Visits

Saturday, September 11, 2010

NEW YORK MOTOREXPO TAKES OVER LOWER MANHATTAN SEPTEMBER 12-17

NEW YORK MOTOREXPO TAKES OVER LOWER MANHATTAN SEPTEMBER 12-17

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

For additional information, visit www.motorexpo.co

Friday, September 10, 2010

Sept. 11 Memorial Events

Sept. 11 Memorial Events

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

Thursday, September 9, 2010

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

Tenants Seek to Block Sale

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Mr. Kessner couldn't be reached to comment.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

New York City schools won't be offering flu vaccines this year: officials

New York City schools won't be offering flu vaccines this year: officials

Wednesday, September 8th 2010, 4:00 AM

 
New York City students will have to go to their doctor for a flu vaccine this year.
Brandon/AP
New York City students will have to go to their doctor for a flu vaccine this year.

New York City schools won't offer flu vaccines this year, officials said Tuesday.

The decision marks a shift from last school year, when the city offered free swine flu vaccinations to all kids at public schools.

Mayor Bloomberg rolled out the massive inoculation program during the height of the swine flu outbreak - an international pandemic that hit children hardest.

The appearance of swine flu in 2009 forced scientists to create a second vaccine late in the year, meaning patients needed two different drugs to protect against seasonal and swine flus.

This year's standard flu vaccine covers both seasonal flu and swine flu - also called H1N1.

Dr. Jane Zucker, assistant commissioner in the city Health Department's immunization bureau, said parents should still have their children vaccinated this year at a pharmacy or a doctor's office.



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/education/2010/09/08/2010-09-08_schools_wont_be_giving_flu_vaccines_this_year.html#ixzz0ywZMm0BV

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

'Jew-maican' kosher jerk chicken builds cultural bridges at West Indian Day Parade

'Jew-maican' kosher jerk chicken builds cultural bridges at West Indian Day Parade

Tuesday, September 7th 2010, 4:00 AM

Sarah Attias (l.) and Zev Attias (r.) serve kosher jerk chicken, a blend of the couple's two cultures that brought smiles to more than one face on Monday at the West Indian Day Parade.
Marino for News
Sarah Attias (l.) and Zev Attias (r.) serve kosher jerk chicken, a blend of the couple's two cultures that brought smiles to more than one face on Monday at the West Indian Day Parade.

No sight along Monday's West Indian American Day Carnival Parade prompted more smiles and cell phone pictures than a big cardboard sign on a low cast-iron fence.

"KOSHER JERK CHICKEN."

From the sweet-scented smoke arose a cry, "It's Jew-maican!"

The chicken in question was being cooked in the classic style on a big, smoky grill fashioned from a steel drum. But the guy with the tongs wore a yarmulke and looked like typical member of the Jewish community in Crown Heights, unless you counted the T-shirt dyed in the black, green and yellow of the Jamaican flag and the apron stenciled with "Jerk Hall of Fame."

Nearby stood a woman who also appeared typically Jewish, save for a shirt printed with the word "JAMAICA." She was Sarah Attias, and the Inquisition drove her family from Spain to Jamaica back in the 16th century.

She moved to Eastern Parkway this summer with her American husband, 33-year-old Zev Attias, and their two children, 5-year-old Judah and 18-month-old Ezra. The two major elements of her heritage, Jewish and West Indian, shared the same streets but too often tended to act as if the other were not there.

"Like they don't exist," she said.

As the day of the big parade approached, some of her fellow Jews warned her to stay away, that there was sometimes violence. "They said, 'You hide when the Caribbean parade comes here,'" she recalled.

She and her husband instead acted in accordance with something she had often heard in her home country.

"There's a saying in Jamaica, 'One love out of many people,'" she said Monday as her husband stood at the grill with smoke billowing around him. "This food is going to bring the communities together!"

Sarah did note one cultural complication.

"You singed your beard," she told Zev.

They were joined in culinary crossover by their friend Tani Pinson, who coined the term Jew-maican. He also wore a Jerk Hall of Fame apron, these sent by Sarah's mother in Jamaica. He made the sign from a cardboard box, answering the question repeated again and again as they started cooking.

"Is it kosher?"

After all the parades where the smell of jerked chicken on the fire filled the air, members of the Jewish community would finally be able to see if it is as good as it smells.

"I've been smelling it for years," said Tracy Akner as she ordered a plate. "Now I get to taste it."

She set off without taking a bite, deciding to delay the experience until she picked up her 4-year-old, Nahy, so he will not have to wonder for years as she did.

An elderly gentleman in Hasidic garb stepped up and asked in Yiddish for dark meat. His shoulders began to rise and fall to the parade's music as he finished the chicken along with a side dish Sarah's mother reminded them to include.

"She said make sure you have rice and peas," Sarah reported.

Zev set to preparing another treat that made a paradegoer cry out, amazed and delighted.

"Breadfruit!"

Just the sight of the kosher crew caused scores of passersby to smile and take cell phone pictures, happy proof that most of us prefer unity to division.

"I love it! I love it!" exclaimed Kerriann Brown.

"It says we can all be one," said Robin Winter.

There it was; one love. Winter sampled from a plate and gave a thumbs up that said it all.

mdaly@nydailynews.com



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2010/09/07/2010-09-07_jewmaican_their_day_with_some_kosher_jerk_chicken.html#ixzz0yqnJywFO

Monday, September 6, 2010

African-American News - September 6, 2010

African-American News - September 6, 2010
 
 
Ludacris is narrating a new reality series on BET, but it's likely not anything you'd expect.
White House planners have mistakenly attributed a quotation to Martin Luther King in the new Oval Office carpet but the original author was in fact a now-forgotten 19th century activist.
The Souls of Black Folk, W.E. B. Du Bois' classic 1903 work of vivid description and advocacy for African-American self-education and self-emancipation, is a wonderful book for "reading" by ear.
Freedom Trains (New York Times)
In the winter of 1916, as Americans read the news of unimaginable slaughter in a distant yet rapidly spreading European war, it was easy to overlook stories like the one in The Chicago Defender reporting that several black families in Selma, Ala., had left the South.
How to create the right mix of assets in your 401 Choosing your investments involves creating an investment portfolio that is well diversified According to the AARP Public Policy Institute , older African Americans and Hispanics are less likely than whites to have income from pensions and other retirement savings or assets and are more likely than ...
Follow the Black Enterprise 40th Anniversary countdown of the most impactful black business leaders of the past 40 years Robert L. Johnson made business history when he took BET public in 1991, the first time a black-owned company was traded on the New York Stock Exchange.
Follow the Black Enterprise 40th Anniversary countdown of the most impactful black business leaders of the past 40 years With his historic $985 million leveraged buyout of TLC Beatrice International Foods Cos.a 'the largest offshore transaction at the timea 'the late financier Reginald F. Lewis created the first black-owned global enterprise to ...
Finding out what really happened on the Turkish flotilla headed for Gaza and to Turkish-American Furkan Dogan of Kayseri last May 31 has been painfully slow.
Conservative radio host Monica Crowley on Friday smacked down Newsweek's Eleanor Clift over racism in the Tea Party.
The 2010 U.S. Open, like last year's edition , has seen several contentious moments on the court. According to the New York Daily News, a brawl broke out among spectators Thursday night in section 187 as Novak Djokovic and Philipp Petzschner played nearby. Both participants -- a woman and a man -- were reportedly taken away by police.
An Iowa State Patrol trooper fired last year after repeatedly circulating what he believed was humorous material about racial minorities is fighting his dismissal in Polk County District Court.
Know It All
Know It All (San Mateo Daily Journal)
The first female African-American millionaire was Madame C.J. Walker . She made her fortune selling hair care products in the early 1900s.