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Murrow HS @ 1 Saul Bruckner Place

Murrow HS @ 1 Saul Bruckner Place published on

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The current address of Brooklyn’s Edward R. Murrow High School is 1600 Avenue L. That may change if my fellow alum Shadrach Stanleigh gets his way.

Since the untimely death of Murrow’s founder and former beloved Principal, Saul Bruckner, there have been Facebook groups popping up. Stanleigh started one such group, to rename the block fronting Murrow to Saul Bruckner Place.

It’s a great idea! Even if you’ve never heard of Bruckner, chances are you know someone whose life he touched. You’re reading this blog? Bam! You’ve probably watched a Marissa Tomei movie or listened to the Beastie Boys? Bam! Murrowites. It’s the Boro of Murrow and we’re everywhere.

So, you should join the group and send a letter to your local councilperson. There is a letter on FB that you can use to cut and paste and add your own info. You can find your district council person here.

Easy stuff. And thank you.

Good Night and Good Luck, Mr. Bruckner

Good Night and Good Luck, Mr. Bruckner published on 2 Comments on Good Night and Good Luck, Mr. Bruckner

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Saul Bruckner, founder and former principal of Edward R Murrow High School, passed away from a heart attack over the weekend. His wife found him in the swimming pool in the backyard of their Mill Basin home.

Bruckner founded the acclaimed school in 1974. By the time I arrived as a sophmore in 1980, Murrow had already molded minds as brilliant and eccentric as Jean Michel Basquiat. Murrow was an “alternative” high school. Principal Bruckner believed students should have the freedom of choice.

I’m not sure how the school has changed since the years I left, but at the time….

1. There were no bells. Class schedules were slightly confusing. I still have dreams that I’m walking around the hallway trying to figure out which class is next.

2. Instead of grades like A, B, C, it was E for Excellent, G for Good. To this day, people look at me funny when I say “I was a straight E student in math, I don’t know what happened to me.”

3. No sports. Yeah, we had gym. But no teams. The emphasis was on music, theater and the arts. Kind of like a school full of “Glee” kids, or at the time: “Fame”.

4. “Periods” were called “bands”. A free period was “opta band”. OPTA standing for “Optional Time Activity”.

Saul Bruckner’s vision of a New York City public school didn’t work out so badly. Apart from Murrow being ranked one of the best schools in the country, it’s clear to see how much the school has shaped student’s lives. Ask most folks how they felt about their high school years, they didn’t exactly love it. Ask a former Murrowite and they always look back with a smile.

And that was all Mr. Bruckner’s doing.

There were over 700 kids in my graduating class and nearly 4000 in the entire school, yet he seemed to know everyone’s name. I was one of the students who took advantage of the freedom. In other words, I cut a lot of classes. I’d be sitting in the hallway when Saul would come up to me and say “Miss Bobb, shouldn’t you be in French class now?” Sometimes he would make me go and sometimes he would let me screw up my future interactions with French people. But he trusted that I would make the right decision on my own.

The last time I saw Saul Bruckner was in Caravelle Restaurant in Midwood (where else?). He had retired by then and he looked like an old man. He was with a group of people and I was with people who didn’t know him, so I didn’t say hello. I guess I kind of regret that now.

Funeral services are today, May 3, 2010 at 11:30 AM at Parkside Funeral Home, 2576 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn. Mrs. Bruckner will be sitting Shiva Tuesday and Wednesday at 2171 East 65th Street, Brooklyn.

At the request of Mrs. Bruckner, any donations made will be added to the Saul Bruckner Scholarship Fund. You can send that to the attention of Ellen Goldman, at Edward R. Murrow High School, 1600 Avenue L, Brooklyn, NY  11230.

I’ll leave you with some quotes I snatched from Facebook friends:

“In many ways, Saul Bruckner’s vision allowed for all of us to be part of a very special anomaly – one that I think we all have recognized and have come to cherish. And over the years, I think many of us will agree that we have carried that spirit with us.”

“Gee, I remember that early morning AP American History class. And he gave me a 99 on the final paper because there was a minor typo (and my mom typed the paper…remember those Selectrics!).”

“A standout among the academic figures with whom I studied (and that includes college, grad school and law school professors), and more than any other, a personification of the institution he frequented.”

“Sad, that a great man who helped shape my unparalleled education passed away yesterday.”

“OMG. I’m so sad. Truly a man who took education seriously. The man never forgot a name. He taught me the importance of knowing someone’s name. I didn’t even realize that till this very moment. RIP Saul. R.I.P.”

New Contractor Bid Site Outta Bed Stuy

New Contractor Bid Site Outta Bed Stuy published on 4 Comments on New Contractor Bid Site Outta Bed Stuy

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Swee10 is a new “online marketplace where homeowners design, share and post their home remodeling projects and contractors bid on them.”

Much like this blogger, the founder, Jean was inspired after the renovation of her Bed Stuy home. And much like this blogger, she is still not finished with said home.

Swee10 has got it going on though! The company has a team of architects and designers (including Jean) overseeing the now-in-beta website.

Members can browse projects and post their own and receive bids from interested contractors. There is a section to view bids and best of all…complaints! Keeps these guys honest, know what I mean?

Anyway, check it out. Even if you don’t have a project going on, worth the visit to check out that adorable logo!

Best Place You’ve Ever Lived?

Best Place You’ve Ever Lived? published on 3 Comments on Best Place You’ve Ever Lived?

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As I start to pack and plan my move, I’m getting a bit sentimental. The house I’m leaving is my dream home and by far the best house I’ve ever lived in (finished or not). Makes my dream brownstone pale in comparison. Unfortunately, small town Beacon isn’t a perfect fit for me and I can’t take the house with me.

I’ve lived in a gazillion places in my lifetime. My parents moved more than a few times, then I followed in their footsteps. We lived in East Flatbush during my childhood, then Wurtsboro, NY for a few years while keeping the Brooklyn apartment. When my parents moved back to Brooklyn (I told you I’m following in their footsteps!) we lived in Midwood. Then Coney Island.

As soon as I was old enough to move out, I went to the city, then chose to live in brownstone Brooklyn. A bunch of different neighborhoods over the years. I’ve also lived in London, Bavaria, Kingston, NY and The Castro in San Fransisco. None of the long distance places for longer than a year. I always come back to NYC.

So, what makes me smile most when I look back?

Nicest apartment ever: The first apartment my husband and I shared alone, minus roommates, in Ft. Greene. Circa 1988. It was a gorgeous brownstone parlor floor with a young, first time landlord. In other words, he cared about the place.

Best neighborhood I’ve ever lived: Coney Island. Maybe it was because I was at that carefree age, but I loved living in Coney Island! The amusements, the beach, the aquarium, the handball, the flea markets, the boardwalk. It was a trek on the subway, but if the city hadn’t been calling my name at all hours, there would have been plenty to do right in the neighborhood.

So, that’s my story. What about you???

Reclaimed Wood Straight Outta Bklyn

Reclaimed Wood Straight Outta Bklyn published on 5 Comments on Reclaimed Wood Straight Outta Bklyn

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While searching for porch flooring I came across a reclaimed lumber company that gets it’s wood from places such as exotic Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan.

Well, it IS exotic woods like Ipe and Kumaru. New York City is the largest consumer of tropical woods for boardwalks, benches and other outdoor uses. The city has curbed the use of these woods due to protests from environmental groups, but not completely. The reclaimed Ipe is a way to use these woods sustainably.

So, enter Sawkill Lumber. Partners Alan Solomon and Klaas Armster of Solomon Wood and Armster Lumber have inventory from the Coney Island and Rockaway boardwalks as well as from those water tanks you that enhance the NYC skyline.

I haven’t received a price quote yet, but I’m not too bothered for my current project. I suspect this stuff isn’t cheap. I mean, who doesn’t want to say their floor is made from the Coney Island boardwalk?!

So, I wait until I build a deck on the Brooklyn house. If I can’t afford a whole deck, there will be SOMETHING!, a piece of the Coney Island boardwalk in my house.

No matter what the cost.

There’s a sucker born every minute. And I was minute 947823230492734 of 1965.

Brooklyn Photos from a Brooklyn Guy

Brooklyn Photos from a Brooklyn Guy published on 1 Comment on Brooklyn Photos from a Brooklyn Guy

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Friend plug alert! I went to high school with photographer Erik Lieber. He was taking darkroom classes at Murrow before I knew how to adjust my shutter speed. And 30 years later, he’s shooting Brooklyn like nobody’s business.

Lieber lives in Gowanus now. That’s the industrial area between Carroll Gardens and Park Slope that has just been declared a Superfund site. He shoots both rural and urban landscapes, but of course it’s the Brooklyn shots I really love!

The digital works are printed on archival fiber paper. Price range is $100-$150.

I’ve been eying Eric’s gorgeous work on Facebook and last weekend I finally got around to visiting so I could choose a print to hang on my wall (once I have walls). After making him take out every print he’s ever made, I decided on the one I originally wanted online. (That would be the image above.)

Maybe one day I’ll actually frame and hang my signed Lieber, but for now, I’m happy just to own it.

Most of these shots are Gowanus unless otherwise specified. There are tons more on his site.

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Jay Street at the river

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Yes, this is Brooklyn! Can you guess where?

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CNN on Kids in Bars

CNN on Kids in Bars published on 12 Comments on CNN on Kids in Bars

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When I saw the CNN Living headline yesterday “Brooklyn Brewhaha: Babies in Bars“, I knew it was about Park Slope. Of course it was. It’s well known around Brooklyn that Park Slope is the land of entitled parents, but it was kinda funny that CNN decided to weigh in on it.

So yeah, in a nutshell, parents are bringing their kids into bars and child free patrons aren’t all that happy with it. They want to be able to curse and fall down drunk without someone telling them to watch their language. They don’t want to trip over the $800 strollers blocking the entrance and they don’t want to entertain the kiddies when the parents are otherwise engaged.

As an unwavering non-breeder (who doesn’t really go to bars much anymore), I’d like to put in my two cents.

You want to bring your kid to a bar? Ok, but here are the rules:

1. Non breeders and parents who are taking the night off are free to say or do whatever they please. Because it’s a bar, not a playground!

2. I don’t want to hear your little brat scream and cry.

3. No, I’m not making eye contact. I don’t think your offspring is the cutest thing on earth. Tell it to leave me alone.

4. If I trip over your rugrat while making my 12th trip to the bathroom and knock him over, I keep walking.

5. You better keep those diapers clean and I don’t want to see any spittle or snot or you’ll be cleaning MY puke off the chair.

6. If it’s ok to bring little Damien into a drinking establishment, you shouldn’t have a problem with my dogs, correct?

Ok, I think that oughta do it.

When We Used To Play In The Streets

When We Used To Play In The Streets published on

An old Brooklyn buddy just posted this link on Facebook. Check out the trailer for New York Street Games, a documentary film about a simpler time in NYC. Back before blogs and Facebook and texting when we had to leave the house to have fun. Imagine that!

What I love about Bed Stuy is that it’s old school Brooklyn. I can hang out on my stoop and watch the kids play on the sidewalk (not my kids, mind you). There is still that sense of community that has been lost in many parts of New York.

FYI, I was a Chinese handball gal myself. Never played stickball in my life.

Everything You’ve Ever Wanted To Know About Brownstones

Everything You’ve Ever Wanted To Know About Brownstones published on

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Spring 2010 Offering: Layouts and Lifestyles

 

Course Code:     BRNS 032
Date:                 Saturday, 3/13
Time:                 1 – 5 pm
Fee:                  $40
Directions:         click here

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When it’s time to renovate your Brownstone, there may be nothing like the original. But how do you create a floor plan that fits your lifestyle? During this edition of the popular Anatomy of a Brownstone series, we will mix a little history and a lot of examples of what your neighbors’ Brownstones look like inside and outside their old homes. Architects and designers will show you how to fit your family’s life and style into a classic Brownstone.

Speakers

1 to 2 pm
Alexander Stoltz AIA, Vaidya Stoltz Architects, and Kenneth Conzelmann, RA are members of the City Tech Architectural Technology department.
They will share examples of recent projects and offer insights into the architectural process- from ideas to finished home.

2 to 3 pm
Gennaro Brooks-Church is a Certified Eco Broker, LEED AP, National Sustainable Building Adviser and the founder of Eco Brooklyn, a company that focuses on green brownstone renovations. He will discuss passive design approaches for creating energy-smart brownstones.
3 to 4 pm
Interior Designer Judith Angel, Allied Member ASID, will show how to bring rooms into focus using principles of form and design. Learn to use the objects you own and love as the starting point for a room that is distinctly your own.

4 to 5 pm

Debra Salomon, Program Developer at City Tech Division of Continuing Education and owner of 408 Group Design, will share favorite sources for fixtures and furnishings that will fit your style and budget.

Download registration form here and complete. (Include course code)

Ways To Register: 

By Phone: Call 718 552-1170
charge cards

By Mail:
Complete registration form and mail check or money order to:
NYCCT Continuing Studies Center, 300 Jay Street, Howard Building 4th Floor
Brooklyn NY 11201

Walk in: 25 Chapel Street, 4th Floor, Brooklyn NY 11201
Click here for directions

Haiti Earthquake Hits Home

Haiti Earthquake Hits Home published on 2 Comments on Haiti Earthquake Hits Home

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I’m sure we all know someone who has been affected by the Haiti earthquake. When we heard about it, my husband and I went through a list of Haitians we knew and wondered if their families were ok.

We forgot about Darnelle.

Darnelle is the cheerful young woman who meets and greets everyone at Kush Cafe in Clinton Hill. She lost several family members, including her mother, when her childhood home was destroyed.

Kush is holding a fundraiser this Wednesday, February 3rd. All profits go to the Dasne family. It’s $20 for an all you can eat buffet.

If you cannot attend but want to contribute, I’m looking into how to do that. I’ll leave it in the comments.

via Brownstoner

Finally.One Hanson

Finally.One Hanson published on 2 Comments on Finally.One Hanson

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After a short holiday hiatus, Reclaimed Home will finally be returning to the world of winter fleadom. Brooklyn Flea at One Hanson (aka The Willamsburgh Savings Bank) has been packed to the rafters with vendors, but they managed to squeeze me in for this Sunday.

So, come visit! I’ll be in space #35. That’s the gorgeous main floor. There are 3 levels of vintage and handmade vendors, plus I think they are adding some more food vendors this week!

Brooklyn Tours. Yeah, That’s Right.

Brooklyn Tours. Yeah, That’s Right. published on 2 Comments on Brooklyn Tours. Yeah, That’s Right.

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We all know that Brooklyn is the new Manhattan. Just ask Stacey Toussaint and Sheila Collins. They revere their native borough so much that they started up a business taking tourists to untouristy destinations.

Inside Out Tours offers bus and walking tours of Afro-Caribbean neighborhoods, gospel churches, Underground Railroad stops, urban farms and of course The Brooklyn Brewery. Because what tour would be complete without beer?

I think it’s a great idea. I’m just jealous I didn’t come up with it first. So, I have to mock.

* “Sample ethnic cuisine.”

Where are these tourists from? The mid-west or something?

* “Hang out with hipsters in Brooklyn’s trendiest and hottest neighborhoods.”

Oops, just puked in my mouth.

* “Enter a historic brownstone.”

Hey, can you bring them over to my house? They can help restore a historic brownstone!

Actually, it sounds like fun. Maybe they can hire me to give the Jewey Brooklyn tour.

Lifted from Brokelyn.

Goodbye Kings Plaza Cinemas

Goodbye Kings Plaza Cinemas published on 6 Comments on Goodbye Kings Plaza Cinemas

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Yikes! The Kings Plaza Cinemas are closed! And what is taking it’s place? A Best Buy! What’s next? Kings Plaza Diner? Maybe they can make that into a Starbucks.

I was catching up on my blog reading yesterday and I’d like to thank Brooklynometry for bumming me out with this news.

Ok, so I haven’t been to Kings Plaza in a while and it’s been YEARS since I’ve seen a movie there. In fact, the last time I did, there were only two large screens. At the time of the closing this year, they were a sixplex.

The last movie I saw there was probably Rocky or something of that era (although I know I saw Rocky on Avenue U). That doesn’t matter. I just liked knowing it was there!

Home for the Holidays

Home for the Holidays published on 2 Comments on Home for the Holidays

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Yesterday I packed up the 6 cats and headed down to Brooklyn to stay full time with the husband and dogs in our 1 bedroom garden apartment. It’s only for three weeks while I’m working Gifted, then we’re off to Dublin for Christmas. So actually, I’m home UNTIL the holidays.

Just wanted to check in and say I’m still alive….just too crazed to blog. I warned ya!

Hey, check out the rock exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. I won’t be able to go until after the New Year when life starts anew.

Hand Made Brooklyn

Hand Made Brooklyn published on

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New blog alert! There’s not much there yet, but Hand Made Brooklyn looks very promising. I found out about it via Brokelyn.

Hand Made was started by a couple of chicks living in the boonies of Brooklyn (Boro Park and *Flatbush). They are inviting crafters to post DIY tips, self promotion articles and tips on all things crafty.

There’s also a free directory for listing your crafty website or Etsy shop.

* Flatbush is just a guess. She says “among the Victorian houses.”

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