Thursday, September 30, 2010

Black Clergy Ask Police to Help Cut Violent Crime - NYTimes.com

Police Heed Black Clergy And Set Up Panel on Crime
By AL BAKER
Published: September 29, 2010


Prompted by the concerns of black clergy members in crime-plagued sections of central Brooklyn, the New York Police Department has set up a task force aimed at reducing violent crime there, particularly among black people.

The Brooklyn Clergy/N.Y.P.D Task Force was created after clergy members approached the department.

“We’re killing ourselves with black-on-black crime,” Bishop Gerald Seabrooks of the Rehoboth Cathedral said at a news conference on Wednesday with other clergy members and police officers at 1 Police Plaza. “We cannot blame it on the police or on any other groups.”

He said religious leaders wanted to send a message “that we want to stop homicide, violence and shootings of any kind of people, but especially we want to speak out on black-on-black shooting — hurting, harming or endangering one another.”

Black Clergy Ask Police to Help Cut Violent Crime - NYTimes.com.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Police Mum at Stop-and-Frisk Hearing - NYTimes.com

At Council Hearing on Stop-and-Frisk Policy, the Police Stay Silent
By RAY RIVERA
Published: September 28, 2010


A City Council hearing on the New York Police Department’s use of its controversial “stop, question and frisk” policy in public housing became a one-sided affair on Tuesday, after police and housing officials declined to testify.

Police Mum at Stop-and-Frisk Hearing - NYTimes.com.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

NYC - Looking Inward for Solutions to Gun Violence - NYTimes.com

In the Bronx, Looking in the Mirror for Blame, and Solutions, on Gun Violence
By CLYDE HABERMAN

The older woman sitting in church was fed up with pretty much everyone — the politicians, the clergy, the police, the district attorneys — but most of all with the gun-slinging young men who act as if the streets of the Bronx were the streets of Laredo.

“They can’t be controlled,” she complained to a younger woman near her in the Greater Faith Temple, a church occupying space that was once a movie theater on White Plains Road in Wakefield, a northern corner of the Bronx.

That’s the truth, the younger woman agreed. “They’re out of order,” she said.

That led to back and forth over where blame lay. A man joined the conversation. The three of them hauled out some of the usual suspects: The schools are failing. Programs for young people are inadequate. Housing is poor. The courts and the police don’t help. Fathers disappear. Mothers, too, sometimes. That leaves children to be raised by their grandmothers. “How do you expect a 78-year-old woman to keep up?” the man said.

But in the end, he said, all roads lead to the same place. “You know who we have to blame?” he said. “Ourselves. I don’t mean to point fingers at anybody, but it’s the truth.”

That sense of the truth brought them and about 100 others to the church the other day for a rally against gun violence. The theme could not have been simpler in concept or tougher in practice: people of the Bronx had to get control — of themselves, of their children, of their streets.

“We are sick and tired, aren’t we?” the Bronx borough president, Ruben Diaz Jr., told the audience. “We are sick and tired of being held hostage in our communities.”

After the rally, Mr. Diaz, who organized the gathering, took to the street. He and others stopped people and urged them in English and in Spanish to turn in bearers of illegal guns.

The Police Department operates a phone line, at 1-866-GUN-STOP (1-866-486-7867). On that line, people can leave anonymous tips. If the information leads to an arrest, the caller may get a $1,000 reward. This program has been around for nearly 10 years. The department says it has recovered 2,695 guns, made 4,757 arrests and handed out more than $1.6 million in reward money.

“We’ve had days of outrage and vigils and gun buybacks,” Mr. Diaz said. It was time, he said, to beat the drum more loudly for a program that provides a cash incentive. “I know there’s this business of ‘Don’t snitch,’ ” he said. But for him, naming names is doing the right thing.

“Our children are killing themselves,” he said. “We are killing ourselves.”

The grim reality is that murders have crept back up after years of decline. Reality also is that, in Wakefield as elsewhere in the city, no one is a greater threat to life and limb for young black and Hispanic men than other young black and Hispanic men.

Increasingly, New Yorkers are not comforted by reminders of how much better things are now than they were 20 years ago, when the homicide rate was outrageous — four or five times what it is today. That was then. This is now. And while the absolute numbers are not huge, reported homicides in 2010 through Sunday were nonetheless up 13 percent citywide compared with the same period last year. In the Bronx, they have risen by 18 percent. The increase for the 47th Precinct, which covers Wakefield, is 46 percent — 19 killings, as opposed to 13 a year ago.

A few terrible cases stand out, including “the day of infamy,” Mr. Diaz’s name for a burst of violence in the Bronx last month that, within a few hours, produced 9 shootings, 14 wounded and 2 dead, both teenagers.

Gloria Cruz, the Bronx chapter leader of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence, was also at the church. She embraced this cause after her niece, Naiesha Pearson, was killed by a stray bullet five years ago at a Labor Day barbecue in a South Bronx playground. Naiesha was 10.

It is good that some politicians are now speaking out, Ms. Cruz said. For too long, many of them wouldn’t “because it brings negative publicity to the Bronx,” she said. All too often, church leaders have also been silent, she said, but “a lot of them are tired of doing funerals for young people.”

Can a campaign like this actually help bring the crime numbers down? What, Ms. Cruz asked, is the alternative to at least making an attempt? “We need to try to get these young people to stop fixing their problems with firearms,” she said. “People have to take responsibility.”

E-mail: haberman@nytimes.com

NYC - Looking Inward for Solutions to Gun Violence - NYTimes.com.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

If Black English Isn’t a Language, What Is?

July 29, 1979: If Black English Isn’t a Language, What Is?

I DO not know what white Americans would sound like if there had never been any black people in the United States, but they would not sound the way they sound. Jazz, for example, is a very specific sexual term, as in jazz me, baby, but white people purified it into the Jazz Age. Sock it to me, which means, roughly, the same thing, has been adopted by Nathaniel Hawthorne’s descendants with no qualms or hesitations at all, along with let it all hang out and right on! Beat to his socks, which was once the black’s most total and despairing image of poverty, was transformed into a thing called the Beat Generation, which phenomenon was, largely, composed of uptight, middle-class white people, imitating poverty, trying to get down, to get with it, doing their thing, doing their despairing best to be funky, which we, the blacks, never dreamed of doing — we were funky, baby, like funk was going out of style.

Black English is the creation of the black diaspora. Blacks came to the United States chained to each other, but from different tribes: Neither could speak the other’s language. If two black people, at that bitter hour of the world’s history, had been able to speak to each other, the institution of chattel slavery could never have lasted as long as it did. Subsequently, the slave was given, under the eye, and the gun, of his master, Congo Square and the Bible — or, in other words, and under these conditions, the slave began the formation of the black church, and it is within this unprecedented tabernacle that black English began to be formed. This was not merely the adoption of a foreign tongue, but an alchemy that transformed ancient elements into a new language: A language comes into existence by means of brutal necessity, and the rules of the language are dictated by what the language must convey.

 

There was a moment, in time, and in this place, when my brother, or my mother, or my father, or my sister had to convey to me, for example, the danger in which I was standing from the white man standing just behind me, and to convey this with a speed, and in a language, that the white man could not possibly understand, and that, indeed, he cannot understand, until today. He cannot afford to understand it. This understanding would reveal to him too much about himself, and smash that mirror before which he has been frozen for so long.

JAMES BALDWIN was a novelist and essayist. He died in 1987.

The preceding was excerpted and adapted from a previously published Op-Ed article, for inclusion in a 40th-anniversary issue.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Pioneering black physician to be honored in NYC

Pioneering black physician to be honored in NYC

NEW YORK — He couldn't go to medical school in New York, so James McCune Smith went to Scotland for his degree and returned home to treat the city's poor.

The degree he earned in 1837 made him the nation's first professionally trained African-American doctor. He set up a medical practice in lower Manhattan and became the resident physician at an orphanage.

Celebrated during his lifetime as a teacher, writer and anti-slavery leader, Smith fell into obscurity after his death in 1865 and was buried in an unmarked grave.

On Sunday, descendants who only recently learned they had a black ancestor, will honor Smith at his Brooklyn grave. It will be marked with a new tombstone.

"He was one of the leaders within the movement to abolish slavery, and he was one of the most original and innovative writers of his time," said John Stauffer, a professor of African-American studies at Harvard University who has written about Smith and edited a collection of his works.

The story of why Smith was nearly overlooked by history and buried in an unmarked grave is in part due to the centuries-old practice of light-skinned blacks "passing" as white to escape racial prejudice.

Smith's mother had been a slave; his father was white. Three of his children lived to adulthood, and they all apparently passed as white, scholars say.

Smith's great-great-great-granddaughter, Greta Blau of New Haven, Conn., said that none of his descendants was told that they had a black ancestor, let alone such an accomplished one.

Blau came across her family connection while taking a course in the history of blacks in New York City. It was there that she came across the name James McCune Smith, which rang a bell. The name was inscribed in a family Bible belonging to her grandmother, Antoinette Martignoni.

Blau consulted with Stauffer, and they did some research and determined that the James McCune Smith who was known as America's first black doctor was indeed her forebear.

"I never, ever would have thought that I had a black ancestor," Blau said. She added, "We're all really happy. ... He was a really amazing person in so many ways."

Smith lived and died during a time in America when little attention was given to the achievements of black people. Smith's children refused to promote their father's legacy and even shunned their African-American heritage.

While hardly a household name, Smith was well known enough that a public school in Harlem was named after him. Danny Glover portrayed him in a video produced by the New York Historical Society.

Smith also was the first African-American to publish scholarly studies in peer-reviewed medical journals, Stauffer said. He also wrote essays countering theories of black racial inferiority that had currency then. He was a friend and associate of famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass, and he wrote the introduction to Douglass' "My Bondage and My Freedom."

Smith set up a medical practice and a pharmacy in what is now Manhattan's Tribeca neighborhood. He also was the resident physician at the Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street.

The orphanage burned to the ground in 1863 amid riots by white working-class immigrants over the Civil War draft. Smith and other prominent African-Americans fled to Brooklyn, then a separate city.

The asylum was re-established at a new location and survives today; it's called Harlem Dowling.

Smith championed educational opportunities as a founding member of the New York Society for Promotion of Education of Colored Children. He also helped organize New York's resistance to the Fugitive Slave act of 1850, which decreed that slaves who escaped to the North be returned to their owners.

Stauffer said Smith's reputation suffers in comparison to Douglass' because he was not a fiery speaker like Douglass.

"He didn't have the public persona," Stauffer said. "He preferred writing."

Carla Peterson, a professor of English at the University of Maryland who has written about Smith in a forthcoming book, "Black Gotham: An African American Family History," said Smith did not share Douglass' dramatic history of escape from slavery.

"He did not live the life of a slave," Peterson said. "He could not write a slave narrative."

But she said Smith was "incredibly significant."

"He's remarkable for what he could do for his community," she said.

ALeqM5gkBaq93sTw5EZF772OYwVuBXUmEQAntoinette Martignoni, left, and her granddaughter Greta Blau hold a family Bible that contains the name of their ancestor, Dr. James McCune Smith, the nation's first African American physician at Martignoni's home in Fairfield, Conn., Thursday, Sept. 23, 2010. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

Friday, September 24, 2010

WEEKEND THINGS TO DO!

‘Blood Dazzler’ (Friday through Sunday) Paloma and Patricia McGregor’s dance-theater piece is based on poems by Patricia Smith and seeks to unearth truths about Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m., Sunday at 3 p.m., Harlem Stage Gatehouse, 150 Convent Avenue, at West 135th Street, Harlem , (212) 281-9240, harlemstage.org; $20. (Anderson)

Dance Listings - Schedule - NYTimes.com.

El Museo del Barrio Through Jan. 9, “Nueva York (1613-1945),” with the New-York Historical Society as a co-curator. The exhibition focuses on the historical relationship of New York City with Spain and Latin America, with interactive displays that illustrate the commercial and social interdependence of the cultures. Museum hours: Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. 1230 Fifth Avenue, at 104th Street, East Harlem , (212) 831-7272, elmuseo.org; suggested admission, $9, $5 for students and 65+; free for members and children under 12, on Wednesdays for those 65+ and older, and on the third Saturday of the month. Admission is free this Saturday for those with a Museum Day pass. (See Museum Day listing below.)

Wave Hill After observing migrating hawks, participants in a family art workshop will create a glider or windsock on Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. A workshop in canning fruits, vegetables and herbs will be held Saturday at 1 p.m.; space is limited; $20, $15 for members; registration required: (718) 549-3200, Ext. 305. Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Raptor Day, with displays of live raptors, discussions and other activities. Garden hours: Tuesdays through Sundays, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Independence Avenue and West 249th Street, Riverdale, the Bronx , (718) 549-3200, wavehill.org; grounds admission: $8; $4 for students and 65+; $2 for children 6 to 18; free for members and children under 6 and for everyone Tuesday and Saturday mornings until noon; on-site parking, $8.

Annual Upper Broadway Autumn Festival The 17th annual event in the series; Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., between 110th and 116th Streets. Sponsored by the Interfaith Assembly on Homelessness and Housing.

Bronx American Indian Festival Sunday, noon to 4 p.m., with performances, food, storytelling and other activities that highlight the traditions of the Apache, Narragansett, Blackfoot and other groups. Sponsored by the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation; Pelham Bay Park, South Picnic Area, Stadium Avenue and Middletown Road, the Bronx , nyc.gov/parks; free.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE

 

 

 

Thursday, September 23, 2010

HARLEM INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2010 PROGRAM

HARLEM INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2010 PROGRAM

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010

FILMMAKER'S RECEPTION
CONGRATULATIONS to all the filmmakers whose film made it onto the roster of the 5th Annual Harlem International Film Festival! Hi 5!! We are excited about this year's line up and want to celebrate with you and your friends at the Filmmaker's Reception @ 7:30 PM.

Bistro Chez Lucienne Harlem
308 Lenox Avenue
(between 125th & 126th)
New York, NY 10027

Come out and co-mingle with your competition!

$21 ALL FESTIVAL PASS at Maysles (Excluding Special Screening Friday at 7pm)
 


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2010

HARLEM SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
(1:20 - 5:00 PM)
645 Saint Nicholas Avenue @ 141st Street
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM I 1:20 PM
FATHERHOOD
A Bike Ride (USA) - 13 min
Breadwinner (USA) - 10 min
Sand (USA) - 10 min
The Essay (USA) - 17 min WORLD PREMIERE
War Stories (USA) - 11 min
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

PROGRAM II 2:30 PM
HARLEM
A Harlem Reprise (Harlem) - 22 min WORLD PREMIERE
In its thirty plus years of existence, the Boys & Girls Choir of Harlem grew to become a world renown performing ensemble, providing musical training and life-changing opportunities to disadvantaged youths in New York City. But in 2007, the choir faded away following years of legal and financial troubles, accompanied by the death of its founder. A group of alumni decided to join together to carry on the spirit and traditions of the choir. 'A Harlem Reprise' profiles their group as they try to resurrect the legacy of the Boys & Girls Choir and build a name for themselves.

Obama Song (Harlem) - 17 min
The sights and sound of Harlem, hours after the presidential election of Barack Obama.

Welcome to My World (Harlem) - 50 min
Welcome to My World is a documentary film about two groups of American teenagers from disparate walks of life, and what happens when they come together. Through their adventures on a high school exchange trip, these students discover that the woods of Maine and the streets of Harlem are not as far apart as they had once imagined.

With
Flat Love (Spain) - 15 min HARLEM PREMIERE
Great Celebration/Mec Ton (Armenia) - 34 min
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

MAYSLES INSTITUTE
(6:00 - 10:00PM)
343 Malcolm X Boulevard/Lenox Avenue (127th & 128th)
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM III 6:00 PM
FREEDOM
Freeing Silvia Baraldini (USA) - 102 min
Documents the life of former US political prisoner, Silvia Baraldini, who after 15 years as a political activist was arrested by the FBI and sentenced to 43 years in part for her participation in the freeing of Black Panther, Assata Shakur, from prison.

Portrait of a Filmmaker (USA) - 3 min
 


PROGRAM IV 8:00 PM
NEW YORK CITY
125 Franco's Boulevard (Harlem) - 21 min WORLD PREMIERE
With colorful strokes, Franco the Great changed the face of Harlem's most famous street, 125th. Now, a massive rezoning and city council vote threatens to discard his living canvas.

The Vanishing City (USA) - 55 min
An in-depth look at the forces behind the 'luxurification' of New York City and its far reaching effects on the middle class and working poor.

Just Be Frank (USA) - 15 min WORLD PREMIERE
Just Be Frank is an inspiring film about Frank Senior, a black blind jazz singer who we follow as he adjusts from walking with a cane to training his new guide dog, Kew. As he navigates the streets of Manhattan the audience witnesses the trust, courage and humour necessary for a blind man's survival in New York City. Presented with:
The Lift (Animation) - 5 min
 


FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2010

HARLEM SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
(1:30 - 5:00 PM)
645 Saint Nicholas Avenue @ 141st Street
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM V 1:30 PM
SHORTS
Echomotion (USA) - 5 min
Kidnap (Animation) - 4 min
Lunch (USA) - 27 min
Mozambique (Mozambique) - 14min
Alcides Soares is a sixteen-year-old AIDS orphan, one of half a million living in Mozambique today. An American television writer (Neal Baer) and movie director (Chris Zalla) gave Alcides a movie camera and taught him how to shoot. The result is a moving chronicle directed by Alcides himself.

Ndapewa: I am Given (Namibia) - 15 min
Oakland School For The Arts (USA) - 16 min
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

PROGRAM VI 3:00 PM
SPOKEN WORD
Louder Than a Bomb (USA) - 99 min
Louder Than a Bomb tells the story of four Chicago high school poetry teams as they prepare for and compete in the world's largest youth slam. By turns hopeful and heartbreaking, the film captures the tempestuous lives of these unforgettable kids, exploring the ways writing shapes their world, and vice versa. Louder Than a Bomb is not about high school poetry as we often think of it. It's about language as a joyful release, irrepressibly talented teenagers obsessed with making words dance, and the communities they create along the way.
The Lost Samurai (USA) - 6 min
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

MAYSLES INSTITUTE (12:00PM - 12:00AM)
343 Malcolm X Boulevard/Lenox Avenue (127th & 128th)
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM VII 12:00 PM
COMING OF AGE
Lunatics, Lovers & Actors (Harlem) - 80 min
A drama teacher in an urban university decides to take a topical approach to Shakespeares comedy classic, A Midsummer Nights Dream, and set it in Kuwait. And to make things interesting, he packs the cast with a rainbow of incompatibles: Muslims, fundamentalist Christians, out gays, homophobes, Orthodox Jews, and he lets em rip!
Presented with:
You Stole My Heart (USA) - 5 min
Mamas Boy/Mamanek (Czech Republic) - 23 min
 


PROGRAM VIII 2:00 PM
THE RECE$$ION
Skylight (Animation) - 5 min
Heaven Garden/Jardim Beleleu (Brazil) - 15 min
Presented with:
Road to Las Vegas (UK) - 90 min
Spurred on by a dream from God, Vanessa and Maurice take their five youngest children to start a new life in Las Vegas. With only their car for shelter, they set up camp next to the airport runway. Over the following four years of their lives, we track the familys mixed fortunes as they attempt to sustain a living in the face of unemployment, an impending recession and Maurices recurring drug abuse.


PROGRAM VIV 4:00 PM
MAD SCIENCE
Gartxot (Spain, Animation) - 19 min
Scientists Under Attack (Germany) - 88 min
rpd Pusztai and Ignacio Chapela have two things in common. They are distinguished scientists and their careers are in ruins. Both scientists choose to look at the phenomenon of genetic engineering. Both made important discoveries. Both of them are suffering the fate of those who criticise the powerful vested interests that now dominate big business and scientific research.
 


PROGRAM X 6:00 PM
SEX SELLS
The Virgins (USA) - 11 min
Does Sex Ruin Lives (USA) - 87 min WORLD PREMIERE
Does Sex Ruin Lives? The Unspoken Birds and Bee's. Everyone has an Adam and Eve experience. Taking a bite of the forbidden fruit can be a decision filled with excitement and can come with painful consequences. Join Diann Johnson on her journey to discover the truth about sex and the impact that it has on so many people's lives as she shares her own experiences; the good, the bad, and the ugly.
 


PROGRAM XI 7:40 PM
SPECIAL SCREENING
Blood Done Sign My Name (USA) - 128 min
Tells the true story of the 1970 murder of Henry Marrow in a rural North Carolina town by Robert Teel and his sons including the aftermath and the eventual acquittal of the Teels by an all white jury, despite testimony of multiple eyewitnesses. It also depicts the emergence of the Civil Rights leader Dr. Benjamin Chavis. Featuring Rick Schroder and Nate Parker as Dr. Chavis.
Discussion with Dr. Benjamin Chavis to follow the screening.
View the trailers: http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi2856256537/
 


PROGRAM XII 10:00PM
SUSPENSE
The Things You Lose in the Ocean (USA) - 28min NEW YORK PREMIERE
The Toll (Australia) - 90 min NEW YORK PREMIERE
Steve and his best mate Nick embark on a journey to the Western Australian town of Denmark following a tip off that a recently deceased farmer has buried his fortune somewhere on his land. Armed with what they believe to be the map to the supposed fortune, the pair quickly bite off more than they can chew as their forest setting closes in on them, testing their resolve and their friendship.
 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2010

BARNARD COLLEGE
(12:00 - 6:00 PM)
Held Auditorium, 304 Barnard Hall
3009 Broadway
New York, NY 10027

PROGRAM XIII 12:00 PM
CIVIL RIGHTS
But Some Are Brave (Canada, Animation) - 5 min
Mountains That Take Wing: Angela Davis & Yuri Kochiyama (Harlem Spotlight) - 97 min NEW YORK PREMIERE
Features conversations spanning 13 years between two formidable women whose lives and political work remain at the epicenter of the most important civil rights struggles in the US. Through the intimacy and depth of conversations, we learn about Davis, an internationally renowned scholar-activist and 88-year-old Kochiyama, a revered grassroots community activist, longtime Harlem resident and 2005 Nobel Peace Prize nominee's shared experiences as political prisoners and their profound passion for justice.
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

PROGRAM XIV 2:00 PM
WOMEN and WAR
A Lost Generation (USA) - 6 min
Hope (Australia) - 104 min NEW YORK PREMIERE
400 refugees set out on a boat from Iraq to Australia. Only seven made it. Amal Basry was one of them...
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

PROGRAM XV 4:00 PM
SPECIAL SCREENING!
THE BLUES
Frosty Man and the BMX Kid (New Zealand) - 4 min WORLD PREMIERE
Black, White and Blues (USA) - 107 min
Director, Mario Van Peebles latest film features Michael Clarke Duncan and Morgan Simpson on a road trip to the heart of the blues.
View the trailer http://www.blackwhiteandblues.com/
FREE SPECIAL SCREENING!
RSVP to info@harlemfilmfestival.com to guarantee your seat.

MAYSLES INSTITUTE
(6:00 - 11:00PM)
343 Malcolm X Boulevard/Lenox (127th & 128th)
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM XVI 6:00PM
EVERYDAY BLACK MAN (USA) - 100 min
A small neighborhood grocer wants to do good for his community, but when he is convinced to take on a young black man posing as a Muslim to be his partner, he realizes that he has put his beloved neighborhood and his family in danger, and must become the man he used to be in order to save them.
 


PROGRAM XVII 7:45 PM
ISLAM
Taqwacore: The Birth of Punk Islam (Harlem Spotlight) - 80 min
Punk rock meets Islam. The rest is history
 


PROGRAM XVIII 9:00PM
HIP HOP
Baby Daddy Memoirs (USA) - 6 min
Hip Hop - A Tale From the Hood (Germany, Harlem) - 95 min HARLEM PREMIERE
1986. HipHops Golden Age. Its high-point: the infamous Bronx versus Queens battles between KRS-One and MC Shan. Years later, Bronx meets Queens again. But its no rematch, no battle for street hype and respect. Now the feud between the Bronx and Queens is over: I.G.Off and Hazadus team up together to make it big.
 


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 2010


MAYSLES INSTITUTE
(12:00 - 6:00PM)
343 Malcolm X Boulevard/Lenox Avenue (127th & 128th)
New York, NY 10030

PROGRAM XIX 12:00 PM
KATRINA
Take Too Long (Animation) - 18 min
Katrina Cop in the Superdome (USA) - 81 min
Documents the story of Rhett Charles, a veteran of the New Orleans Police Force, who found himself assigned to the New Orleans Superdome just prior to Hurricane Katrina making landfall on August 29th, 2005. Originally expecting the storm to hit with little impact, Officer Charles soon finds himself stuck in a steadily disintegrating situation, as the New Orleans levees fail, the city is flooded, electrical power vanishes, and upwards of 30,000 people descend on the Dome, seeking shelter.
 


PROGRAM XX 2:00 PM
WOMEN
If I Leap (USA) - 18 min
Jacob (Australia) - 12 min
Knock Off (UK) - 11 min
Presented with:
I Remain (Harlem) - 46 min
Tracy a young woman and Harlem resident, age 39, goes home to Washington, DC to receive a double mastectomy and breast reconstructive surgery after being diagnosed a few weeks before. In this film, Tracy's journey weaves the history of her 'Family of Matriarch's' individual battles with the disease that seems to have made itself at home over the span of twenty plus years. With the support of family, awareness, fighting spirit, and caring doctor's you have a recipe for 'survivor' in this documentary.
Excluding cancers of the skin, breast cancer is the most common cancer among women, accounting for nearly 1 in 4 cancers diagnosed in US women. African American women have a higher incidence rate of breast cancer before age 45 and are more likely to die from breast cancer at every age!
*This screening contains adult themes, partial nudity and graphic content. For mature audiences.
 


PROGRAM XXI 4:00 PM
ILLEGAL
The Clearing (Australia) - 18 min
Anchor Baby (Canada) - 94 min WORLD PREMIERE
Married illegal immigrant couple, Joyce (Omoni Oboli) and Paul Unanga (Sam Sarpong) have been ordered to be deported by the US immigration department. They agree to leave; only after Joyce who is 5 months pregnant delivers her baby inside the US. This will guarantee automatic citizenship for their child. But, when Paul is caught and deported Joyce struggles on her own to accomplish the American Dream for her baby.
 



 

Urban Brands files for Chapter 11

New York— Reuters

Women’s clothing company Urban Brands Inc., the parent of the Ashley Stewart chain, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a U.S. court early on Tuesday, after three straight years of losses.

Ashley Stewart, which caters to plus-size urban women, has about 210 stores in cities including New York and Los Angeles. Its flagship store is located on 125th Street in Harlem, New York.

Despite the strength of the Ashley Stewart brand name, the clothing company began suffering as economic conditions worsened in 2008, according to the court papers.

The company plans to continue operating and has entered an agreement with a stalking horse bidder called New Ashley Stewart LLC, which has offered to buy the assets.

A stalking horse offer sets a floor for bidding, against which all other offers will need to match or exceed.

In the meantime, Urban Brands is continuing to solicit other bids, according to court documents.

Urban Brands in 2009 posted a loss of $28.6-million, and sales fell to $174.6-million from $179.6-million the year before.

The apparel company, which markets to urban Hispanic and African American women, owes about $81.3-million after entering a note purchase agreement with Trimaran Fund II LLC in 2004, and five additional debt agreements since then.

Plus-size African American women ranked the Ashley Stewart chain as their No. 3 favourite place to shop, according to a 2009 industry survey by apparel research firm NPD Group.

In its bankruptcy filing, Urban Brands estimated assets in the range of $10 to $50-million and liabilities in the range of $100 to $500-million.

A company representative was not immediately available to give more details on the bankruptcy filing.

 

UM2N - Saggin': Fashion Trends Of The Hood And Its Effects On The Entire World Fundraising Event

Saggin': Fashion Trends of the Hood and Its Effects on the Entire World Fundraising Event
September 20, 2010

Url: http://www.gwetv.com

New York, NEW YORK, September 20, 2010 - GWETV will present “Saggin': Fashion Trends of the Hood and Its Effects on the Entire World” at the National Black Theater of Harlem, located at 2031-33 5th Avenue, on September 26, 2010.

The event will last from 3pm-7pm and feature musical performances, a fashion show, a panel discussion featuring representatives from the fashion industry, the religious community and the legal system as well as a music video presentation.

I-AM-Creations will be unveiling their line of fashions for children. In addition Cultural Creations will offer teen fashions, and more designers may be appearing.

Panel members include: Shabazz Fuller (CEO of Shabazz Brothers) former manager of the infamous rap group the Wu-Tang Clan, Dr. Maryse Selit (Attorney), Crystal G. Warner (CEO of Crystal Glass Cosmetics), Student Minister A. Hafeez Muhammad (Muhammad Mosque No.7), Reverend Vernon Williams (Perfect Peace Ministry) and Pee Wee Dance, original B-Boy and Hip Hop Historian.

There will be surprise performances and special guests. Ticket holders will witness the premiere of the "Pull Up Your Pants & Dance" music video by David “DJ” James directed by upcoming, award winning film director, Philip Muhammad (CEO of GWETV).

Ticket Price: $10 donation toward the eventual national launch of GWETV, a television network dedicated to inspiring the best in all of us.

Sponsored by “Moshood” and “Kev's Copy Center”, this promises to be an unforgettable event you will not want to miss!

About GWETV: GWETV is a new subsidiary of God's Water Entertainment with a mission to create a national television network featuring positive programming that will inspire, motivate and improve the moral condition of society. Targeted to all ages, races, faiths and orientations, GWETV will feature a diverse programming lineup with casting, entertainment and story lines you will not find on the average television network. In particular, GWETV is dedicated to giving African Americans positive role models and more diverse viewpoints to consider.

For more information on this event and GWETV, go to www.gwetv.com

For inquiries, please contact Monica Trombley at mtrombley@gwetv.com

For general inquiries, please write: God's Water Entertainment Television, P.O. Box 2085, New York, NY 10025 or call (866) 986-9333, Extension 1.

UM2N - Saggin': Fashion Trends Of The Hood And Its Effects On The Entire World Fundraising Event.

On the Atlantic City Boardwalk, Other Stories Remain to Be Told

On the Atlantic City Boardwalk, Other Stories Remain to Be Told

ATLANTIC CITY

You can’t be an Atlantic City historian these days without a Nucky Johnson experience, so both Allen Pergament and Ralph E. Hunter Sr., retirees who became obsessive collectors of local artifacts and lore, come prepared with tales of the political boss, racketeer and kingmaker whose fictionalized spawn is at the heart of the HBO series “Boardwalk Empire.”

At what he calls his “Booseum” — a phantasmagoria of 20,000 pictures, 10,000 postcards, the lost world of Miss Americas, diving horses, men in suits on a packed Boardwalk — Mr. Pergament, known as Boo, recalled the time his father, the chief clerk for the county board of elections, took him along when he visited the great man after Mr. Johnson’s release from prison in 1945.

Sure, Mr. Johnson, fictionalized as Nucky Thompson in the series, took bribes, flouted Prohibition and went to prison for tax evasion, but in real life he was far more charming and less menacing than the Sopranoesque figure in the HBO series, Mr. Pergament said.

“They didn’t make Nucky like Nucky was; they made Nucky like they wanted him to be,” he said of the premiere. “It was a wonderful picture; they did a fantastic job, but Nucky wasn’t a Capone. He had a way of being appreciated, ingratiated, respected. Nucky had a smile on his face 95 percent of the time.”

Mr. Hunter, a retired business executive, who turned his collection into the African American Heritage Museum of Southern New Jersey, holds court at the All Wars Memorial Building, originally called the All Wars Memorial Building for Colored Soldiers, that Johnson built in the ’20s. He brings along political literature in which Nuck Johnson highlights the black jobholders of his era like Dr. Leroy Morris, Physician to the Poor and Miss Edna Aiken, Stenographer to Chief Electrician.

Later, Mr. Hunter visits a friend, Alvin Washington, and they trade Nucky stories. “He’d come up with jobs for people, $10, $20 a week, but sometimes he needed a title,” Mr. Washington said. “They’d say, ‘Well I saw a fireplug that froze up last night,’ and he’d say, ‘Well, you’re the night fireplug inspector.’ ”

Like an aging prom queen being courted for the first time in years, Atlantic City is smitten with its most recent star turn. There are “Boardwalk Empire” posters and billboards everywhere, at the toll booths, on the Boardwalk, billowing in the breeze in front of Caesars Atlantic City.

Hotels and restaurants offer rooms and meals for $19.20 in honor of Mr. Johnson’s heyday. About 1,000 people turned out to watch the “Boardwalk Empire” premiere at Caesar’s and listen to six panelists, including Mr. Pergament and Mr. Hunter, discuss the city’s past.

The show’s initial ratings were boffo. The first episode was viewed by 7.1 million people, HBO’s biggest premiere audience since 2004. A second season has been ordered. It’s hard to know who wants it to catch on more, HBO looking for a hit or Atlantic City desperate for some buzz.

Still, there are rich stories as well on the other side of what Mr. Hunter calls the Mason-Dixon line in a city more than half black, where African-Americans formed the bulk of the city’s work force for decades.

There was the old Chickenbone Beach, at Missouri and Boardwalk, which was the black beach; Madame Sarah Spencer Washington, the cosmetics entrepreneur who was one of the first black female millionaires; the black clubs like the Club Harlem, and Golden’s Cocktail Bar, featuring its one-armed bartender.

Beneath it all is the fascinating, largely untold story of the vanished black businesses and institutions that flourished during segregation and then died with integration. It is not “The Roaring Sopranos,” as some are already calling “Boardwalk Empire,” but it’s pretty fascinating grist for someone’s mill.

It turns out that Nelson Johnson, the county judge who wrote the book that inspired the HBO series, actually tells this story in another book, “The Northside: African Americans and the Creation of Atlantic City,” to be published in November.

But TV fodder? We’re in what’s billed as television’s second golden age, all those smart, novelistic shows about mobsters, ad men, cancer, polygamy, sexy vampires and funeral home owners — television informed by Coppola and Cheever. Virtually none of it reflects the ever-increasing part of America that’s not white.

Maybe someday television will find room for the universe of Ralph Hunter and Boo Pergament’s — for Chickenbone Beach as well as mobsters with Tommy guns. Or maybe not.

E-mail: peappl@nytimes.com

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Op-Ed Columnist - Neglecting the Base - NYTimes.com

Neglecting the Base
By BOB HERBERT

Maybe it was just a coincidence, but it was striking, nevertheless.

The mayor of Washington, Adrian Fenty, one of the so-called postracial black leaders, suffered a humiliating defeat in his bid for re-election last week when African-American voters deserted him in droves. The very same week President Obama, the most prominent of the so-called postracial types, was moving aggressively to shore up his support among black voters.

Mr. Obama, who usually goes out of his way to avoid overtly racial comments and appeals, made an impassioned plea during a fiery speech Saturday night at a black-tie event sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus. “I need everybody here,” he said, “to go back to your neighborhoods, to go back your workplaces, to go to the churches and go to the barbershops and go to the beauty shops. And tell them we’ve got more work to do.”

It’s no secret that the president is in trouble politically, and that Democrats in Congress are fighting desperately to hold on to their majorities. But much less attention has been given to the level of disenchantment among black voters, who have been hammered disproportionately by the recession and largely taken for granted by the Democratic Party. That disenchantment is likely to translate into lower turnout among blacks this fall.

The idea that we had moved into some kind of postracial era was always a ridiculous notion. Attitudes have undoubtedly changed for the better over the past half-century, and young people as a whole are less hung up on race than their elders. But race is still a very big deal in the United States, which is precisely why black leaders like Mr. Fenty and Mr. Obama try so hard to behave as though they are governing in some sort of pristine civic environment in which the very idea of race has been erased.

These allegedly postracial politicians can end up being so worried about losing the support of whites that they distance themselves from their own African-American base. This is a no-win situation — for the politicians and for the blacks who put their hopes and faith in them.

Mr. Fenty was cheered by whites for bringing in the cold-blooded Michelle Rhee as schools chancellor. She attacked D.C.’s admittedly failing school system with an unseemly ferocity and seemed to take great delight in doing it. Hundreds of teachers were fired and concerns raised by parents about Ms. Rhee’s take-no-prisoners approach were ignored. It was disrespectful.

Blacks responded last week by voting overwhelmingly for Mr. Fenty’s opponent, Vincent Gray, who is also black. This blowback undermined whatever Ms. Rhee and Mr. Fenty had hoped to achieve. Thanks to their ham-handed approach to governing and disregard of the sensibilities of their constituents, both of them will soon be gone. But the children they claimed to care so much about will still be locked in a lousy school system.

Black voters across the country are not nearly as discontented with Mr. Obama as blacks in Washington were with Mr. Fenty. But neither do they have the same enthusiasm that they had in the historic 2008 election.

Mr. Obama has seldom addressed black concerns directly, although many of his initiatives have benefited blacks. What has taken a toll is the perception that the president has consistently seemed more concerned about the needs and interests of those who are already well off, who are hostile to policies that would help working people and ethnic minorities, and who in many cases would like nothing better than to see Mr. Obama fail.

Most blacks are reluctant to publicly express their concerns about the president because they are so outraged by the blatantly unfair and often racist attacks against him from the political right. But many blacks are unhappy that Mr. Obama hasn’t been more forceful in the fight to create jobs. And there is disappointment over the dearth of black faces in high-profile posts in the administration.

The Shirley Sherrod fiasco fed the belief that the Obama administration was excessively concerned about the racial sensibilities of whites. The secretary of agriculture fired Ms. Sherrod without even giving her a hearing after an excerpt from a video appeared to show that she had discriminated against a white farmer. She had done no such thing, and she would later decline an offer to rejoin the administration.

There is real danger here for black people. In many cases, because of an excess of caution, policies that would help people in need are never even seriously considered, much less implemented. Forces that are hostile to blacks are not aggressively confronted, which, of course, empowers them. Perhaps more important, when you have to tiptoe around absolutely anything that has to do with blacks, it can leave the insidious impression that there is, in fact, something wrong with being black, something to be ashamed of.

We need to be careful not to corrode the joy and pride felt by blacks in the triumphs of African-American leaders.

Op-Ed Columnist - Neglecting the Base - NYTimes.com.

Monday, September 20, 2010

'Today' Show Guest Robert Plant References 'Spook Music'

'Today' Show Guest Robert Plant References 'Spook Music'

'Today' Show Guest Robert Plant References 'Spook Music'

I was in New York doing what I try to do best: show up for my little girls and support them in their endeavors. My daughter had a volleyball game at her university and I was pumped for the event. Although I do all I can to stay away from work when I am with my kids, I couldn't help but sneak away to appear on one of my favorite radio shows, "The Main Line" on 98.7 Kiss FM.

During the show, we discussed all the usual topics for a hot blooded Sunday afternoon: politics, news, African American issues, Obama and more. Toward the end of the show, someone made mention of Robert Plant's appearance on the 'Today' show. My first thought was, "Who in the heck is Robert Plant and why does he matter?" It only took me a couple of seconds to figure out the answer to both of those questions.

Plant is the former lead man for Led Zeppelin. He is also of British decent. Apparently, Plant was mentioning the American influences to his music (check the 1:02 mark in the video). "Spook music" was a genre he stated to be one of his favorites, which obviously got my attention. The host of the show didn't seem to notice a thing, and the 'Today' show hasn't issued an apology or explanation for the incident.

Okay, I tried to think to myself, "What else could he have meant when he said 'Spook music'?" So, I went to Internet University to try to find answers to that question. When I searched for the term "Spook Music" on the web, I didn't find much of anything that might allow me to exonerate Plant for his ill-timed remark.

I saw a band called "The Spooks," but that didn't seem to correlate. I also saw a website that talked about Spook music, but it was referring to a record label that appears to have been created in the last five years. Overall, it appears that both Plant and the 'Today' show might owe black America an apology.

I'd love to hear feedback on this one, as I'm trying to find an explanation. Could the 'Today' show host have been too insensitive to catch this, or am I the one missing the joke? Either way, black people would rather not be referred to as "spooks."
 
Dr. Boyce Watkins is the founder of the Your Black World Coalition and a Scholarship in Action resident of the Institute for Black Public Policy. To have Dr. Boyce's commentary delivered to your e-mail, please click here.
Posted by Picasa

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Niketown shutdown, latest store to have bedbugs bite - NYPOST.com


Nike flagship store shut down, latest store to have bedbugs bite

By GEORGETT ROBERTS and CATHY BURKE

Last Updated: 1:17 PM, September 18, 2010

Posted: 12:51 PM, September 18, 2010

That bites!

Nike’s tourist-friendly flagship store here is closed down because of bedbugs, the Just Do It corporate giant said today.

The massive East 57th Street Niketown location is a fave of tourists and shoppers with its array of shoes, clothes and gizmos, and officials said they’d like to just-do-it and reopen as soon as possible.

"It’s one of our most popular stores," said Nike spokesman Kijuan Wilkins.

In a statement, Beaverton, Ore.-based Nike — which became synonymous with ex-NBA superstar Michael Jordan when he was its celebrity spokesman — the company said it had "proactively closed Niketown" when bedbugs were discovered there.

"Our primary concern is the well being of our consumers and sales associates," the statement said. "We are taking all proper steps to eradicate the problem and we expect the store to reopen shortly."

The company’s downtown store on Mercer Street isn’t affected.

Nike is the latest big retailer in Manhattan to get bit by the bedbug infestation.

Abercrombie & Fitch also was shut down the bed bug infestation that is ravaging New York, as well as one Times Square theater.

Niketown shutdown, latest store to have bedbugs bite - NYPOST.com.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Free Coldstone Creamery NYC

Free Coldstone Creamery NYC

Enjoy a Free Coldstone Creamery & Help the Make A Wish Foundation

pulsed 9/10/10 at 8:20am EDT
When: 9/30/10 at 5:00pm EDT to 9/30/10 at 8:00pm EDT
Where: Cold Stone Creamery
2 Astor Place
Phone: (212) 228-4600
Tags: eats deals
Source: Coldstone Creamery

All month long, Cold Stone Creamery is helping make wishes come true for children with life-threatening medical conditions. Visit any Cold Stone Creamery store and show your support for the Make-A-Wish Foundation by purchasing a Make-A-Wish paper star for just a dollar!

* Full details on Free Coldstone Ice Cream

Plus on 9/30 from 5-8pm Enjoy a FREE Ice Cream! at any NYC Coldstone Location!

Free Coldstone Creamery NYC | pulsd.

Selling the ‘Stop’ in ‘Stop and Frisk’

Selling the ‘Stop’ in ‘Stop and Frisk’

One Police Plaza

There’s no doubt that the New York City Police Department’s tactic of stopping and frisking people on the street can create tensions with those stopped, and within the neighborhoods where many of the encounters occur. Yet the department is loath to give up the tactic, calling it a core law enforcement tool.

The Newark police director, Garry F. McCarthy, speaking at a law enforcement breakfast recently in Manhattan, proposed one idea: “Sell the stop.”

Meaning: After you do it, explain why you did. Nicely.

Chosen to lead his city’s police force in September 2006, Mr. McCarthy, 51, is the son of a United States Marine. He retired from the New York Police Department as the deputy commissioner of operations after a career of more than 20 years. In his speech, he raised the notion of street-stop encounters — known in the Police Department’s language as “stop, question and frisk” encounters. And he said the police in Newark want to make these interactions opportunities to bridge the often caustic divide between officers and civilians, and not linger as moments that foment discord.

“Even a negative police interaction, if done in the proper circumstance, can leave somebody with a positive mindset when you’re done,” Mr. McCarthy said.

Wild Mushrooms of Central Park

Wild Mushrooms of Central Park

Thursday, September 16, 2010

6:30 p.m.8:00 p.m.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Economic Scene - Blacks Show Strides in Happiness Over Whites - NYTimes.com

For Blacks, Progress in Happiness


By DAVID LEONHARDT

Set aside some prominent success stories, like the current occupant of the White House, and the last few decades have not been great ones for African-American progress.

In 1975, per capita black income was 41 percent lower than per capita white income. Since then, the gap has shrunk only modestly, to 35 percent. The black unemployment rate today is nearly twice as high as the white rate, just as it was in 1975. And by some measures — family structure, college graduation, incarceration — racial gaps have actually grown.

But now a new study has found that there is one big realm in which black Americans have made major progress: happiness.

Economic Scene - Blacks Show Strides in Happiness Over Whites - NYTimes.com.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Cablevision and Time Warner Agree to Fines for Late Service Calls in New York - NYTimes.com

New Cable Contract Has Fines for Late Service Calls
By FERNANDA SANTOS

Besides perhaps a root canal or a tax audit, few things can be more frustrating than making an appointment to have a cable technician visit one’s home. You’re given a four-hour window and find yourself waiting and waiting, with no idea when the technician will arrive. Inevitably, it seems, he does not show up until just before the window expires. Or despite the four-hour time frame, he arrives late.

But now, customers may finally get a small measure of justice for what many complain is unfair and just plain rude treatment at the hands of the cable giants.

Under the terms of a new contract that has been negotiated with City Hall, Time Warner Cable and Cablevision will have to pay a price for failing to honor appointments. And they will have to do a lot more to make sure that the people who patronize their businesses are getting good service in return.

The contract will make cable customers eligible for a credit amounting to full month’s bill if a technician does not arrive on time. The penalty decreases to $25 after 2012 when Verizon Fios, a competing cable provider, is expected to have built its infrastructure throughout much of the city, negotiators said on Tuesday.

Customers can also request that they be notified by e-mail, phone or text message when a technician is heading to their home. And in most cases, a real person must come on the phone line no more than 30 seconds after a customer makes a selection from an automated menu.

Some people get so fed up with their cable company that they give up on customer service and start complaining to 311, the city’s help line. Almost 1,200 complaints have been received this year alone, most of them related to the quality of service, statistics show. But city officials believe that there are many more unhappy customers out there.

As Robert Porto, 38, a Time Warner Cable customer who lives in the Boerum Hill section of Brooklyn, put it, the new contract the city negotiated is “the ultimate revenge for the little guy.”

Until Verizon Fios entered the picture, Time Warner Cable and Cablevision had essentially cornered the market for cable services. For the city, the competition turned into a great bargaining chip. Many of the customer service provisions contained in the contract are similar to those Verizon agreed to in the service deal it brokered with the city in 2008.

Under federal law, municipalities are required to renew franchise agreements with cable companies unless signal quality has been persistently problematic, response to complaints is unsatisfactory or the companies fail to honor the terms of the previous contract, among other things. The contract with Time Warner Cable and Cablevision expired in 2008.

The new contract with Time Warner Cable and Cablevision, which city officials said included about 30 pages of customer service provisions, still has to be finalized and then must clear some regulatory hurdles, but most of its requirements are expected to remain in place. One is an investment of about $10 million by the cable companies to provide wireless Internet service to 32 city parks, which have yet to be identified. The service would cost users 99 cents per day, though it will be free for 10 minutes up to three times a month. Time Warner Cable and Cablevision subscribers would get the service free, according to details of the contract city officials made available to The New York Times.

Time Warner Cable will also work with nonprofit groups to establish free Internet access in 40 community centers across the city, at a rate of at least four per year, the contract says.

A spokeswoman for Time Warner Cable, Harriet Novet, said the company was “excited about a lot of the new features that come with this contract,” but noted that “we’re still working through some of the details,” without being specific.

In a statement, Jim Maiella, a spokesman for Cablevision, said, “We look forward to providing service in the Bronx and Brooklyn for many years to come.”

Bruce Regal, a senior lawyer at the City Law Department and one of the city’s negotiators, said the city expected to complete much of the approval process by the end of the year. The contract will be valid until 2020, which is also when the city’s agreement with Verizon Fios expires.

And, you might ask, when should New Yorkers expect to notice changes? Mr. Regal said most people will notice much fiercer competition in the next year or two. “Our hope,” he said, “is that the level of competition will have an effect on service, programming, pricing and all aspects of cable television.”

Cablevision and Time Warner Agree to Fines for Late Service Calls in New York - NYTimes.com.

Booty Warrior rejoice.

Booty Warrior rejoice.
via O Hell Nawl - We should have been whooped more as kids by Slaus is a Reading Azz Reader. on 9/14/10

Youuuuu better not go to jail anywhere in San Francisco, yall. Notttttttt never not nan. Unless you are into that sort of thing…

Looking for a little action?

You might want to try the San Francisco County Jail’s San Bruno lockup, where authorities have installed 16 condom machines for the jail’s 750 prisoners.

The condom dispensers are the latest evolution in a safe-sex program that began in 1989, when health workers began distributing condoms to inmates as part of their counseling before they were released.

And although sex among inmates technically is illegal, the Sheriff’s Department went ahead and installed the 16 machines anyway – one for each jailhouse pod – paid for by a pair of small grants from UCSF and a Southern California nonprofit.

“It may be controversial,” Sheriff Michael Hennessey said, “but I think the larger health education message is important.“( I’m wondering if that message is hidden behind the whole all in ya booty vibe being given.” GO to jail… get some ass. Seems pretty clear to me.)

As for the chance that all those machines will actually promote jailhouse sex?

The sex already takes place, says Kate Monico Klein, who is directing the program for the city’s Public Health Department. “If (providing condoms) saves one or two lives, it’s worth it,” she said.

[source]

Well since Craigslist has shutdown their Adult services which enabled plenty of booty ass booty time pleasures for the masses, I guess they’ve got to get their fun somehow. Hell, run a stoplight, run your mouth, get ran up all in your booty. If that’s your thing.. hey… it’s alllll yours.

Next time I roll through the Bay Area and I get into trouble…because I always do… I’m sealing my booty up with hot lead. Oh it’s gonna hurt… but I’m not down with the alternative.


 

New rules preserve all active community gardens under Parks Department jurisdiction

New rules preserve all active community gardens under Parks Department jurisdiction

Tuesday, September 14th 2010, 4:00 AM

 
New rules announced by city officials state that only abandoned or rule-breaking community gardens may be sold or developed - the strongest protection yet for the neighborhood green spaces.
Noonan for News
New rules announced by city officials state that only abandoned or rule-breaking community gardens may be sold or developed - the strongest protection yet for the neighborhood green spaces.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/09/14/2010-09-14_city_gives_green_thumbs_up_to_saving_gardens.html#ixzz0zVjimwIM

Monday, September 13, 2010

A Street Vendor Takes the Biggest Step, Indoors - NYTimes.com

A Street Vendor Takes the Big Step, From 59th Street to the Indoors
By KIRK SEMPLE

In his most trying moments, when the winter winds and the summer storms bore down with unforgiving intensity, the Senegalese street vendor would gaze across the street at Bloomingdale’s and allow himself a fantasy: his own concession inside its gilded doors.

“I would wish they could give me a spot inside to put my stuff, especially when it was raining or it was too cold or too hot,” the vendor, Cheikh Fall, recalled, chuckling at the audacity of the idea.

For seven years, Mr. Fall sold hats, handbags and other accessories from a collapsible table on the streets of Manhattan, mostly at 59th Street and Lexington Avenue.

But while he never managed to move into Bloomingdale’s, he recently accomplished a feat that is quite rare among the city’s street merchants: He opened his own shop. A small storefront on Frederick Douglass Boulevard near 132nd Street in Harlem, it is called Ob’Prama — an amalgam of Obama and Oprah, two people who, he said, have inspired him.

Sean Basinski, a leading advocate for street vendors in New York, said he knew of only a few people, mainly food vendors who opened restaurants, who had made the shift indoors in the past decade.

“It’s a remarkable thing that he’s done,” said Mr. Basinski, founder and director of the Street Vendor Project, a program at the Urban Justice Center in New York that provides support to vendors, the overwhelming majority of whom are immigrants. “It’s what’s supposed to be happening.”

The street-to-store transition was once far more common, particularly in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Mr. Basinski said. Some of New York’s most prominent retailers made the leap: Nicholas D’Agostino Sr., founder of the supermarkets that bear his name, operated a pushcart after immigrating from Italy. Jack Cohen, who created the eyewear chain Cohen’s Fashion Optical, peddled glasses from a cart on the Lower East Side.

But Mr. Basinski said the dreams of most vendors today had been stifled by government regulations and costly fines for minor code violations. And the switch to a sedentary location behind glass and a door, he said, is often harder than it seems.

“It’s a totally different skill,” he said. “Being on the street, you don’t really have to have a fancy display. People just see your stuff. But when you have a store, you need to have a display, and vendors aren’t used to that.”

Mr. Fall, 44, was born in Dakar, the capital of Senegal, and grew up in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where his father was an airline executive. In 1990, because he wanted to attend college abroad, he flew to New York. His parents predicted he would return after a few months once he learned how tough it was to survive on his own.

Yet Mr. Fall found work as an interpreter, a busboy and a waiter, eventually enrolling in John Jay College of Criminal Justice. He dropped out after two years — unable to attend school and to support himself at the same time, he said — and joined the Navy. After an honorable discharge in 2003, he started street vending.

He colonized a corner near Bloomingdale’s, where he had more than a passing familiarity with the kind of commercial traffic the area drew. For two months in 1998, he had worked in the store’s shoe department.

Days on the street were long and sometimes arduous, he said. His goods, arrayed on a 3-by-8-foot table, changed with the seasons: sun hats, headbands and sunglasses in the summer; mittens, earmuffs and wool caps in the winter. But he managed to earn enough to support himself, buy a van and raise a family.

Last year, he decided he was ready to take his business to the next level. On Aug. 12, he opened Ob’Prama, an 870-square-foot shop next to a Fine Fare supermarket, a block from where he lives with his wife and four children. In both form and content, it is a bricks-and-mortar expression of his vending table.

On a recent afternoon, handbags and belts dominated one wall; hats hung on a rack against another. A display case showed off jewelry and T-shirts. Pashmina scarves in a rainbow of colors were stacked on a table, and the front window was crowded with goods.

The simple aesthetic of his street business had carried over to the store, which was without decoration, save for a shiny silver garland that remained on the wall from his opening party. There were no signs outside — Mr. Fall said he was awaiting the delivery of an awning emblazoned with the store’s name. He had turned off the fluorescent lights to cut his electricity bill, pitching his goods into semidarkness.

Passers-by could be excused for thinking the shop was closed. He had had only one customer all day, a woman who bought several bracelets.

In the quiet of his shop, Mr. Fall admitted that he often missed the commotion of the street. “I used to be in an area where hundreds of people would pass by, and I would at least have a smile or a hello,” he said. “And now I have a window between me and the passers-by.”

But if he was discouraged, he betrayed no sign of it. On the street, he said, it had also taken time to get up and running. “It took me at least a few months to know what the customer needed, to redirect my buying strategies,” he recalled.

For now, he is using his downtime — and the comforts of a roof, air-conditioning and an Internet connection — to develop other enterprises, including an African hair-braiding salon he plans to open in an empty storefront next door; his wife, Diobe, will manage it. He also has plans to start an import-export business with friends in West Africa.

“For me to make some kind of money, this,” he said, waving his hand in a gesture encompassing the store, “has a limit. I have to look elsewhere.” He paused, then smiled knowingly — a man about to impart a tip.

“There are a lot of opportunities in Africa now,” he said.

A Street Vendor Takes the Biggest Step, Indoors - NYTimes.com.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

U.S. poverty rate jumps

U.S. poverty rate jumps
record amount - 1 in 7
Americans considered
poor in 2009: report

BY James Fanelli
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2010/09/12/2010-09-12_soaring_poverty_rate_hits_dismal_high__45_million.html.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

NEW YORK MOTOREXPO TAKES OVER LOWER MANHATTAN SEPTEMBER 12-17

NEW YORK MOTOREXPO TAKES OVER LOWER MANHATTAN SEPTEMBER 12-17

Venue: World Financial Center
250 Vesey St.,
New York, NY 10080
The Third Annual New York Motorexpo will fill the World Financial Center in lower Manhattan with the hottest new vehicles and motorcycles. Vehicles will be showcased throughout the indoor lobbies and outdoor areas of the World Financial Center. FREE to visit, attendees are invited to check out the latest vehicles and sit behind the wheels of the latest models from across the automotive spectrum. From ultra high-end exotics to the latest alternative fuel vehicles, this annual event showcases all that is hot on two and four wheels.
Sunday, September 12, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday, September 13 to Friday, September 17, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

For additional information, visit www.motorexpo.co

Friday, September 10, 2010

Sept. 11 Memorial Events

Sept. 11 Memorial Events

The ninth anniversary of the terrorist attacks will be commemorated on Saturday with concerts, services, displays and walks. The September Concert, a celebration for peace through music, will sponsor free concerts throughout the day around the city; locations include Central Park, St. Patrick’s Cathedral, St. Bartholomew’s Church and Washington Square Park; septemberconcert.org. The annual “Tribute in Light,” featuring beams of light shaped like the World Trade Center towers, will be visible from dusk Saturday till dawn Sunday; the display is presented by the Municipal Art Society of New York, the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation and Creative Time. Saturday is designated the National Day of Service and Remembrance, and organizations that accept volunteers can be found at 911dayofservice.org. At 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. there will be a screening of the 2002 documentary “In Memoriam: New York City, 9/11/01” at the Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue, at 103rd Street; $10 suggested admission; $6 for students and 62+; and free for members and children 12 and younger; (212) 534-1672; mcny.org. An annual ceremony from 6 to 9 p.m. sponsored by the New York Buddhist Church and others will feature the launching of lanterns on the south side of Pier 40, at West Houston and West Street; newyorkbuddhistchurch.org. A ceremony honoring lost members of the New York City Fire Department will take place from 5 to 9 p.m. at the Alice Austen House Museum, 2 Hylan Boulevard, Rosebank, Staten Island; (718) 816-4506; aliceausten.org. A walking tour of sites significant in the days following the attacks, including churches and rescue stations, will be led by NYC Discovery Tours on Saturday and Sunday at noon; $18; reservations and meeting place: (212) 465-3331.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Residents of Foreclosed Harlem Apartments Say Nonprofit Isn't Up to the Task

Tenants Seek to Block Sale

Residents of Foreclosed Harlem Apartments Say Nonprofit Isn't Up to the Task

A Harlem-based affordable-housing group wants to buy several foreclosed apartment buildings in East Harlem. But tenants in those apartments who say they've been victimized by neglectful landlords for too long aim to thwart a sale from happening.

The now-defunct British investment firm Dawnay Day previously owned the 47 apartment buildings before the properties fell into foreclosure proceedings last year. Dawnay Day originally purchased the 1,100 apartment units for $225 million in 2007.

Now Hope Community Inc., a nonprofit that currently manages 1,300 low-income apartments in Harlem, wants to acquire and renovate some of those buildings. Members of the tenant associations in the foreclosed Dawnay Day properties say Hope Community isn't up to the task.

"We've known for a while about Hope Community's history of neglect," said Juan Haro, coordinator for Movement for Justice in El Barrio, a group that represents the tenant associations in the apartment buildings. "We don't want another slumlord."

Hope Community's executive director, Walter Roberts, says that he is "bothered" by what he says are unfounded criticisms of his organization made by Movement for Justice in El Barrio. He also said that he has tried to reach out to Movement for Justice in El Barrio without success.

The two groups share the same goal of helping the tenants, Mr. Roberts said. "If there are issues, I am happy to have a discussion with them," he said.

Not all Dawnay Day tenants are opposed to Hope Community. "If Hope can get our building, that's a plus for us," said Anne Bragg, a Dawnay Day tenant who has lived in her apartment on East 117 Street for 39 years. "Hope has a pretty good reputation. We see their buildings and their upkeep."

The tenants in the 47 apartment buildings have a long history of squabbling with their landlords over issues like repairs, heating and infestations. In 2004, the tenants began organizing against their then landlord, Stephen Kessner. The Village Voice named Mr. Kessner one of the city's worst landlords in 2006.

Mr. Kessner couldn't be reached to comment.

In 2007, Mr. Kessner sold the apartment buildings occupied mostly by low-income tenants to the London-based firm Dawnay Day. At the time of the purchase, executives of Dawnay Day were quoted by British newspapers as saying that they intended to raise rents on the units once the current tenants were displaced.

But Dawnay Day fell victim to the financial crisis and eventually walked away from the 47 Harlem apartment buildings. Representatives for Dawnay Day couldn't be reached to comment.

Residents who lived under Mr. Kessner's and Dawnay Day's management say their apartments were often in squalid condition. Tenants had to deal with mice and bedbug infestations, shoddy plumbing and leaky ceilings, said Maria Mercado, who has lived in her cramped, one-bedroom East Harlem apartment with her mother and two children for 25 years.

Now Ms. Mercado says she worries that Hope Community will bring in more of the same type of negligent management. "With all that we've lived through, we don't want to regress," she said.

Ms. Mercado says she knows people who live in Hope Community-owned buildings and has seen the conditions of several of their apartments. Many of those apartments were in dilapidated conditions and in need of renovation, reminding her of the previous condition of her own apartment building, she said.

Mr. Roberts said that Hope Community is now renovating 63 low-income apartments in Harlem, assisting those tenants to find temporary residences nearby. When the work is complete, the tenants will be able to move back into their apartments at the same rent, Mr. Roberts said.

"We think we can replicate some of that work for some of the Dawnay Day tenants," he said.

C III Capital Partners LLC, the special servicer in charge of the properties, has yet to decide if it will seek buyers for the 47 buildings or if it plans to auction them off. "We are very focused on protecting the property and achieving recovery for the bond holders," Frank Garrison, a senior executive officer of C III, said without elaborating.

So far at least one for-profit organization has also shown interest in the properties. Manhattan real-estate company American Properties Inc. wants to acquire the buildings without raising the current rents of the tenants, said Scott Zwilling, a principal at the company.

Write to Joseph De Avila at joseph.deavila@wsj.com