Monthly Archives

July 2012

Arts and Entertainment, Events, Music

Opera in Brooklyn Bridge Park Gains in Popularity

July 28, 2012

Signore Carlo, before sampling pizza at Dellarocco’s soft opening, headed with his cam to his favorite local destination, Brooklyn Bridge Park, to catch some of the Metropolitan Opera’s performance there yesterday evening. Fortunately, he had some video of the 2010 Met performance in his now substantial vault, and so is able to show how this event’s popularity has increased. Video after the jump.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/44981

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Events, Food

Dellarocco’s Of Brooklyn At Hicks & Montague: Open For Biz Tuesday

July 28, 2012

At last! Dellarocco’s of Brooklyn, the new local brick-oven eatery at 214 Hicks Street, one door south of Montague, is set to open for business Tuesday, July 31. The eatery held a soft opening Friday, featuring pizzas cooked in its wood-burning brick oven imported from Italy, which were oh so delectably light & tasty. The restaurant also features a wine & beer cafe, offering local Brooklyn brews. And for dessert: hand-made cannoli. Update: Our man Karl was on hand with his cam. Video, as well as more text and photos, after the jump.

Dellarocco’s is owned & operated by Brooklyn-bred brothers Greg and Glenn Markman and Joseph Secondino (who has known the bros for 30+ years). The three are also partners of the Heights Cafe next door at 84 Montague Street. Dellarocco’s has a separate kitchen and operates as an independent biz. (See photos below.)

The tasteful boutique-style dining room boasts 15-foot ceilings, with a menu specializing in personal pizzas. It is open seven days a week, from noon to midnight. As you might guess from the image, delivery is also available. (Photos: Chuck Taylor)
Dellarocco’s owners Joseph Secondino, Glenn and Greg Markman.
Hopeful signs of success for the local eatery.
Joe, Glen, Greg… owners of Dellarocco’s Of Brooklyn.
The owners with Chef Pasquale Cozzolino in center.


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/44910

From the Web

Tale of the Tweets: Locals React to the Death of Assistant AG Richard Schwartz

July 27, 2012

Local residents and electeds are reacting via Facebook and Twitter to last night’s death of Assistant Attorney General Richard Schwartz in Cobble Hill. (Photo: Richard Kozar via Twitter)

Locals React to Assistant AG’s Death During Storm in Cobble Hill

Storified by Brooklyn Bugle · Fri, Jul 27 2012 10:44:47

"On behalf of all NYers, I would like to express my sympathy to the loved ones of Asst. AG Richard Schwartz." – GAMC http://www.governor.ny.gov/press/07272012-attorney-gen-richard-schwartzAndrew Cuomo
Our condolences to family & friends of AAG Richard Schwartz. NY is a better place because of his commitment to fairness & legal excellence.Eric Schneiderman
So sorry for the tragic death of Ass’t Atty General Richard Schwartz. Deep loss for Cobble Hill, Brooklyn, & NYS http://www.nydailynews.com/blogs/dailypolitics/2012/07/eric-schneiderman-mourns-assistant-ag-richard-schwartz-brooklyn-casualty-of-thBrad Lander
My thoughts & prayers are w family of Richard Schwartz, tragically killed last night in Cobble Hill during the storm. http://m.nypost.com/p/news/local/gov_perfect_storm_QZKWRLNKNhBLN1EkWn7ErLDaniel Squadron
Tragic: Assistant Attorney General Richard Schwartz, a 25 year vet of the NY AG’s office, killed in last night’s storm. http://nydn.us/N8cfRrRoss M. Wallenstein
Please keep Christ Church in your prayers. They suffered a lightning strike that injured a man during storms tonight.The Episcopal Church
Wow…just heard that lightening struck a church on Clinton Street in Cobble Hill. Knocked bricks and debris down and hit and injured a man walking by. What a storm…that was close!Meryl Blackman
As part of my ongoing early morning reports on Brownstone Brooklyn building collapses, Chri @ Christ Church http://instagr.am/p/Nlfub1smvA/Steve Wax
Christ Church of Cobble Hill in Brooklyn struck by lightening – falling rocks and scaffolding seriously injures man http://pic.twitter.com/DraK1vPqMatt Kozar


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7667

From the Web

News, Police Blotter

NY1 Reporter Vivian Lee Attacked While Covering Story in Cobble Hill

July 27, 2012

NY1 veteran reporter Vivian Lee was attacked by a whacko woman in a white sheet in Cobble Hill Friday morning. DNAInfo.com explains that Lee was reporting on the death of Richard Schwartz, 61, who was killed after lightning struck a church steeple and sent debris tumbling to the street Thursday night.

A woman draped in a sheet climbed into an NY1 news van and began using Lee’s makeup and snacking on food, according to Lee and a witness. When the reporter told her to leave, the woman allegedly took a swing at Lee. “The van’s driver grabbed the woman and hauled her out of the van. As the three stood beside the van, the woman swung again, this time punching Lee in the neck. The driver wrestled the woman to the ground and held her until cops arrived and took her away,” DNAInfo says.

Lee was not seriously injured, and an ambulance was not called. (Photo: DNAInfo)


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7656

From the Web

Books

Brooklyn Bugle Book Club: “Rez Life” by David Treuer

July 27, 2012

Image via Amazon.com

David Treuer begins his engrossing memoir “Rez Life” by describing his grandfather’s suicide and the way the family comes together to mourn, to cope, and to clean up. He, along with his uncles, his brothers, and his cousins dig the grave and clean up the old man’s house. It’s a fitting beginning for this complex look at reservation life. Each chapter starts out with a real person, then takes off from that person’s story to examine another facet of reservation life, and the complex series of negotiations, treaties, policies and laws that created each particular result.

One chapter starts with a conservation officer and a conflict over hunting and fishing rights – can the tribe fine a non-tribal, non-resident for fishing in its (lake) waters? And why do Indians have all these special privileges anyway? It’s a jumping off point for a careful discussion of treaties and the origins of the reservations. Another chapter begins with a vignette of a tribal judge, who also happens to be the author’s mother, sitting in tribal court, meting out punishment for the assorted Indian vandals, juvenile delinquents, and drug abusers appearing before her. This chapter discusses families, tribal law enforcement, gathering of wild rice, and state and federal jurisdiction – and the treaties and policies that got the tribe to this day.

Yet another chapter starts with a discussion of a small tax bill, an Indian couple, and the lawsuit that resulted in a Supreme Court decision that laid the basis for casino gambling. Along the way, that chapter touches on sovereignty, assimilation policies, the Trail of Tears. The final chapter discusses, painfully, the Jones twins, who were separated from their parents at the age of five and sent to an Indian boarding school where they were forced to speak English and learn non-traditional ways of life. It’s a starting point for an examination of the role of language in retaining identity and preserving culture. It also allows Treuer to paint a hopeful picture of some immersion Ojibwe language schools that will ensure the language continues, though of course many other Native American languages have disappeared.

Along the way, Treuer takes on the American Indian Movement of the 1970s, as well as other stereotypes – the drunken Indian living impoverished on the rez, the Native American who touched the earth only lightly. The result is a carefully orchestrated trip through a vortex. The effect is a spiral, with different topics touched on repeatedly, each new context adding to the depth and precision of the discussion. What could be a recipe for a disorganized mess is instead a tour de force of argument, layered and meaningful.

Do you have a similar response to this approach to the story? A different one? Let us know in the comments.

Have a book you want me to know about? Email me at asbowie@gmail.com. I also blog about metrics here.

From the Web

News

Man Killed by Collapsing Scaffolding from Christ Church in Cobble Hill

July 27, 2012

New York City’s only fatality in last evening’s powerful storm occurred in Cobble Hill when scaffolding surrounding a Christ Church on Clinton Street collapsed as a 61 year old man was walking under it, according to NY1.

Update: The victim has been identified as Richard Schwartz, a prosecutor in the State Attorney General’s office. He is survived by a wife and daughter. The scaffolding was at Christ Church on Clinton Street; it appears to have collapsed when lightning struck the church’s steeple and dislodged some stones which fell onto the scaffolding.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7650

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, News

Brooklyn Borough Prez Markowitz Weighs In On Bloomberg’s Soda Ban Proposal

July 26, 2012

NYC Mayor Bloomberg’s intent to ban 16+-ounce sodas in movie theaters, sports arenas, food carts, restaurants and delis met with plenty of opposition at a NYC Board of Health hearing in Long Island City Tuesday, which drew such a crowd that an overflow room was needed. Among those testifying that the proposed policy is sour grapes was Brooklyn Borough president Marty Markowitz, who offered a dollop of humor, alongside a much-needed common sense message.

The hotly contested issue—which would be the first such ban in the nation—has fostered public rallies, petitions and an advocacy group, New Yorkers for Beverage Choices, which relayed its message at the Brooklyn Heights Regal/United Artists movie theater earlier this month with a sign on the marquee proclaiming: “Say No to the NYC Ban.”

In his address at the hearing, Markowtiz said, “Despite the city’s many positive health programs, I do not support the proposed ban, because consumers should have the ultimate say. The way to approach obesity is through education, advocacy, counseling, group support and efforts to raise self-esteem—not a punitive policy that forcibly limits consumer choices.”

He added, “I’m overweight not because I drink Big Gulp sodas, but because I eat too much pasta, pastrami sandwiches, pizza, bagels with cream cheese and lox, red velvet cake and cheesecake, don’t exercise as much as I should, and my genes are working against me. Someone who exercises regularly, eats right and has the right DNA can drink an entire two liter bottle of soda and not gain a pound.

“When it comes to a personal decision like what I put on my dinner table, the government can educate, inform, advocate and inspire, but should not be the final decision maker when it comes down to what is best for me. Ultimately, it should be the consumer that decides,” Markowitz said.

Unfortunately, despite the best intentions of Brooklyn’s Borough Prez, his testimony will likely ring hollow with the NYC Board of Health. All 11 members were personally appointed by Nanny Bloomberg himself, all but insuring rubber stamp approval when the legislation goes up for a vote in September. Next up: Prohibition!

Markowitz’s full statement:

Although I am here in disagreement on this particular policy, I fully support and commend this administration’s commitment to improving the health of all New Yorkers.

From expanding smoke-free zones to healthier school meals, banning trans fats to increasing access to fresh fruits and vegetables, and reducing sodium in foods to labeling calories at fast food chains, this administration’s health initiatives have proven to be enormously successful.

But despite the city’s many positive health programs, I do not support the proposed ban on sugary drinks—or what I used to know as soda—larger than 16 ounces because consumers should have the ultimate say.

The way to approach the obesity epidemic is through education, advocacy, counseling, group support, and I believe most importantly, efforts to raise self-esteem, not a punitive policy that forcibly limits consumer choices.

When it comes to what we eat or drink, a one-size-fits-all approach doesn’t work. Someone who exercises regularly, eats right, and has the right DNA can drink an entire two liter bottle of soda and not gain a pound. But if someone like me did that—I would be twice the size I am now.

Let me be clear: I’m overweight not because I drink Big Gulp sodas, but frankly because I eat too much pasta, pastrami sandwiches, pizza, bagels with cream cheese and lox, red velvet cake and cheesecake, don’t exercise as much as I should, and my genes are working against me. I was an overweight kid and I’m an overweight adult.

There’s an absolute truth that I want to share with you. Nobody wants to be obese, but for whatever reason, whether it’s genetics—which plays a big part in this—overeating, or a lack of exercise, for many of us, what we eat really sticks to us.

Don’t get me wrong. For those with this problem, I know large sodas, fast food, fatty foods, too much sodium, and super-sized portions, as well as “white” products—breads, pasta, rice, and baked goods—are a direct cause of the obesity epidemic. But the key is limiting them from our diets, not banning them.

So to really tackle the obesity epidemic head on, I urge the Department of Health to launch a citywide campaign to promote group exercise in the neighborhoods with particularly high rates of obesity.

And let’s get the private sector involved. If the city is really serious about knocking pounds off the scale, we should create an “exercise stamp” program like “food stamps” that subsidizes the cost of gym membership, spin studios, or group exercise classes for the city’s youth and low-income families. After all, you’re more likely to get in shape and stay that way when you’re working out with others who are facing the same challenges.

With kids glued to their computer screens, iPhones, iPads, or other electronic devices all day, only their fingers are getting a workout and not their bodies. So getting kids to be active and in shape is more important than ever. Unfortunately, right now roughly 20 percent of high school students in New York City have no physical education classes in an average week and far too many don’t even have space to exercise.

That is unacceptable. When I was a kid, we had gym class every day. So let’s not combat obesity by banning large sodas; let’s do it with a policy that requires students to exercise every day in middle school and high school.

And in neighborhoods struggling with obesity, we should be setting up physical fitness programs and outdoor group exercise clinics led by physical trainers. In addition, we should be ensuring that all New Yorkers have access to fresh fruits and vegetables by providing incentives to developers to rent to full-service supermarkets rather than another bank or drug chain, and open up our schools so that they can educate not only children, but parents on how to cook healthier and smarter meals with an emphasis on smaller portions.

As one of the most diverse places in the world, we should be sharing the best practices from our many ethnic groups to educate residents on how to prepare tasty, exciting, and healthy dishes. For instance, Asian American cuisine is delicious and also emphasizes more vegetables, smaller portions of meat, and less starch.

And with the same gusto that the city has poured into its anti-smoking ads, let’s send a clear message that obesity leads to heart attacks, diabetes, high blood pressure, other deadly health risks—and lowers the quality of life—but with the caveat that the goal is not to idolize being razor-thin. It’s about being fit and increasing self-esteem, because beauty comes in every size and shape. How sweet it is!

So when it comes to a personal decision like what I put on my dinner table, the government can educate, inform, advocate, and inspire, but should not be the final decision maker when it comes down to what is best for me. Ultimately, it should be the consumer that decides.

It’s as simple as this: the better you look, the better you feel. And the better you feel, the better you want to look and the more you’ll be conscious of what you eat and drink. I said it before and I’ll say it again: nobody willingly wants to be obese.

Photo via Brooklyn Borough President’s Facebook Page


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/44851

From the Web

Health

New ‘Out Of The Closet Thrift Store’ In Boerum Hill Offers AIDS Services Throughout The Borough

July 26, 2012

Out of the Closet Thrift Store has opened its newest location in Boerum Hill, at 475 Atlantic Avenue. The destination benefits the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. Regional Director Adam Ouderkirk tells DNAInfo.com that the shop will work in the community with other AIDS agencies to provide testing, information and treatment in the borough.

The AIDS Healthcare Foundation was founded in 1987 by a group of men in Los Angeles who saw their friends dying of AIDS in the streets and in the hallways of hospitals. They wanted to provide a place to die with dignity and sponsored California legislation that enabled creation of the first licensed HIV/AIDS facility for the terminally ill in that state. Today the Foundation is the largest provider of HIV/AIDS medication in the U.S., according to their website. They also provide medicine and advocacy to people in 22 countries.

Out of the Closet was created to benefit the foundation. Community members donate clothing and accessories and for every item sold, 96 cents of each dollar benefits AIDS prevention and advocacy programs and services. There are several branches in San Francisco and Los Angeles, plus stores in Miami, Amsterdam… and now Brooklyn.

Ouderkirk tells DNAInfo, “We want the Brooklyn community to really own the store and feel that its theirs.” There will be free and confidential HIV testing every day in the store, plus a pharmacy that provides HIV medications.

According to Ouderkirk, while the Brooklyn borough has the third-highest AIDS/HIV rates after Manhattan and the Bronx, it also offers the fewest amount of services.
“Brooklyn was an important place for us to be. And being near the Atlantic Terminal, hopefully people from all over Brooklyn will have access to the store and its services.”

The store’s manager is Carlos Cartayas, who is known as “Peanut.” He says, “We have had several boxes of clothes donated from L.A. but none so far from the Brooklyn. I don’t think people know we’re here yet.” To donate, call 718-614-5949 or drop off clothes any weekday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m at 475 Atlantic Avenue.


Source: Cobble Hill Blog
http://cobblehillblog.com/archives/7638

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights, Sports

Skeptic Deems Proposed $40M Fieldhouse A ‘Masquerade That Doesn’t Belong In BB Park’

July 26, 2012

The $40 million, 2,499-seat Fieldhouse/Velodrome proposed for Brooklyn Bridge Park has been personified as a community recreation center, with an indoor bike riding track as its centerpiece. But Peter Flemming, Co-Chair of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Community Council and a member of the Citizens Advisory Committee of the Park Corp., says the plan that’s been shared with the public is a ruse.

He tells the Brooklyn Eagle that the proposed Fieldhouse is actually “a specialized velodrome masquerading as a community recreation center—and it doesn’t belong in Brooklyn Bridge Park… Painting stripes on a horse doesn’t make it a zebra.”

Flemming says that the Velodrome will primarily serve specialized competitive track cyclists who come from around the world, accompanied by hundreds of vehicles and thousands of spectators, to the detriment of BBP: “It’s a pipe dream. The number of people who really want it you can count on the fingers of your left hand. What is it doing in our park? Why help the city build a huge stadium in a tiny waterfront park for this quaint, obscure, bizarre sport?”

The Eagle explains: “A velodrome is a racing track, banked 45 degrees or more at the curves, for competitive bicycle racing. Competitors ride special fixed-gear bikes without brakes, and must travel at least 16 miles an hour to avoid tipping over. There is only one other indoor velodrome in the United States, the Home Depot Center Velodrome in Carson, California, though there are dozens of outdoor velodromes.”

Brooklyn Bridge Park proponents say the Fieldhouse, backed by founder and chairman Joshua P. Rechnitz, is envisioned as a “flexible public indoor athletic and recreation center” that includes a public boathouse, restrooms and space for the park’s maintenance and operations.

Greg Brooks, executive director of New York City Fieldhouse, argues in the Eagle that the entire community will make use of the facility, and says it will “save the park millions in capital costs. That’s money for maintenance, restrooms, storage for kayaks, all capital costs the park will not have to spend or maintain.”

Regina Myer, President of Brooklyn Bridge Park, adds, “The proposed Fieldhouse will bring park users and the community the all-weather sports and recreation venue that has always been included in the General Project Plan for the park but was unattainable due to financial constraints. We will continue to work with the New York City Field House to address the community’s concerns and ensure that this project adds positively to the park experience.”

There’s much more to the story in the Brooklyn Eagle. See the article here.

(Photo: Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy via McBrooklyn)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/44836

From the Web

Brooklyn Heights

Image Of The Day: Halloween In July?

July 26, 2012

Forget Christmas in July. The folks at Verizon Wireless on Montague Street—apparently wanting to insure no passersby ended up meeting the Grim Reaper in the netherworld below the sidewalk—placed this non-intimidating scarecrow beside the candy corn safety cone… making hay out of potential hell. (Photo: Chuck Taylor)


Source: Brooklyn Heights Blog
http://brooklynheightsblog.com/archives/44815

From the Web