CN Vision Care on 46th St. between Greenpoint and 48th Ave has been putting lenses in my glasses for nine years now. The same lenses with all the fixins' for $95 a pair. UV, Glare, Scratch all that, installed on premises by a really nice guy. He even has a white coat to make you feel at ease.
Why the hell should I trek all the way out to Queens? Answers within.
Sunday, June 01, 2008
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Woman, 19 Challenges 6 Year Old From Queens on NY1.
Watching My NY1 this morning and caught the story of the woman in SoHo who was sexually assaulted last night at 330 while walking home from the subway. There was NY1 with a live report being filed, interviewing neighbors; there was the NYPD in their white suits, dusting for prints, yellow tape, lights going. It was, rightfully, being reported as a big deal.
Remember the 6 year old girl who was sodomized in broad daylight three weeks ago in a Woodside park? If you don't it's because it didn't merit that level of attention.
Perhaps we should get our own news channel? Our own Police Department? Oh, right. Nevermind.
Does anyone have the phone number to the 114th Precinct? Do they have a phone number?
Posted by
Wesley Dumont
at
7:55 AM
2
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Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Free Outdoor Fitness Classes at Socrates!
SOCRATES
SCULPTURE PARK
OUTDOOR FITNESS IN THE PARK
SPRING / SUMMER / FALL 2008
Yoga in the Park
Saturdays, May 10 - September 27 (rain or shine)
First session: 9:30 AM - 10:30 AM
Second session: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Socrates offers free Kripalu Yoga, a system of Hatha Yoga that integrates body postures, breathing techniques, relaxation and meditation. Taught by Monique Schubert, participants are encouraged to integrate their yoga practices with this very special waterfront environment of nature and art. Suitable for all experience levels. Participants should bring a mat or towel.
Pilates in the Park
Sundays, May 11 - June 29 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM (rain or shine)
Socrates Sculpture Park is pleased to introduce a fourth outdoor exercise class into its weekly repertoire. Classical Pilates encourages proper breathing, spinal alignment, core strengthening, muscle flexibility and balance in the body. Taught by Cortnie Vitali, participants will leave feeling empowered, and stress free.
Tai Chi in the Park
Sundays, May 11 - September 28 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM (rain or shine) Socrates hosts free Tai Chi classes in the Park led by members of the Taoist Tai Chi Society. Participants will have the opportunity to relax and exercise among the changing exhibitions of contemporary outdoor sculpture. Classes are designed for all experience levels. Participants should wear comfortable clothing.
Capoeira in the Park
Saturdays, May 10 - September 27 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM (rain or shine) Capoeira is a lively martial art that originated in Brazil over 450 years ago. Self-defense techniques are concealed by graceful dance moves and spectacular acrobatics set to music. Taught by Professor Abará. Classes are designed for all experience levels. Participants should wear comfortable clothing.
OTHER EXHIBITIONS & PROGRAMS:
WASTE NOT, WANT NOT
MAY 4 - AUGUST 3, 2008
Curated by Robyn Donohue with Alyson Baker and Marichris Ty, this group exhibition explores interpretations and responses to the motivations, goals, realities, politics, and practices of recycling, with works by: Jonathan Allen, The Canary Project (Annie Murdock, Ed Morris, and Jussara Lee), Tony Feher, Lars Fisk, Miwa Koizumi, Rainy Lehrman, Carole Frances Lung, Julian Montague, Macrae Semans, Austin Shull, Courtney Smith, Shinique Smith, Jade Townsend & Michael Petersen, Paul Villinski, Letha Wilson, and Randy Wray.
SATURDAY SCULPTURE WORKSHOPS MAY 10 - SEPTEMBER 27
SUMMER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION JUNE 21
OUTDOOR CINEMA WEDNESDAYS, JULY 6 - AUGUST 27
LEARN MORE ABOUT THESE EVENTS HERE!
EVEN A SMALL GIFT
MAKES A HUGE DIFFERENCE:
A contribution of any size is a tremendous gift to the 72,000 people that visit us annually. Your donation to Socrates Sculpture Park helps us to ensure that all of the Park's dynamic exhibitions, artmaking workshops, film screenings, fitness classes, concerts, performances and annual events remain open to the public for FREE.
You can make your donation right here or mail a check to:
Socrates Sculpture Park
PO Box 6259, 32-01 Vernon Boulevard
Long Island City, NY 11106
TELL YOUR FRIENDS:
An exciting new season is now in development and we look forward to sharing the details with you and your friends. Like you, your friends can receive up-to-the-minute information about Socrates' upcoming exhibitions and programs by email:
ABOUT SOCRATES SCULPTURE PARK:
Socrates Sculpture Park was an abandoned landfill and illegal dumpsite until 1986 when a coalition of artists and community members, under the leadership of sculptor Mark di Suvero, transformed it into an open studio and exhibition space for artists and a neighborhood park for local residents. Once a rubble-strewn lot, it now flourishes as an ever-evolving natural landscape.
Located in an industrial neighborhood in Long Island City, Socrates is a waterfront park that overlooks the Manhattan skyline; the site is an affecting and inspiring place for artists to work and a spectacular setting for the presentation of public art. To date, Socrates has hosted close to 700 artists and currently attracts more than 72,000 visitors annually.
Socrates Sculpture Park is the only site in the New York Metropolitan area specifically dedicated to providing artists with opportunities to create and exhibit large-scale sculpture and multi-media installations in an outdoor environment that invites interaction between artists, artworks and the public.
Socrates Sculpture Park is open 365 days a year from 10am to sunset. The Park is located at the intersection of Broadway and Vernon Boulevard in Long Island City.
DIRECTIONS:
BY SUBWAY: Monday through Friday take the N or W trains to the Broadway stop in Queens and walk eight blocks along Broadway toward the East River. On Saturday and Sunday take the N train to the Broadway stop. For driving, cycling and walking directions, please visit our website: www.socratessculpturepark.org.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
8:05 PM
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Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Woodside Cafe:Esparks A-OK
Sunday I went to ESparks Café on Roosevelt Ave @ 59th Street. It turned into a beautiful day as I sat there grading papers. I left the house on a grey Sunday looking for a quiet place to get some work done away from the kids. I got a decent cup of coffee and was treated well by the "barrista" (an awful and pretentious name for a coffee-clerk). There were people in the café on a Sunday afternoon, which made me happy since it is the first "bourgeois" amenity in this part of Woodside. I want this place to thrive, because it is the first place like it in Woodside. Now, I've tried drinking Coffee at Mango Café on 61st St and Woodside Pizza on 60th and 44th Ave and, while they were kind enough the vibes were all wrong: they are restaurants not a cafés, where you can "camp." (La Flor Café, an excellent spot, is just a bit too far away for me to grade, and it is a brunch joint on Sunday afternoons.)
I asked the guy who came by cleaning the counter near me how to pronounce espark's: is ot "e-Sparks" or "Esparks?" Because all the workers that day looked latino I thought it might be that the addition of the "e" to the dipthong "sp," because in Spanish they don't usually start words with s-dipthongs, my brother's name often suffers from that and he becomes Estaffor (for Stafford). Rather, the name is because the Parks started the café to sell Espresso (where the extra "s" went to, I don't know). A Korean-American cafe, peopled by latinos and Asians, serving coffee and cakes to JOJ Irish people pushing fancy strollers, is exactly why I love Woodside Queens.
I had a great day scrapping through six student essays: sinceI only turned the page sideways to write SUMMARY alongside of three paragraphs it was a good day. I had a nice stretch of window counter facing out at Evangeline's Filipino bakery and restaurant. It is so-so according to the mabuhay cognoscenti: Tito Rad's over by PC Richards on Queens Boulevard and 59th is what my Filipino friends like. As I looked up there were almost always people out on the street, families and delivery people mostly, kids licking cones from Carvel and a couple of drunks staggering by with the colors of African Liberation wrapped in their blonde dreadlocks. I think I admire the working class whites that haven't fled the neighborhood as much as anyone, I'm glad I'm allowed to feel comfortable here now.
As I graded the third paper I looked up and jackets were suddenly tied around waists and the sun was streaming down through the Elevated, looking something like the venetian blinds in a noire film. But as the skate punks stood aside to let the families and retirees stream out of St. Sebastian's around the corner after mass I started to see why I am so happy to have moved to Woodside. I am glad to live in a neighborhood where EVERYBODY fits in.
I just have to say watching the three scooter delivery guys from the Chinese restaurant around the corner was a welcome diversion for me. It seemed each time I had to stop to write "¿thesis?" they'd be headed out or back or both. I love seeing delivery guys work out how to stack the goods on the scooters and joke between deliveries around the fur-mittened scooters with the duct-tape holding them together. It is a reminder of my younger days messengering. I miss the esprit de corps of delivery riders, even if they don't have the cachet of the track-bike-messenger I was in the 1980s; it is the same gig. (I'll bet we have the same brakes: none!)
The coffee was good and Esparks had the welcome and welcoming vibe of the corporate megafauna, but I was avoiding the corporatization of Queens. I have to say that when I lived in Sunnyside I liked the two Cafes there "The Grind" @ 39th Pl and Queens Boulevard and Café Aubergine on Skillman and 50th, but now they are too far away, so here is where I'll have to tipple my joe. Woodside lacks the intimacy of Sunnyside gardens with its painfully cute houses, gardens and trees, but Roosevelt Ave is as nice a "high Street" as there is in New York. Esparks is a damn fine addition with all of the comfort and ambiance of any café, well it is a bit bourgeois and neat, not like The Grind or the Mission Café's of San Francisco, but it is a great meeting place in Woodside.
59-02 Woodside Ave Woodside, NY 11377
http://www.yelp.com/redir?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.esparkscoffee.com&src_bizid=5_S4tBhVm7s7kCgDslKmbw
I just learned that they have another branch that was favorably reviewed other places, And if I was a reviewer instead of a romantic I'd tell you the important things that those other reviews included like ireless access and baked goods and the like. I hear they are hiring. I'm glad I already have a job.
Posted by
Blank Pembroke
at
8:08 PM
3
comments
Sunday, May 04, 2008
Jackson Heights Poetry Contest--Reading & Winners
Announcing the Winners of the First Annual Jackson Heights Poetry Festival Student Poetry Contest
Winners, listed at www.jhpfest.org, will receive awards and read their poems at the Jackson Heights Poetry Festival on Saturday, May 17
From May 15-17, 2008, Jackson Heights will open its doors to both the local community and NYC at large to celebrate the cultural diversity of Queens and the poetic talent of its students.
The Jackson Heights Poetry Festival is a 3-day event involving workshops taught by professors and poets, a poetry slam, and a series of readings at an all-day outdoor-poetry-extravaganza.
The poetry contest was held in all public and private middle and high schools throughout Queens for students in grades 6 – 12. A celebrity panel of judges, including Jonathan Galassi, Lynne Procope, and Roger Bonair-Agard judged the winners, announced May 1 and who will be featured at the Festival.
Events:
WORKSHOPS: Thursday May 15, 6:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
The Garden School 33-16 79th Street, Jackson Heights NY, 11372
POETRY SLAM & OPEN MIC: Friday May 16, 9:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m.
Restaurant and Lounge Novo 78-23 37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, NY
THE FESTIVAL: Saturday May 17, 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
The Garden School 33-16 79th Street, Jackson Heights, NY
Noted Poets and Educators Taking Part in the JHPF Events:
Patrick Rosal, Jai Chakrabati, Michael Dumanis, Samantha Thornhill, Bill Zavatsky, Richard Marotta, Lee Schlesinger, and the first woman to be named the Poet Laureate of Queens, New York, Ishle Yi Park.
Sponsors/Organizers/Supporters:
New York Council for the Humanities
Jackson Heights Beautification Group
NYS Senator John D. Sabini
NYS Assemblyman José R. Peralta
NYC Councilman Hiram Monserrate
Marina Yoffe, Co-Founder/Director
Sarah Heinemann, Co-Founder/Director
Contact info: JHPFest@gmail.com or (347) 239-2243
For more information please visit www.jhpfest.org
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
10:00 PM
0
comments
Thursday, May 01, 2008
Garden & Grub Potluck Picnic at Two Coves Garden
Bring your family, friends, and favorite vegetarian dish. Let's picnic and help beautify the largest community gardens in Astoria.
Saturday, May 24th 12:00 – 2:00 pm
Location: Two Coves Garden/Triangle at 30th Ave.,
8th St., & Astoria Blvd
Learn about indoor and outdoor composting
Want a garden? Plots still available contact twocovesgarden@yahoo.com for info.
Co Sponsor: Two Coves Garden Association
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
8:56 AM
0
comments
Monday, April 28, 2008
Area Mom Fed Up With Parks
Reader Marie Walnut writes in to share her hair raising experiences as a new mom out in the wilds of Sunnyside playgroundland:
Only recently I found myself venturing into the New York City parks and playgrounds now that I’m a mother. I have always taken walks in Central Park, but it’s really not the same as the local play spaces. Nothing like the play spaces we have here in Sunnyside – Lou Lodati and Noonan playgrounds.
I have spent more hours at Lou Lodati than I care to count on the few warm days we have had so far. I had no idea that I was going to encounter such unfortunate things there. Before I entered for the first time I referred to the rules that are clearly posted on gate. However, after sitting there for a few minutes I started to notice that many of the rules were broken. I noticed dogs, people lying on benches who were not in the company of children, and worst of all cigarette smoke was rampant.
I can forgive most wafting cigarette smoke, but when the blue haze makes way over my newborn’s face I find it totally unacceptable. On one of the first lovely spring days in Sunnyside, the smoke was heavy over at Lou Lodati playground. There were women pushing baby buggies smoking their super 110s. The kids were happily breathing in the thick blue haze when the wind blew in the right direction. Even the park attendant was puffing a butt close to the restroom facilities in plain view of all to see. I had to move to three different benches to save my baby from a lifetime of asthma just from one visit to Lou Lodati.
A few days later I decided that the weather was too nice and I needed to go back for another round of the abusive relationship I have entered into as a park sitter at Lou Lodati. Little did I know that the day would bring some interaction with the local adolescent boys? How does a group of young mothers with little babies get into a verbal altercation with tween boys? Well visit Lou Lodati after school lets out and you will see. After some young punks decided to kick their soccer ball ferociously around four young moms and their babies, one brave mom went to reason with them. They didn’t let up and decided to release as many uses of the F-word they could configure in their broken sentences. No park attendant was to be found though – probably out smoking…
I discovered that hanging out in Sunnyside’s playgrounds is more of a standoff than an enjoyable walk through the park.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
9:00 PM
7
comments
Labels: playground, sunnyside
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Support for Dolce Vita Withdrawn
See original post. Sorry it took so long to respond to the hue-and-cry in the comments.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
9:41 AM
4
comments
Monday, April 21, 2008
The First Annual Jackson Heights Poetry Festival to Take Place this May The Most Culturally Diverse Neighborhood in the U.S. brings togetherCommunity Schools and Organizations to Promote Diversity Appreciation through Poetry From May 15-17, 2008, Jackson Heights will open its doors to both the local community and NYC at large to celebrate the cultural diversity of Queens and the poetic talent of its students. The Jackson Heights Poetry Festival is a 3-day event involving workshops taught by professors and poets, a poetry slam, and a series of readings at an all-day outdoor-poetry-extravaganza. Leading up to the festival, a poetry contest will be held in public and private middle and high schools throughout Queens for students in grades 6 – 12, and winners will be featured at the festival. Events: WORKSHOPS: Thursday May 15, 6:30 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. The Garden School 33-16 79th Street, Jackson Heights NY, 11372 POETRY SLAM & OPEN MIC: Friday May 16, 9:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m. Restaurant and Lounge Novo 78-23 37th Avenue, Jackson Heights, NY THE OUTDOOR FESTIVAL: Saturday May 17, 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. The Garden School 33-16 79th Street, Jackson Heights, NY Noted Poets and Educators Taking Part in the JHPF Events: Patrick Rosal, Jai Chakrabati, Richard Marotta, Lee Schlesinger, Michael Dumanis, Bill Zavatsky, and the first woman to be named the Poet Laureate of Queens, New York, Ishle Yi Park. Sponsors/Organizers/Supporters: New York Council for the Humanities Jackson Heights Beautification Group NYS Senator John D. Sabini NYS Assemblyman José R. Peralta NYC Councilman Hiram Monserrate Dime Savings Bank Marina Yoffe, Co-Founder/Director Sarah Heinemann, Co-Founder/Director Contact info: JHPFest@gmail.com or (347) 517-1506 Online Contest submissions are due by Tuesday, April 22, 2008. Finalists will be announced online May 1, 2008. For more information, please visit www.jhpfest.org
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
5:50 PM
0
comments
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Kite Flight: Plastic Play on Sunday, April 27
KITE FLIGHT: PLASTIC PLAY
Sunday, April 27, 2008 at
Socrates Sculpture Park
11AM - 2PM
Free / Rain or Shine!
Socrates Sculpture Park and The Noguchi Museum are proud to present the sixth annual kite making workshop and flying event. This free hands-on workshop will take place at Socrates Sculpture Park and welcomes children of all ages to participate.
This year, children and their families will find an excellent new use for plastic bags by transforming this durable, and light weight material into beautiful recycled kites! Kite designs are provided by artists Miwa Koizumi and Marco Scoffier who will draw inspiration from the Park's fantastic view of the Manhattan skyline. Participants will have the opportunity to build and decorate their kites, then fly them in the Park.
Advance registration is not required, but space is limited, so come early! The workshops are free and will be held - rain or shine - under a tent in the education area at Socrates Sculpture Park; all materials and supplies will be provided.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
8:03 PM
1 comments
Friday, April 11, 2008
THALIA SPANISH THEATRE presents its SPRING session
BILINGUAL THEATRE WORKSHOP FOR YOUNG AND BEGINNING ACTORS.
Experience an intensive theoretical-practical acting workshop at Thalia Spanish Theatre, taught by the prestigious Ecuadorian actor and director Franco Galecio. The class will culminate with a special performance for invited guests, including industry professionals.
The fee for the entire twelve-week session is $150. The classes are on Mondays, from 6pm to 9pm. The workshops begin April 7 and continue through June 23, with the final performance for the general public, critics, and industry professionals, on June 25.
For more information and to register, call 718-729-3880, or visit the theatre’s website: www.thaliatheatre.org.
Sponsored by Citibank, Con Edison, Independence Community Foundation, The New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Dept. of Cultural Affairs, and New York State Assemblywoman Catherine Nolan.
THALIA SPANISH THEATRE
41-17 Greenpoint Avenue, Sunnyside (Queens)
Subway # 7 Local to 40th St. Station. Buses Q60, Q32 to Queens Blvd & 41st St.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
6:51 AM
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THALIA SPANISH THEATRE ANNOUNCES ITS BILINGUAL THEATRE FOR CHILDREN WORKSHOP/TALLER DE TEATRO PARA NIÑOS
Thalia Spanish Theatre is proud to announce the return by popular demand of its BILINGUAL THEATRE FOR CHILDREN WORKSHOP, directed by award-winning actress, Soledad Lopez incorporating mime, masks, puppetry, and theatre, to explore our children's diverse cultural backgrounds.
The class will be taught by bilingual actresses/instructors Angelica Ayala and Mariana Buoninconti. It will accommodate both Spanish and English-speaking children.
Classes are Saturdays mornings from April 5 to June 21, 2008 (12 classes) from 10am to 12pm. The workshop concludes with a performance for the community of a unique multi-disciplinary piece performed by the children, at Thalia Spanish Theatre. The theatre is a professional, fully-equipped space, wheelchair-accessible and centrally located.
The fee is $150 total; there is a discount for families who enroll several children. The age group is from 5-14 years old.
ENROLLMENT IS LIMITED. For information and reservations contact Soledad López or Kathryn Giaimo at (718) 729-3880, or visit the website at: www.thaliatheatre.org
Thalia Spanish Theatre is located at 41-17 Greenpoint Avenue in Sunnyside, Queens.
The Theatre for Children Workshop is sponsored by Citibank, Con Edison, Independence Community Foundation, The New York State Council on the Arts, the New York City Dept. of Cultural Affairs, New York State Senator George Onorato, and New York State Assemblywoman Catherine Nolan.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
6:50 AM
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Thursday, April 03, 2008
WORLD PREMIERE Flamenco Musical at Thalia Spanish Theatre
THALIA SPANISH THEATRE, celebrating its 30th anniversary, presents
The BILINGUAL WORLD PREMIERE of
a FLAMENCO musical
PICASSO FLAMENCOunt of Orgaz
Written by the Spanish artist
PABLO PICASSO
ENGLISH version by JEROME ROTHENBERG
Flamenco music, singing and dance fuse with Picasso’s poetic text, projections of his paintings, and Picasso-inspired masks, to create an unforgettable “total theatre” experience.
Original Music by BASILIO GEORGES
Choreography by AURORA REYES
Associate Director HECTOR LUIS RIVERA
Audiovisual RUBEN DARIO CRUZ Masks by JANE STEIN
Designed, Produced & Directed by ANGEL GIL ORRIOS
with AURORA REYES, ERIKA DE JULIA, SILVIA SILLER,
KATHY TEJADA, ANGELA PEREZ,
WALTER GUZMAN, HECTOR LUIS RIVERA
and the special collaboration of dancer
YLOY YBARRA as PICASSO.
Guitarists: BASILIO GEORGES and JED MILEY
Keyboard: OCTAVIO BRUNETTI Percussion-Bass: SEAN KUPISZ
SIX WEEKS ONLY! APRIL 18 to MAY 25, 2008
alternating performances in ENGLISH and SPANISH
IN ENGLISH: FRIDAYS at 8 PM & SATURDAYS at 3 PM
IN SPANISH: SATURDAYS at 8 PM & SUNDAYS at 4 PM
TICKETS $30 STUDENTS & SENIORS $27; Special group rates
At THALIA SPANISH THEATRE
41-17 Greenpoint Avenue, Sunnyside (Queens)
Subway # 7 Local to 40th St. Station. Buses Q60, Q32 to Queens Blvd & 41st St.
INFORMATION & TICKETS (718) 729-3880
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
9:23 AM
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Friday, March 14, 2008
Thalia Spanish Theater--Concerts 2008
SATURDAY MARCH 29 at 3 PM & 8 PM
FLAMENCO Guitarist DANIEL CASARES DIRECT FROM SPAIN!
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! The hottest young FLAMENCO GUITARIST of Spain will perform his best compositions. At age 26 he has just released his 4th CD “CABALLERO” [Gentleman], and has won many international awards.
SUNDAY MARCH 30 at 4 PM
ZARZUELAS (SPANISH OPERETTAS)
The most beautiful arias and duets from the best-loved Spanish operettas.
With: Soprano ILYA MARTINEZ , Baritone RAFAEL LEBRON, Tenor DAVID ROBINSON, Mezzo-soprano PATRICIA CAY, and Pianist OCTAVIO BRUNETTI.
SATURDAY APRIL 5 at 8 PM
Yosvany Terry’s RAICES AFRO-CUBANAS (AFRO-CUBAN ROOTS)
An extraordinary saxophonist & percussionist and his ensemble achieve LATIN JAZZ FUSION in this piece inspired by the YORUBAN cultural traditions of his native CUBA.
With: Saxes YOSVANY TERRY, Dancer FELIX “PUPI” INSUA, Piano OSMANY PAREDES, Bass YUNIOR TERRY, Lead vocalist & percussion PEDRO MARTINEZ,
and Percussionists ROMAN DIAZ & MAURICIO HERRERA
SUNDAY APRIL 6 at 4 PM
CANCIONES ROMÁNTICAS (ROMANTIC LATINO SONGS)
The most popular songs from the best Latin American Romantic Music.
With: Singers LEONARDO GRANADOS & JOHANNA CASTAÑEDA,
Violin ALI BELLO, Bass ABRAHAM SAENZ, Piano AMY MILLÁN,
and Percussion TONY DE VIVO.
TICKETS $25 For any TWO concerts $ 44 (save $ 6).
For all FOUR concerts $ 80 (save $ 20)
Sponsored by the Music Program of the New York State Council on the Arts.
At THALIA SPANISH THEATRE
41-17 Greenpoint Avenue, Sunnyside (Queens)
Subway # 7 Local to 40th St. Station. Buses Q60, Q32 to Queens Blvd & 41st St.
INFORMATION & TICKETS (718) 729-3880 www.thaliatheatre.org
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
9:09 PM
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Love to Garden?
The Queens Botanical Garden makes small gardens available to members of the community age 55+ to grow vegetables. You seed, water, pick, eat, and make new friends during April-to-October season. If interested, leave message at 718-886-3800 ext. 525.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
9:05 PM
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Thursday, March 13, 2008
Queens Ledger on Barnett Ave
03/13/2008
DOT's Sunnyside stroll leads to new traffic plans
By Jeremy Walsh
A long-neglected thoroughfare in Sunnyside Gardens will soon get a makeover from the city Transportation Department. DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan toured the site along with City Council Speaker Christine Quinn (D-Manhattan) last week, developing a series of short-term solutions until capital improvements can be made.
As a result, Barnett Avenue may become a one-way street later this spring, pending a resolution from Community Board 2 on whether the street should run westbound or eastbound. CB 2 Chairman Joe Conley said the board would take the issue up at its April 6 meeting.In addition to the one-way conversion, Sadik-Khan suggested using some of the space gained to add painted parking spaces and incorporate a walking area on the asphalt between the new parking spaces and the shoulder.Residents who use the road were pleased by the news."This was always the back street of Sunnyside and it needs development," said resident Dorothy Cavallo, who has lived in the neighborhood for 50 years.Resident Ciaran Staunton said he and others have been complaining for years about the state of the road, which runs parallel to the Long Island Rail Road tracks between 48th Street and Woodside Avenue. The narrow road is open to two-way traffic and allows parking along its northern side. All that and a lack of sidewalks create a hazardous situation for neighborhood residents who walk to Starbucks Tower Square, the major shopping center at Woodside Avenue and Northern Boulevard, Staunton said."In fact, Ms. Quinn almost got hit the last time she was here," Staunton said. "It wasn't done on purpose, but the publicity would have been good."City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Sunnyside), who grew up in the neighborhood, agreed that the street needed serious improvement."This has been unsafe and unsightly my entire life," he saidBut further improvements, such as building sidewalks, will have to wait until 2012, when the city Environmental Protection Department will get $1.9 million for capital improvements, Conley said.Quinn and the DOT also visited a residential block of 46th Street, where residents have been clamoring for speed bumps since the death of an 11-year-old girl in 2004. Hallie Geier was walking her dog when she stepped out from between two cars and was fatally struck by an oncoming motorist, Conley said."Anything we could do to make it safer for the children would be worth doing," said CB 2 member James Van Bramer."People take the corner, see the green light and race for it," said resident Tonia Moore, 36, who circulated a speed bump petition last year among her neighbors. "We have to slow the traffic down."Michael Primeggia, deputy DOT traffic commissioner, said the DOT would conduct a study of the street. If a suitable spot is found, work on the speed bump could start as early as June, he said.
Posted by
harry thatcher
at
5:33 AM
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Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Sunday March 30th: Crossing the BLVD performance
Sunday March 30, 3pm
Crossing the BLVD performance of monologues, sounds and images of new immigrants and refugees with Warren Lehrer and Judith Sloan. Post show discussion moderated by Brian Lehrer, talk show host WNYC radio and wnyc.org
Goldstein Theatre, Queens College
All seats $12. Order online or call: 718.793.8080.
About the Performance: As immigration policy is being hotly debated around the country in terms of national, economic, and cultural security, Crossing the BLVD presents the very human stories of why new immigrants and refugees have migrated to the United States and what their experiences have been since they came here pre- and post-9/11. Writer and artist, Warren Lehrer is the tour guide providing commentary and perspective as actress and oral historian Judith Sloan "channels" many of the people they interviewed on their three-year journey around the world through the borough of Queens. Sloan's vocalization work and movement bring these characters to life. Their performance is illuminated by projections of Lehrer's stunning photographs of the subjects, urban landscapes, objects they have carried with them from home to home, and Queens' landscapes, along with Sloan's soundtrack of original music, sounds, and voices.[Soundtrack includes music by Scott Johnson and Gogol Bordello.]
"Immigrant life as told in the intimate, rich, comic, ironic and sad stories so often seen but not heard in America's big cities..." The Washington Post
"A turbo-driven Eyewitness guide...BLVD is a demonstration of the way you can explore the world without leaving home." The Guardian, London
"An offbeat ethnic tour of one of the country's most ethnically diverse counties. Riveting stories..." The New York Times
"Crossing the BLVD boldly carries the tradition of oral history into the 21st Century... Electrifying! Eve Ensler, author, oral historian, performer The Vagina Monologues
Winner Brendan Gill Prize, Municipal Art Society of New York 2004
The performance is held in conjunction with Lehrer and Sloan's Multimedia Exhibition of the same name at Queens College's Godwin-Ternbach Museum. The exhibition includes 90 portraits, story excerpts, 14 sound stations, and an interactive Mobile Storybooth. It runs through June 28 and will be on view before and after the performance on March 30th.g
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Claire Deveron
at
3:25 PM
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Labels: theater
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Queens Rocks Now Has Free Community Forum
So check it out, yo--
We've just launched a brand new free online forum. Post your own neighborhood reviews, classifieds listings, or talk amongst yourselves.
Register in your own name, if you dare...
Open to all who call our mighty borough home.
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Claire Deveron
at
5:08 PM
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Labels: talk
Sunday, March 09, 2008
Organic and Biodynamic Wine Tasting in LIC
Organic and Biodynamic Wine Tasting at Hunter’s Point Wines & Spirits in LIC
If you are going to drink wine, why not drink wine that tastes good and is good for the planet? Sustainable farming techniques rely on healthy soil, not chemical fertilizers, weed killers, insecticides, and other synthetic chemicals. Come to this free wine tasting to learn more about what it means to be a “certified organic” or “biodynamic” wine.
WHAT: Organic and Biodynamic Wine Tasting (FREE)
WHERE: Hunter’s Point Wine & Spirits, 47-07 Vernon Boulevard, LIC
WHEN: Thursday, March 20th from 6-8 pm
RSVP: Lynne Serpe at 646-202-0825 or Robyn Sklar at robynsklar@gmail.com
This event is co-sponsored by 3R Events, a project of Lynne Serpe and Robyn Sklar. Lynne & Robyn are long-time Green Party members who don’t just vote green - they live green. They organize monthly green events in LIC/Astoria that are fun and educational, not boring and preachy.
Hunter’s Point Wines & Spirits is an independently owned and operated store in Long Island City, NY. Owner Paul Huston graciously offered his store for this event. Hunter’s Point Wines & Spirits holds free wine tastings every Thursday and Friday from 6-8pm. Take the 7 train to Vernon Boulevard, walk 3.5 blocks north. Please call 718-472-WINE for more information.
The organic, biodynamic and sustainably farmed wines that will be available for tasting are from Small Vineyards, which specializes in single estate wines from all regions in Italy, customarily picked by hand and always earth-friendly. Production at the estate must be 10,000 cases or less. Guest Lorenzo Gaeteschi will be pouring a wine that he makes himself: an estate grown Merlot that he makes 300 cases of only.
3R Events will hold the first annual “Queens is Green Fashion Show” on April 26 at Green Space in Long Island City, highlighting green fashion designers with a Queens connection. Please contact Robyn Sklar at robynsklar@gmail.com or Lynne Serpe at 646-202-0825 for more information, or for an application to submit designs.
Posted by
Claire Deveron
at
6:12 PM
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Friday, March 07, 2008
The Latest Addition to Skillman Ave - Trash Cans
While this may sound pathetic, my mood went from average Friday anticipating the weekend joy to near elation when I walked out of my house and looked up the block this afternoon. As if delivered by a secret fairy garbage-mother, four NYC trash cans appeared on the corners of my block at 47th street and Skillman Avenue at some point this morning. My jaw nearly dropped as I discovered that they also appeared on the corners of 46th and Skillman (I haven't ventured further today, so I'm not sure if they appeared elsewhere down the avenue as well.)
Not only does this hopefully mean people won't feel compelled to throw their wrappers and trash on the sidewalk for lack of better options, but as a long-time dog owner it also (hopefully) means that less-diligent dog owners will stop giving we responsible canine-parents a bad name by properly and easily disposing of dog waste!
So thank you Eric Gioia, if you had a hand in this, and if not, thank you fairy garbage-mother wherever you are!
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Anonymous
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2:17 PM
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Labels: sunnyside gardens, sunnyside queens, trash can