not getting the URL right. It’s Zuzuspetalsbrooklyn.com
This from our friends at NY1:
The new Prospect Park Tennis Center on the famous Parade Ground is now
open for business after $4 million in improvements and new amenities.
The courts have gotten a facelift, and the center now has a full locker room, a new clubhouse and a pro shop.
The center also boasts a large junior program and summer camp. For
adults, there are classes five days a week and private lessons. There’s
also public play for those who just want to volley around.
To find out more, visit www.prospectpark.org.
This from Hepcat who found it on Bloomberg.net
By Joel Rosenblatt and Karen Gullo
May 26 (Bloomberg) — Apple Computer Inc. can’t force online
journalists to disclose their sources of confidential information
used for news stories, a California appeals court ruled.
Online writers are protected by the state’s reporter
“shield law,” as well as by the First Amendment right to free
speech, the state Court of Appeal in San Jose ruled today,
reversing a lower court decision.
Apple, maker of the iPod music player, subpoenaed the e-mail
provider of Jason O’Grady, publisher of O’Grady’s PowerPage, an
Internet site that posted information in 2004 about an unreleased
Apple product. The ruling establishes that Web reporters have the
same right to protect sources as print reporters, said lawyers at
the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
The decision is a “victory for the rights of journalists,
whether online or offline, and for the public at large because it
protects the free flow of information to the press and from the
press to the public,” said Kurt Opsahl, a lawyer at the San
Francisco-based EFF, a privacy-rights group which sided with the
journalists.
Continue reading Apple Can’t Subpoena to Get Web Journalists’ Sources →
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