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

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.

ONLY THE BLOG LINKS

Marty’s wife thinks he’s gonna run (NY Daily News)

Thanks for sweeping up the garbage. It was GROSS! (Brooklyn Junction)

Another hearing about Coney Island’s future (NY 1)

Extensive reporting on Coney Island hearing (Kinetic Carnival)

This much is CLEAR in Coney Island (Gowanus Lounge)

Wednesday at 7:30 : Brooklyn Was Mine Reading at Slope Barnes and Noble (Brooklyn Based)

How to make the best hot chocolate (Eat, Drink, Memory)

A Successful Weekend of Reuse and Recycling here in Brooklyn (Sustainable Flatbush)

Trouble at Long Island College Hospital? (McBrooklyn)

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.

BROOKLYN BLOGADE (AND WAFFLES): JANUARY 20TH

The next Brooklyn Blogade is being organized by Robin Lesterhead of Clinton Hill Blog. This bloggy event is on January 20th at 11 am at the Frank White Cafe + Gallery.

Guess what: Not only will there be bloggers galore but even better there will be HOT WAFFLES WITH FRESH TOPPINGS!

The Brooklyn Blogades are a monthly meet and greet for bloggers, blog readers, and people who are thinking about becoming bloggers. It’s a great opportunity to network and to learn a thing or two about blogging. It’s also a great way to learn about new blogs.

Yummy Belgian waffles served with your choice of fresh fruit toppings:
–strawberries
–bananas
–mango
–apples n cinnamon
–blueberries
–whipped cream
–chocolate/caramel sauce
–pure maple syrup

waffles w/butter/syrup $4.50
waffles + toppings for $6

LOCATION: Frank White Cafe + Gallery, 936 Atlantic Ave (at
St. James).

RSVP by Friday Jan 11 to robin.lester@gmail.com

LIVE HD OPERA AND BRUNCH AT BAM

BAM Rose Cinema will present the Metropolitan Opera’s “groundbreaking series of live, high-definition performance transmissions to movie theaters around the world.”

This year, Metropolitan Opera: Live in HD will reach more than a million people worldwide, and BAM participates in this second season with eight transmissions at BAM Rose Cinemas.

January 12 1:30 Macbeth

January 26th 1:30 Hansel and Gretel

February 16 at 1 p.m. Manon and Lescaut

March 15 at 1:30 Peter Grimes

March 22 at 12:30 Triston and Isolde

April 5 at 1:30 La Boheme

April 26 at 1:30 La Fille du Regiment

Tickets
$22 for Screening ($20 for BAM members)
$42 for Brunch and Screening ($40 for BAM members)
All screenings take place at BAM Rose Cinemas. Brunch takes place in BAMcafé.

NINTH STREET INCIDENT: UPDATE

Throughout the day comments came in from readers about Sunday night’s incident on 9th Street. Here’s what readers wrote in. No one seemed to know what happened.

–Watched this out my bedroom window all night…friends and relatives were pleading with the man inside over a block-rocking loudspeaker until at least 3 a.m. There were dogs and SWAT guys on the roof. No sign of the outcome when I left for work this morning. Scary stuff on a very quiet street!

–Yeah, I also live across the street. It was pretty scary. From the announcements over the loudspeaker, it seemed like this was a possible suicide attempt. At one point, they told him to take the gun out of his mouth. They were pleading with him most of the night to come to the window just to let them know he was ok and to drop the gun out the window. Was woken up again around 1:30 a.m. or so to hear them saying that his mother, father and sister were there. They had rigged this phone in a bucket outside his window and were asking to reach into the bucket and call them. I don’t know how it ended. I woke up this morning at 6:30 a.m. and the street was all clear. I would be very curious to find out what happened; I was just really sad to hear this might be a suicide attempt. I hope it all worked out ok.

–does anyone know anything more about this and how it ended? the swat team was on my roof last night – pretty unnerving.

Brooklyn Skeptic had this to add on their blog:

The incident was resolved around 4:30am, when they managed to get Dave away from the building peacefully. The entire block was surrounded in police tape. Anyone trying to get home after 8pm was forced to either find somewhere else to stay, or wait until the standoff was over. My roommates were not allowed to leave our apartment. I was not allowed to get into it.

Someone on Park SLope Parents had this to say:

There is a report on Gothamist. I live across the
street. I think the basics are that he got drunk,
there was a domestic dispute, there were shots fired,
and he refused to come out of the apartment. I did
hear a shot, and the loud speaker with the negotiator
until like 5:30 this morning. Very hard to sleep, it
was right outside my window. Dogs barking, SWAT,
etc

.

CONCERT THIS SUNDAY AT BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY

Looking for a totally civilized, inspiring, and entertaining thing to do next Sunday afternoon? Check this out. I just got this email about event at the Brooklyn Public Library on January 13th at 4 p.m.

Peter Weitzner is curating a Chamber Music series at the
Brooklyn Public Library’s new auditorium. If you haven’t been there
yet, it’s a great space that’s still Park Slope’s best kept
secret. The programs being offered are pretty impressive. Jonathan
Lethem was there a couple of weeks ago. Russell Banks will be there
on Feb. 1 and there is a complete roster of really great music
happening every weekend.

The first concert in Peter’s series will be next Sunday, January 13
at 4 p.m. It will be a concert of flute and harpsichord music with
artists Susan Rotholz (flute) and Kenneth Cooper (harpsichord), both
world renowned musicians who always have great rapport with their
audiences.

ONLY THE BLOG LINKS

Register to vote in presidential February 5th Primary: Deadline this week (Gowanus Lounge)

Hello there: New Blog on the Block (Brooklyn Optimist)

Scaffolding at Congregation Beth Elohim: Structural improvements in the works (Andy Bachman)

The Grammar Gestapo: Freedom for Spellers (Brooklynometry)

It’s a mad world: New Year’s resolutions (Luna Park Gazette)

American Institute of Architects says: Get rid of Gowanus Expressway (NY Daily News)

Author of “The Sneaky Chef: Simple Strategies for Hiding Healthy Foods in Kids’ Favorite Meals” sues Jerry Seinfeld’s wife, author of “Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food.” (NY Post)

Public hearing on future of Coney Island (NY 1)

Eat, Drink, and Be Literary: Fran Lebowitz is already sold out (BAMCafe)

Devlin had a complicated view of Christmas (Deep in the Heart of Brooklyn)

Jeff Scher ballet in black and white animation: Op Ed Visual Series (NY Times)

She doesn’t make New Year’s Resolutions (Mrs. Cleavage’s Diary)

BLOOMBERG BRINGS JUNIOR’S CHEESE CAKE TO OKLAHOMA BI-PARTISAN FORUM

I was watching WABC News at noon today and saw a shot of Mayor Bloomberg in Oklahoma attending a bipartisan forum at Oklahoma University.

The Mayor looked dapper and casual in a red sweater and he was carrying a box of Junior’s cheese cake into the home of some kind of official. He said something like: "Here’s some very intense cheese cake."

Junior’s Cheese Cake represents Brooklyn all over the country. If not the world.

According to New York 1,
Bloomberg speaking at the forum said that politicians need to find common ground.

"People have stopped working together. Government is dysfunctional;
there’s no collaboration, and congeniality. There’s no working
together. Let’s do what’s right for the country,” said Bloomberg. “I
think there is no accountability. Nobody’s holding themselves
accountable and to the standards of what they promised when they ran
for office. And I think lastly, there is no willingness to focus on big
ideas."

STANDOFF ON 9TH STREET

Just got this tip from a friend about a dangerous situation that started on Sunday night. I’m not sure if it has resolved itself yet. It’s from Gridskipper:

…a man became enraged, intoxicated, and fired a gun in his home on 9th Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues sparking a police standoff. The shooter, a young man named David, apparently lost it after arguing with friends and family. Despite initial fears that he had taken hostages, he is currently holed up in his home alone. The block is swarming with police personnel including a hostage negotiation team, armored trucks, and a bomb squad robot.

NEW BLOG ON THE BLOCK: A YEAR IN THE PARK

What a great idea Crazy Stable has come up with. Her new blog is called Prospect: A Year in the Park. I am looking forward to reading!

Here’s the deal: I hereby commit to walking or cycling in Brooklyn’s magnificent Prospect Park every day for a year, with as few exceptions as humanly possible, and then showing or telling you at least one cool thing I encountered, through this new blog.

Yeah, so what’s the big deal? Lots of people go to the park every day, right? But I don’t. I look at it outside my windows, and then I slink around my big ol’ house, screen-suck at my computer for work or play, take naps, overeat, watch TV, garden, or chug around Brooklyn in the car doing errands. The few times I visit this pastoral treasure on my doorstep, I enter a sort of urban Narnia where just about anything can happen, even the lifting of anxiety and depression, my little demons. And I swear I will come more often (and, being already a bloggeuse, will tell the world of its wonders)–and then I skulk back inside, for more months of turpitude. An entire life could easily pass this way.

WORLD RENOWNED CLASSICAL PERFORMERS AT BROOKLYN LIBRARY

Looking for a totally civilized, inspiring, and entertaining thing to do next Sunday afternoon? Check this out. I just got this email about event at the Brooklyn Public Library on January 13th at 4 p.m.

Peter Weitzner, is curating a Chamber Music series at the
Brooklyn Public Library’s new auditorium. If you haven’t been there
yet, it’s a great space that’s still Park Slope’s best kept
secret. The programs being offered are pretty impressive. Jonathan
Lethem was there a couple of weeks ago. Russell Banks will be there
on Feb. 1 and there is a complete roster of really great music
happening every weekend.

The first concert in Peter’s series will be next Sunday, January 13
at 4 p.m. It will be a concert of flute and harpsichord music with
artists Susan Rotholz (flute) and Kenneth Cooper (harpsichord), both
world renowned musicians who always have great rapport with their
audiences.

WAFEL AND DINGES IN PARK SLOPE

Sunday morning in front of the PS 321 weekend flea market I saw this:  a truck bearing the name Wafel & Dinges. It looked like they were serving Belgian waffles. There was a bit of a line and then I remembered I had no cash on me.

Unlucky me.  The waffles looked delicious and I was hungry.

The company is apparently thinking of making Park Slope a regular stop on its rounds around NYC. Be on the lookout for these tasty looking waffles in a big yellow truck.

Did anyone try them?

Hey, I just found this post on their BLOG from Wednesday January 2nd. They were going to set up in front of Key Food but parked at 2nd Street and Seventh instead. I wonder how long they wre parked there today. Anyone know?

We’ll be back in Park Slope on Sunday, January 6th. Location will be 7th Avenue and Carrol Street (at the Key Foods).

There is only one place in the world where Wafel & Dinges show is better than in Manhattan… Yes…Brooklyn has the record of eating the most waffles in one day. We haven’t heard from Special Envoy Cynthia W. in a while (would she still be hung over from New Years??), but let’s hope she shows up and orchestrates the visit this time as well….

ONLY THE BLOG LINKS

He went to Hawaii and lived to tell the tale (Luna Park Gazette)

Fortune’s Sisters: Adopted in China, best friends in Brooklyn. (City Section)

The Guardian Loves Chris Rock: No Apologies Tour in Britain. (Guardian)

You know those Russo Notary Buildings on Smith Street? They’re about to be demolished. (Gowanus Lounge)

Family of Brooklyn fallen firefighter forgives 6-year-old who started fire. (NY Post)

Student at Brooklyn Urban Assembly School for Law and Justice gets into Hamilton College early decision. (NY Post)

Brookyn sculptor’s work showcased on Gossip Girl (Gridskipper)

Oneupsmanship is getting her down (Saucy Tart)

Steve Buscemi’s Top 10 from the Criterion Collection. (Criterion web page)

A NIGHT TO REMEMBER AT PERCH

The Perch Cafe may not be the easiest place for 100 people to gather to hear acoustic music but it was the site of one heck of a show on Saturday night.

Perch is a long skinny restaurant. In the front there are tables, in the middle a bar and in the back there’s a tiny performance space and seating area.

Twenty people would fit comfortably back there and it’s a great place for poetry readings and kid’s concerts where a small group can lounge around and let there kids run wild.

About 100 people packed the house for a night of music by the leaders of Park Slope’s new teenage acoustic music scene. Boy oh boy is there talent in our midst.

I won’t brag, but Henry Crawford performing solo grabs an audience by its neck—and heart—and won’t let go. Last night he was a tad tired after his earlier Union Hall show with his band Mighty Handful but his performance of original songs and a smattering of covers was hard to shake. Go man go. Knockout song: Uptown Drunks.

Kane Dulaney Balser, performing with a terrific bass player and his brother Luca Balser, just breaks your heart with the beauty and craft of his self-penned songs, his voice, and his virtuosic guitar playing. Knockout song: Bright Angel Trail

Calamus, a trio with two guitars and an upright bass plays a mesh of country, swing, bossa nova and folk rock that was really fun and original. Knockout song: Act Like You Didn’t

Closing the night, was the event’s organizer Lily Konigsberg playing with her Elliott Smith influenced duo Window Sign Language. She commands the stage with a restrained and quiet vocal power that’s razor sharp. She never pushes and yet holds the audience in her thrall with her ultra-melodic, wise and introspective tunes. Knockout song: The Slowest Song. Watch out for them in 2008.

Watch out for all of these kids this year. There will definitely be more of these acoustic shows.

MIGHTY HANDFUL AND CARE BEARS AT UNION HALL

Japanese Television was at Union Hall Saturday afternoon taping a show about Care Bears on Fire, the hotter than hot trio, leaders of Park Slope’s kid core scene. They’ve got a record contract, a CD that’s gotten a lot of press, and one of the band members performs in a Converse television ad.

A crowd began to gather on the steps leading down to Union Hall’s basement performance space at around 1:30 when Care Bears was finishing their sound check and Mighty Handful was getting just started.

The downstair’s space is neon lit and highly atmospheric like a 1950’s union hall. I guess that’s what it was. There’s a full bar for adults and special drinks for kids like Worm Punch and Hot Chocolate.

The room was packed with fans and friends of Mighty Handful when the band began to play at 3 p.m. In the audience, there were also lots of parents and young kids (3-13), who make up the Care Bears audience.

When Mighty Handful’s fans started moshing, some of the parents got agitated and asked them to stop. The kids didn’t seem to mind but some of the really little kids might have gotten trampled by the unbridled rock and roll energy of the dancers.

Mighty Handful, as the name suggests, is a wildly energetic and eclectic mesh of musical influences and styles. The lead singers (Henry Crawford and Jack Ferenz) definitely project a Mick and Keith vibe, as they riff off of one another and sing and move emotively.

While this was their very first gig, the band members are veterans of other bands and there’s a level of comfort when it comes to stage performance. Everyone seemed highly committed and creative. The energy level and chemistry between the band members was intense.

All I can say is this: I was blown away and am very excited about the prospects for this brand new band. Their next show is at the Cake Shop in February.

Care Bears show began at 4 p.m. and the room was stuffed to the gills with their young fans. I had to leave but Hepcat stayed around. He was very impressed and said their punk pop sound is very tight and very professional. He loved the drummer and said that the singer/guitarist really knows what she’s doing.

PS I LOVE YOU GETS ALL NOSTALGIC

Check out this week’s PS I Love You column by OTBKB friend and fave, Wendy Ponte:

Every time I pass by the Barnes & Noble on Seventh Avenue, I remember how I met my boyfriend there. Not the most romantic of meeting spots — I might have preferred the park, or maybe something a more literary like at a reading at the Old Stone House — but nonetheless it was our meeting place and so lovely a moment that the store is inextricably connected to our relationship in my memory.

After 14 years of living here, Park Slope is full of place memories for me — spots that are inextricably attached to a specific event. Around the New Year, I find myself thinking about them even more often.

SMARTMOM GIVES FROM HER WALLET

Here’s this week’s Smartmom from the Brooklyn Paper. No that’s Brooklyn, New York. Not Brooklyn, Iowa.

On Christmas Eve, Smartmom had a nice conversation with Jake, the panhandler who usually stands in front of Ace Supermarket on Seventh Avenue and Berkeley Place.

Jake has a lovely smile and a very pleasant personality. Over the years, he and Smartmom have had many short conversations and she has probably given him hundreds of dollars.

A dollar here, a dollar there, Smartmom gives him money just about every time she sees him.

On the days when she’s low on cash, she crosses the street or makes excuses. “I’ll get you on my way back,” she says fully intending to do so. Usually she doesn’t come back. But Jake doesn’t seem to hold it against her.

In fact, Jake always looks happy to see Smartmom. That may be because she once gave him a $10 bill.

About an hour later he hit her up for more money. “I just gave you $10,” she told Jake somewhat miffed. What an ungrateful so and so, she thought.

“That’s right. Excuse me. Sorry, miss.”

Everyone makes mistakes.

Years ago, Smartmom read an interview with Jake in Stay Free Magazine. In it, he said that he needs $20 a day for food and his room in a flophouse somewhere in Brooklyn. That’s where he sleeps and showers.

But every day without fail, Jake is back on Seventh Avenue, where he’s as much a part of the scenery as the stroller moms, the woman who sells bags made out of kimonos, and the Chinese musician who plays the Erhu in front of Citibank.

Not all panhandlers are as pleasant as Jake. The homeless men who used to sleep on the steps of Old First Reformed Church got on a lot of people’s nerves and caused Old First’s Pastor Daniel Meeter a great deal of tsuris.

“People keep asking why don’t we get rid of them. We can’t. We’ve tried. Believe me, we have tried. They have abused our hospitality, they piss on our building, they leave food around, they leave garbage all over, they play their radio at great volumes,” Meeter wrote on his blog, oldfirst.blogsspot.com.

Meeter tried to help these men, who all allegedly have substance abuse problems, but nothing worked. According to Meeter, they’re still living on the street somewhere.

But at least the steps of his church are free of them.

The police and many in the community believe that generous Park Slopers are the cause of the homeless problem.

“One of the reasons we’re not getting rid of them is because everyone is giving them money.” Officer Nybia Cooper told The Brooklyn Paper.

But are the homeless really that big a problem in Park Slope? For Buddha’s sake, it’s not like the East Village, the Lower East Side, or San Francisco. Indeed, Park Slope has a small group of homeless people who’ve been around for years. They belong here as much as anyone else and have endeared themselves to many in the community.

For some of the same reasons that Park Slope is a red-hot real estate market, it’s a great neighborhood to be homeless in. And like most Park Slopers, the local homeless love to have intense street-side conversations.

There’s the William Burroughs’s look-a-like, who sits in front of Starbucks. Apparently he has an apartment nearby. But he comes out once a month around rent time and asks in a polite whisper if you can spare some change.

There’s the ravaged-looking woman who stands in front of Citibank and the guy who sits on a fruit crate in front of the Apple Tree and always says to the kids, “Don’t forget to read a book.”

If Officer Cooper is right, Smartmom is part of the problem. Yet, she knows she doesn’t have the heart to stop giving Jake or any of these other familiar faces money.

Even Meeter, who had his own homeless problem, admits that giving alms is important — though not necessarily for the reason you’d suspect.

“Giving alms doesn’t solve a problem, especially considering where many panhandlers spend what they get,” he told Smartmom.

“But one gives alms symbolically. When I give alms, I am telling the person I trust him or her, and I don’t care whether he or she deserves it. Giving alms is an act of humility, of honoring the person’s right to demand something of me. Giving alms is a way of saying, We’re in this together.”

Smartmom doesn’t have a problem with these Park Slope regulars, who have been on Seventh Avenue for as long as she has. She does, however, wish that they could get the help they need and improve their lives.

And that’s really the issue. Smartmom wonders if giving Jake money is part of his problem. If she and others like her stopped, would he get a job? Smartmom knows that Jake probably has complicated reasons for living the life he leads. He doesn’t seem to have a substance abuse problem. But then again, maybe he does.

Still, he seems very reliable as he shows up every day and stands in front of Ace or at the Citibank.

In a sense, panhandling is his job. And he does it very well. An unpaid doorman, he’s a good conversationalist, who’s friendly, clean, courteous, and helpful.

The other night, Jake told Smartmom that it would be a tough Christmas because his 95-year-old mother died last month. She lived in South Carolina, where Jake grew up on a farm.

He seemed proud of his rural background and talked a bit about his mom, whom he hasn’t seen in a long time. Smartmom asked if he ever thinks about moving back to South Carolina.

“The farm is long gone,” he said. But he’s really hooked on New York City. “It’s too slow down there,” he told her with a smile. “Too slow.”

Hearing about the death of Jake’s mother made Smartmom sad. But that wasn’t why she gave Jake a $10 bill. She gave it to him because it was Christmas Eve and she wanted to do something special for this man, who always makes her smile.

DO THE MULCH IN PROSPECT PARK TODAY

Come to Prospect Park today and mulch a tree. That’s right, Christmas trees will be ground into wood chips that can be placed in tree pits and gardens. It smells so good and it’s so good for your garden.

Read more here.

MulchFest provides New Yorkers an opportunity to bring their Christmas trees to designated sites where they are ground into wood chips. The chips can then be placed in tree pits and gardens. Parks & Recreation encourages New Yorkers to help the environment and their community by participating in this event.

MulchFest takes place on January 5 & 6, 2008 from 10:00am to 2:00pm. Participants are encouraged to bring bags to take advantage of the free mulch provided.

All lights, ornaments, and decorations must be removed from the trees prior to drop-off    

Participants will be able to take wood chips and/or mulch home from designated chipping sites.

Mulch will not be available at sites marked as "Drop-off Only".

How to Recycle Your Tree if You Miss Mulchfest

The Department of Sanitation will collect for composting clean holiday trees left at the curb from Thursday, January 3 through Wednesday, January 16, 2008. Make sure all lights, ornaments and stands are removed before setting trees at the curb

.

ALL RELIGION DAY AT OLD FIRST IN HONOR OF MLK

The other day I was having my weekly informal chat with Pastor Daniel Meeter at Old First Church and among other things he told me that he was expecting a Buddhist Monk and a Sikh that evening.

They were coming by to check out the sanctuary that will be the site of Old First’s unusual Martin Luther King Day activity.

Meeter has decided to divide the church’s  sanctuary into six separate sections each devoted to a different faith, including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism.

This will enable people to silently pray for peace in their own way side by side.

It’s an inspired idea and a few months ago Meeter told me that he wanted to create a King day event that just wasn’t a whole bunch of people making speeches.

“We’re just trying to find ways that religious people can do something together as American citizens, so that religion doesn’t separate us, but somehow unites us,” Meeter told the Brooklyn Paper.

This unusual event is just one week away. Old First’s all-religion day in honor of Martin Luther King will be on Monday January 21, at the church which is located on Seventh Avenue and Carroll Street.

OSFO’s takes piano lessons with church member Helen Richmond at Old First. That’s when I usually see Pastor Meeter and we our chats, which are  always interesting and insightful. The other day he recited an XJ Kennedy poem to me that I wish I remembered enough to put here. We talked about writing and blogs and ways to reach out to the community. 

As we were leaving, I peeked into the sanctuary and saw the Sikh, Meeter and the Monk in the big sanctuary getting ready for the big day.

It was a sight to behold.   

Serving Park Slope and Beyond