BROOKLYN BLOGFEST: TODAY’S THE DAY

The Blogfest is tonight! Those who plan to attend please arrive promptly. Over 100 people have RSVPed. They will be given preference for entry if they show up. At 8:05, those who didn’t RSVP will be allowed in. Sorry to have to do it this way, but it’s a small space and we can’t allow in more than a certain number.

The program will begin at 8:20 or so. Here is the tentative program. There will be plenty of time to meet and greet your favorite Brooklyn Bloggers.

Welcome: Louise Crawford (OTBKB)
Rabbi Andy Bachman (Notes)
Outside.In
Lumi Michelle Rolley (No Land Grab)
Robert Guskind (Gowanus lounge)
Jonathan Butler (Brownstoner)
Norman Oder (Atlantic Yards Report)
Eleanor Traubman (Creative Times)
Open-mic shout-out for new blogs
After-party sponsored by Partida Tequila

SECOND STREET CAFE EXPOSED

Second Street Cafe spent much of Tuesday without a front wall — therby exposing the renovation going on within.

They must be spending a pretty penny on this gut reno. Off with the wall art, off with the front windows, off with the floors, the walls, the everything.

Looks like they’re completely rebuilding. Well, it’s been ten years. Time for a change.

OTBKB LECTURES AT BARUCH COLLEGE

OTBKB delivered a guest lecture at Baruch College about neighborhood blogging to two classes of undergraduate journalism majors.

She has this to report: the students were very interested and they asked good questions. Quite a few seemed to have personal blogs. Some even asked about advertising and building a readership. Many seemed to appreciate the interactive aspect of blogging and enjoy commenting on their classmate’s blog posts.

These classes, of mostly black and hispanic college students, have been developing a class blog. Students are required to post from their neighborhoods all over the city.

OTBKB’s prognosis: look out for a whole bunch of interesting neighborhood blogs from neighborhoods that are now underepresented by blogging. These bright and very engaged kids have great stories to tell and are learning how to tell them. It may be a while because these kids are busy with course work and college life. But in the future…

Professor Bridgett Davis, a Park Slope resident and PS 321 parent, was recently honored for "excellence in education"  by the New York
Association of Black Journalists. She invited OTBKB to come to the college after overhearing her discuss blogging with Bklynmama at Sweet Melissa’s in Park Slope. Clearly, she is excited by the challenge of introducing blogging to her students.

Professor Davis and her colleagues are trying to instill journalistic principles of ethics and credibility into the blogging process. They understand that blogs and citizen blogging are the wave of the future. But they want to insure that it’s not at the expense of journalistic professionalism and craft.

I’m not sure if their class blog is open to the public. I will find out and let you know.

PROMINENT PARK SLOPERS HOST BBQ FOR BILL DiBLASIO

Neighborhood powerhouse Kim Maier may be one of the most important people in Park Slope. As director of The Old Stone House, she’s responsible for turning that small museum into a hotbed of  cultural and educational events. Her Summer Arts Festival, about to begin its second season, brings movies, Shakespeare and blues to JJ Byrne Park.

Kim’s a mover and a shaker all right. An active PTA member at MS 51 and PS 321 (at one time) she knows everybody and is a great connector of people and ideas.

Know Kim. Know Park Slope.

Now Kim is teaming up with Mindy Goldstein, another neigborhood powerhouse, people connector and advocate for special needs children, to host a BBQ for city councilmember, Bill DiBlasio. There is no minimum contribution to attend, but attendees are asked to bring their check books and use them. They sent this email this morning…

Mindy Goldstein & Kim Maier invite you to join them at a Barbeque for Bill
Sunday, May 20, 2007
5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

For more information and to RSVP by May 16 contact Kim at 718-788-1281 or email her at kmaier@sprynet.com

About Councilman Bill deBlasio:

Bill deBlasio was elected to the New York City Council in 2001, and overwhelmingly re-elected in 2003 and 2005. He has been a terrific supporter of education and parks, much to the benefit of our community. Please join us to help support Bill as he begins planning for 2009.

HELP SAVE ENGINE 204: RALLY MAY 15 AT CITY HALL

A friend emailed me about this:

HELP SAVE ENGINE 204(299 Degraw St.)

Without your help this historical building could be lost forever!

Join your neighbors and City Councilmember Bill de Blasio on the steps of City Hall to protest the sale of the former Engine Company. Ask the City Council to send the application back to the City Planning Commission and demand that it stay in city hands.

Date: May 15th, 2007
Time: 12:30PM
Location: Steps of City Hall (R to City Hall Stop)
Contact: Tom Gray 718-854-9791 or Tagray1@gmail.com


 

BIKE LANE DRAMA AT COMMUNITY BOARD 6: SEE THE VIDEO

Streetsblog is covering the continuing drama about the 9th Street’s proposed bike lane. There’s there’s even a video of an executive member of Community Board 6 who is dead set against a bike lane over there.

"First off, please accept my apologies for continuing to torture you
with the intensely parochial drama taking place on Park Slope’s 9th
Street. I justify all of this coverage by imagining that this story may
be useful for advocates working towards Livable Streets goals in other
neighborhoods.

For those who are just coming in to the story, a few weeks ago the Department of Transportation put forward a thoughtful, responsive and well-designed "Road Diet" plan
for Park Slope’s dangerous, crash-prone 9th Street. Sadly, a rather
well organized group of residents led by a Community Board 6 executive
committee member named Robert Levine has set out to kill the plan (or,
at least, get rid of the bike lane portion of it)."

TOMORROW: THE BROOKLYN BLOGFEST

Blogfest_3  The  Brooklyn Blogfest. is TOMORROW: Thursday, May 10th at 8 p.m.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Only 110 people can fit in the Old Stone
House. A seat will be held for everyone who has RSVPed until 8:05. Your
name will be on the list at the door. After that, we will let everyone
in until we hit the magic number. The best bet is to arrive early.

Sponsored by Partida Tequila, a world famous mixologist will be on hand to make the Partida Margaria with 100% organic Agave nectar.

More info: Go to the Blogfest’s blog.

Location: The Old Stone House in Park Slope on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.
Contact: 718-288-4290

I ATE LIKE A BONOBO APE YESTERDAY

Really. I had lunch at Bonobo’s, a raw food lunch spot, on 23rd Street east of Broadway in Manhattan, that is named for the Bonobo ape.

Bonobo apes are the closest to humans of all the great apes, They  live in Africa and are an endangered species. They are very healthy and live long lives, dying from old age, accidents or predator. Their diet is predominantly raw, wild and plant based: fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds. I had tahini pate with beans, nuts, seeds, carrots, and cabbage, rolled into five small nori rolls. It was delicious and I felt good all day.

All food is served in the most healthful delicious and nutritious manner with live enzymes intact as Mother Nature intended.  All vitamins, minerals and other food components are not changed by heat. We always try to serve tastier and more healthful Organic and naturally grown foods from earth-friendly natural mineral rich soil. Our food is free from toxic chemicals. We support local farmers.  Appropriate nuts and seeds are soaked or sprouted to aid digestion and increase nutritional value. We do not add any processed cooked fats, salt or sugar to any of our food. We use natural healthful sweeteners.  Our "salt" is used sparingly and is Celtic Sea Salt or specially filtered Sea Water with live ionic full spectrum minerals from whence we came.  There is no cholesterol nor harmful heated fat in any of our food.  All fat in our foods has been put there by Nature and is needed by our bodies. Bonobo’s food has an abundance of fully assimilable nutritional components such as protein and calcium.  Everything is harmonious with our bodies. Since most food choices are made from social habit, we suggest being adventurous and trying new things.

2 MORE DAYS UNTIL THE BLOGFEST

Blogfest_3Just 2 MORE DAYS  until the Brooklyn Blogfest. on Thursday, May 10th at 8 p.m.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Only 110 people can fit in the Old Stone House. A seat will be held for everyone who has RSVPed until 8:05. Your name will be on the list at the door. After that, we will let everyone in until we hit the magic number. The best bet is to arrive early.

Sponsored by Partida Tequila, a world famous mixologist will be on hand to make the Partida Margaria with 100% organic Agave nectar.

More info: Go to the Blogfest’s blog.

Location: The Old Stone House in Park Slope on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.
Contact: 718-288-4290

COMMUNITY LIAISONS TO ADDRESS ATLANTIC YARDS CONSTRUCTION CONCERNS

This from New York 1:

Less than two weeks after a partial
building collapse, officials announce plans to hire community liaisons
to address neighborhood concerns about work on the controversial
Atlantic Yards project.

The Empire State Development Corporation says it wants to "ensure
that residents remain in the loop, and that community concerns receive
proper attention" as developer Bruce Ratner moves forward with plans to
build a series of office and apartment towers, and a basketball arena
for the Nets.

The state also says Ratner will bring in a representative to
oversee demolition and construction on the $4.2 billion high-rise
project in Prospect Heights.

On April 26th, a 200-foot parapet came crashing down on cars parked
in front of one of the buildings being prepared for demolition.The
accident fueled calls from neighborhood activists to shut down the
entire project.

            
            
       
   
 
 

BROOKLYN BOOK FEST GALA SEPT 15 WILL HONOR PAUL AUSTER

I didn’t go to the Brooklyn Book Festival press conference last Friday night but I did get the lowdown from The Book Standard. The festival will honor OTBKB fave, Paul Auster.

Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn Borough President, made several announcements on Friday about the second annual Brooklyn Book Festival,
which will be held on Sept. 16 at Borough Hall in Brooklyn. The
festival will again have several outdoor stages, indoor reading rooms
and Young Authors programming, including a teen writing contest.
Markowitz also announced that legendary Brooklyn author Paul Auster
would be honored at the Festival Gala on Sept. 15.

 
Johnny Temple, the publisher of Akashic Books and the
chair of the Brooklyn Literary Council, also announced several authors
who are confirmed for the event, including Neal Pollack, Paula Fox,
Myla Goldberg, Colson Whitehead, Alesia Valdez-Rodriguez, Uzodinma
Iweala, George Packer, Mo Willems and A.M Homes.

BLOGS: ALTERNATIVE TO SKIMPY MAINSTREAM COVERAGE OF ATLANTIC YARDS

Atlantic Yards Report surveys Atlantic Yards coverage and concludes that the action is in the blogosphere if you want to know what’s really going on. Thanks to No Land Grab for bringing AYR’s story to my attention.

But there are lessons from “the battle of Washington Square,” notably the availability of sympathetic and analytical media, as argued by architectural historian Robert Fishman, in a presentation 3/10/06 and a chapter in the new book, Robert Moses and the Modern City.

The Village Voice was key to the battle. Today, blogs serve an similar function in the Atlantic Yards debate, which has gotten spotty coverage in the mainstream press . (I contend that Prospect Heights, not Clinton Hill, is the “bloggiest” neighborhood, mostly because of AY.)

The “battle of Washington Square” was not merely a key point of Moses’s career, it was a watershed in New York City history and American urbanism. It was then that what now seem to be Jacobsian commonplaces–the primacy of diverse neighborhoods, an orientation to pedestrians, a reliance on mass transit, and the importance of public space–were articulated.

Without the blogs, the story wouldn’t be advanced, the archive wouldn’t exist, and reporters and researchers would have trouble exploring the history of Atlantic Yards. We’ve provided an alternative to reliance on flawed mainstream coverage. (Who covered the epic hearing Thursday in the lawsuit over the Atlantic Yards environmental review? Nobody from a daily.)

3 MORE DAYS UNTIL THE BLOGFEST

JUST 3 MORE DAYS until the Brooklyn Blogfest. on Thursday, May 10th at 8 p.m.

This event is OPEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC.

Volunteers are needed for: set-up, registration of participants, nametag table, and clean-up. You will not miss any of the program. Email: Louise_crawford@yahoo.com

List of speakers: Gowanus Lounge, Brownstoner, Streetsblog, Outside.In, Creative TImes, No Land Grab/Atlantic Yards Report, Rabbi Andy Bachman

Sponsored by Partida Tequila, a world famous mixologist will be on hand to make the Partida Margaria with 100% organic Agave nectar.

More info: Go to the Blogfest’s blog.

Location: The Old Stone House in Park Slope on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.
Contact: 718-288-4290

MORE ABOUT TOBY:

A message from Stephen and Mookie, parents of Toby who has neuroblastoma. For ways that you can help, go to their blog.

hello everyone, we are back in the hospital since friday evening,
because of a fever and slowly readjusting to life on the inside. friday
at home was actually lovely… stephen built a lego train track that
enticed toby to play on the rug for the first time in many days. saba
was able to elicit some belly laughs and randy came over for some quick
songs. but then it was back to mskcc and admission through the urgent
care center where toby was immediately hooked up to iv antibiotics to
treat a possible infection.

while we were waiting for a bed to
open up on the 9th floor we found a roll of medical tape and toby taped
up his hospital bed from side to side. one of the nurses also brought
in a small craft kit with four tiny paint pots and a white plastic
fish. we covered toby’s lap with a sheet and he jackson-pollacked the
fish with interest and intent.

stephen also discovered that his
itunes stash on the computer is a great distraction for toby. since
that night mommy and daddy have danced around toby’s bed to booker t
while toby grooves lying down. it’s a new activity, one born of our new
reality. so far it works amazingly well.

toby spends most of his
days in bed, with short forays to the playroom and around the ward. we
want him to be up and about as much as possible, but he tires quickly.
so we’re trying to come up with ways to make the hospital interesting
beyond the constant beckoning call of tv. over the weekend toby did his
"homework" on the computer, typing pages of letters, increasing the
font size and cycling through the pages like a stop-motion animation.

so
we’re in until toby’s absolute neutrophil count rises to 500, which may
take a few days. i hope that we’ll have a tiny window to return home
before his next cycle of chemo starts. we are currently at day 14, with
the next treatment scheduled to start on or about day 21. however, the
protocol is aggressive, so if the docs deem he is ready to start before
day 21, we will.

toby has now lost 8 lbs, down to 36 lbs. for
the last few days his mouth and throat were filled with sores (a side
effect of chemo) so he was unable to eat much of anything. the
nutrition staff suggests liquid foods during this time, but toby tanked
out on icecream and jello pretty quickly. yesterday out of the blue he
announced that he wanted chips and stephen ran out to get cheetos,
pringles, anything with taste and salt. i couldn’t believe that his
poor swollen mouth could handle those intense flavors but he relished
the jolt of flavor. last night he actually ate 4 small bites of pizza,
so we might have a few days of real eating before the 2nd cycle.

toby
still looks beautiful, with his new short cut and lingering suntan from
jamaica. he is the most delicious little boy. the long road ahead seems
cruel and unfair. we try to take it day by day. my tears are short,
fierce and usually come in the early morning, at the moments between
sleep and wakefulness, when i remember our old life and am confronted
with the new.

uncle greg drove all the way from
michigan, arriving late on saturday night after a detour to queens. we
are so grateful to have him here for the week. yoni is doing okay, very
busy with sports on the weekends and school the rest of the time.
yesterday we had a normal dinner together and right now he’s sitting
next to me having breakfast.

a totally inadequate thank you to
all of you for your continued and amazing support and love. the food,
visits, words, errands, energy, gifts and prayers are so, so important
to us. we have just started on this journey together.

DEPT OF EDUCATION DROPS PLANS TO PLACE ARABIC SCHOOL IN PS 282

This from the New York Times.

The city’s Department of Education abandoned plans yesterday to
place the Khalil Gibran International Academy, a fledgling public
school that is to be devoted to the study of the Arabic language and
culture, in the same building in Park Slope, Brooklyn, that houses
Public School 282.

Instead, the department will try to
open the Khalil Gibran school in September in another building.
Department officials declined to comment on the locations being
considered.

The move comes after a campaign against the school by
parents of children at P.S. 282, who for months have barraged Schools
Chancellor Joel I. Klein’s
office with e-mail messages and protested outside department
headquarters over the plans for the two schools to share a building.

The
parents said they were worried about losing classroom space and
activities to accommodate the Khalil Gibran school. In recent weeks,
some columnists in The New York Sun joined the battle, with accusations
that the school was a madrassa, which teaches the Koran, a claim the
department dismissed.

      

MORE ABOUT TOBY: YOU CAN HELP

P1010347 Toby has  neuroblastoma, a very serious illness. He lives in park Slope with his parents and they are reaching out to the community for help in finding a new place to live. Visit their website for more information and ways you can be of help.

Neuroblastoma is a relatively rare cancer of
the sympathetic nervous system — a nerve network that carries messages
from the brain throughout the body. Each year about 600 children in the
United States will develop neuroblastoma. Generally developing in young
children, it accounts for half of all malignancies in infants. These
solid tumors, which take the form of a lump or mass, commonly begin in
one of the adrenal glands, though they can also develop in nerve
tissues in the neck, chest, abdomen, or pelvis. The adrenal glands,
located above the kidneys, are specialized glands that release
hormones which maintain blood pressure and respond to stress.

Toby’s family needs to find a new apartment to live in. They can’t stay in their current apartment due to environmental factors that are dangerous to Toby. Email louise_crawford@yahoo.com or leave a comment and I will get info to them. There  are links on Toby’s website about ways that you can help Toby.

Toby made it home earlier this week. Initially, the transition back to home was a difficult one. Toby was particularly fussy, but today he had a better day. He showed shades of himself, playing on the carpet & engaging those around him.

This evening Toby was readmitted to Sloan because of a fever. As expected, his blood "counts" have bottomed out. Toby’s white blood cells & his ANC are zero, & for this reason, he’s unable to mount a significant response to infection (i.e., fever) & needs i.v. antibiotics.

Tomorrow, Toby’s saba & savta (grandparents) return to Israel. They provided moral support, cooked, cleaned, & shopped. They will surely be missed. Greg, Toby’s uncle, arrives tomorrow for the week.

On the homefront, Mooki & Stephen are still searching for a new apartment. If any of you have any news or suggestions, please let Mooki & Stephen know.

Finally, Fran, Heather, & Carie met today to make sure that everyone’s efforts to help out are maximized & coordinated.

Thank you all.

STOOPENDOUS: SLOPE SOLSTICE CELEBRATION ON JUNE 23rd

Planners are hard at work organizing Stoopendous, another great event from the Park Slope Civic Council, the folks that bring you the Halloween Parade and the House Tour.

In the days and weeks ahead, be on the lookout for flyers, postcards, and posters about Stoopendous, celebration of the summer solstice in Park Slope on Saturday June 23, 2007

Stay tuned for the launch of Stoopendous.org, where there will be lots of how-to information about making Stoopendous happen on your block.

There will also be  information about the event at the Park Slope Civic Council’s table at Seventh Heaven.

Celebrate the beginning of summer with your neighbors and friends on the stoops and sidewalks of Park Slope.

Mark the day with a simple, fun event on your block or in your building. Morning, afternoon, or evening: whatever time works for you. Plan a stoop sale, a BBQ, a hopscotch tournament, a solstice teach-in, a talent show, an art activity, a sidewalk café.

At sundown (8:31 p.m.) join the All-Slope-Solstice Shout-Out, a chance to make a lot of joyful noise. Blow a kazoo, a whistle, bang on some pots and pans, or play an instrument.
.
For how-to information, contact Louise Crawford at 718-857-5842 or louisecrawford@gmail.com

LA DIVINA COMMEDIA

La Divina Commedia
Music and Words
Marathon Reading of Selections from Dante’s
Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso
Sunday, 4 pm
May 6, 2007

St. Augustine Roman Catholic Church
116 Sixth Avenue
Park Slope Brooklyn
Admission: Free

Come hear La Divina Commedia come alive, as a various, lively and distinguished ensemble comprised of actors, musicians, poets,
scholars and others gather to celebrate Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso in a the splendid St. Augustine’s Roman Catholic Church (Parfitt Brothers design)
which The Brooklyn Eagle as “one of the finest examples of Gothic architecture in the country.”

SUBWAY: 2 or 3 IRT to Bergen Street, walk two blocks to 6th Ave. and Park Place.
or Q or B IND to Seventh Ave, walk 1.5 blocks on Park Place.

ON MOTHER’S DAY: BE A STANDING WOMAN

Join Standing Women, a group of women who are literally taking a stand on Mother’s Day. And they are asking others to stand with them for five minutes of silence at 1 p.m. local time on May 13th, 2007. Check out the Standing Women website where there’s more information, a blog, a video, translations of their message into many languages, and more.

We are standing for the world’s children and grandchildren and for the seven generations beyond them. We dream of a world where all children have safe drinking water, clean air to breathe and enough food to eat.  A world where they have access to a basic education to develop their minds and healthcare to nurture  their growing bodies. A world where they have a warm, safe and loving place to call home. A world where they don’t live in fear of violence — in their home, their neighborhood, their school or in their world. This is the world of which we dream. This is the cause for which we stand.

Please stand with us for five minutes of silence at 1 p.m. your local time on May 13, 2007, in your local park, school yard, gathering place, or any place you deem appropriate, to signify your agreement with the statement below. 

We ask you to invite the men who you care about to join you.  We ask that you bring bells to ring at 1 p.m. to signify the beginning of the five minutes of silence and to ring again to signify the end of the period of silence. 

During the silence, please think about what you individually and we collectively can do to attain this world.  If you need to sit rather than stand, please feel free to do so.  Afterwards, hopefully you and your loved ones can talk together about how we can bring about this world.

5 MORE DAYS UNTIL THE BLOGFEST: HELPERS NEEDED

Blogfest_3JUST 5 MORE DAYS  until the Brooklyn Blogfest. on Thursday, May 10th at 8 p.m.

This event is OPEN TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC.

Volunteers are needed for: set-up, registration of participants, nametag table, and clean-up. You will not miss any of the program. Email: Louise_crawford@yahoo.com

List of speakers: Gowanus Lounge, Brownstoner, Streetsblog, Outside.In, Creative TImes, No Land Grab/Atlantic Yards Report, Rabbi Andy Bachman

Sponsored by Partida Tequila, a world famous mixologist will be on hand to make the Partida Margaria with 100% organic Agave nectar.

More info: Go to the Blogfest’s blog.

Location: The Old Stone House in Park Slope on Fifth Avenue between 3rd and 4th Streets.
Contact: 718-288-4290

TOBY AND HIS FAMILY NEED A NEW APARTMENT: NOW!

Gse_multipart2828_3
A Brooklyn family with a sick child named Toby is in desperate need of an apartment. Immediately. If you or anyone you know can help them please email: Mooki.Saltzman@ujc.org

Here’s what she wrote to me: "I’m writing to ask for your help. i’m the mom of toby, see below.
i was hoping you could post a message on your blog to get the word out about our apt search. please visit toby’s page at www.tobypannone.blogspot.com for updates and info.

.

Serving Park Slope and Beyond