Sunday July 8th Council Member Chin’s Free Bike Helmet Give-Away
In Sara Roosevelt Park’s :Â “The Pit” (Broome Street Entrance)
In Sara Roosevelt Park’s :Â “The Pit” (Broome Street Entrance)
New Forsyth Gardens:
First, thanks to intrepid Tenement Museum Staffers and all our volunteers and Park’s staff who try to keep up with the mess!
In Forsyth Conservancy Gardens:
Garbage cans needed.
Garbage removal needed.
Disinfectant needed.
Brighter lighting needed in the Evening needed.
Removal of crumbling low walls needed.
Open the Broome Street Restrooms Again.
Audubon and Betty Hubbard and Stanton/Houston/Forsyth:
Trash Removal needed
Trash alongside Forsyth at Houston
Trash Removal Needed:
Cars and Trucks in the Park at Stanton: (Not even Parks cars/trucks!)
Remove them!
Interesting idea for men to gather and support one another while building useful things.
YouTube video here
Website here.
“They’re community spaces for men to connect, converse and create. The activities are often similar to those of garden sheds, but for groups of men to enjoy together. They help reduce loneliness and isolation, but most importantly, they’re fun.”
One purpose:
And yes, we can have all kinds of “Sheds” for everyone who wants to belong to such a network!
“…we can pick some low-hanging fruit right away in order to reduce traffic and enhance pedestrian safety in Lower Manhattan: End the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge’s one-way toll, which right now only charges drivers going from Brooklyn to Staten Island.
Slowly the quilt grows.Â
We bring our sacred intentions
Toward a better here and now
For our children, our neighbors, our friends and ourselves;
Peony roots from a mother’s garden, a child’s sculpture
A great band, a real-live chicken
Sometimes just flowers.
We bring ferns from the mountains, coffee from the corner
The family turtle, a perfect rose, the Daily News.
We bring our children here, sacred, raucous, irreverent, destructive;
But also our most committed stewards;
We bring our friends and their friends, a cousin from New Zealand, from Israel, from Cincinnati; 3 guys from up the block with broad smiles and broader shoulders;
We bring more hot dogs, more daffodils, more visitors more might-come-in-handy
than anyone could ever eat, plant, talk to or use, and yet we do
And the quilt grows.
– Kate Fitzgerald (M’Finda Kalunga Community Gardener)
“Hart Island burials also came in smaller numbers, like the 27 from Rivington House, a nursing home in Manhattan exclusively for AIDS patients…”
Pridgen (2010) Directed by Fury Young Film shot by Christopher Cafaro
From the NYTimes:
“In an untold chapter of the AIDS epidemic scores of unclaimed bodies were buried in a remote spot on Hart’s Island. How many exactly remains unclear.
The bodies reached Hart Island on a ferry like all the others, in spare wooden boxes and bound for ignominious mass interment off the coast of the Bronx where New York City buries its unclaimed dead by the hundreds in long, shallow trenches…”
The island would go on to receive scores, if not hundreds, of people who died during the AIDS epidemic, which during the 1980s and 1990s killed more than 100,000 people in New York, about a quarter of AIDS deaths nationwide during the same period…”
“…Officials at several city agencies involved in the burials refused interview requests to discuss the issue and insisted that no data or any other information was available on AIDS burials.
“…the number of AIDS burials on Hart Island could reach into the thousands, making it perhaps the single largest burial ground in the country for people with AIDS.
It is an untold chapter of the AIDS crisis, but in recent years some of the island’s secrets have started to tumble out largely because of the work of a longtime activist whose legal pressure has wrested information from the city, giving relatives of people with AIDS answers they have long sought.
“Part of the history of the AIDS epidemic is buried on Hart Island, and it’s the unknown part,†said Melinda Hunt, the longtime advocate who has battled the city for information and believes that the island should be open to the public.”
For more information: Melinda Hunt‘s “Hart Island Project” here.
For Clair Yaffa‘s photographs of Hart Island Graves here.
Clair Yaffa: “It is difficult to get access to this place where the homeless, unclaimed bodies, and bodies of ?children are buried in common graves. Claire Yaffa spent one year, calling every day until she was finally permitted to go. Because of her photographic essays on child abuse, the homeless and children with AIDS, she had read about this place and wanted to see it for herself. Says Yaffa, “I spent my time there?in awe and sadness to see what for some was the end of their life’s journey.â€
Pridgen (2010) Directed by Fury Young Film shot by Christopher Cafaro
Gotham Gazette: “Whimsical Fact: It’s Legal To Jump In NYC Fountains To Cool Down”
Answer (a qualified):
“Hell Yes!”
Gotham Gazette gives information and a warning:
“All of the city’s fountains (50 in total) get their water system cleaned before being turned back on for the summer…”
“But that ain’t stopping the rat-pigeon pool parties that definitely happen when we aren’t looking.”
“It is not against park rules to go into display fountains, though…they are not intended for swimming…the water is not treated in the way a swimming pool is. [You cannot use… it to bathe—it is against park rules to use fountains for personal hygiene or for washing clothes, belongings, or pets (there are water fountains for that!) [Ed. note: you really want to see this link].”
Oh, and not in Bryant Park.
“Bryant Park is managed by Bryant Park Corporation, and they prohibit humans in the fountain…” GG
| SCHOOLFOOD INFORMATION | ||
| Sara D. Roosevelt Playground | ||
| Menus* |
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| Breakfast Time: | ||
| Lunch Time: | 10:00 AM-04:40 PM | |
| Dates of Operations: | 06/27/2018 thru 08/31/2018 | |
| Service Days | Lunch Sa,Su,Mo,Tu,We,Th,Fr | |
| *Menu(s) are subject to change. | ||
More Information: Here
“I’ve always wanted to have a neighbor just like you.Â
I’ve always wanted to live in a neighborhood with you” – Mr. Rogers
Young People:
Families:
Signs From the Day:
To the Bridge!
March Fatigue:
And the Last Word:
“Down with Cruelty”