Category Archives: Postcard from the Slope

OSCAR NOMINATIONS ANNOUNCED

The New York Times reports that "No Country For Old Men,” and "There Will Be Blood" topped the nominations announced this morning.

No surprise, Daniel Day-Lewis was nominated for best actor. "There Will Be Blood" is also up for best picture and director (Paul Thomas Anderson).

"Michael Clayton" and "Atonement" were also big winners garnering quite a few nominations. Julian Schnabel was nominated for best director for "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (which I loved).

Surprisingly, "Into the Wild" directed by Sean Penn received just one nomination: Hal Holbrook for best supporting actor, his very first nomination.

Not surprisingly, the film everyone seems to love, "Juno," was nominated for 4 awards including best actress.

For her sensitive and beautiful portrayal of a woman with Alzheimer’s, the great Julie Christie is up for the best actress award, as is the astounding Marion Cotillard for her age-spanning role as Edith Piaf in "La Vie en Rose."

The question remains: will there be an awards show or will it just be a news conference like the Golden Globes? At our house we make a big deal about Oscar night but we could live without it in solidarity with the writers.

CREATING AND SUSTAINING PEACE ON MLK DAY AT OLD FIRST

TODAY from 10 am until 7:30 p.m, Spoke the Hub Dancing and the Old First Reformed Church have designed an event dedicated to the idea of creating and sustaining peace.

A day day of participatory activities at Old First at Seventh Avenue and Carroll, the event that intriques me is: Six Chapels: Simultaneous interfaith Meditation and Prayer for Peace right in Old First’s sanctuary. Here’s a list of what’s going on today:

THEATER OF CHANGE (for ages 12 and up) with Ellen Baxt & Friends: An all day workshop for young people and adults, culminating in an informal performance at the end of the day.

SIX CHAPELS: INTERFAITH MEDITATION AND PRAYER FOR PEACE

Six sacred spaces set aside for simultaneous silent prayer and meditation for Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and Sikh faiths.

MOVING MEDITATION & PRAYER (Adults & Teens) with Jenny Burrill

FAMILY DANCE & YOGA (siblings ages 1-5 with caregivers) with Heidi Kinney

HATHA YOGA: A PORTAL TO FREEDOM (Adults & Teens) with Dolores Natividad

Beginners welcome.

JESUS ON PEACE: TEACHINGS WHICH INSPIRED MLK (Everyone Welcome)

with Pastor Daniel Meeter

BIG HEART DANCING & YOGA (ages 8 and up) with Heidi Kinney & Elise Long

LITTLE BIG HEART DANCING (ages 5-7) with Sarah Pope

PRAYING PEACE (Everyone Welcome) with Pastor Daniel Meeter

MEDITATION: A WAY TO INNER PEACE (Adults & Teens) with Mina Hamilton

WALKING MEDITATION (Adults & Teens) with Mina Hamilton

TOUCHING THE EARTH : A WAY TO OUTER PEACE with Mina Hamilton

Based on the work and practice of Thich Nhat Hahn.

CHAIR YOGA & MEDITATION (Adults & Teens) with Dolores Natividad

Ideal for seniors and the physically challenged.

TECHNIQUES AND APPROACHES TO REDUCING TENSIONS AT HOME

(Parents Only) with Sharon Peters

BIG HEART DRUMMING (For the Whole Family) with Gabriella Dennery of BaTuBa Collective Percussion

INTRO. TO NONVIOLENT COMMUNICATION (Everyone Welcome) with Nellie Bright

WORKSHOP SHARING Informal Workshop Performances

by Gabriella’s BIG HEART DRUMMING Workshop and Ellen’s THEATER OF CHANGE

MEAL SHARING & SALUTE TO DR. KING’S LIFE AND LEGACY

Food generously donated by local restaurants

BROOKLYN BLOGADE IN CLINTON HILL

On a freezing cold Sunday morning, a group of sixteen Brooklyn Bloggers gathered at Frank White’s Cafe in Clinton Hill (936 Atlantic Avenue near St. James) for buffet-style waffles and conversation.

The Brooklyn Blogade is an effort by Brooklyn bloggers to spread the blogging gospel beyond the confines of brownstone Brooklyn.

Dope on the Slope wrote this about the origins of the Brooklyn Blogades on his blog:

After the recent Brooklyn Blog Fest, two questions seemed to come up quite frequently:

How do we build and nourish the blogger network between festivals?
How do we extend and diversify the network beyond the brownstone belt?

Thus was born the “Brooklyn Blogade Roadshow,” which is conceived as a monthly get-together of bloggers featuring one of our borough’s fabulous neighborhoods and hosted by a blogger from that neighborhood.

Sunday’s blogade was hosted by the very gracious and lovely Robin of Clinton Hill Blog. Once everyone was seated, the shout-outs began. That’s when everyone introduces themselves and their blog.

There were quite a few new faces at the Cafe and a wide range of issues and interests expressed by individual bloggers.

The vibe at the cafe was super friendly and serious. Everyone seemed eager to connect and network with others in the Brooklyn blog community. It’s always fun to put a face to a blogger, who you’ve only known through their words and/or pictures. During the shout-outs, everyone had something to say about their motivations and the issues and interests that spurred them to become bloggers in the first place. It’s interesting to see how this group hones its identity as individuals and as a group as these meet-ups continue.

Present were Clinton Hill Blog, Brooklyn Based, Sustainable Flatbush, Creative Times, Nightshift Chronicles, Flatbush Gardener, Lambent, Vast and Ruthless, Brooklyn Optimist, Luna Park Gazette, Brit in Brooklyn, City Dirt, Reclaimed Home and Super Vegan.

There was talk about the Brooklyn Blogfest on May 8th at 8 p.m. No location has been selected yet but many were discussed. There was also talk about doing a Brooklyn Blogging Conference, a full day event which would include break-out discussion groups about topics of concern to Brooklyn bloggers, including, ethics, comments, social activism, development, place blogs, photography, video, technical tips from Typepad, Blogger and more, etc. This project, which moves beyond social networking, is well worth pursuing…

A reporter from BCAT told the group that their show, Brooklyn Review, will now have a weekly segment featuring a Brooklyn Blogger. First up: Robert Guskind of the Gowanus Lounge.

The next Brooklyn Blogade is on February 10th in the Carroll Gardens vicinty hosted by Creative Times. Check in at her blog for information which should be forthcoming.

COMMUNITY INPUT WANTED IN JJ BYRNE PARK

Kim Maier sent me this email about another brainstorming session at the Old Stone Hosue.

Dear Neighbors,
Because of popular demand, we’ve added another session:
Tuesday, January 22: 7 pm – 9 pm
Play space, open space, green space – what do you imagine?!? Join us for a group discussion hosted by the Old Stone House and Brooklyn Parks to get your input on potential renovations to the 5th Avenue side of the park between 3rd and 4th streets.
Please RSVP and let us know if you are planning to attend — oldstonehouse@verizon.net or 718-768-3195. This is a wonderful opportunity for community input, and we look forward to hearing from you.

BOBBY FISHER DEAD AT 64

Bobby Fisher died and Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn has the story.

Brooklyn-raised, Chicago-born chess icon Bobby Fischer, who became a
Cold War symbol when he defeated Soviet Union’s Boris Spassky as world
champion in 1972, has died at age 64.

In May 1949, the
six-year-old Fischer learned how to play chess from instructions found
in a chess set that his sister had bought at a candy store below their
Brooklyn apartment. He saw his first chess book a month later. For over
a year he played chess on his own. At age seven, he joined the Brooklyn
Chess Club and was taught by its president, Carmine Nigro.

Bobby Fischer attended Erasmus Hall High School together with Barbra
Streisand, though he later dropped out in 1959 when he turned 16. Many
teachers remembered him as difficult. When his chess feats mounted, the
student council of Erasmus Hall awarded him a gold medal for his chess
achievements.

PARK SLOPE’S COMMUNITY BOOKSTORE IN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Communities are coming together coast to coast to save their cherished independent booksellers. Read "Who’s Buying the Bookstore" by Nathaniel Popper in today’s Wall Street Journal:

At the Community Bookstore, in Brooklyn, the owner,
Catherine Bohne, composed this email to her customers last February:
"I’ve gambled and staked everything I have, including every last asset,
every ounce of my energy, and . . . it seems it isn’t enough to make
things work."

These announcements have elicited swift replies from
coast to coast. After a June 2005 article appeared in a Eugene, Ore.,
newspaper proclaiming the imminent demise of that city’s Tsunami Books,
a group of professors from the local university offered some $35,000 to
save it. In the past year, the number of investors in Tsunami has grown
to 28 — who collectively own a third of it.

ONLY THE BLOG LINKS

No Land Grab beats Norm Oder in Atlantic Yards quiz (No Land Grab)

Countdown until Spring in Bay Ridge (Right in Bay Ridge)

Clinton Hill Meeting recap (Clinton Hill Blog)

Not your ordinary baker (Creative Times)

The story of a house for a dollar (Brooklynometry)

Name that Tune celebrates 1988 (Union Hall)

No Parking, Marty (NY Daily News)

Park Slope kid’s authors win Caldecott Medals (Brooklyn Paper)

In a corner with photographer Irving Penn (NY Times)

Mike Daisey, Brooklyn Monologuist in Seattle (Seattle Times)

TONIGHT: SIDE STREET, A STAGED READING OF A PLAY BY ROSEMARY MOORE

Tonight at Brooklyn Reading Works, a staged reading of Side Street by Rosemary Moore, directed by Ian Morgan of the New Group.

A woman discovers that her dead mother has been living in a studio apartment on the Upper East Side for the last 30 years. Ad she’s the same age she was when she died. A mother/daughter reunion you won’t want to miss.

The Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue and Third Street
8 p.m.
Your $5 donation includes wine and refreshments.

‘SNICE TO OPEN ON THIRD STREET

Finally a sign on the storefront vacated by Zelda Victoria on Fifth Avenue and Third Street. It says ‘Snice. Short for: It’s nice? S’nice?

It’s a West Village sandwich shop/cafe that’s heading across the river. Free wireless, good food. I am so there now that Tempo Presto is gone.

The Brooklyn Paper says ‘Snice is veggie friendly. Wonder if it’s vegan, veggie, or just diverse?

‘Snice will learn the hard way that Brooklyn establishments need to have a web presence otherwise everyone will get their info from Blogs when they google ‘Snice.

Super Vegan likes the place in Manhattan:

Not only does Isa have a new book coming out, she tells us that ‘sNice (home of awesome sandwiches and cupcakes, and arguably the only place worth eating the West Village) is opening a second location in Brooklyn! Seems to be happening somewhere in Park Slope. Details (sort of) can be found from here.

The chef/owner of the store has a cookbook. Always a good sign. I’m psyched.

SOMEONE TO RUN WITH: ISRAELI FILM AT BETH ELOHIM

Rabbi Andy Bachman recommends a film adaptation of a David Grossman novel. It will be screened at Congregation Beth Elohim (8th Avenue and Garfield in Park Slope) on Sunday:

Noah Stollman’s beatifully written adaptation of David Grossman’s Someone to Run With kept getting sold out this week at the New York Jewish Film Festival at the Walter Reade Theater.

If you want another chance to see it, come Sunday night January 20 at 6.30 pm to Film Park Slope at CBE and you’ll get to meet Noah and talk to him about the movie.

“A vibrant, at times frightening, Jerusalem emerges as a significant character in the exhilarating Someone to Run With. Based on the best selling novel by David Grossman, the film captures the literary work’s sense of pace, suspense and heartfelt drama while taking viewers on a riveting tour of the stone alleyways and pulsing 24-hour street life of the ancient city.

WAYS TO AVOID LOCAL CREDIT CARD FRAUD

Here’s some useful advice from a member of the Park Slope Parents message board regarding the recent credit card/debit card fraud that had been rampaging through Park Slope. Some on the message board thought to post the names of merchants in PS, who may be responsible for credit card fraud. Obviously PSP is rejecting posts with merchant names as there is no evidence that specific merchants are at fault. Nor is this problem limited to Park Slope.

Since the PSP board is rejecting posts with the names(s) of
merchants they believe have been resposnsible for CC fraud. Its
worrisome to know that this is happening and that I have no way of
even trying to protect myself despite the fact that others are
willing to share their information.”

If you’re concerned, I’d suggest emailing directly the people who’ve
said they might have ideas as to which stores might put your credit
info at risk; their email addresses are included in their posts. Note
that I didn’t say these merchants are “responsible”–because as an
earlier poster made clear, it’s entirely possible or likely that the
merchants have been hacked without their knowledge, and are no more
responsible for the situation than their customers.

Absent any hard proof beyond speculation, I’m sure you can appreciate
how unfair it would be to announce to some 7,000 people in the area
that Merchant X is not to be trusted; it could easily be a death
sentence for a small business that has done nothing wrong–and may
have been identified mistakenly in the first place.

In the meantime, there is plenty you can do to protect yourself. Only
use bank ATMs. Pay only with credit cards, not debit cards–or,
ideally, use cash instead. Put a freeze on your credit report, as has
been explained earlier. And keep in mind that, as one of the
fastest-growing areas of crime, credit card fraud and identity theft
are a much bigger problem than a single breach in a single store;
these are all measures we should be taking anyway, regardless of the
current suspicions.

This credit card fraud thread has a lot of people spooked, myself
included! But it would be a terrible thing if, in our eagerness to
play detective, we ended up victimizing one of the local merchants
who make PS such a special place.

MY CITICARD WAS “COMPROMISED”

Last week, Citibank told me that our debit card may have been compromised. That’s why they reduced our cash limit suddenly without telling us. There may have been a robot call but I’m not sure.

I found out when I tried to take out more than $500 from my account on a weekend and the screen told me that I wasn’t allowed to do that.

When I called Citibank, they told me that many debit/credit card passwords had been compromised in this area and as a safety measure, they were limiting the amount of cash that can be withdrawn from a large number of accounts in the area.

I’m not sure why they suspected that my account had been compromised or if they are protecting a random selection of local accounts.

In order to get the security limit lifted, the Citibank operator went over every transaction on my card made since December 12th.

I was able to confirm that there were no fraudulent uses of the card.

Reading Park Slope Parents, I see that a lot of members are talking about finding purchases they never made on their cards. Many of the purchases are at gas stations in Texas.

Gowanus Lounge has the story,too.

HOPE SNOWS ETERNAL

Are we still bracing for a big storm or did it just blow over? Once again, the kids are disappointed. They were hoping for a snow day. “Did it snow, did it snow?” Teen Spirit made a beeline for the front window when he woke up.

Hope snows eternal.

According to Weather.com, flurries and a few snow showers throughout the day. Temps in the mid-30’s. Chance of snow 30%.

Brooklyn Junction proposes a ban on the term Nor’Easter.

I propose a temporary ban on the term Nor’Easter, until further study of its impact on society can be undertaken.

TEENAGE SLEEP DEPRIVATION AND SCHOOL

Park Slope’s Nancy Kalish, author of The Case Against Homework, writes in an Op/Ed in Monday’s New York Times:

Research shows that teenagers’ body clocks are set to a schedule that is different from that of younger children or adults. This prevents adolescents from dropping off until around 11 p.m., when they produce the sleep-inducing hormone melatonin, and waking up much before 8 a.m. when their bodies stop producing melatonin. The result is that the first class of the morning is often a waste, with as many as 28 percent of students falling asleep, according to a National Sleep Foundation poll. Some are so sleepy they don’t even show up, contributing to failure and dropout rates.

Many of our presidential candidates have been relatively silent on how they plan to save our troubled education system. For those still searching for a policy that might have a positive impact, here’s an idea: stop focusing on testing and instead support changing the hours of the school day, starting it later for teenagers and ending it later for all children

TODAY: A SHOW FOR KIDS AND PARENTS FOR DEVELOP DON’T DESTROY

Audra Rox and the Deedle Deedle Dees
Brooklyn Lyceum
Doors open at 3 p.m.
Tickets at the door: $18.00
227 Fourth Avenue

Marty Beller of They Might Be Giants says: “AudraRox is a gem. She connects so well with kids of all sizes. Her energy and spirit are infectious, her songs are clever and catchy and alot fun to sing along to. Her band is rockin’!”

The Deedle Deedle Dees are a rock band for kids who perform historically inspired songs like “Nellie Bly”, “Underground Railroad” and silly songs, too.

Sounds like a great show and a great CAUSE.

SMARTMOM: FIFTY IS NIFTY

The other day, Smartmom ran into her neighbor, Ciao Bella, who wanted to know which Weight Watchers meeting she’s been attending. Smartmom told her that the Sunday morning meeting at the Montauk Club is top notch and that Melanie, the leader, is knowledgeable and inspiring. She even sends out a Thinspiration e-newsletter every week or so.

“That’s my New Year’s resolution,” Ciao Bella told Smartmom. She’s already lost 23 pounds on Weight Watchers, put 10 back on during the holidays and now wants to get back on track.

Way to go, Ciao Bella. Smartmom gave her loads of encouragement and hopes to see her at the Sunday meetings.

The two women have lived on the same block for more than 10 years — and in that Third Street way, feel a lot of affection for one another. Somehow, Ciao Bella knew that she and Smartmom were both going to be turning 50 this year and they got to talking about that, too.

“We should have a support group or something,” Ciao Bella suggested.

That seemed like a great idea. Ciao Bella wasn’t sure if it should be a support group or something a little more festive.

“Maybe a party or a gathering,” she said.

This got Smartmom thinking. A part of her loved the idea of a huge gathering of everyone in Park Slope who is turning 50. It could be like a secret society and called the Park Slope Half-Century Club and have a special handshake or something.

But then she wondered if she’d really want to attend something like this. She felt a little Groucho Marx about the whole thing and worried that it might be a drag. For Buddha’s sake, what does Smartmom have in common with a bunch of 50-year-olds?

The whole thing started to sound really depressing. It would probably be a first-class kvetch fest, an “I-can’t-believe-I’m-turning-50” kind of event. Smartmom was pretty sure she wanted no part of it. She still feels like she’s an 11-year-old in Mr. Giard’s sixth grade class at New Lincoln. As far as she’s concerned she’s still that same old gal.

Wake up, Smartmom. You’re 50 and there’s no denying it. You may feel like you’re 11, but add 39 years to that number. Get real, girlfriend.

Besides, maybe 50 isn’t so bad after all. Ciao Bella is turning 50, so is Epic Poetry Mom, Best and Oldest, The Brooklyn Paper’s PS…I Love You columnist, Diaper Diva, of course, local architectural historian Francis Morrone, and many more.

And that’s not all. Just look at this list of celebrities who are turning 50 in 2008: Holly Hunter, Ellen DeGeneres, Sharon Stone, Miranda Richardson, Michele Pfeiffer, Annette Benning, Kevin Bacon, Alec Baldwin, Prince, Madonna, Tim Burton, Michael Jackson, Tim Robbins, Viggo Mortensen and Jamie Lee Curtis.

Suddenly, Smarmtom isn’t feeling so bad. Maybe the Park Slope Half-Century Club should show movies starring actors turning 50 this year. They could have a Holly Hunter film festival and watch “Broadcast News,” “Thirteen,” “The Piano” and “Raising Arizona.” How about “Bull Durham” with Tim Robbins or “The Lord of the Rings” with Mortensen?

The club could dance to CDs by Prince, Madonna and Michael Jackson and discuss books by 1958-born authors like Park Slope’s George Hagen (“The Laments”), Mitch Albom (“The Five People You Meet in Heaven”), Roddy Doyle (“Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha”) Christina Garcia (“Dreaming in Cuban”) and George Saunders (“In Persuasion Nation”).

The more she thought about it, the more she liked the idea of a Park Slope Half-Century Club. Maybe it’s a club she wouldn’t mind being part of even if she really has no choice. The group could compile an interesting list of historical events that happened in 1958 and even talk about what it was like to be 10 years old in 1968, that most iconic year, when Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy were both assassinated.

They could share memories of “duck-and-cover” Cold War exercises in elementary school, anti-war demonstrations, bake sales for Eugene McCarthy, and Watergate hearings on network television.

So it’s decided. Smartmom and Ciao Bella are gong to do it: The Park Slope Half-Century Club. Next week, when Smartmom runs into Ciao Bella at that Sunday Weight Watchers Meeting, they will come up with a plan. Maybe they can even figure out the secret handshake?

Who’s in?

SIX CHAPELS: SIMULTANEOUS PRAYER AT OLD FIRST

On Martin Luther King Day, Monday January 21 from 10 am until 7:30 p.m, Spoke the Hub Dancing and the Old First Reformed Church have come together to create an event dedicated to the idea of creating and sustaining peace.

This special event will be a day of participatory activities at Old First at Seventh Avenue and Carroll.

The event that intriques me is Six Chapels: Simultaneous interfaith Meditation and Prayer for Peace right in Old First’s sanctuary. Here’s a list of what will be going on that day:

THEATER OF CHANGE (for ages 12 and up) with Ellen Baxt & Friends: An all day workshop for young people and adults, culminating in an informal performance at the end of the day.

SIX CHAPELS: INTERFAITH MEDITATION AND PRAYER FOR PEACE

Six sacred spaces set aside for simultaneous silent prayer and meditation for Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, and Sikh faiths.

MOVING MEDITATION & PRAYER (Adults & Teens) with Jenny Burrill

FAMILY DANCE & YOGA (siblings ages 1-5 with caregivers) with Heidi Kinney

HATHA YOGA: A PORTAL TO FREEDOM (Adults & Teens) with Dolores Natividad

Beginners welcome.

JESUS ON PEACE: TEACHINGS WHICH INSPIRED MLK (Everyone Welcome)

with Pastor Daniel Meeter

BIG HEART DANCING & YOGA (ages 8 and up) with Heidi Kinney & Elise Long

LITTLE BIG HEART DANCING (ages 5-7) with Sarah Pope

PRAYING PEACE (Everyone Welcome) with Pastor Daniel Meeter

MEDITATION: A WAY TO INNER PEACE (Adults & Teens) with Mina Hamilton

WALKING MEDITATION (Adults & Teens) with Mina Hamilton

TOUCHING THE EARTH : A WAY TO OUTER PEACE with Mina Hamilton

Based on the work and practice of Thich Nhat Hahn.

CHAIR YOGA & MEDITATION (Adults & Teens) with Dolores Natividad

Ideal for seniors and the physically challenged.

TECHNIQUES AND APPROACHES TO REDUCING TENSIONS AT HOME

(Parents Only) with Sharon Peters

BIG HEART DRUMMING (For the Whole Family) with Gabriella Dennery of BaTuBa Collective Percussion

INTRO. TO NONVIOLENT COMMUNICATION (Everyone Welcome) with Nellie Bright

WORKSHOP SHARING Informal Workshop Performances

by Gabriella’s BIG HEART DRUMMING Workshop and Ellen’s THEATER OF CHANGE

MEAL SHARING & SALUTE TO DR. KING’S LIFE AND LEGACY

Food generously donated by local restaurants

DON’T LET NEW UNION MARKET PUT GRAB OUT OF BUSINESS

Everyone loves Grab. It’s a great cheese, charcuterie, speciality foods and gift shop at 438 Seventh Avenue (between 14th and 15th Streets)  that everyone needed when Blue Apron left the South Slope.

Now Union Market is opening on Wednesday January 16th in the South Slope and they’ve hired some kind of big deal muckity muck fromaggey expert kinda guy. Still, that doesn’t mean you have to stop shopping at Grab.

There’s room enough for both places. It’s all about moods and needs. Somedays you wanna get a Jarlsberg from Union Market. Some days you wanna have a long talk about various kinds of Stiltons at Grab.

This isn’t a zero sum game. Keep the local place in business while welcoming a new gourmet supermarket. That’s what I say.

Yay Grab.

LUCKY TO HAVE APPLEWOOD IN OUR MIDST

I had a lovely dinner at Applewood last night; it was my first time there. The food was delicious; well prepared with fresh ingredients.

How did we get so lucky to have this great place in our midst?

I had the pan seared striped bass and it was friggin’ awesome. I didn’t really know what to expect and it was GREAT with potatoes of some kind and kale. My friend had the venison. Another friend had the duck

We ordered this great bottle of Tuscan cabernet: Tenuta de capezzana sangiovese cabernet sauvignon for $45.

What a good bottle of wine. Or was it three? The waiter was very helpful, attentive. Loved the place. Five of us went out and we had appetizers, entrees, wine, dessert and coffee and it was $80 bucks a person. Not cheap but really wonderful.

SUNDAY: CONCERT AT BROOKLYN LIBRARY

OTBKB friend and Fave, Helen Richmond, neighborhood flute and piano teacher, concert flutist, and founder or Chocolate Chip Music recommends this Sunday’s concert.

There looks to be a great FREE flute and harpsichord concert this Sunday Jan. 13th at the Grand Army Central Library starting at 4 p.m. Features superb, prestigious players Ken Cooper and Susie Rotholtz. I highly recommend checking it out!!

SLOPE SUSHI SWITCHEROO

According to Go Brooklyn, if you call the old Inaka Sushi phone number you get Mura Sushi at 369 Fifth Avenue.

On to fishier matters: Park Slope’s Inaka Sushi has closed and dialing the phone number now leads callers to Mura (369 Fifth Ave. at Sixth Street in Park Slope) where a staffer wouldn’t explain what happened to Inaka, but did offer to replicate any item from its menu for me.

This could mean a couple of things.

1. Mura Sushi is moving into the spot where Inaka used to be on Seventh Avenue between 4th and 5th Streets.

2. Inaka Sushi gave its customers to Mura Sushi.

3. Inaka Sushi is taking over Mura Sushi.

4. Inaka Sushi is Mura Sushi.

Anyone know?

LIVING ON FIFTH RELOCATING

Living on Fifth, the clothing and home goods store on Fifth Avenue, with other outposts on Seventh Avenue (Living on Seventh), Smith Street (Living on Smith) and the South Slope (Lola) is relocating.

The landlord at their old location on Fifth between 3rd and 4th Streets stopped heating the store two months ago. He suddenly changed the terms of their lease and acted in a dishonorable fashion.

Not a nice guy.

Luckily, LOF’s owner found a small storefront on that hotter than hot block between Carroll and President Streets next door to Diana Kane, Scaredy Kat, and Eidolon (I double checked the spelling on that 3 times because someone got so mad at me for mispelling it on the Park Slope 100). (And I still got it wrong. I fixed it.) 

SIDEWALK SIGNAGE IS ALLOWED, AGAIN

Brownstoner reports that A-frame signs are allowable in Park Slope again. You know, those signs that restaurants and shops use to display specials, sales, and other information.

I know a lot of businesses in Park Slope were bemoaning the fact that they were getting multiple tickets for their sidewalk A-frames from the Sanitation Department. In fact, this issue came up quite a bit at the Buy in Brooklyn (Yellow Umbrellas) meeting last November. This will be good news for many shops! The following is a quote from the Gothamist’s  story.

Brooklyn bars and restaurants rejoice: you can once again put your sandwich board signs on the sidewalk without fear of tickets from the Department of Sanitation! Your free and effective method for seducing customers with daily specials and clever jokes about drinking the pain away is now perfectly legal. Of course, this does not give you permission to lose all restraint and play music or let people dance.

Last fall a crackdown on the signs led to such establishments as Park Slope’s excellent Community Bookstore and Brooklyn Heights’ delicious Zaytoons getting slapped with tickets from the Department of Sanitation, who was acting on a rarely enforced law intended to keep the sidewalks clear. Brownstoner reports that Councilmember David Yassky leaned on Sanitation commissioner John Dougherty a few weeks ago and, lo and behold, Dougherty “agreed it was ridiculous.

TENSE SITUATION RESOLVED WITHOUT VIOLENCE ON 9TH STREET

According to Gridskipper, an arrest was made following the tense situation on Sunday night in a 9th Street Park Slope when an angry resident refused to leave his home and disarm when the police arrived.

Additionally, we were able to verify that, after more than six hours of negotiations, the situation was resolved without violence. Interestingly, those we spoke to in the police department also let us know about their frustration with the way some folks in the neighborhood responded to the situation.

PRINCIPAL SELECTED TO LEAD KHALIL GIBRAN SCHOOL

Finally. And her name isn’t Debbie Almontaser. It’s Holly Reichert. This from NY Daily News:

NEW YORK (AP) — A new principal was hired to head the city’s first Arabic-themed public school, the education department announced Tuesday, five months after the academy’s founding principal said she was forced to resign.

Holly Reichert was to begin leading the Khalil Gibran International Academy in Brooklyn on Wednesday. The school, which opened last September with about 60 students and emphasizes Arabic and Arab culture, is named for the Lebanese Christian poet and peace advocate.

Reichert, 42, replaces interim principal Danielle Salzberg. Salzberg, who is Jewish and doesn’t speak Arabic, replaced Debbie Almontaser, who stepped down in August after she gave an interview in which she discussed the word “intifada,” an Arabic term commonly used to refer to the Palestinian uprising against Israel.

WHAT AN UPSET: IT’S HILLARY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE

The Caucus, a New York Times political blog reports that a Hillary Clinton fundraising letter is already out:

Subject: From the bottom of my heart

You and I surprised a lot of people tonight!

In the days after Iowa, I turned to you and asked you to stand with me. When I needed you most, you came through with flying colors.

From the bottom of my heart, I thank you.

All the best,

Hillary

Senator Barack Obama, who came in a close second, says that he’s still fired up and ready to go. “But, in record numbers, you came out and you spoke up for change. And with your voices and your votes you made it clear that at this moment in this election there is something happening in America.”

Obama congratulated Hillary Rodham Clinton and had this to say:

“All the candidates in this race have good ideas and all are patriots who serve this country honorably,” Obama said

FIRST PERSON ACCOUNT OF SUNDAY MUGGING IN PARK SLOPE

This just in from a woman who was mugged on Sunday night. The good news is that one of the muggers was caught on Sunday night in the Park. I want to say THANKS to the woman who took the time to write this post as a way to warn women in the neighborhood. She’s been through a lot and still feels violated, frightened and vulnerable. THANK YOU.

I was mugged on my way home Sunday night at around 10:30. From what I’ve heard from neighbors, this has been going on for the past week or so.

I had passed these two kids when I was walking home from the 2 subway at Grand Army Plaza . They must have doubled back, and followed me – I saw them on the other side of the street about 20 feet behind me, but since there were plenty of people around, I felt ok, but very cautious. I turned down my block, and when I turned around, saw that they were following me. All I could think of was I needed to get to my door as soon as possible. I took my keys and my cell phone out of my bag. They came up on my stoop, I heard them and turned around, and then they backed me up against my door, pulled on my coat, telling me to give them the bag.

All I could think of was that they were going to drag me somewhere. The smaller of the two grabbed my bag, and they both ran into the park. I started screaming for people to help me, my downstairs neighbor and one of my other neighbors ran into the park after them, and a bunch of other people came out. My roommate and this other woman called the cops. I really appreciate all my neighbors and what they did for me. The cops came right away, asked me to get in the car, and we were going to drive into the park to see if I could identify them if found.

They ended up catching one of the kids in the park, but the other one got away. They had also dumped my bag and all its contents on a playground. He took my debit and credit card, my leather gloves, and my camera.

Although they didn’t hurt me, I still feel violated. Although they got one of them, I’m still scared.

I have had the satisfaction of identifying one of them. The cops had him in handcuffs near the playground, and asked me if that was one of them, I looked at his face, and immediately knew it was him. He denied it, of course, but the cop told me that when they got him, he had obviously been running, he was pretty winded. It was pretty satisfying knowing that I could identify him, say, “yes, that’s one of them” and that hopefully he’ll be put away.

He was the one that had me against my door and was in my face, but I don’t know if I could recognize the other one. I read up last night on sentencing for this type of crime (I couldn’t sleep), and since the kid has priors, he could actually go to jail for anywhere between 2 and 25 years depending on what classification felony it is.

The ADA called me Monday morning, and told me that the kid had given up his buddy, and the cops were now out looking for him so that they could arrest him. He also told me that since they took my credit cards, it’s a felony. I have to go to the grand jury on Friday. Detectives stopped by last night, and I’ll have to go to a line-up sometime this week to identify the other one, if I can.

Hopefully, these two are the ones who have been mugging other woman in the neighborhood and that there aren’t more of them out there. If this has happened to you recently, you should call the officer on your case, and tell them that you heard that someone had been arrested for a similar crime.

UPDATE ON RASH OF MUGGINGS

The rash of muggings continues in Park Slope. As recently as Sunday night a woman was mugged. However, one of the muggers was caught in the park and identified by the victim. She has written a longer post about the incident (above).

I have an update on the muggings going on on 8th Ave , and wanted to let people know one of the kids has been arrested, and the cops know who the other one is, and will try to arrest him today. I was mugged Sunday night, and the police were able to catch one of them.