Sunday, October 31, 2010

Sunset Park Centre recycling separates ground

A new plant for recycling in Twilight which will serve as the main facility in Brooklyn recycling Park started construction. The Sims Municipal Recycling Facility, a 100,000 square foot facility will create 100 new jobs.? It is set to open in December 2011. Read more.

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Open letter to the parent

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If you’re not aware of the breeder-nonbreeder infighting in this town, well, we’re not sure where you’ve been hiding. But a recent essay sparked a response from one of our BB Kids writers, and that in turn elicited another parent’s take on the stroller wars.

Dear Parent Hater,

I don’t know you, but I know your kind. I know, because once I was you. Back in my childfree days, I remember playing chicken with a particularly vengeful-looking mommy on a narrow stretch of Hicks Street. I was walking one way; she was walking the other. We locked eyes and barreled toward each other. Sure it felt petty, but I just wasn’t willing to be bulldozed for what felt like the twentieth time that day. Was it so much to ask to be able to walk in a straight line from here to there without having to dodge a sea of Maclarens? No, it was not. I ended up getting wedged into a planter studded with decorative lettuce. Mommy dearest screamed past me, the acrid scent of righteous indignation wafting off of her.

When I got home that night, I spent at least twenty minutes ranting at my then boyfriend now husband about the hazards of childbirth. “Why is that pushing out a shorty makes people feel like the world owes them something?” I asked. He shrugged and resumed playing Need for Speed: Underground. I vowed never to become “one of those moms.” I would never be a sidewalk tyrant; I would never treat my favorite patisserie like my living room. I mean really, how hard could it be to exhibit good manners? Enter baby.

Okay, so here’s the thing. I’ve read all of the essays—the apologia and the rants—and what no one seems to be acknowledging is the obvious: it’s fucking hard. I’ve only been a parent for a year and a half now and I’m here to tell you, raising a child in the city is not for the faint of heart. Yes, being in New York has its undeniable benefits: rich cultural amenities, a many-hued and multifaceted population, yada yada yada. (You don’t need me to tell you this. This is why we’re all here, right?) It also offers an array of practical challenges that threaten to transform parenthood into a full contact sport. To all the parent haters out there, I say this: you try pasting a smile on your face after schlepping your 25-pound kid and your own weight in groceries up two flights of piss-slick subway stairs with people bouncing off you from every direction like angry billiard balls. You try piloting a stroller and a grocery cart through Trader Joe’s without occasionally blocking peoples’ path. You try “subtly” navigating a stroller past someone gabbing away on his cell on a turn-of-the-century Brooklyn block. It’s next to impossible. It’s easy to sit in judgment of all the “entitled” parents out there when the hardest logistical challenge you face is squeezing your ass onto an over-packed subway car at rush hour. Now summon up the irritation you feel at that moment and multiply it by about a thousand. That will give you some sense of the physical hurdles and minor indignities people suffer through every day to have a family in New York.

Now I know what you’re going say, nonbreeders. You’re gonna say: no one told you to have kids, lady. And you’re right. It was my choice to breed in the most populous (and stinky) metropolis in the States. A place conceived and built before things like elevators and two-lane streets came into vogue; a place where a one-bedroom apartment sells for more than my grandfather earned in a lifetime. I took on that challenge and no one else should pay the price for any resulting discontent. There’s no excuse for being a shithead. Because of this I make every effort to mind my Ps and Qs when I’m out with my daughter and to be ever mindful of how much space we’re taking up. I’ll admit that I’m not always the paragon of civic virtue I set out to be. (There have been a couple of bared teeth incidents involving doors smacked shut in my daughter’s face, and some aggressive stroller maneuvering on narrow walkways commandeered by couples sauntering hand-in-hand.)?But overall I feel like I’m more conscious of my fellow New Yorkers post-child bearing than I was prior to it. I never would have turned my back on an old lady in need, but now I’d be hard pressed not to fling my purchases to the ground and run to her aid. Why? Because now I’ve personally experienced that type of powerlessness. I can still reach the highest shelf, but stick me and my stroller in a subway station with more than four flights of stairs and no volunteers and I’m a lame duck.

Nothing has brought home the meaning of the word community to me like trying to raise a tiny human in a big city without any immediate family at hand. I’m a better, more engaged citizen now than I ever have been. And I know I’m not alone. Which is why I maintain that the smug parents so oft conjured up in anti-breeding epistles are the exception to the rule. I’d be willing to lay down money that Daryl Lang’s nemesis, Mr. Potato Chips,?was an asshole long before he ever got around to procreating. Replicating his genetic code just intensified his condition.

So if the vast majority of us are doing the best we can, where does all the hate come from? Are a handful of bad-mannered narcissists poisoning the atmosphere for the rest of us parents? Maybe, but I think it’s more complicated than that. Part of the ire leveled at today’s parents is the result of sheer volume. What you rarely hear about in the context of the breeder vs. nonbreeder debate is that we’re in the throes of one of the biggest baby booms since WWII ended. There are kids literally everywhere you look. It’s wall-to-wall strollers out there. Playgrounds are being erected faster then skyscrapers. You can’t spit without it landing on the helmet-clad head of a boy on a Razor scooter. And this upsurge in under-fives is upsetting the delicate equilibrium of the five boroughs. It’s putting a strain on already strained resources. It’s crowding sidewalks, clogging up lines at the grocery store, and claiming your seat on the subway. And it’s annoying. I’m annoyed and I’m part of the problem.

Just like that, parents have become the easiest target for disgruntled city dwellers everywhere. Part of the irritation is justified (that double stroller really does take up as much space as a Smart Car) but part of it is circumstantial. This city has always been filled with families, but it wasn’t built to accommodate hordes of?them. And now that the middle-class parents who traditionally decamped for the suburbs are staying put, we all seem to have reached some kind of civility tipping point. Blame it on crumbling infrastructure or the “me-first” culture of the moment. Either way the fertile folk among us aren’t the only culprits. Still nonbreeders seem to think that the answer to this conundrum is to a) browbeat families into shrinking into the background, or b) drum them out of the city.

But both of these responses are wrong headed. Because guess what? New York is full of people, and when people reach a certain stage in their lives they have a tendency to make new people. (You did get that whole Birds and Bees lecture, right?) You cannot reasonably expect these newly hatched families to stay home all the time or quietly lurk around the edges of civic life, speaking in hushed tones. I’m sorry if we’re disrupting the lifestyle to which you, the single and unburdened, have become accustomed, but it’s my world too. Now I think we can all agree that dragging a kid out to the bar every night is not in anyone’s best interest, but please spare me the nasty looks next time I duck into my favorite dive for an afternoon beer with my family. And rest assured, I didn’t bring my daughter in there because I’m “acting out” or trying to curtail your free expression. I’m there because I need a drink and that beer you paid $8 bucks for will cost me $28 if I get a sitter. I’m sorry you find my family irksome, but I don’t remember signing anything when I moved to Brooklyn stating that I’d stop frequenting my favorite establishments the second I gave birth.

You have the right to your life, certainly, but so do I—and so do the other people out there toting their broods around, so get used to it. The only other option is to round us up and transport us to the suburbs, which sounds good until you contemplate the urban havoc wrought by so-called “white flight” two generations ago. Try renewing your liberal credentials after you’ve forced all the gentrifiers to trade in Kings County for Monmouth.

It seems like there are plenty of people out there willing to plead the case of disgruntled nonbreeders and a slew of parent-apologists playing attack and defend, but there don’t seem to be many people willing to step up and declare their right to have kids in the city without being made to feel like social pariahs. I mean, it’s not like we’re huffing glue here, people. These are babies we’re talking about. They might be disruptive, even a little obnoxious, but they’re pretty innocuous in the scheme of things. Some people even find them cute.

So go ahead and resent us—you’re a New Yorker after all, it’s practically part of the job description. But don’t vilify us. Trust that most of us are trying to tread lightly and if we sometimes screw up, well, it’s possible that you too occasionally behave in a less than neighborly fashion. Strong-arming your way through a pack of distracted mothers is no fun, but neither is getting manhandled when your teething toddler squalls in line at a Starbucks. Sure, your life’s no picnic, but at least you have the benefit of something approximating a good night’s sleep. Plus I’m guessing you don’t spend your days bagging up someone else’s poop. You’ve got that going for you.

Orli Van Mourik is a writer, a mother, and a budding curmudgeon. Photo by Tracy Collins.

Published on 10.29.10.

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Unleash your creativity to the 3rd Ward (plus, a deal killer for BB readers!)

Roger Benton at Work

Many know Ward 3rd events as their drink-n-runs weekly, they throw their openings of the art of the line-on-the-block, and the annual parties as Bacchanale Halloween tomorrow evening, in the Land of ash.

But its 800 members + know of 3rd Ward - one that provides all the tools, space and creative juice that they need to produce their work much it would cost to share a studio and purchase the equipment yourself.

Whether you're an amateur or a professional creation, there is a membership for you. And now 3rd Ward offers an impressive amount of readers BB - one month free membership with a 12 month contract (see details and code promo below).

Their package members unlimited access $ GA per month - is a crazy boon. To this 30,000 square foot multipurpose space creative in East Williamsburg, you get private or collaboration space and their unique offers unlimited use and encompassing: workshop a 10,000 square feet and metal, all-Mac Digital Media Lab, a jewelry studio dedicated, several pictures studios, wood and classes as much as you want to take in their class catalog of 150 +.(If you took an all the days of the week, it would be possible for verification of a Chair, raise chickens, build a loft, learn graphic design, make SOAP and launch a Web site in no time flat.)

3Rd Ward also gives its members a ton of fabulous benefits such as free coffee intellectuals and discounts on equipment and supplies to suppliers such as Utrecht, rental of photo by CSI and Mr. Fine wood work.In addition, each Member - Basic or unlimited - gets their own lime green Ward 3rd free bike.

A Web design class in the Media Lab

To get an idea of how membership can transform the way work you, study Roger unlimited Benton, Member since 2008 which has increased its design furniture company, Benton custom 3rd Ward. For him, "this installation benefits go beyond having a shop and tools to do my job YH ' I used our lobby as a temporary exhibition room and a meeting place for clients."And when I finished a song I can it roll down the room in a photo studio to shoot it for my Web site.

But the main draw, he says, is the creative culture at 3rd Ward. "There is a welcoming feeling here, not only the other carpenters or furniture, but also by artists, designers, photographers, models, musicians and other creative call this homebase persons place.I've met with good friends here and started business different and new projects based on these relationships.?

3rd Ward became a go - to place to take risks, make errors and realizing your potential créatif.Leur Brooklyn last campaign, case of ideas, he seized with this rallying cry: "" 3rd Ward was built for game-changers, people like you who do not follow the stream, but forge future ""

Membership base, only $49 per month, is perfect for those who want to tap into the community of enthusiasts, creative 3rd Ward with large discounts on classes, booking fees and passes journée.Un unlimited number of members is the best deal and all 3rd Ward brings at your fingertips for a low monthly rate.

Learn more at www.3rdward.com or learn first main.Devenir member with special agreement for Brooklyn Based readers: for a limited time, sign up for 12 months or Unlimited membership base and get your first month free (up to a value of $359)! to plan your trip and claim your free month with 12 month contract, click here http://www.3rdward.com/takeatour/bbased and use the promotional code BKCREATE.

Published on 10.29.10.

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Dance of the Rafters

The Horror Show advertising makes an impressive range of promises: pornography, twisted magic and 98% of historical accuracy high standing among them. Written, directed and produced by Anya Sapozhnikova House of Yes, The Horror Show cannot realize all its boasts, but it is a pleasant evening.

Draw magic that only ' t - the show centers around a sour missing love triangle. The complex issues of character development is neither requested nor answered. Instead of this, interpreters require a lot of their body.Impressive antennas by Anya and fellow alum Cirque de Lady Jordann Baker are beautifully paired dances choreographed by Brett Lord earth-bound.(Lord also plays the man at the Centre of the love triangle, lucky guy).

The ground for suicide a little too ran true when mere moments after a mannequin resembling one of the performers was dropped from a high balcony, another speaker fell a rope being rigged.To its credit, not only has she reassured the public that it was beautiful, but she also smooth and returned renewed at the end of the spectacle.Professionnalisme: 100;died: 0.

He might not live title, but The Horror Show offer certainement.La haunting height of the brewery and the old Bushwick theater space-an amazing artists costumes are thin spots in history .for essentially, the public seems too stunned by the series of physical prowess to require much more, proving that the talent of real life reads better than trumped theatricality.

Horror show
More than at night!
Friday 29 octobre.portes at 8 am, show at 9
Dansbro, 260 Meserole Street brewery
Tickets $ 25 (some walk up remaining tickets)
Featuring the band Stumblebum

Chlo? Bass has a poor sense of balance, but it is for him with other talents

Published on 10.29.10.

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Handmade Holiday Craft Fair

We are team still with 3rd Ward present handmade Holiday Craft Fair, a fair-market-style where eclectic artisans, craftsmen, music, workshops, food and beverages are the typical day zoo is something to look forward to purchasing.> >

Published on 10.29.10.

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Brooklyn schools may close due to declining performance

John Dewey, Kappa VII Middle School and Sheepshead Bay High School school are just three of the 47 schools may be closed due to poor performance. Schools represent 5% lower as regards performance according to the Ministry of education of the city of New York. Schools were also measured by the results of examination, reviews of parent and other measures. Read more.

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Bed-Stuy bakery uses the Internet to raise funds

Matthew Tilden, owner of SCRATCHbread, a bakery in Bed-Stuy, raises $ 10,000 through a Kickstarter website. Tilden hopes to use the funds to develop a large restaurant and grocery retail at ground level. More information on the Brooklyn Eagle

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Filene basement, H & M and the Aéropostale To Come Fulton Street

Retailers Filene basement, SYMS, H & M and Aéropostale taking place at Fulton Street Mall, shop in downtown Brooklyn. With high range construction housing developments, developers want to draw the name of major retailers. More WSJ

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Brooklyn Design challenge: loft

Curves and color in a Coleman design.

A few months ago we started series Brooklyn design challenge, in which we ask local designers to give us advice on how to get the most from different types of apartments more widespread in Brooklyn. First of all, we discussed the apartment railway, walkthrough, rooms lack of cupboards and all. Today, we give you advice on how to improve your life style loft.

Apartment loft, this symbol of urban Bohemia, evokes images of artists with industrial spaces and houses of old factories to sculpture found materials.Indeed, lofts are fair studio apartments with more space .alors that some may have rooms or loft has thus built on sleeping areas, many lofts are a large area with a separate bathroom and closets-if you are lucky.

Breaking space into distinct areas, finding enough storage, avoidance of disorder (which goes hand in hand with storage solutions) and protection of privacy, especially when it comes to the region of dormant, were the design challenges present lofts. We spoke with Christopher Design Interior Christopher Coleman Coleman and John Loecke John Loecke interior interior designers design inspiration.

Breaking space: the large amount of space is often what attracts people from lofts, but it can also feel overwhelming, structured and messy.Christopher Coleman is a fan of follow-up, which may be suspended or mounted directly on the ceiling (many lofts have exposed pipes or uneven ceilings do suspend a better choice), fabric, plastic, or virtually any matter aesthetically, panels shaped partitions.Suivi including follow-up ripplefold allowing partitions the curve can be purchased in stores upholstery and drapery around in the city. On a budget, it suggests to create panels suspended using canvas stretchers art supply store. "You can use canvas or go to the garment district buy fabric that you like and then make panels-sided with a gun," he said.

Investment: another way to divide the space is to use furniture-cabinets, entertainment units, shelves, and couches. Spaces more traditional, furniture, with the exception of dining tables, is generally placed against a wall. In an attic, you will probably want to float some parts placing them on their own so that they can be seen from all sides.

An uncluttered space by Loecke.

Loecke suggests spending your money one element which defines a room. "Very good sections helps anchor the space and creates a Visual limit," he says. "In an attic, you generally have a lot of space and a sectional sofa will fill that visually. "On a similar note, he suggested that define the area of room bedroom with a head of a large, bold. On the expensive side of the spectrum, he loves Mitchell Gold room setting pieces. At the end of the budget, Loecke is an advocate for Ikea. "If the pieces are assembled correctly, they are not as disposable as everyone thinks,"he said.""

Adding color: several loft spaces were in fact, after the plants and many have unfinished elements such as exposed brick walls, concrete floors or ceilings for fall. Because there are fewer walls, there are fewer opportunities to add more foolproof color with paint-one inexpensive ways to transform space. Coleman suggests the use of major pops round rug color space and create an interesting visual dynamics. ""I just bored to puncture before with square carpet," he said."I'd like to float on a round rug furniture, I think that makes the eye revolve around much more than a rectangular carpet in a rectangular room."

If you are a logical wall paint, Coleman recommends a bold color for a wall feature. "It's cheaper if you don't have money for art," he explains.He likes using paint-gold colored duct tape-to make edges on the floor, delineating "rooms" and the addition of interest."Tape comes in all these colors-I've used the Orange quite a bit,"he said.""

Advice Low cost: Ikea and the Bank of containers have a follow-up, or shoot metal ceiling suspension using budget.à great storage solutions, you can divide your space almost any equipment at low costs, then to upgrade or switch on when you get bored or increased.

Challenge: echoes parasites.Dans spaces opened with a few cupboards your stuff tends to drift and collect in piles.Loecke recommends long hard reviewing your belongings and find what you need to warehousing support, if it comes to clothing, books, or supplies crafts. using your Cabinet or shelf boundary makes solves both problems by providing storage and dividing your espace.Si you have much to declutter, go big. ""If you build a whole Wall shelves just an element of design," said Loecke. "It is not like distributed echoes of your home.?

Published by Annaliese Griffin, photos courtesy of Christopher Coleman and John Loecke 10.28.10.Texte

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Make your own Kimchi, threw a party

Three years ago the Pickle annual International Festival was crammed into a block of Lower East Side and there is no kimchi suppliers. But this year, the festival has spilled in an empty parking lot and a crowd of fans of kimchi waited in line for dogs kimchili kimchi, kimchi tacos and at least five kinds of kimchi. What is all the this "krage" or Korean rage on Korean tradition fiery and pungent food conservation?

In the past few years, such as small-scale kimchi on NY MILKimchi and Mama O have made appearances in chips in Brooklyn, new Amsterdam market Marlow girls, Dean and DeLuca and Murray's Cheese Shop.

? Mama O is known for it's lyric takes the kimchi, addition of coriander and limes and experimenting with mushrooms, while packaged elegance MILKimchi paired with New Zealand Viognier and Porchetta sandwiches.

It looks like a small New York kimchi regionalism emerges, and there are a lot of room for more varieties and pairing. After all, the Korea has more than 150 varieties which are based on different regions, seasons and ingredients.

My parents had a Korean restaurant for over 40 years and I sat watching my mother to build walls of kimchi since I was a child. For me, is more than a traditional process to preserve the b.c foods ' is the evolution of seasons and what that grew locally.Steeped in history and tradition with creativity and innovation. as strong and healthy and eating something to help you eat more! And because it is such a process of manpower, register often using from neighbours and friends, who begs for a party.

If this is your "mother kimchi," "traditional kimchi," "vegan organic kimchi," there is something to add to the set.Each variety reflects a place and culture, in that it exists.

Kimjang is a major annual event in Korea lies at the end of October til early November, where people gather to make kimchi last cold winter months.This is an excellent opportunity to share recipes, experiment, crying your eyes to and the bottle a few memories.

If you haven't made before kimchi, now is a perfect time to throw a party, drink some soju and make some for the vacances.Vous do not need a special building clay which you bury in the ground.(This was before refrigerators)! you will need are gloves, rubber, glass jars, a large mixing bowl and a bucket, cooler or brine bath in.

Here's a simple recipe for blow your party kimchi.Pour napa cabbage Kimchi most adventurers, add pickled shrimp, fish, potatoes, nuts, radish - sauce make your propre.Il there's always room for expressions more NY-style kimchi.

Equipment

Pair of rubber gloves
Large mixing bowl
Glass or the crock pots
Bucket or brine cooler in

Ingredients
(fills a jar of 32 oz)

1 Napa cabbage, about 2 pounds
coarse sea salt
1/2 cup chopped green top onion
3 tablespoons peeled and minced garlic
3 tbsp peeled and grated ginger
1 tbsp or more red soil Korean chilies *.

Reduce by half the cabbage longitudinalement.Faire soak the cabbage water salt liberally froide.Saupoudrer between layers of cabbage and cover water froide.Placez heavy plate or an object on top to keep the cabbage submerged. let the brine during the night.

After the cabbage is marinated, rinse well between the layers of feuilles.Agiter and gently press part of the water to help dry the feuilles.définie in a strainer to dry while you prepare the sauce.

Wear gloves and combine green onions, garlic, ginger and terrestrial chilies in a paste (add a little water if necessary for thin dough enough to allow you to more easily expand).

Cut lengthwise half new cabbage (4), cut the stem and cut 1 "horizontal cuts." as well as the chou.Mélanger leaves of cabbage with paste

Cabbage Press firmly in a glass jar and let 2 "at the top of the air .Laissez rest in a cool place at room temperature for 2 to 3 jours.Si it seethes serve immediately or réfrigérer.Les aromas will evolve in the days, and it should last for several months in the fridge."

* On the other hand, you can buy the Korean chili powder (kochugaru) most Korean markets.Han Nam string to Flushing, Queens and Han Ah Reum in Midtown Manhattan are two that wear.

Published on 10.28.10.

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Friday, October 29, 2010

Halloween at 313

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Enter, if you dare. For Halloween, 313 Clinton Ave. in Clinton Hill turns into a haunted house. (Joi-Marie McKenzie/The Brooklyn Ink)

Enter, if you dare. For Halloween, 313 Clinton Ave. in Clinton Hill turns into a haunted house. Last year it attracted more than 3,000 kids. (Joi-Marie McKenzie/The Brooklyn Ink)

By Joi-Marie McKenzie

When a new tenant moves in to 313 Clinton Ave. in Clinton Hill owner Janna Hyten always asks, “Do you like Halloween?” It helps if they do. Hyten warns them that beginning in September the entire first floor of the white facade brownstone may well resemble a haunted house.

Hyten is 55. She lives for—and with—Halloween. The words “Do not disturb the dust…it is not dead, only sleeping” are painted on her the wall in her living room. A skeleton hanging on an antique wheelchair once welcomed visitors to her home. She started decorating the wheelchair months ago because she thought it was a cool idea. Hyten moved it to the kitchen to make room for more Halloween decorating. Two coffins stand upright in her living room. There is a rack of costumes against the parlor wall. A dozen mannequin heads line the mantel of the fireplace. They are leftover props from last year’s production, “Carnival of Carnage.”

Hyten starting producing Halloween shows for her neighbors and friends nearly 13 years ago. The first year she decorated her lawn with two-dimensional tombstones. Each year her decorations have grown bigger. Hyten even added a short play put on by her next-door neighbors. The play was a way to entertain the passersby while they marveled at Hyten’s front lawn. Neighbors gradually volunteered to help create Hyten’s ambitious Halloween plans. Last year she attracted more than 3,000 kids.

Andrew Watts, a longtime friend and neighbor of Hyten, remembers when they produced “Pirates of the Scareabean.” “We built, she and I, in her dining room, this freaking pirate ship. It was huge — about 30 feet long,” Watts recalls. Hyten is producing “The Vampire Opera” this year. It features the King of the Vampires, gypsies and gore. Every year Hyten hopes to outdo herself. She’s a little disappointed that the flamethrowers from last year’s production can’t make it to 313 this year. But Hyten has some other ideas up her sleeve.

Hyten, left, and another volunteer put the finishing touches on a backdrop for the set. (Joi-Marie McKenzie/The Brooklyn Ink)

Hyten has lived in 313 for 25 years. She moved here with her husband Randall, an investment banker. They used to throw Halloween parties together. When her daughter Kelsey was born in 1989, Hyten wanted to make Halloween even more special by decorating the house. Although her husband has moved to Connecticut and her daughter is away at college, Hyten still decorates the house.

It’s a week before the big show. The door at 313 is wide open. Hyten is running back and forth painting inside her parlor and checking on the guys outside who are building the 40-inch stage on her front lawn. She’s wearing jeans that are no longer white because they’re covered in grey, black and red paint. Her blonde hair is pulled back in a leopard-print scrunchie. She’s been up since six a.m. and she’s still going. Hyten is on her knees trying to lay painted canvases on foam core. It will serve as a background for the stage. She presses the canvas carefully with her hands while on her knees. She opts to do it again when it’s not perfect.

A wooden body lies in Hyten’s hallway. Tombstones with tongue-in-cheek epithets like “Christine O’Donnell—I’m not a witch, I’m you” rest on the stoop. Her neighbors Matt Duncan and Larry Heintes have just finished setting up the stage for this year’s production in the front yard. The stage stands some three feet off of the ground and straddles 313 and 315 Clinton. It took two hours to erect the stage and another seven to build the set.

Every now and then a few neighbors gather to watch the half dozen people running around in Hyten’s yard. After years of Halloween shows in her front yard they’re used to this scene.

“It seems to get more and more elaborate every year,” says Becca. She’s lived across the street from Hyten for seven years. “They totally do it for themselves. The fact that the kids enjoy it is a total byproduct.”

Every year brings it’s own set of problems. It’s a week before Halloween and Hyten is nervous about the set backgrounds. Two panels have so far been painted with black, white and gray skeleton heads. Hyten and two other volunteers are painting the trees that will serve as the backdrop for the gypsies’ song. They will have to repaint the dentist’s office. It was painted too bloody. Claudia Howard, who lives upstairs at 313 and who wrote the script, didn’t envision the office that bloody.

Volunteers work to complete a backdrop decorated with paintings of skulls for the set. (Joi-Marie McKenzie/The Brooklyn Ink)

Volunteers work to complete the set's backdrop, which is decorated with paintings of skulls. (Joi-Marie McKenzie/The Brooklyn Ink)

By sundown, Duncan and his crew are finally hoisting the set’s defining image: lips. Later they will hang two candy corn fangs. The stage will look like an open mouth to fit this year’s theme.

“We didn’t always use to do the big shows,” said Marc Ashmore. He’s been involved since the beginning. He and Hyten met at Florida State University when the two were undergraduates. “It started with the tombstones and she would throw a big party inside the house and would decorate.” But that was years ago. Hyten expects the crowd to reach nearly 5,000 this year.

Wendy Krabbe, who lives in the basement at 313, frantically checks the weather. Rain is in the forecast. She pounds the screen on her iPhone to check for updates. She sighs as she sits down at a sewing machine to finish the gypsy costumes.

She finishes the easy costumes first then moves on to tougher ones. The elaborate outfits do not intimidate her even though she has no experience in costume design. She just knows how to sew. Last year, Krabbe pushed herself to create a half man/half woman costume for the “Carnival of Carnage.” It was the show’s most controversial character.

A poster with a hermaphrodite was hung throughout the neighborhood, urging people to “come see the freaks,” until someone left a note saying the poster was insensitive to transgenders. Still, the half man/half woman scene remained in the show. “It’s all supposed to fun,” Duncan explains. “The last thing we want to do is offend somebody.”

Most of the painting was supposed to be finished today but now it looks like they’ll have to put the finishing touches on tomorrow. At least the stage is up. That’s one task checked off the list. A few neighbors walking by stop to talk to Duncan as the sun is finally setting on the day’s work. “The first show starts at 5:30 and it’s a family-friendly show,” Duncan tells the passersby. They’re new to the neighborhood and wondering why so many people are in Hyten’s front yard.

“I think that’s why a lot of us do it,” says Ashmore. “We all jump on board because we don’t want to let her down, apart from it being a really cool thing to do for the neighborhood. When she stops, I’ll stop.”

Hyten yells to Duncan that a panel on the stage was put on incorrectly. Although it’s getting late in the day, he’ll have to do it again. Hyten usually goes to sleep around 9 p.m. but not today. She’ll have to stay up late to finish painting the set with the other volunteers. People have been milling around 313 since the early morning and Hyten knows them all.

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Refutes the witnesses of the prosecution diagnosis

By Alejandro Lopez de Haro

The King’s County Supreme Court in Brooklyn, where Teon Brummell is being tried for murder. (Lea Khayata/The Brooklyn Ink))

County of the Supreme Court of the King in Brooklyn, where Teon Brummell is tried for murder.((Khayata/the Brooklyn Ink lea.))

A psychiatrist called by the prosecution in the case of a Brooklyn man accused of the murder of his little friend, delivered in question the theory of the defence, that the respondent was not responsible for his actions.

Mr. Alexander Bardey, prosecution expert witness challenged previous testimony made by expert witness for the defence, Mr. Sanford l. Drob, who stated the accused Teon Brummell, 33, has suffered from emotional distress Extreme (EDI), a condition that would allow the defence to assert that he was not responsible for his actions.Bardey said that the Brummell instead suffered a report less serious that he described as "a disorder of personality, with a limit of antisocial features."

Brummell is charged with second degree murder in the death of Natasha Southerland, his girlfriend, September 20 2004.Il allegedly stabbed and beaten s in the apartment they share.Brummell was arrested after her car crash and be transported to the hospital after reportedly attempted suicide with an overdose of Tylenol.Il claims do not really remember in killing her.

Questioned by the Assistant District Attorney, Edward Purce Bardey stated that its own study of Brummell and reads other medical reports allowed him to conclude that the accused has been dishonest about his mental health.

Bardey further added that he has not seen Brummell feel "remorse" for murder présumé.Cela was examined by the Bardey to be an important feature for someone that has suffered from EED.

Bardey has also said that Brummell selective memory was "suspicious" and called into question his credibility.

Testimony on Wednesday for the defence, Mr. Sanford l. Drob said that he diagnosed with borderline personality disorder Brummell and a serious case of contr?le.M loss.Drob stated that it was because Brummell had accumulated many trauma in her father vie.Son allegedly abused him and his older brother had died in a car accident when he was 17.

The trial is set to meet again Monday.

Read our previous coverage this trial.

Read the trial of Brooklyn ink coverage:

Fresh corrections officer police ill-treatment

Daughter of the victim talks about forgiveness

Trial said in the case of knife teens from Brooklyn

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Debate in the figure homeless

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Pastor Ann Kansfield spoke to a hearing of Council housing homeless plan community. (Miranda Neubauer/The Brooklyn ink)

By Miranda Neubauer

Residents at a recent hearing board community regarding a new shelter homeless in the figure expressed predictable concerns that addition add to the problems of crime and drugs among the homeless in the voisinage.Mais a leader of the community, said tenor perennials like those obscured arguments anti-social behaviour how traditional Polish figure neighbourhood exists separately from the roaming.

For the city in response to the community shelter again, opposition representatives proposed by non-profit group helps the United States, question exceeds as simply providing shelter to those in need.

"I have enough beds tonight," George Nashak, Deputy Commissioner of the Department of the city of homeless services said in a contentious Community Council hearing in figure on the question, what it says it is a problem much more big tries to convince some of the people who need housing to accept it.

Packaged in the foyer residents national Polish figure heard Alex DHS Zablocki and Nashak, who explained the process of approval of the proposed shelter without abri.Lorsque Nashak confirmed that the target population for the shelter would be 200 single men strong screams erupted between the inhabitants, who raised concerns about needles in parks, safety hazard for children on the streets night.

Ann Kansfield, who spoke at the hearing, is pastor of the reformed church of figure and he said in an interview that his Church offers weekly dinners Wednesday Church attracts up to 50 people, many of them without abri.Dans interview, however, she said without shelter in the public conversation as trompeur.Dans figure, she said, other contributing factors should be considered, such as the influence of the Polish culture and latitude for the action of police and the city.

"One of the things in our neighbourhood which makes it more difficult to speak of homeless people is that there are people who are homeless, they are not actual shelter and a lot of people that appearance without shelter or homeless but who actually have a shelter," she says.

She emphasized the hotel figure, a cheap private hotel single-room-occupancy that The New York Times, highlighted in 2006 a refuge for the use of drugs and unsanitary conditions. "Hotel figure has a horrible to be a very bad neighbor history" she says. ""But the people who live in a hotel listed are not homeless."

The neighbourhood has a large population with and homeless people who are alcoholic chronic or mentally ill who camp in the parks and urinate on the property of anyone, she says.

"I had for example, a man who has slipped into the Church, sitting in the Reserve Bank and urinated on itself and in the Church," Kansfield recalled."And when I'm gone and called the police about it, the police came… and I said I would really like that stop you, and they said that we cannot do so because he has not broken laws.""Provide shelter will not necessarily fix the anti-social behaviour," she says.

What complicates dealing with the issue, she said, is the fact that many of these people speak only Polish, while lack of personnel in the competent bodies speak polonais.Contrairement other people without shelter, says, those needing help in figure are particularly want to enter a system that could put them in a different neighborhood where nobody speaks their langue.Un another problem, what it sees is that the new proposed shelter as an institution sponsored by Government, would anyone without special for residents priority of Polish figure.

"It is not that there is necessarily a prevalence higher alcohol enters Polish culture", she says. ""But the Polish culture as a community deals with people who are alcoholic, my experience and agreements appears to be very different, that it's a horrible to be a member of the family who is an alcoholic stigma and there is not so much understanding of alcoholism as a disease".

Scott Adamo, the 94th cited, said that he understood the concerns raised during the meeting of the résidents.Il Community Council community affairs officer noted that alternative accommodation has already existed in the South of the figure and has not caused any problems for the police.Il warns against making false assumptions. ""Homelessness is not a crime," he said. "It has always been a question without shelter figure.?

Polish community members are also against plan.Thaddeus Cieszynski, a resident of 81 years of installation of DuPont Street main housing, evoked historic Polish resistance to foreign occupation in arguing against the sanctuary in a letter to Mayor Michael Bloomberg, signed by 18 other Polish residents.

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Group of kimchi

Kimjang is a major annual event in Korea lies at the end of October til early November, where people gather to make kimchi.?Jullia Kim shares his own family recipe for kimchi, so you can start your own kimchi party.

Published on 10.28.10.

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Rented for heroes - and address shooting COP

Amaris Castillo

Detective Feris Jones was honored Thursday morning by Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz for her heroic acts last Saturday. (Amaris Castillo/The Brooklyn Ink)

Detective Feris Jones was honoured by the President of the Borough of Brooklyn Marty Markowitz Thursday morning for his heroic actions last Saturday.(Amaris Castillo/The Brooklyn ink)?

Feris Jones seems to be surprised to see photographers waiting for her when she arrived at the Brooklyn Borough Hall Plaza in downtown Brooklyn Thursday morning.? NYPD detective smiled shyly for the camera and then examined more later.

Behaviour discrete agent of 50 years is contrasted its shares last Saturday, when she exchanged fire with a man tries to keep a Bedford-Stuyvesant hairdressing salon.The incident brought its published reputation and a promotion to detective Tuesday by Mayor Bloomberg and police Commissioner Raymond Kelly.?

Detective Jones in his dress uniform was officially honoured as a hero with a ceremony chaired by the President of the Borough of Brooklyn Marty Markowitz and assisted Thursday by the city of New York, elected representatives, colleagues and friends.

Jones has worked in a NYPD crime lab in Queens for 20 years and prefers to be called Jonesy.Elle received her hair done inside entrance natural Hair Salon of Sabine at 320 Franklin Avenue when a teenager armed with a pistol stormed in and tried to steal enterprise.

According to police, when Jones detachment itself identified the man, he fired a shot in his direction.On behalf of the police of the incident, as indicated in the Daily News, detachment Jones drew his gun and fired five out of the drawer, which struck the gun in his hand and blew the doorknob offshore, trapping him inside store.

No injuries were signalés.Le Daily News reported that made human flight after kicking on the glass on the lower part of the entrance door.

The suspect, Winston Cox, 19, was captured Monday and charged with attempted murder, attempted theft, criminal possession of a weapon.

? Markowitz said that neither he nor Jonesy is really proud of Cox.

"Shame", he said. "We lost him God thanks Jonesy was to ensure that it did not take anyone with him - and this is the article.

The President of the arrondissement describes behaviour of Cox as dangerous to the public and himself.

"To ensure that when a young person commits an offence under the Act,"said Markowitz, "it is time to tag as young and provide the attention required to ensure that this young person's chances of a positive and productive life." ""

Assembly Joseph r. Lentol (D-Northern Brooklyn) spoke directly from detachment Jones.

"As each New Yorkers, each Brooklynite who heard the story of your heroism we really and indeed proud," he said, "not only address the fire, but also that the author survived."

"Amen as!" shouted someone from the crowd.

On a lighter note, parliamentary Lentol said he thought that this should be a movie.It has even established a title.

A "Feris Jones Day Off," dit.La ri crowd.

Sabine Bellevue, owner of Sabine’s Hallway Natural Hair Salon, tearfully spoke about her traumatic experience last Saturday. (Amaris Castillo/The Brooklyn Ink)

Sabine Bellevue, enter Hair Sabine natural forced to a salon owner spoke her experience traumatic last Saturday.(Amaris Castillo/The Brooklyn of ink)

As other elected officials spoke, detachment Jones continued to smile shyly to next tribune.Ses hair was dreadlocked and cleverly twisted in a large bun on tête.Ses eyes widened whenever it has recognized someone in the crowd.

Markowitz introduced Jones detachment with a proclamation declaring the day as recognition detective Feris Jones.Il day presented detachment Jones with a replica of a gift, he said he only gives the Presidents and Prime Ministers from other countries as a token of the memory of the city, Brooklyn Bridge.

Sabine Bellevue, Sabine, hosted detachment Jones with a big bouquet of flowers hair salon owner.

"It was God who placed him", she said detachment Jones.

The room is currently closed due to damage, Bellevue stated later in said journalistes.Elle expects to be reopened in mid-November.

S/d Jones was the last to speak at podium.Ses eyelids still wet with tears, she shyly brandishing group of photographers near lui.Elle congestion level simply wanted to give thanks.

"At least we are all in one piece," she says. ""That was the main objective".

Learn more about the fine people of Brooklyn:

Pokerface: How a Brooklyn Boy has pro

Brooklyn Pingpong field - age 11

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Where in the world are Kate and Michael?

Already wish you could just bend and the world? Step realistic, right? In addition, some people find a way to achieve. Brooklynites Kate Blumm, communication among BBG and Michael de Zayas, founder of Neighborhoodies , put their lives in expectation of globetrot through the South America, Asia and Europe for four months. This is the journey of his life, and we will be posting their pictures preferred their adventure here. You can also check their entire blog to universalsinkplug.posterous.com.


Kate: A small street! Information about trickster in Montpellier! It is quite easy to imagine is the gaze steep paved streets in a little French town, but in fact, it is the seat of El Desayunador window (motto: "eternal breakfast") in Valparaiso (Chile).The place is at the heart of Cerro Alegre, one of the many hills (cerros) that make up this confused city, splendiferous and exquisite one million inhabitants approximately 90 minutes from Santiago.Nous are here for a lunch or lazy to discuss toast and a cortado, we were ready to leave again of Valparaiso.

Michael: is my favorite in the world, a game endless scales for socialites - color, color, color across hills and falls city turbulent 44.Parmi funiculars, steep stairs ascents, winding streets paved, you discover an endless parade of detail in the city streets and j. animal artists ' like this picture because chaos wiring mirrored here by grasses planted - as we watch this city of constant improvisation.

Published on 10.27.10.

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Thursday, October 28, 2010

Persistent wicket

1Er November 2010

07: 30: 00 PM

WILLIAMSBURGNow that the Yankees were beaten in the playoffs, it looks like an interminable period of time until we then caring about bats and balls on the turf of New York.Conference dialogue open town Monday to Pete candy store suggests an alternative intrigante.Le cricket, sports oft ridiculed the United States, is so important in other parts of the world which matches goes even between countries with diplomatic relations are fragile mieux.Joueurs passionate in New York are trying to create a resurgence of sport in the city, among them, the Club of cricket in Staten Island, including the Chairman would give the Conference and extolling the virtues of ATMs and tea breaks.

Published on 10.26.10.

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The life and freedom

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

07: 30: 00 PM

FORT GREENEMaira Kalman and the pursuit of happiness is constantly of pleasant surprises are located on the website of the New York Times in 2008-2009;his artistic renderings of his travels in search of democracy are magnificent and évocatrice.Mardi, it will be marking day of the election with an appearance at Greenlight bookstore to promote his new book collection sérialisées.Elle illustrations share you images as well as the stories behind them.

Published on 10.26.10.

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A Halloween Mad, MAD

Sunday, October 31, 2010

07: 30: 00 PM

Park Slope If you arrived dressed up to our party MAD men final, you already have a costume for the sheep Station Mad Men Halloween bash.(And if you need inspiration, discover the fabulous outfits in these party peaks).Suggested donation $ 5-10 gets you your first free drink and benefits of the micro-credit program WomenForWomen.org .Portes 7.30 am 10.La costumes contest best Joan may prevail.

Published on 10.26.10.

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Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Community working group fighting high infant mortality of Brownsville

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Born two months premature, Eric Millen-El is cared for at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in East Flatbush, Brooklyn. (Courtesy of Erica Millen-El)

Born two months premature, Eric Millen-El was cared for at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in East Flatbush, Brooklyn. (Courtesy of Erica Millen-El)

By Brian Park

In a pharmacy in Brownsville, a young woman quietly peruses the aisles. She is looking for something, but does not want to draw attention to herself. She stops at the shelves lined with various home pregnancy tests. Quickly, she takes one box and stuffs it away inside her shirt. But all the while, a plain-clothes officer has been watching her every move.

This is just one of the many stories Sharon Marshall-Taylor has to offer about young pregnant women who are desperate for help but are unaware of how to get it. She is the community service coordinator for the Brooklyn Perinatal Network, a community task force established to tackle infant mortality in the borough. She remembers this story especially well because she was there.

What happens next, Marshall-Taylor tells with some satisfaction. Instead of arresting the young woman for shoplifting, the officer turned to Marshall-Taylor, who is a familiar face in the community. “I told him what I do and gave him my card. I asked him to give her my card because putting her in the system wouldn’t do her any good,” said Marshall-Taylor.

The officer gave the young woman a stern warning and handed her the card, with information about services the prenatal center offers, says Marshall-Taylor, turning the incident into an opportunity for the young woman to get help with her possible pregnancy.

Marshall-Taylor’s story is just one example of some of the desperate measures and the difficult circumstances that women in the Brownsville neighborhood face—women who are pregnant or who believe they are.

Marshall-Taylor has met many of them. Scared and in need of answers, they are either unaware of the prenatal services available in their community or may travel long distances to seek help.

Had the young woman known, “she could have received a free pregnancy test and counseling just four block away,” said Marshall-Taylor.

Such confusion and unawareness of the availability and importance of prenatal services have contributed to Brownsville’s unusually high infant mortality rate, or IMR, said Marshall-Taylor. Healthy People 2010, a set of national health objectives and goals set forth by the Surgeon General, aims to reduce IMR to 4.5 per 1,000 births. From 2006 to 2008, the IMR in Brownsville was 11.3 deaths per 1,000 births. In comparison, the entire borough of Brooklyn had an IMR of 5.4 during that same time period.

As it is often the case, the women most vulnerable to losing a baby are the ones who are unaware of the gravity of their pregnancy and do not take care of themselves until it is too late. “Some [expectant mothers] don’t come in until their second or third trimester,” said Yolando Vasconcellos, project manager for the Brooklyn Infant Mortality Reduction Initiative (IMRI).

Teenage pregnancy accounts for more than half of Brownsville’s infant deaths. Working in conjunction with the Brooklyn Perinatal Network, health educators from the IMRI travel to local high schools to speak with and inform teenagers about proper procedure and care should a pregnancy arise. The IMRI conducts workshops for teenagers, covering topics such as reproductive health, pregnancy prevention, sexual-decision making, and STI/STD awareness.

“I was at a high school recently, and there was one girl who said she knew everything and acted like it wasn’t a big deal,” said Vasconcellos. Although the student was not looking for answers at the time, a semester later, she was pregnant and looking for help. Help that Vasconcellos was there to provide.

Vasconcellos said financial issues also play a role.

“A lot of people go the hospital emergency rooms instead of seeing the prenatal doctors because they can’t always pay the $75 copay,” said Vasconcellos. Emergency rooms generally do not deny treatment, so patients with no insurance or sparse financial flexibility often use them as their entry point for medical care.

Marshall-Taylor calls these circumstances “social determinant,” or simply “stressors.” Things such as housing difficulties, joblessness and abusive homes qualify as stressors. “Ultimately, if a woman can’t quickly get to a prenatal program or service because she lost her job, she’s worrying about where she is going to live and it takes too long to get to a facility, then those are very real factors. Those are stressors.”

Stressors are all too familiar for Erica Millen-El, a 37-year old mother of three. While pregnant with her youngest son, Eric, in the late summer of 2008, Millen-El was laid off from her job as an executive assistant at an investment banking firm in Manhattan. But in addition to losing her job, Millen-El also lost the health insurance that came with it. With Medicaid as her only viable option for affordable health insurance, Millen-El was unable to access her physician—an HMO doctor—from a previous pregnancy.

“By the time I got to a clinic, I was five months pregnant with Eric,” said Millen-El. “One-and-a-half months after, I went in for a neo-natal scan at SUNY Downstate [Medical Center].”

WomensHealth.gov, a federal resource for women’s health, recommends expectant mothers see their doctor once a month between the fourth and seventh month of pregnancy. Women over 35, like Millen-El, are encouraged to see their doctor more often because their pregnancies are at a higher risk for complications.

The delay in Millen-El’s pregnancy had unfortunate consequences. A doctor informed her that she had to be admitted into the clinic because the scan had shown a possible leakage of amniotic fluid in her womb. Also, a series of tests confirmed that Millen-El was suffering from gestational diabetes and more seriously, preeclampsia, a potentially life-threatening disease for both mother and child when protein is found in the mother’s urine.

“After I was admitted, I thought I would be in the hospital for a few days, that I’d be brought back up to speed and then I would get to go home,” said Millen-El. “I was in the hospital for five days and the doctor told me [Eric’s] heart rate was dropping. I was just a couple days into the seventh month, but the doctor said I needed to have a C-section … I never thought I’d have a premature baby.”

Millen-El’s son Eric was born on January 16. “The day after the plane crashed into the Hudson,” she remembers. Two months premature, Eric weighed only two pounds, four ounces—healthy newborn weight falls in the range of six to nine pounds. “He was very tiny. I was scared to touch him,” said Millen-El. “I saw him on the second day and he had no fat on him. The nurses told me he was iron deficient so he had to have two blood transfusions. I was told he wouldn’t make it without the transfusions.”

In addition, Millen-El said her son had weak lungs, so he received a 24-hour supply of oxygen and steroid treatments. After 49 days, Millen-El was able to take Eric home. He weighed four pounds the day he left the SUNY Downstate Medical Center. Nearly two years later, Eric is now 22 pounds.

Eric will probably have developmental problems and need physical and speech therapy, said Millen-El. But despite the challenges of being a single mother, her personal experience with a difficult pregnancy has motivated her to share her story with the community. After discussing it with Marshall-Taylor, Millen-El says she is interested in speaking with other expectant mothers regarding the proper measures to take during a pregnancy to ensure a safe birth and a healthy baby.

“I want to speak to the community about this because it’s a big problem,” said Millen-El. “It’s a serious problem and people need to heart it for their safety and for their baby’s.”

Currently, the Brownsville Action Community for Health Equality (BACHE) is working to implement a new digital referral system that would “provide at-risk women with the services needed to improve both their health and the health of their babies.” The BACHE is a coalition of medical providers, community based organizations and government officials who are united in their effort to address Brownsville’s high IMR. The Brooklyn Perinatal Network is the central coordinating organization that oversees and aids groups like the BACHE and the IMRI.

Similar digital systems have already proven to be successful. In Monroe County, NY, which includes the city of Rochester, the implementation of such a system resulted in a decrease in the amount of admissions into the neonatal intensive care unit—107.6 per 1,000 in 1998 to only 56.7 in 2003. It is Marshall-Taylor’s hope that Brooklyn area hospitals and health facilities will also adopt the program, and that in doing so, a similar outcome may arise in Brownsville.

According to Marshall-Taylor, the new system would enhance prenatal care by encouraging advanced screenings. Once an expectant woman meets with her physician, her entire medical history and also her psychosocial profile—made up of the aforementioned stressors—would be entered into a shared but private system. Furthermore, once a patient is referred to other physicians, programs or facilities, the system will automatically update that information so as to build a personal profile and to keep track of her progress.

The BACHE is currently seeking funding to extend the program, now in year four of its five-year pilot phase.

“It is a challenge but everyone we’ve spoken to and everyone we’re working with is on board,” said Marshall-Taylor. “Now, we have something that’s been proven to work and we’re confident we can help a lot of mothers during their pregnancies.”

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Jewish patrol Still Sparks controversy in Crown Heights

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Gadi Hershkop, a shomrim member, patrolled the streets of the 71st Precinct in Crown Heights on Tuesday night.

Gadi Hershkop, a shomrim member, patrolled the streets of the 71st Precinct in Crown Heights on Tuesday night. (Alex Alper/The Brooklyn Ink)

By Alex Alper

Last month, four men allegedly surrounded an Israeli man who was visiting Crown Heights for the Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur and punched him in the face. The man, 36, knocked on the door of a nearby Jewish home at midnight. The residents called Shomrim, a group of orthodox Jewish men who patrol the neighborhood. The Shomrim arrived at the scene and called police, who are investigating it as a possible hate crime. All four assailants were black.

The incident occurred on Crown and Albany streets, just a few blocks from the intersection where nineteen years ago, a Rabbi in a station wagon struck and killed a black child, sparking three days of rioting, looting, and a murder, which thrust the Brooklyn neighborhood into the national spotlight.

Crime and racial conflicts have dropped dramatically since the ’91 riots.? But Binyomin Lifshitz, a 24-year-old computer programmer, who responded to the call from the Isreali says, “It’s a false sense of security.” ?He said the attack on the Israeli shows the Shomrim still serve an important function for area Jews, many of whom barely speak English and are afraid to call the Police.

“Jewish people who are in this neighborhood come from Russia and Eastern Europe, not from a democratic culture,” said Lifshitz. “People have instilled this mindset where they are not very trusting of the police regardless of anything.”

Last month, a Boro Park Shomrim patrol approached a man accused of fondling himself in front of children in a Boro Park playground. The man had a gun and fired at the four Shomrim members, wounding all four, though none of the wounds were life threatening.

Brooklyn Democratic Senator Eric Adams pledged to donate five bulletproof vests to the group, whose members are always unarmed.

Shomrim is a volunteer patrol group that responds to reports of ongoing criminal activity, such as armed robbery and burglary, and helps citizens with routine problems such as locked and stalled cars.

Serving, as a “liaison between the police and the community,” Shomrim members instruct crime victims to call the police and provide translation when they file a police report if the victims do not speak English. If the crime act is ongoing, Lifshitz said, Shomrim may chase the alleged perpetrator, and, if they catch him, perform a citizen arrest—surrounding him, and saying “anything to him to buy time until the cops come.” If they don’t catch him, or think giving chase is too dangerous, they simply call the police.

Shomrim claim an average response time of 1.5 minutes, 2.7 minutes faster than precinct cops. They work on the Sabbath and holidays, though Jewish law generally prescribes it. They have no weapons, they say, because weapons could be used against them.

Adams says the Shomrim are a needed supplement to the declining numbers of police patrolling the neighborhood.

“Our police department now has been stripped to the maximum,” said Adams, a former officer. “The only way to complement the crime fighting operation is to have these community civilian patrols.” He said the NYPD has lost more than 6,000 officers citywide since 2001.

The organization was established in the 1960’s to protect Jews living in a mixed race neighborhood with high murder rates, then expanded after the ’91 riots, and now claims to serve the whole community, irrespective of race. Of 125,000 Crown Heights residents, almost three quarters are black.

“We are here to diffuse the tension,” said Gadi Hershkop, a 36-year-old school bus driver who joined Shomrim during the ’91 riots. “When I roll now, and I see a lady get robbed, I don’t care if she is white, black, Hispanic. We’re colorblind.”

That’s why Shomrim responds to car crashes, Lifshitz said. “In a car crash everyone’s emotions are compromised and adrenaline is running,” he said. “It took a car crash to spark the ’91 riots.” Hershkop said he broke up a physical fight between a Hispanic couple and unlocked the cars of two African American women.

But while the Shomrim proclaims its positive impact on race relations, some black Brooklyn leaders are skeptical.

“Every black youth that [the Shomrim] see in hip hop gear is a criminal,” said City Councilman (D-Brooklyn) and gubernatorial hopeful Charles Barron, a former Black Panther. “They [Shomrim] get preferential treatment from the police department and they try to agitate and intimidate black citizens.”

Barron pointed to the 2008 beating of Andrew Charles, a twenty-year-old Black college student who was assaulted by two white men wearing yarmulkes. They approached him on the street, said “Do you have a problem?” tear gassed him, and beat him on his back and arm with a nightstick, sending him to the hospital. Yitzhak Shuchat, one of the alleged perpetrators, then fled to Israel.

Charles’ attackers were member of Shmira, a splinter group that left Shomrim in the late 1990s, according to Hershkop.

“The [Shmira] take in a lot of kids and do a lot of stupid things,” said Hershkop. “We take a lot of heat for their stupidities.” Yet Hershkop acknowledges he was only 16 when he was allowed to join Shomrim around the time of the riots. An age floor of 18 is now strictly adhered to, he said, while many Shmira members are below that age.

Shmira was unavailable for comment.

Even though it was Shmira members who assaulted Charles, the Shomrim have their share of run-ins with the law. In 2007, a fight over a bed among students in an Orthodox Jewish school devolved into a fight between Messianic and non-Messianic Jews. Shomrim was called, and Hershkop, Lifshitz and four other members arrived at the scene. A scuffle ensued. Hershkop was convicted of a misdemeanor for third degree assault.

Hershkop said Shmira members rigged the fight to entrap and implicate the Shomrim, he said, in an attempt, to “silence us forever.”

Despite incidents like the 2007 conviction, Charles Green, a black Medgar Evers College political science professor and a lifelong resident of Crown Heights, does not think poorly of the Shomrim. “The existence of the Shomrim does not increase ethnic tensions. Every now and then they step out of line, but by and large they run well.”

Senator Adams agreed. “We all?recruit from?the community at large,” said Adams. ”There are good apples and bad apples. You don’t judge the whole based on the actions of a few.”

Murder and rape in Crown Heights are up 50 percent and 36 percent so far this year, according to NYPD figures. Anti-Semitic hate crimes in New York City increased 14.4 percent in 2009 over the previous year. The recent start of the trial of four men accused of attempting to bomb a synagogue in the Riverdale section of the Bronx is a reminder of the persistence of anti-Semitic crimes in the city.

Still, Hershkop says most of the calls he receives are not for hate crimes. “If a guy needs money, he is robbing somebody. If a Jew walks by, he is going to get it.”

But not all of the crimes Hershkop deals with are serious.

He once helped a child out of handcuffs and untangled another from a seat belt once. “The mother is weeping, and I’m smiling because it is funny to see the kid in a pretzel like that.”

“They do help other people,” said Green. “Their main goal is protecting the Hasidic community, but they don’t distinguish.”

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Found: A leader in Prospect Park goat

A goat's head was discovered in Prospect Park today, the latest in a string recently found pieces of animals slaughtered in accordance with the Gothamist. Found by a man walking his dog, the head was found covered orange wax. It can belong to one of the goats of many bodies found in the Park, week last, being part of a sacrifice in the Santería.

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