For More Information About Jamie Livingston and Photo-of-the-Day

For those of you who want MORE information about Jamie Livingston and his life-long photo-of-the-day project here’s what you can do:

–For information, interviews, and inquiries you can email Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid: hugh(at)hughcrawford(dot)com and betsy.reid(at)earthlink(dot)net

–You can view all of Jamie Livingston’s polaroids at photooftheday.hughcrawford.com

–To see what the exhibition of Jamie Livingston’s Photo-of-the-Day project looked like at Bard College in October 2007, you can go to Hugh’s website: hughcrawford.com

–Scroll down on this page for many articles that have appeared about Jamie Livingston on OTBKB and elsewhere.

–Last but not least: Google "Jamie Livingston" and see everything about him on various blogs and websites around the world. Lately there’s been quite a lot of interest in China.

Berkeley Carroll Child Care Center To Close

I just got word of this from an OTBKB reader.

The
families with children at the Berkeley Carroll Child Care Center were
just informed this past week that it will be closing at the end of this
academic year in August 2009. 

Methodist Hospital owns the building and needs the space back to
accommodate their own growth. Unfortunately, Berkeley Carroll was
unable to find another suitable space. We are all devastated and are
trying to mobilize to get another year extension on the lease so that
the families will have more time to transition to other options.

Shortage of child care options, especially for children under two because of the strict physical requirements of the space, was already a
problem in this neighborhood, so this is a real loss, not just to the
families who currently attend, but to the whole neighborhood as well.

The center is a truly wonderful place with loving teachers.
A few years ago, the NY Times wrote an article about the "crazy"
parents who pulled all-nighters on a cold February night for spots at the BCCCC.

Please help us get the word out so we can rally to save the child care
center.

Ocean Parkway: A Suggestion of the Old Country Flavor

Nice article in the Times’ New York today about Ocean Parkway. I’m not sure I knew that Olmstead and Vaux designed that, too. Wow. Those guys were awesome.

I love that stretch of Brooklyn from Kensington to Brighton Beach. I go that way often on my way to Coney Island. Here’s an excerpt.

Elegant and sketchy, welcoming and insular, the striated band of
roadway, trees and people called Ocean Parkway both reflects Brooklyn
and divides it with a thick green line. It was designed about a century
and a half ago as a place to promenade, to socialize, to pleasure-drive
or to settle, on a street that looks like a park. The architects Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux were inspired by the grand tree-lined boulevards of Europe, like Avenue Foch in Paris and Unter den Linden in Berlin.

In
an 1867 report to the Brooklyn Parks Commission, the architects talked
about the kind of person who might live on the parkway, a country boy
of “superior caliber” drawn to the city by an “irresistible magnetic
force.” But the metropolis and success would not be enough for such a
man. “Day by day,” they wrote, “his life needs a suggestion of the old
country flavor to make it palatable as well as profitable.”

Jamie Livingston in the New York Times City Section

Here’s
the article by David Shaftel which is on the City Visible page of The
City section of the New York Times
(October 12th, 2008): 

AS a senior at Bard
College
in 1979, Jamie Livingston acquired a Polaroid camera. After a few
weeks, he noticed that he was taking about one picture a day, and
shortly thereafter he decided to continue doing so.

The project, which quickly
evolved into something of an obsession, began with a snapshot of Mindy
Goldstein, Mr. Livingston’s girlfriend at the time, along with another
friend, both of them smiling at something outside the frame. It ended
18 years and more than 6,000 photos later with a self-portrait of the
photographer on his deathbed on his 41st birthday.

The narrative
that unfolds between those two images tells the story not only of the
friendships Mr. Livingston forged over the years but also the evolution
of a city. It charts New York’s progression from an era of urban decay
and fiscal crisis to a place characterized by the economic recovery
that had arrived by the time of Mr. Livingston’s death, of melanoma, in
1997. This was especially true downtown, where he lived for much of the
period covered in the photographs.

Before Mr. Livingston died,
his friends Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid promised they would not let
the project die with him. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of their
friend’s death, they digitally photographed the Polaroids and
reproduced them for an exhibition at Bard, in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y.

Mr. Crawford also loaded the images onto a Web site (photooftheday.hughcrawford.com)
so they could be experienced in their entirety.

As
the cityscape has changed, many of the pictures have accrued meaning.
“They often don’t mean anything by themselves,” Mr. Crawford said. “But
when you put them all together, they take on a life of their own.”

Ms.
Reid, who met Mr. Livingston in 1985, cited other benefits of the
collection. “When I look at a picture that I was involved in or know
about,” she said, “you’re just sent right back in time and you just
remember everything about that day.”

Trader Joe’s Is A Hit

Well, from all reports the new Brooklyn Trader Joe’s is a big hit. On opening weekend they did more than a half a million dollars in sales.

Many people I’ve spoken with seem to like the landmark bank building, the wide aisles, the high ceilings, the well-organized space and plentiful cashiers. In terms of design it is miles ahead of the their location on East 14th Street, which people say is a crowded and unpleasant place to shop during busy hours.

Deep Joanna, an OTBKB source, who works inside store said that TJ’s acknowledges that mistakes were made in the design of the first NYC store on 14th Street. The Court and Atlantic shop is the East Coast flagship store.

Seems that the California chain has set its sights on the Upper West Side. Plans are in the works for another store on 72nd Street and Broadway not far from the famous Gray’s Papaya.

With Fairway, Citarella, Zabar’s and Whole Foods, it remains to be seen whether the Upper West Side will be quite an enamoured of the California food store. I mean, it’s not like you can’t get good cheese, organic produce and meats, condiments, snack foods and all variety of frozen and prepared foods up there.

Brooklyn really needed TJ’s. Other than the Food Coop, Fairway, Pomegranite (the new kosher superstore), Sahadi’s, D’vine Taste, Blue Apron and other specialty shops, there’s not much to brag about in the grocery department in Brooklyn.

Trader Joe’s has given Brooklynites lots to talk about.

Brooklyn Optimist Says No to Term Limits

Read why Morgan over at the Brooklyn Optimist is against term limits. I’m not sure how I feel about the issue so it’s very interesting reading over there. Here’s an excerpt.

The Queens Tribune calls it "tyranny". "Never has the city seemed so nakedly for sale," writes Newsday. The good government group Common Cause wants the Mayor investigated for
using "his position in a prohibited manner to obtain personal advantage
in a quid pro quo deal with Ronald Lauder." Even the Mayor himself said
(back in 2005): "I think it would be an absolute disgrace to go around the public will."

But
still the City Council and Mayor Bloomberg are less than two weeks away
from pulling off the most shameful power grab in the history of New
York. This is the time for all New Yorkers to stand up and save our
City from the naked ambition of our elected officials.

Lyceum: Halloween Storytelling Fest for Kids

Our friends over at the  The Brooklyn Lyceum are presenting a  Halloween Storytelling Festival for kids of all ages — beginning Sunday, October 26th and continuing through Thursday, October 30th.   

The festival will showcase noted storytellers Robin Bady, Gerald Fierst, Jonathan Kruk, Mara McEwen and Julia Morris, who will delight and bewitch toddlers, tweens, teenagers and grownups with contemporary and classic tales of ghosts, witches, monsters and gigantic pumpkins.

Tickets are $10 (kids under 2 are free). Free admission is available to adults who present a membership to one of the following Brooklyn cultural institutions: The Brooklyn Children’s Museum, Green-Wood Cemetery Historic Fund, and The Old Stone House, or a receipt from one of the following Brooklyn restaurants: Two Boots, Perch Café, Dizzy’s or Tom’s Restaurant.  Tickets can be purchased in advance at www.brooklynlyceum.com or at the door the day of the show.

The When and Where

October 26-30, various times (see below)
The Brooklyn Lyceum
227 4th Ave, between Union and President St. in Park Slope
Telephone is 718-857-4816

Schedule
Sunday, October 26th – Not So Scary Stories (pre-k and older)
A Halloween Hunt (Original); Terrible Nung Guama (China); Three Witches (African-American) and other stories
Storyteller: Mara McEwin     Showtime: 2:30 PM / 3:30 PM   

Monday, October 27th – Not So Scary Stories (pre-k and older)
How Coyote Lost His Eyeballs, The Enormous Pumpkin and other stories
Storyteller:  Gerald Fierst    Showtime: 4:00 PM / 5:00 PM

Tuesday, October 28th – True Ghost Stories (9 years and older)
Storyteller: Robin Bady     Showtime: 4:00 PM / 5:00 PM
Wednesday, October 29th – "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (all ages)
Storyteller:  Jonathan Kruk    Showtime: 4:00 PM / 5:00 PM

Wednesday, October 29th – The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (all ages)
Storyteller:  Jonathan Kruk    Showtime: 4:00 PM / 5:00 PM

Thursday, October 30th – Not So Scary Stories (pre-k and older)
The Tale of Boneless, Who’s in Rabbit’s House, The Long Red Fingernails and other stories
Storyteller: Julia M. Morris    Showtime: 4:00 PM / 5:00 PM

Free Louis and Capathia Gig at Dweck Center: Go!

Park Slope composer and OTBKB fave wrote to tell me about  free gig at the Dweck Center at the Brooklyn Central Library.

Capathia and I hope to help you take your mind off of the recent chaos of the past few weeks with our last concert of the year–and it’s FREE.

The location is the beautiful new concert hall in the Dweck Center at Brooklyn Central Library (at Grand Army Plaza.)

The date is next Saturday afternoon, October 18. The time is 4 pm.

We’ll be performing songs from THE BLACK LOOM, a trilogy of song suites I’ve written on words by African American poets including One Ounce of Truth: The Nikki Giovanni Songs, 12 Songs On Poems By Maya Angelou, and Dream Suite on words by Langston Hughes. We’ll also include a few songs from our first record, South Side Stories. We’ll be joined by our two favorite musicians, Kim Grigsby on piano and Dave Phillips on bass.

For those who’d like to take some of the music home with you, we’ll have some CDs on hand. The Community Bookstore on 7th Avenue also has copies of One Ounce of Truth, our newest record, in stock. You can also find this CD at most online music sites including Amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, itunes and rhapsody.com. And South Side Stories is still available at www.cdbaby.com.The doors open at 1 PM with fabulous events happening all day!

The Where and When

Dweck Center at the Brooklyn Public Library
Grand Army Plaza
October 18 at 4 p.m.

New Vintage Clothier at Brooklyn Flea on Sunday

2039463557_88ef6e1668
Despite Congress’ best efforts it looks like we’re stuck with the
financial crisis for a while. And if that has you thinking twice before
ducking into Diane Kane or Loom for a bit of retail therapy, take
heart. New vintage clothier BDV
bows at booth E-29 at the Brooklyn Flea this coming Sunday Oct. 12, and
by the looks of it, the collection, pleasing to the eye and wallet,
harks back to the better days of decades gone by. Who knows, maybe a
little sartorial escapism is just what we all need.  If you agree,
there’s 1940s Hollywood film star elegance (slip into the John
Wannamaker dressing gown) on the racks as well as Mad Men—esque cropped
jackets and pencil skirts, and even vibrant 1970s floral dresses just
begging to be taken to South Beach—or the Gowanus Yacht Club before it
shuts down for the season.

Photo by Tamarmosh

The Where and When

Sunday, October 12
10 am – 5 pm
BDV at booth E-29
The Brooklyn Flea
@ Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene
Lafayette Ave. between Clermont and Vanderbilt Ave.

Irondale Open House: New Art Center in Ft. Greene

There’s an open house on Saturday at Irondale Arts Center in Fort Greene.

Join us–the actors, directors and designers of Irondale for a first-hand look at our new home. (Of course, we’ll be here all day, but why not stop in early? Beat the crowds!)

2 PM – 4 PM

Join in on one of our Games Workshops – No experience necessary!
A new one starts every half hour!
Families with Children Welcome!!

4 PM – 6PM

See a brief Sneak Preview of Irondale’s Peter Pan
(Opening in a full length production right here October 22)
Followed immediately by an Improv Set performed by standout high school students from the Irondale education programs.

Then–Join in and play with us in a Drum Circle

Followed by a Special Celebration—Wow! What’s it going to be?

6 PM – 7 PM

Sit down at our table for an old-fashioned pot-luck dinner. Food and beverage will be supplied courtesy of our neighborhood restaurants and merchants, but feel free to bring along your favorite dish to share.
We’ll also be providing plenty of Brooklyn beer.

8 PM – 10 PM

The Main Event.
We’ve invited a fabulous assortment of artists (many from right here in Brooklyn) to come by and help us launch THE SPACE.

The bar WILL be open and the entertainment is hot

The Where and When

Irondale
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Doors open 1 p.m. until 11 p.m.
85 South Oxford Street
Fort Greene, Brookyn

Park Slope Filmmaker Makes Youvotevideo.org With Loads of Celebs

Check this out: Park filmmaker Sue Kramer, who directed Grey Matters and is also one of the Park Slope 100 has something to share with OTBKB readers. A video called: You Vote.

Presently, I have an even more exciting project! I have conceived and directed a video called YOU VOTE, www.youvotevideo.org
—I think of it as the first passionate, playful, joyful, video to
appeal to ALL to get out and vote. It stars everyone from Anne
Hathaway, Susan Sarandon, Samuel Jackson, The Muppets and 40 other
celebrities. If there is anything you can do to push people to go to
the site or go to YOUTUBE and type in you vote video. I would greatly
appreciate it!

New Vintage Clothing Collection at the Brooklyn Flea

2039463557_88ef6e1668
Despite Congress’ best efforts it looks like we’re stuck with the financial crisis for a while. And if that has you thinking twice before ducking into Diane Kane or Loom for a bit of retail therapy, take heart. New vintage clothier BDV bows at booth E-29 at the Brooklyn Flea this coming Sunday Oct. 12, and by the looks of it, the collection, pleasing to the eye and wallet, harks back to the better days of decades gone by. Who knows, maybe a little sartorial escapism is just what we all need.  If you agree, there’s 1940s Hollywood film star elegance (slip into the John Wannamaker dressing gown) on the racks as well as Mad Men—esque cropped jackets and pencil skirts, and even vibrant 1970s floral dresses just begging to be taken to South Beach—or the Gowanus Yacht Club before it shuts down for the season.

Photo by Tamarmosh

The Where and When

Sunday, October 12
10 am – 5 pm
BDV at booth E-29
The Brooklyn Flea
@ Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene
Lafayette Ave. between Clermont and Vanderbilt Ave.

Con Ed Worker Killed in Brooklyn Manhole Blast

From the NY Daily News:

A Con Edison worker looking forward to marriage next year died Thursday in a fiery
manhole blast that trapped him in an underground death chamber,
authorities said.

George Dillman, 26, was splicing high-voltage cables 10 feet beneath the street in Brooklyn when the explosion shook the earth around him.

Craig Penney, 28, tried desperately to get to the electrician, but it was no use.

"The guy down there – he didn’t have a chance," said one witness, a retired cop. "He would have needed God to pull him out."

This Weekend by Kristin Goode

Kristin Goode, the good blogger for About.com Guide to Brooklyn always knows what’s going on in our fair borough. In addition to her work at About.com, she works full-time for a New York food magazine,
where she serves as Managing Editor of the publication’s marketing
website.

She spends her free time exploring the streets of Brooklyn and
also contributes to CheapTricksNYC, a blog devoted to living on a budget in New York City. I’m guessing she lives in Brooklyn but maybe not. Still, she makes it her business to know what’s going on. She writes:

I
believe Brooklyn is the best place on earth to live, and whether I’m
biking through Prospect Park, walking along the Brooklyn Bridge, or
just eating a hot dog from Nathan’s in Coney Island, I’m happy to be a
part of it all.

My favorite thing about the borough? There’s something for everyone. From the arts scene in DUMBO to the famed DiFara’s pizza in Midwood, there’s a flame to fuel every passion.

This weekend Goode selects these events:

  • Red Hook Film Festival

    Head to Red Hook this weekend for two days of short film screenings
    as the Red Hook International Film and Video Festival celebrates its
    second year. I just looked at the movie line-up, and I want to see them
    all!
    Saturday and Sunday, 1pm to 6pm

    Brooklyn Waterfront Artists’ Coalition Screening Room, 499 Van Brunt Street

  • Bed-Stuy Alive! Taste, Strut, Tour, Shop, Rock, and Run Festival

    If you’ve ever needed an excuse to get to know Bed-Stuy, then this
    is it: This weekend, the neighborhood will be offering special
    restaurant and shopping deals, as well as interesting events in honor
    of Bed-Stuy Alive!, a week-long celebration of the area.
    The kick-off street festival (along Fulton Street between New
    York and Kingston Avenues) is Saturday, 9am to 6pm; Bed-Stuy Alive!
    events run throughout the week.

  • Free Fridays at the New York Aquarium

    Every Friday from 3pm on, the New York Aquarium opens its doors to
    the public, free of charge. This pay-as-you-wish special only runs for
    a couple of hours, so if you want to see the museum’s sea creatures in
    all their glory (imagine Duke the Sea Lion doing acrobats), arrive
    right at 3pm.

    Friday, 3pm to 5pm

    New York Aquarium, Surf Ave and West 8th St, Coney Island

Joyce Watson: A Crossing Guard We Will Always Remember

Julie Markes, the co-president of the PS 321, sent me some sad news this morning, which she asked me to share with OTBKB readers.

Joyce Watson, the wonderful crossing guard who used to cross kids to PS 321 from the corner of First  Street and Seventh Avenue, passed away this week.

She will be remembered by students and parents for the lovely way she spoke to the children.

"Hello beautiful," she used to say.  I can hear her melodic voice in my head. I always thought it would be a good idea to record her.

Did anyone ever record her voice?

Hers was a lilting, musical voice full of endearments for the children: "Good Morning, my sweet angels" "Hello lovely lady." "How are you today, handsome?"

She was a much a part of our mornings as cereal for breakfast, conversations with friends outside of the school, waiting on line for a coffee at Connecticut Muffin.

Do you remember any of her endearments? If you do please send them in. Otherwise, they will become the lost art of this wonderful crossing guard.

I’m not sure how long Joyce was the crossing guard but I feel like she was there for the entire 11 years that I was a parent at PS 321.

Every morning and every afternoon, there she was (until she left more than a years ago when she took sick). That lovely voice, that cheerful demeanor, those endearing phrases addressed to the children.

Her funeral is Friday, October 9, at 11am.  It’s at Queen of all Saints
Church at 300 Vanderbilt Ave.  Near the corner of Lafayette Avenue.

Good bye sweet angel, thank you for the civility your brought to our mornings.

Oct 16 at The Old Stone House: Poetry Punch Packs a Punch

Brooklyn Reading Works presents Poetry Punch, a festive, fun,
celebratory group reading of poets curated by Michele Madigan
Somerville.

And, yes, there will be punch. Lots of it.

This year’s reading really packs a punch with Bill Evans, Jeff
Wright, Joanna Sit, Ilene Starger, Will Nixon, Louise Crawford and
Michele Madigan Somerville. Says Michele: "The poets on the bill are
all very high interest, high energy poets: juicy, libidinous, good
performers, not dry."

Bill Evans: "I always think if God were a New York
poet he’d sound like Bill. Bill is funny and speechifying in a
philosophical yet embracing way.

Jeff Wright: "He used to call himself a "new
romantic" came up as a boy wonder among New York School and Beat
legends, edited Cover Magazine for a long time, has a bunch of books
and chap books out, and writes lush, sexy, surreal and funny — he’s a
latter day troubadour! In sillier moments I have referred to Jeff as
"The Dean Martin of the Downtown Poetry Scene"

Joanna Sit: "Chinese born Medgar Evers Professor Joanna Sit is a middle-aged knockout who writes like an Irish woman high on Absinthe."

Ilene Starger: A New York-born poet whose work has
appeared in such publications as Folio, Georgetown Review, Paper
Street, Oyez Review, Oberon and Ibbetson Street. Ilene’s brand new
chapbook Lethe, Postponed will be published in August 2008 by Finishing
Line Press. She is currently putting together her next collection of
poems.

Michele Madigan Somerville: The author of Wisegal
from Ten Pell Books: "A multilingual hardrock reverie…going upside
your head to whisper whipsmart secrets about cracked-out big-city
survival.” She runs the Ceol Poetry Series at the Ceol Pub on Smith
Street.

Louise Crawford: Louise runs OTBKB and Brooklyn Reading Works and is the Smartmom columnist for the Brooklyn Paper. She will read from her unpublished collections, Therapy and Anarchists Don’t Return Phone Calls.

Will Nixon: His book, My Late Mother as a Ruffed
Grouse (FootHills Publishing), offers poems inspired by his experiences
growing up in the Connecticut suburbs, then living in Hoboken and
Manhattan as a young man, and finally moving to a Catskills log cabin.
His previous chapbooks are When I Had It Made (Pudding House) and The
Fish Are Laughing (Pavement Saw). His poems have also appeared in many
journals, including Rattle, The Ledge, Slipstream, Wisconsin Review,
Tar River Poetry, and others. His work has been nominated for a
Pushcart Prize and and listed in The Best American Essays of 2004. He
now lives in Woodstock.

The Where and When

Thursday, October 16th at 8 p.m.
Brooklyn Reading Works at the Old Stone House
Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets
It’s the stone house in JJ Byrne Park
$5 donation appreciated. Punch and light refreshments will be served.

Urban Environmentalist NYC – Eco Lens

 Tree_sidwalk_pix
Here is the occasional feature from the Center for
the Urban Environment (CUE).
In this submission Chiara Di Palma, Program Manager of
Urban Education
 at the Center for the Urban
Environment, takes a close look at a local favorite, “Tree of Heaven.”

The Tree of Heaven (Latin name Ailanthus) is perhaps
the most common tree species found in New York City. But despite its divine
name, is also the most notorious. An opportunist, like most New Yorkers, the
tree’s characteristics can be likened to the cockroach, rat or pigeon and
shares many things in common with them, namely its incredible ability to
survive in the most difficult of ecosystems.
However,
unlike unwanted vermin, most New Yorkers see a hundred Tree of Heaven a day and
never think twice about them. Although incognito to most— for some, the
tree has a foul reputation, referred to
as “Stinking Sumac,”
“Stink Tree,”  “Ghetto Palm,” or more straight to
the point, “Tree from
Hell.”

The Tree of Heaven made its most famous debut in the
novel A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,
as a metaphor for the ability to thrive for the difficulties of growing up in
the borough. In the novel, the author admiringly describes the tree’s
tenacity but claims, in equal measure,
“there are too many of
it.” Although once cultivated and hailed as a beautiful ornamental, like
all things ubiquitous, the Tree of Heaven is considered about as exotic as a
gold fish with the pesky habits of a weed.

In the mid to late 1700’s when
Chinese artistic style was popular throughout Europe, the tree was one of many
species brought west to add some Asian flare to ornamental gardens. It was
introduced into the U.S in 1784 for the same purpose. However, admiration was
soon lost as gardeners had to deal with the trees foul smell, its incredible
ability to spread its kin, and the impossibility of ridding it. The tree was
further spread as Asian immigrants brought it with them for medicinal purposes
to the western United States. Before it could be controlled, the tree quickly
spread itself across the country to every nook and cranny of the nation—
from the deserts of New Mexico, to the banks of the Mississippi and the streets
of New York City.

The Tree of Heaven is a short lived
but extremely fast growing tree. It can grow up to 6ft in just one year.
Because of its speed, it is quick to outrace other species for sunlight and
space. It has been known to grow out of sidewalk cracks, on the roofs of
buildings, and even in garbage piles. Once mature a single tree can produce as
many as 350,000 seeds a year. The seeds are dispersed by wind and fly far
distances propelled by their design.  When the tree is cut down it can
re-sprout rapidly from the stump and is nearly impossible to eradicate without
herbicide.  Its aggressive spread is no academic matter. The tree’s
ability to thrive is so intertwined with the demise of other species its
negative impact can’t be over looked.  Furthermore, the tree
produces a toxin in its bark, leaves and seeds. The toxin produces a foul smell
and accumulates toxic poison in the soil, inhibiting the growth of other
species.  The Tree of Heaven is also one of the most pollutant tolerant of
all tree species. It can tolerate high levels of pollutants such as salt, coal
tar, sulfur dioxide and ph levels as low as 4.0.
These factors
combine to make the Tree of Heaven invasive and capable of out growing native
species, and of growing where few other trees dare to stand their ground. (In
its native China the Tree of Heaven has some 32 species of arthropods and
dozens of fungi that have a healthy relationship with the tree. In the United
States however, besides a few moths and a webworm it hosts the tree has little
redeeming value to wildlife. Thus when the tree pushes out native tree species
native animal species go along with them.)

But, to be fair, a
tree is still a tree and redeeming qualities aren’t hard to come by. The
Tree of Heaven helps to clean our air, lowers the heat island effect, shades
our blocks, and provides vegetation in areas hostile to other species. Look at
any vacant or abandoned lot in the city and there you will find it making
lemonade from lemons, and then you can decide, “Tree of Heaven” or
“Tree from Hell.”

 

Sources used:
 Forest Service
Department of Agriculture: http://hort.ufl.edu/trees/AILALTA.pdf; Plant Conservation Alliance: http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/fact/aial1.htm; USDA Forest Service: http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/tree/ailalt/all.html

 

New Plans for Old Zuzu’s Site Goes to Landmarks

For those wondering what’s happening with those burned out storefronts on Seventh Avenue between Union Street and Berkeley Place here’s some news.

It seems that site, which used to house Zuzu’s Petals and Olive Vine and a Korean market is in the process of being developed.

Oh yeah, we knew that. But things seemed to be stalled for so long I was wondering what was going on.

Turns out that the new owners and architects of that site presented their plans to the Landmarks Commission on October 8th. They should be hearing back in the next few months I’m guessing.

The new building will replace the fire damaged structure currently on that site at 79 and 81 7th Avenue.  I remember seeing plans for that site. It’s set to be a condo with a large storefront. As I remember it’s got a red brick loft building look with large windows.

Does anyone know anything else about this new building and the process?

Book Court Expands!

I was in Book Court, the well-stocked and friendly bookstore on Court Street, which has been in existence since 1981, and noticed that there was a huge expansion in process.

I spoke to Henry, the owner, who told me that the storefront used to house a flower shop and that the back was a large green house.

The Book Court owners expanded into what was the green house and built upwards. They now have a one-story 1,600 square foot extension to the bookstore.

I asked Henry what he is going to add to the bookstore inventory because of the expanded space. "Everything," he said. They will probably be adding an African-American Literature and Food Writer’s section. Also all the sections currently downstairs will be moved into the extension.

The downstairs will become office space for Henry and other staff members.

Rabbi Andy Bachman: The Transparent Synagogue

I had the pleasure of attending the Kol Nidre service at Congregation Beth Elohim last night, the eve of Yom Kippur.

Rabbi Andy Bachman delivered a thoughtful and thought-provoking sermon about religion, transparency, and architecture. It was fascinating. The sermon, from which this is an excerpt, is titled: The Transparent Synagogue.

Read the rest at his blog, Ideas (the blog is subtitled: Thoughts
during the day in the life of Rabbi Andy Bachman building community at
Congregation Beth Elohim). I am so glad he put this sermon online (it is just one more element of "the transparent synagogue).

One usually ends a Drash on Yom Kippur with such a wish; but this
year, more than ever, we need to reassure ourselves that in our time of
great uncertainty, the sustainability of our our Tradition and what it
offers us–not just in the piety and seriousness of these Days of Awe
but also in times of trouble in our nation and the world–our Tradition
can shelter us, our People can comfort us, and our Synagogue can
provide something of a structure to use in building our lives anew in
this Season of Renewal.

Structure is a good thing–even for the
most free of spirit. It says everything about our values. Our words are
a structure; our Torah a scaffold of our beliefs and values.

I
married a couple recently–they are both architects, in their early
thirties. When this couple first walked into our Congregation–two
structures as profoundly beautiful as they are in need of repair (like
our great nation) they were in awe. Just as people should be when they
walk into a place that Jacob himself found awesome as he awoke from a
dream and called the spot “Beit Elohim. How awesome is this place and I
did not notice!” They noticed, and said so, and after first thinking
they’d get married in the picnic house in Prospect Park where they had
booked their reception, they opted to build their own Chuppah, get
married in our Chapel, and then go eat in the Park. It was a class
move.

The Chuppah’s was all about transparency–there was a
steel structure which held a modestly opaque silk that was illustrated
and adorned with digitally rendered red and white flowers. It was both
the Chuppah and the “idea of the Chuppah.” I really enjoyed standing
there.

Their Ketubah–the marriage contract–bore the same
qualities. A friend designed it with an abstract illustration. When I
looked at it, I could see a couple, the woods in the Park, or, from
another angle, nothing but pleasant execution of drawing skill. The
heading was the Hebrew date, rendered in traditional language, followed
by their own uniquely written vows to one another. And at the end they
had declared their union to be a “valid acquisition of one another.”
That notion is taken directly from the Talmud–though in Traditional
Judaism, only the man acquires the woman. Here, their mutual
acquisition, their commitment to one another, to their shared values,
and to the Jewish Tradition, was all part of the transaction.

For
me, the fascination and pride in this encounter is two-fold. One, the
overall engagement with the Tradition. I admit it’s my line of work but
hey, that’s a good thing. Two, is the fact that one member of this
couple grew up as a relatively unaffiliated Reform Jew and the other
member of the couple is not Jewish. But Judaism and the structures of
Judaism, the infrastructure of Judaism, the architecture of Judaism,
not only speaks loudly and to the hearts of such seekers but provides
the foundation upon which these people have begun to design and
construct their lives. But we know that–that’s why we’re here. We’ve
had the date circled in our calendar for a long time. Notwithstanding
my friend Allen, who called me today from LA and when I said I couldn’t
talk too long because I was preparing for Yom Kippur, he joked, “but
that’s not for six months!” It reminds me of the actor Jeffrey Tambor’s
joke on Garry Shandling’s Larry Sanders show a few years back. When
being interviewed about his desire to study Judaism more seriously with
his rabbi (whom he had a big crush on) Tambor’s character, Hank
Kingsley was asked if he observed Judaism. “The major holidays,” he
offered. “Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and the 4th of July.’”) Even for
those most “outside” the fold, the structure remains.

Our two
buildings here at Beth Elohim were constructed at the dawn of the
twentieth century. And this sanctuary still has a foot firmly planted
in the 19th century to be sure. Around Grand Army Plaza, next to our
neighbor Union Temple, the architect Richard Meier is completing a
decidedly twenty-first century building made of glass and white steel,
a paragon of transparency, constructed on the principles, as he put it,
of Louis Kahn’s tradition of the “architecture of occasion.” Meier says
that such buildings “encourage public gatherings and contemplation,
inspire creativity, give pleasure, and infuse both visitors and
occupants with a sense of event.”

“Encourage public gatherings
and contemplation, inspire creativity, give pleasure, and infuse both
visitors and occupants with a sense of event.”

Sounds like a great mission for a synagogue and a great reason to be Jewish.

It’s
a sign of our post-modern era and our digital age that we have the
ability to both deconstruct but also rebuild the idea of what it means
to be Jewish while at the same time holding on to what we firmly
believe are the Eternal Values of Jewishness and Judaism. This is the
adaptability factor–a quality all good historians credit for Judaism’s
survival.

Transparency means something today. We are hearing
calls for it in government, in how our schools are run, in business
(God knows we need it especially in business) and in religious life as
well. It seems to be a standard now by which people assess and judge
their affiliations. A century ago the Rabbi was rather distant and
opaque. He stood upon this Bimah, high above and far removed from the
people below. In the sixties that began to change with the shift toward
greater folkiness and proximal nearness. Rabbi Sack was to most, Rabbi
Sack. Rabbi Weider was to most, Jerry. That says alot about a
generational shift toward accessibility, further democratization of the
Tradition, and an intimacy that served as a counter-weight to the
distant and fear-inspiring models of leadership from of old.

Oct 15,17,18: Woyzeck with Music by Nick Cave

At BAM this weekend: Woyzeck By Georg Büchner with music by Nick Cave. Performed by Vesturport and The City Theatre and directed by Gísli Örn Gardarsson. Sounds interesting.

A
man thrashes violently in a gigantic water tank, his limbs akimbo, his
face a mask of sheer terror. Welcome to Woyzeck’s world as imagined by
Iceland’s breakout actor/director Gísli Örn Gardarsson—a place that,
thanks to the hyper-athletic cast, explodes with energy. Set to a
rollicking score by cult rock legend Nick Cave and The Dirty Three’s
violinist Warren Ellis, this is a Woyzeck for the angst-ridden
21st-century, a stunningly visceral take on Georg Büchner’s classic
tale of honorable intentions gone tragically wrong.

Frantic to
support his mistress and her young son, Woyzeck succumbs to a series of
gruesome scientific experiments which only increases his mounting
paranoia and fear that his Marie is having an affair. She is, of
course, with the Drum Major, a charismatic sadist who swings menacingly
from a trapeze, baiting and beating the hapless Woyzeck. The
black-cloaked chorus intones forebodingly, bearing witness to all that
unfolds. It’s too much. Woyzeck is pushed to the brink and, thanks to
Gardarsson and his intrepid company, we go along—mesmerized and
breathless—to the inevitable, watery finale.

The Where and When

October 15, 17, 18 at 7:30 p.m.
BAM’s Howard Gilman Opera House
Running time: 90min, no intermission
Ticket: $20, 35, 45, 60

The Oh-So-Prolific-One: Leon Freilich/Verse Responder

BAILOUTS

I think that I shall never see
A bailout that will work for me.

A bailout that brings quick cessation
To rowdy market dislocation.

A bailout whose terms are meant to ease
Through Treasury securities.

A bailout that’ll make no bones
About absorbing subprime loans.

A bailout whose provisions are quellers
Of some misdeeds by shark-short-sellers.

Of course, despite the sunny mailouts,
Only fatcats gain from bailouts.

Joyce Says: There Are Spots in Public Pre-K Now

Joyce Szuflita, who runs the blog, My Sidewalk Chalk, has this good news to share for those looking for a spot  in a public Pre-K programs NOW.

That Joyce, she is a major resource for educational info of all kinds. Check out her highly informative blog. While you’re over there you can read about the Brooklyn Prospect Charter School.

The DOE announced that there are a few spots left in public pre-Ks for 
this fall. All children who are 4 years old by Dec. 31 are eligible 
to enroll in a UPK program. The deadline to enroll is Oct. 31.

You can  go to the DOE UPK information page to get availability by District 
and to find out about enrollment. The list says that Agnes Humphrey 
may have full day seats, PS 38 may have full day seats, PS 130 may 
have am and pm, and PS 131 may have pm. There are also CBO’s that may 
have spots.

http://schools.nyc.gov/ChoicesEnrollment/PreK/default.htm
Joyce Szuflita

Just 1 More Week to See Reinventing Grand Army Plaza: Go!

The Design Trust for Public Space, sponsors of the exhibit Reinventing Grand Army Plaza, have announced the People’s Choice Award for their scheme, "Canopy."

Votes have been tallied and the results are in! A team of four French designers was chosen by exhibit visitors as the winner of the People’s Choice Award for their scheme, "Canopy." This team was also awarded a First Place Prize by the Reinventing Grand Army Plaza Ideas Competition Jury.

"Canopy" proposes a series of pedestrian land bridges that terrace over Flatbush Avenue , which becomes the main north/south vehicle route. Check out images of pedestrians walking over one of these terraces; the roadway is below.

Canopy is currently on view at the Reinventing Grand Army Plaza exhibit, which presents 30 visionary schemes for improving Grand Army Plaza . The last day to see these plans while standing in the heart of Grand Army Plaza is Monday, October 13 – don’t miss this exciting exhibit! The top 30 schemes are also available for viewing online.

Fiasco, One of Brooklyn’s Top Teen Bands, Grows Up

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One of Brooklyn’s top "teen" bands, Fiasco, is set to release an album on IMPOSE Records. Listen to  the a capella version of their song, "Oh You Horny Monster." It’s a knockout (the instrumental is pretty great, too). Sunday, October 12 at 8 p.m. is the all-ages release party at Death by Audio (all details on the bands MySpace page).

The album has already been reviewed by Lost at Sea Magazine:

"With no lyrics, no love songs, and no choruses, Native Canadians is
the type of album to play while driving around smashing the mailboxes
of senior citizens or pissing your name in the snow of some neighbor’s
front lawn, with cheap beer in hand, only to turn around and see your
buddies drive off. At under twenty-two minutes, Native Canadians is as gloriously brief as adolescence and close to being just as furious and fun."

And Pitchfork Media loves their music video:

"Aw, man, I used my lazy ‘lose your lunch’ quip too soon today. Dizzying colors mix with dizzying, combustible guitars– and plenty more fake blood– in this video for Fiasco’s instrumental "Oh You Horny Monster", from the Brooklyn band’s upcoming debut LP, Native Canadians. Like the Ventures covering Rachmaninoff, Fiasco let their guitars buzz and sting, although the drums are more mathematically precise, and the whole thing is more inclined toward herky-jerk tempo changes and volatile outbursts. Director Carlos Charlie Perez concentrates on colorful comic-book graphics and some blood-spattered, motionless dudes, and he also gives us glimpses of a couple of familiar comic-book heroes. If this makes your monster horny, do a better job chaining him under the bed."

Art Obama Raised $46,000 for Obama

On October 3, 2008, Art Obama raised over $46,000 to help drive a Democratic win at the polls in November.  Over $44,000 will be allocated to the Obama Victory Fund; another $2,225 will go to Act Blue, a clearinghouse that distributes funds to House and Senate candidates who will be essential to giving Obama a working majority.   

The auction brought together the work of more than 100 contemporary artists, who passionately believe  that we must change course if our democracy is to survive.  Artists answered the call without hesitation and it is the quality of their work, above all else, that enabled us to reach our goal.

Kudos to the Art Obama auction committee:

David Konigsberg
Hovey Brock
Hugh Crawford
Cynthia Flynt
Julian Jackson
Kimberly Maier
Terry Mainord
Peg Patterson
Margaret Seiler

Serving Park Slope and Beyond