Harry Belafonte and Elsie Richardson Evoke Message of Medgar
Transcription
Harry Belafonte and Elsie Richardson Evoke Message of Medgar
OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 VOL. 15 NO. 39 September 30-October 6, 2010 1 From the Village of Brooklyn, New York Since 1996 Harry Belafonte and Elsie Richardson Evoke Message of Medgar Evers College’s Namesake at 40th Anniversary Gala Dinner In Pursuit of Freedom and Excellence: Civil and Human Rights Leaders Elsie Richardson of Central Brooklyn and Harry Belafonte, humanitarian and world renown performing artist, helped to shape movements more than forty years ago that brought institutions like Medgar Evers College to life. Medgar Evers College’s 40th anniversary Founder’s Day Alumni and Visionaries Dinner,Tuesday, September 28 -hosted by Dr. William L. Pollard, President of the College, and the Medgar Evers College Community -- was a wonderful tribute to how far the college has come since its founding. It also was remarkable in its revelation, most notably through the speeches of comunity activists Elsie Richardson, a founder of the college, and Harry Belafonte, a Civil Rights lion, that the journey is not yet done. More than 300 people gathered for the benefit which was held in the $250 million dollar state-of-the-art building housing the School of Science, Health and Technology to open in October. Mrs. Richardson noted she and her colleague founders would not have conceived such a building in 1970 when Governor Rockefeller signed legislation approving the “establishment of an experimental four-year college {based in Central Brooklyn} offering both career and transfer associate degrees and the bacalaureate degree.” Named for the martyred civil rights leader Medgar Wiley Evers (1925-1963), in photo far right, was established as a result of the advocacy of community residents in Central Brooklyn, and education and civil leaders throughout the City. Among the original founders in attendance at the dinner -- in addition to Ms. Richardson, were Mr. George Harvey, Mr. William Howard Sr., The Honorable Anna Jefferson, Sen. Waldaba Stewart, and Councilman Al Vann. Tony Herbert Assists Return of Missing Girl, 11 Page 3 Our Time Q&A ... with Councilman Al Vann “I think that the community has to look for people who have the community feeling.” Page 2 The dinner sponsors were National Grid, Con Edison, City University of New York (represented by Jay Hershenson) and the Caribbean American Chamber of Commerce and Industry represented by Roy Hastick. Broadcast journalist Julian Philips was Master of Ceremonies; The Rev. Conrad. B. Tillard delivered the invocation; Dr. Marcella Maxwell, along with Mrs. Richardson, delivered messages on behalf of the founders. Medgar Wiley Evers Mrs. Richardson set the tone, recalling the hard work and her great hardworking colleagues. Belafonte, 84, he chose a more important path for his sounded the bell for all to come back to the people.” Following are Mrs. Richardson’s refold to continue the work. He revealed that he had been approached by students about marks in their entirety. Excerpts from Mr. certain challenges at the college, and he did Belafonte’s eloquent speech, roundly apnot shy away from telling us “winers and plauded by Mr. Pollard and dinner guests, will be presented in two parts over coming diners” what he felt we needed to hear. Our colleague Milton Allimadi, the issue. BG/DG See Page 6. jourmalist and publisher, remarked on the delivery of Mr. Belafonte’s MEC’s Newest Academic Building extemporaneous remarks that ranged from a salute to President Barack Obama to a blueprint for saving our youth, gracefully taking the dinner message from a celebration of what we have done to a “wake up” call signalling where we are failing and what we need to do moving forward. Said Allimadi of Belafonte, “He could have been a world political leader, but October 2-5 ... October 13-16 ... Youth Week 2010 Sept. 29 - Oct. 5 Gain a new perspective on African Burial Ground National Monument Perspective. Ola, Renee, and “Reality Check 2010” Page 2 290 Broadway, 1st floor • New York, NY 10007 212-637-2019 • www.nps.gov/afbg AfBurialGrndNPS@twitter See Calendar ... Page 5 INSIDE: COUPON FOR FREE ONE-DAY PASS TO BEDFORD YMCA, Page 6 2 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 Q&A ... with Councilman Al Vann The late Reverend William Augustus Jones of Bethany Baptist Church had a favorite saying: “You eat the king’s meat, you do the king’s bidding.” Looking at the influence of hedge fund money in this past primary, where folks were eager to bellyup to the king’s buffet, rationalizing that the king’s bidding was best for the peasants and knowing for certain it was best for themselves, we thought we’d look at a different path to elected office. Previous generations had come into office buoyed by the community and standing against the king. Councilman Al Vann’s 35 years of elected service began in such a way and we asked him how that path began. OTP: A lot of people run for office and there will be a lot of them running for your office. What were the kinds of preparations you had and what had you done prior to being elected that prepared you for leadership? Councilman Al Vann: Actually, I’ve thought about my life, and as a kid growing up in Bed-Stuy, you know I was born and bred in Bed-Stuy went to PS.83 and Junior High School 35 before I went to Lane (Franklin K. Lane) and I didn’t realize the importance of it at the time, but when I was in public school I was always involved: on the stage doing stuff, head of the guard patrol in the school, I was president of the GO. I was very, very active in the school and the community and it wasn’t anything I thought special, it was just what I was doing at where I was. After I graduated from college, my first real job was teaching, I taught at 256 then Junior High School 35 where I spent most of my years before the infamous 271 when I was principal over there, the year they was OUR TIME PRESS Founded in 1995 679 Lafayette Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11216-1009 (718) 599-6828 Fax (718) 599-6825 Web site: www.ourtimepress.com e-mail: [email protected] Publishers/Editors-in-Chief David Mark Greaves Bernice Elizabeth Green Photographers Mark Stewart Parent’s Notebook Aminisha Black On The Aisle Linda Armstrong Grassroots to Global-Features Bernice Elizabeth Green Reporters Mary Alice Miller Contributor Jaisal Noor Sports Eddie Castro Proof Reader James McCallum Journalist Interns Jolimene Pierre-Louis Fabiola Ramos (C) 1996, DBG Media, printed in New York City. All rights reserved. No part of the publication may be reproduced without prior permission of the publishers. Publishers are not responsible for any ad claims. having the big problem with the union. Ocean Hill-Brownsville. So that was what I was doing. I was involved and we were organizing teachers into the Negro Teacher Association in 1964. So it’s not really being a teacher I think that led me to this but the organizing of teachers, organizing parents actually. Holding workshops for them on the weekends, letting them know this school belongs to you, your children are there. You have the right to come in and make decisions and so forth. A lot of people probably can’t appreciate that time because they think the way things are now is the way they were. They weren’t like that. Parents were afraid to come to the school. They felt they had no say. Obviously, it was a time when there was no Black curriculum and very few Black people. The point I’m making is that I was organized doing things that led me to politics; I didn’t plan a career in being elected to office at all. Obviously, I didn’t know a lot about politics except my mother said that I should vote and I would vote. I would look for names that looked Black and that’s who I would vote for because I really wasn’t involved in it. But in 1972, it was more like a movement than a campaign because in ’72 we were still part of the movement and so I ran against Cal Williams because people said “we understand what you’re trying to do Vann, trying to make decisions, trying to improve the community, you could probably do it better if you’re in elected office. You have access to the media, you have access to resources.” I listened and decided that okay, I would do that. So in ’72, we did not run in the primary. We ran in the general election and again my movement was teachers and the community. We were the Vanguard Independent Party and we had petitioned just like the Freedom Party today. It was a grassroots movement and we did well. Didn’t win but we got a couple of thousand votes. People who were knowledgeable about the subject said, “Man, you’ve got to run in the primary. If you got 2,000 votes in the general election, you can win the primary.” The second time around in ’74, I ran in the Democratic Primary and I won and that was the beginning of my career in elected office. We learned everything on our own. There was no one that mentored us. No one told us what to do so we had to learn by doing. So my people learned all the aspects of running a campaign, so on and so forth and I guess the rest is history. OTP: There’s so many folks that want to run and I don’t get the impression that a lot of them are prepared as far as doing the community background work. The African-American Teachers Association, how involved was the group in the community? Vann: Well, ATA (African-American Teachers Association), which really began in 1964 as the Negro Teachers Association, actually started between the teachers in 35 and PS 21 and then expanded. Eventually, we had a chapter in each borough except Staten Island. We had a coordinator of African-American teachers in each borough except for Manhattan, so we One Perspective … Yet, it’s more than entertainment here. The housewives, Snookie, The Situation and ilk act out because they can leverage “reality” as a way to push their cause and make behind-the-scenes big bucks. So Dear Ola Alabi and Renee Collymore, you ladies appear to have played out your drama in a recent spate of derogatory emails, gossip-girl strategy tactic-antics, namecalling, public displays of animosity. The media, the internet, and the public arena are not the places to show Extreme Hubris or Angst especially when you’re in public office or running for or from something. The public can pick out – and will – every wart, mole, incompetency. For examples of what to do and how to act, there are many -- all role models from whom you can learn that activism and argument Whether you choose to learn onsite or online, you have the power to shape your education >`ÊÃV i`ÕiÊ>ÌÊ-1 9Ê«ÀiÊ-Ì>ÌiÊ i}i°ÊÊÃÊ>Ê>ÌiÀ>ÌÛiÊÌÊV>ÃÃÀÊi>À}]ÊÞÕ½Ê determine how and where to learn through flexible options such as: UÊ Onsite one-to-one meetings with your faculty mentor and independent study UÊ Online courses or full online degree programs UÊ "ÀÊ>ÊVL>ÌÊvÊLÌ ° 9ÕÊ>ÃÊ>ÞÊi>ÀÊVÀi`ÌÊvÀÊVi}iiÛiÊi>À}Ê}>i`ÊvÀÊÜÀÊ>`ÊviÊiÝ«iÀiVi°ÊÊ - >«iÊÞÕÀÊi`ÕV>ÌÊÌÊiiÌÊÞÕÀÊ}>ðÊÊ Ì½ÃÊÞÕÀÊV Vi°ÊÊ̽ÃÊÞÕÀÊ`i}Àii° January and March Terms Undergraduate Information Sessions Manhattan Staten Island Brooklyn Fifth Floor 325 Hudson Street (corner of Vandam) 500 Seaview Avenue Sixth Floor 177 Livingston Street Mon., Oct. 4, 6 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 7, noon Mon., Nov. 8, 6 p.m. Wed., Oct. 6, 6 p.m. Mon., Oct. 18, 6 p.m. Wed., Nov. 3, 6 p.m. Online study only information sessions www.esc.edu/CDLinfo vÀ>Ì\ÊÊnÇÇÎÇÓÈÇxxÊÊUÊÜÜÜ°iÃV°i`Õ Continued on Page 12 Continued on Page 10 My Degree. My Way. Olanike Alabe, Renee Collymore and “Reality Check 2010” Many Americans have settled for the television reality show as a reflection of real life. They also measure their own lives by the reality-show lives of the so-called real people who are “acting out” for the everpresent camera. It’s the old Shakespeare line unplugged or reinvented: “All the World’s a Stage. All the people merely players.” became citywide and we became (I think) the primary force dealing with the UFT (United Federation of Teachers). It was the ATA members who transferred into Ocean Hill-Brownsville, when that struggle Mon., Oct. 18, 6 p.m. Thurs., Oct. 21, 3 p.m. Mon., Nov. 8, 6 p.m. OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 3 Students Rally in Support of Student Safety Act By Jaisal Noor (Special To Our Time Press) The day before school was scheduled to open last week, students, parents, lawmakers and advocates gathered in front of Tweed Hall to address the looming police presence awaiting children in the hallways of their schools. The large crowd gathered to rally support for the Student Safety Act, a bill which would begin to address the issue of the over-policing of city schools by requiring that the NYPD and the Department of Education make publicly available data concerning the types of infractions students are being punished for in schools, as well as information regarding the students’ race, social status and disabilities. “What we’ve found is that many students are subject to over-policing in their schools, there’s a higher rate of arrests in schools, there’s a higher rate of suspensions than there ever has been before. And it’s mostly targeting students of color and students with special needs and students from struggling communities,” said Angela Jones, coordinator of the NYCLU Schoolto-Prison Pipeline Project. In recent years, police presence inside of NYC public schools has grown at a startling rate. Starting with the multitudes of School Safety Officers, guards trained by the NYPD, patrolling the hallways, followed by the introduction of roving metal detectors, many of which became permanent placements inside schools in the poorest neighborhoods. According to the New York Civil Liberties Union, there are 5,200 School Safety Officers in the NYPD’s School Safety Division, making it the fifth-largest police force in the United States. This is also almost twice the number of guidance counselors inside public schools. “Discipline has been taken away from the teachers, from the principals, and handed over to police who are trained in law enforcement, they are trained to arrest, not to engage in conflict resolution, or figure out what’s going on in terms of adolescent development,” said Donna Lieberman, executive director of the NYCLU, at the rally. The high-risk environment created by the presence of uniformed officers and metal detectors does little to foster an environment that encourages learning. Students like 15year-old Angelica Hernandez of West Bronx Academy are unsettled by the long waits as they line up to go through the metal detectors every morning. In her impassioned speech at the rally, Hernandez recounted one winter morning when she was late to class because she had to go through the metal detector repeatedly only to find that she “had been wearing too many bobby pins in my hair that day.” “I think that me getting an education shouldn’t make me feel like I’m going to prison every single day,” said Ashley Desmairs, a junior at Cypress Hills Collegiate Prep School in East New York, Brooklyn. “I would be more ready to learn if I didn’t have to worry about having to take everything off so I don’t ring.” The demand for racial and ethnic statistics by the Student Safety Act is meant to address the issue that minority students in struggling communities are being harshly penalized by current school safety practices. Students face severe repercussions including suspension and arrest for minor infractions like being late to class or writing on the desk, according to the NYCLU. “What we’ve done is we’ve gotten too far away from remembering that we are teaching our youth and our children in the public schools. And our children of color Continued on Page 11 Tony Herbert Assists Return of Missing 11-year-old Girl By Mary Alice Miller Sahara Boyd, age 11, went missing from her Bronx home on Tuesday, September 14. She had been gone for a week. Dawud McKelvin, age 30, was arrested for sending Sahara obscene pictures to her grandmother’s cell phone while Sahara was missing. Community activist Tony Herbert stepped forward to assist the family’s request that Sahara be returned home. Sahara was found in Brooklyn near Chauncey and Broadway on Monday. Herbert got involved with Sahara’s plight when he got a phone call from a member of one of the SUV clubs in the Bronx who had read published reports (including Our Time Press) of Herbert’s work helping to return missing young girls to their home. The Dough Boys SUV Club President printed out the articles, took them to Sahara’s family, who in turn, called Herbert. Herbert went to the family and guided them through the process of organizing a community vigil. They then put alerts on MySpace and Facebook and circulated a Blackberry Messenger chain letter. (No Amber Alert had been issued.) People began to tell where they had seen Sahara. Herbert, the family and concerned community members in the Bronx went to the location where Sahara had been seen – 2250 Pelham Parkway. Ironically, the area where Sahara was seen was the same area McKelvin’s family lived. Sahara was placed under the supervision of ACS when a neighbor had a conflict with Sahara’s grandmother. Vindictively, this neighbor made a false report that drugs were being sold from the grandmother’s home and that children were being abused there. The grandmother was custodial caretaker of her daughter’s three children, including Sahara. Herbert said after the Nixmary Brown situation, ACS is not taking chances. The grandmother was arrested, and removed Sahara until they conducted an investigation. Sahara was placed into a foster home, where she came into contact with McKelvin. While in foster care, Sahara ran away to be with McKelvin. She came back, then ran away again. After McKelvin was arrested, Sahara was seen with him again in the same development. She was also seen walking around with another adult male in the Pelham Parkway Houses. Herbert and the family flooded the complex with posters. After walking through with a bullhorn calling for the return of Sahara, more people stepped forward to say they had just seen her. They walked around the community following the trail to 955 Waring Ave., where McKelvin’s family lives. At 1 am, Sahara called her grandmother saying she was in Brooklyn near Chauncey and Broadway, a known street prostitution location. The grandmother called detectives who arrived while the grandmother was on the phone with Sahara. The detectives directed the grandmother to coax Sahara outside so that she could identify where she was. Sahara could not pronounce the street names, but was able to spell them. Sahara was instructed to get in a cab, they would pay for it. She was taken to a location where she was safely placed into police custody. Sahara was taken to the hospital for a medical evaluation, and is now back in foster care. Three adult males have been arrested in connection with Sahara. Herbert began working with families of missing young girls two years ago when his developmentally disabled 21-year-old niece was held against her will for five days in Brownsville Continued on Page 11 4 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 House & Grounds Matter: REPAIRS,CONSTRUCTION & MORE 6$0$17+$&216758&7,21,1& 0DF'RQRXJK6WUHHW %URRNO\Q1HZ<RUN 2IILFH)D[ 6DPFRQ#YHUL]RQQHW )XOO\/LFHQVHGDQG,QVXUHG )UHH(VWLPDWHV &RPPHUFLDO,QGXVWULDO5HVLGHQWLDO ³<28*(748$/,7<:25.$77+(%(6735,&(6´ )$&,/,7,(66(59,&(' families in need). 7p: Town Hall Meeting Boys and Girls High SchoolAgenda: Presentation and open forum on the state of Boys and Girls High School as a community institution / Introduction of “Achievement For All” mentoring initiative / Community Clergy adoption of Boys and Girls HS / State of Affairs of Bedford Stuyvesant Community Boys and Girls High School, 1700 Fulton Street, Brooklyn, New York 11213 PHONE: 718-467-1700 ext2701 10/8 9:30a-12:30p Saving Teens in Crisis. Long Island University/Paramount Gym @ Dekalb & Flatbush. Sponsors: The Brooklyn Grandparents Coalition and LIU. %URZQVWRQHV$SDUWPHQW%XLOGLQJV6FKRROV &KXUFKHV6WRUHV5HVWDXUDQWV 6(59,&(6 1HZ&RQVWUXFWLRQ ([WHULRU,QWHULRU:RUN ([WHQVLRQV5HPRGHOLQJ 5RRILQJ6LGLQJ $OO7\SHVRI&HPHQW:RUN%DWKURRPV.LWFKHQV 3OXPELQJDQG(OHFWULFDO )LQLVKHG%DVHPHQWV6WXFFR3DLQWLQJ 6(59,&($5($6 7KURXJKRXW1HZ<RUN&LW\ 6DPRU*HRUJH See Small Business Directory on Page 9 for More Resources Lawson’s Tree Service Tree Cutting, Pruning Feeding, Spraying Stump Grinding, Planting, Shade Tree, Alert! for Oct. 2-3 Call Today! 718-763-0087 718-355-0123 NYC PARKS CALLING FOR HELP WITH DOWNED TREES AND BRANCH CLEANUP: The NYC Department of Parks & Recreation, in cooperation with NYC Service, is looking to recruit volunteers this weekend (Oct. 2 and 3) to help clean up from the Sept. 16 storm. If you are willing to volunteer or if you have any questions, please call (212) 360-3421 or NYC Service at (212) 788-7550. Or visit: [email protected]. CALENDAR TONIGHT - September 30 Eyewitness: Beautiful Black Brooklyn/Group Photography Exhibit: Works of Larry Brown, LeRoy Henderson, Marilyn Nance, Beuford Smith, Randy Waterman. Curator: Jacqui D. Woods 718-636-6949. HIGHLIGHT: Oct. 2 -5 African Burial Ground National Monument in Downtown Manhattan to host Youth Week. Visit the Web site for hours, go to: www.nps.gov/afbg or (212) 637-2019. ONGOING Bedford-Stuyvesant Community Legal Services Landlord-Tenant Matters – Wednes. and Thursday / IRS Taxpayer Assistance – Tues. and Thurs. Foreclosure, ACS, Immigration, SS - Mon. and Fri. Call for appt., times, schedule: 718-636-1155 OCTOBER 10/1 11a: Freedom Party Press Conference on the National Black Education Agenda in Harlem with Gubernatorial Candidate Councilman Charles Barron and convened by Dr. Sam Anderson and Dr. Donald Smith at John Henrik Clarke House 286 Convent Ave. 10/2 12n-4p:African Burial Ground YOUTH WEEK 2010 keynote event. Dollmaking, 10/9 Randy Weston’s Book Tour: MoCADA booksigning. Details: www.mocada.org. 10/10 10K Community Run and Walk. Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration. Afternoon: Hugh Masekela stars at Transart’s 11th Annual Jazz in the Valley concert. Craig Harris Didgeridoo Quartet also perform at the Hudson Valley Resort & Spa in Kerhonkson, NY. 917-952-2027 or 347-6981173. FREE ESTIMATE “No Tree Too Tall for Us!” 6p-8p: “A is for ANANSI”: LITERATURE FOR CHILDREN of AFRICAN DESCENT, Institute of African-American Affairs at New York University. With editor/social activist Esther Cooper Jackson, Andrea Davis Pinkney, Cheryl Willis Hudson, Councilman Ras Baraka of Newark, NJ, Andrew P. Jackson of Queens Public Library, Leo and Diane Dillon, Jaira Placide and Our Time Press columnist Fern E. Gillespie (displaying vintage children’s books). Free AND Open to the public. LIMITED SPACE - RSVP: 212-998IAAA. Africanastudies.as.nyu.edu/object/ anasi.html Ranger-led tours. Reservations required for some events. Information: (212) 637-2019. 10/2 One Nation Historic March in Washington, D.C. www.onenationworkingtogether.org 10/4 Ribbon-cutting Ceremony for new Academic Building at Medgar Evers College. 10/6 5p-9p: The Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium (CBJC) presents Central Brooklyn Jazz All-Stars in jam session fundraiser/ Sugar Hill Restaurant, 609 DeKalb Ave. in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Donations accepted at door: [email protected]. 10/7 Evening: Previews begin for James Earl Jones in Driving Miss Daisy, on Broadway, with Vanessa Redgrave. 212-239-6200 6:30p: Storytelling by Emmett Wigglesworth. BAC Gallery, 111 Front Street, DUMBO. 7p-10p: Bedford-Stuyvesant YMCA’s Fall Mixer @ MoCADA, Tickets: $50 (for YMCA Strong Kids Campaign to support youth and 10/12 STARS of NEW YORK DANCE ... ... at the New York Marriott of the Brooklyn Bridge, a charitable, judged dance competition likened to Dancing with the Stars but with the charitable mission of increasing the number of children from low-income communities access to dance. Our local competing stars are: Colvin Grannum, Letitia James, Kenneth A. Smaltz, Jocelyn Taylor will compete with professional dance partners to perform the fiercest dance duet. Our Time Press columnist Errol Louis will host and dance the tango. Donate, purchase tickets or become a sponsor, call Cheryl Todmann, 917-623-7299 or [email protected]. 10/14 BEAREATHER REDDY’s Blues Women tribute revitalized “Crazy Blues,” the first Blues music recorded by Mamie Smith in 1920 that sold 2 million copies. Reddy journeys from See See Rider to Gimme a Pigfoot and other Smith sultry sounds. The Brooklyn 5 Historical Society, 128 Pierrepont St., 1st Floor Gallery. 10/15 8p-12a: 966Jazz presents the great Blues artistry of “big-framed, blustery” Jerron “Blind Boy” Paxton & Floyd Lee Mississippi Electric Blues Guitar Man (cousin of John Lee Hooker). Join 966 at 966 Fulton Street, nr. Clinton/Washington in Bklyn. 10/16 Brownstoners of Bedford-Stuyvesant Annual House Tour. (Details to be announced.) 11p- 4p: Magnolia Tree Earth Center Open House and Opening of “Spirit of Africa: Community Mural Project 2005-10” (working title concept). Artist/Illustrator BRYAN COLLIER at ... 4p-6p: BROWNSTONE BOOKS for booksigning. 409 Lewis Avenue. www.brownstonebooks.com. 718-953-7328 6p-8p: HOUSE of ART Gallery for meet&greet reception. Artist’s talk on his original artworks & limited editions available for purchase. 373 Lewis Avenue. www.nychouseofart.com 347.663.8195. Guy Davis, Guitar/Blues Harmonica man -winner of the W.C. Handy “Keeping the Blues Alive” Blues Foundation Award and son of Ruby Dee & Ossie Davis -- brings the tradition of acoustic blues of Fats Waller, Buddy Guy; patter like Garrison Keillor and some Taj Mahal to Boys & Girls H.S., 1700 Fulton St. Reel Sisters of the Diaspora Film Festival.at LIU, Flatbush & DeKalb. 718-488-1624 8p: Hugh Masekela @ Carnegie Hall. Trumpeter-composer mixes music of his South African roots with the pop-jazz of the 1960’s. 212-247-7800. 10/23 Randy Weston’s Book Tour: Brooklyn College Lecture and book-signing. www.brooklyn.cuny.edu 10/30 Randy Weston’s Book Tour: TriBeca Arts Center, NYC Book-signing, Details: www.tribecapac.org Keepin the Blues Alive and In Perspective at 966: Jerron “Blind Boy” Paxton performs during the 5th Annual Brooklyn BIG-EYED BLUES Festival at Jazz966, Friday, Oct. 15. 6 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 Medgar Evers College Celebrates its 40th Year Harry Belafonte: Dr. and Mrs. Pollard, let me start off by expressing my sincere sense of gratitude and privilege in sharing this evening with you, the alumni, elected officials particularly all the Caribbeans in the room. I am honored to be gained this honor in the name of a man I’ve known, shared many precious moments with, although they were not long. Not enduring. The work that I do takes me into the midst of the criminal culture. In this country which possesses the largest prison population in the world, over two million. Most of the young men and women who languish in those prisons are men and women of color. I’ve had occasion to consider, Nelson Mandela. I had interviewed him for a film that I had done, and it was just two days ago we did the final edit and it will be released soon. It’s going it’s way to through the festival routine and it will be released soon. The film is called Sing your Song, based on a quote by a man whom I revered and who was my mentor, Paul Robeson. Mr. Robeson came to visit myself and a group of young artists at the American Negro Theater at the Schomburg Library and he came to see us perform in a play called Juno and the Paycock written by the great Irish playwright Sean O’Casey. In the group was Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee and Sidney Poitier, all young people not knowing quite where we were going to wind up, but we knew where we wanted to go. Paul came to visit us and spend time. From that moment to the end of his life, I served him and revered him, he was my mentor. When he came to see me after my first performance, he smiled and he said “when they hear you sing your song, they’ll want to know who you are”. I did not know what a metaphor was until one day I woke up and found the whole world singing “Day-O.” (Audience laughs and starts to sing a few bars.) But you’ve heard nothing until you’ve stood and watched 50,000 Japanese singing it. It was through moments like that, that I understood the power of the metaphor. If you sing your song, they will want to know who you are. Elsie Richardson Speaking on behalf of myself and in memory of Dr. Cecil Gloster, Lucille Rose, Almira Coursey, Louise Boiling, Shirley Chisholm and others who have passed on. When we were moving toward gaining Medgar Evers College and trust me it was a battle, none of us envisioned this beautiful building that we’re standing in tonight, 40 years later. I’d also like to give honor to Dr. Richard Trent, Dr. Dennis Paul, Dr. Jay Carrington Chunn and of course Dr. Edison Jackson for shepherding us throughout these forty years. They always worked very closely with the Medgar Evers Community Council. The first such council in the nation. It is known that Medgar Evers was killed on his front lawn. What is not to well known is that he was followed everywhere he went. There was always a car following his car. That did not deter him. He always kept his eye on the prize. He wanted his people to go into the voting booth. I think it’s important for the students of Medgar Evers College to know this story. So any of you who are in contact with our current and former students, please let them know that October 8th is the deadline to register to vote in this year’s election. And no matter what the weather people say the night before, I want them to get out of their beds on November 2nd and go into the voting booth and cast their votes. That is the least they can do as a tribute to Medgar Evers. Elsie Richardson represented many of the founding visionaries of Medgar Reverend Conrad B. Tillard, MEC President William L. Pollard, and former Congressman Major Owens delivered messages at the 40th anniversary event. More Next Week in Our Time Press. On the Web at: www.ourtimepress.com For a free online subscription, write: YOU ALREADY BELONG HERE [email protected] -RLQHU¶VIHHZDLYHG September 7th-October 11th 6XPPHU¶VRYHU7KHNLGVDUHEDFNDWVFKRRO,WVQRW-DQXDU\EXW it is still a new year. 1RWDPHPEHU"&RQVLGHUMRLQLQJD³<´:LWKRXU-weeks Y3HUVRQDO)LWQHVV3URJUDPZH¶OOGHVLJQDZRUNRXWURXWLQHWKDW will be tailored specifically to suit your health and fitness goals , and make exercising a regular, enjoyable part of your life. And it is all free with your membership. Continued on Page 7 Open House Dates Sunday, October 10 12pm-4pm Healthy Individuals Empower A People! P.E.A.C.E. Health Center ( Positive Education Always Corrects Errors ) 582 Halsey Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11233 i Are you struggling with fatigue, the blues, inflammation or pain, anxiety, lack of sleep, recurrent infections headaches or allergies? i Are you over weight? i Do you want a safe and effective natural approach to chronic illness? Shadidi Beatrice Kinsey Doctor of Acupuncture, Licensed Acupuncturist Hyacinth Graham Licensed Clinical Social Worker (Counseling) Ali Talib Abdullah Naturopathic Doctor (Natural Doctor) Chris Saltpaw Naturopathic Doctor (Natural Doctor) Call Now! 718.789.3264 Free 10 Minute Consultation—Flexible Payment Plans TRY THE YMCA FOR FREE Bring this coupon to the Bedford-Stuyvesant YMCA and you will receive a free pass good for one day through October 11, 2010. A one-day pass entitles the holder to use the YMCA branch for free. Limit one pass per guest. Participants must be 18 yrs of age and older , and must present a valid , government issued photo ID. May not be combined with any other offer, other restrictions may apply. YMCA OF GREATER NEW YORK We build strong kids, strong families, strong communities Bedford Stuyvesant YMCA 1121 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11216 Tel: 718 ± 789-1497 Fax: 718 ± 3985783 website: www.ymcanyc.org/bedstuy OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 Belafonte Continued From Page 6 students that I would take you by there, and the first stop was Boys and Girls High. In our discussion we came to the subject of the young and whether or not we had fulfilled the promise in the goals of acceptance. And it was a serious thing because he says, had we done the things Thank you again Paul, Mr. Robeson, for what you did for my heart and soul and sense of purpose. On Nelson Mandela’s first visit to America, I was anointed with the privilege of arranging every aspect of what he would do and who Somewhere along the line, we he would meet during his stay in America. As an agent blinked. Somewhere along the line, for the ANC, as a worker for we got caught up in the immediacy of the African National Congress. The first place he our successes, and did not keep our stopped when he came here, eye on the long term goal.” and I met him at the airport, wasn’t even on the schedule. It was Boys and Girls High. It wasn’t on we were supposed to do, perhaps our the schedule and I knew that Oliver Tambo young people would not be so lost. and others had looked at the schedule and Somewhere along the line, we blinked. approved it, but I had to make (that) stop. I Somewhere along the line, we got caught said I had made a promise to a couple of up in the immediacy of our successes, and did not keep our eye on the long term goal. And in that space the corruptors stepped in and grabbed at us, keeping us from what we were trying to achieve. Now we find ourselves here today in the midst of one of the greatest crises of my lifetime. I don’t know of any time more critical than this very moment is. We are just a few steps away from Fascism. A few steps away from totalitarianism. If they succeed, there will be no place for us to go to find retreat. It will be a doomsday scenario. The Tea Party? It’s no question what they say, it’s about race. It’s about race. You can fill the airways, fill the newspapers, with your elusive talk about issues that don’t hardly exist, but it’s all about race. And I no longer participate in the wasteful debate about whether or not Barack Obama has made or not made the right decision, what’s infinitely more important is what we’re failing to do. It’s where we are and what we have not done and are not doing that is making the difference. And it started long before Barack Obama. You go to Katrina and take a look at the hundreds of thousands of Black people in anguish in that place, where was America’s Black voice? 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COLON THERAPY - A gentle, safe effective way of removing toxins from the body without the use of drugs. we continue to fail because the people of Katrina still languish in misery and pain, while we all sit and wine and dine, frustrated in the comfortable lives we’re living. We have failed. In that failure sits the reason Barack Obama has not moved further forward. Of course I have a lot of complaints and I can take you to the mat on what he should be doing, but more importantly, what I have to keep in mind is that Barack Obama is ours.” To Be Continued Colon Therapy and You PRESENTS CUSTOMER APPRECIATION • 7 For Colon Therapy Contact Doreen’s Holistic Haven 435 Halsey Street Brooklyn, NY 11233 Tel:718.574.8125 For Other Spa Services Contact Hibiscus Day Spa 556 Halsey Street Brooklyn, NY 11233 Tel: 718.573.0831 www.hibiscusdayspa.com [email protected] Do you have a body? Do you put food into that body? 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For more information or to book an appointment, please call us at 718.574.8125 8 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 THE PARENT’S NOTEBOOK Exploring the true Three R’s (Responsibility, Relationships and Resources) necessary to unleash the innate genius of our children. By Aminisha Black The transformation of a nation begins in the homes of its people September has been an emotionally charged month for me, beginning with my 70th birthday celebration hosted by my children and grandchildren. I was moved by the loving energy that existed in the space where people from many different sectors converged and I totally felt loved. I was especially moved by the words of my offspring (mellowed a lot since adolescence) and their offspring (grandparents are always winners). I was especially moved by Adonis, 11, who told his dad that he really enjoyed the party, and another ll-year-old who danced with my grandson and me, told me as they were leaving: “This was the best party”. The month culminated with the film Waiting for Superman, the documentary exposing the dismal state of education in America. On a billboard were the words “The fate of our country won’t be determined on the battlefield - it will be determined in the classroom”. Observing my children and the experiences of raising them and observing them parenting my grandchildren, I say the fate of the country depends on parents sending self-confident and motivated children into the classroom, assuming an informed and participating partnership with the educators and refusing to get drawn into the struggles between factions, insisting they stay on track...providing opportunities for your child’s genius to expand. While deploring the statistics presented in the film, seeing large numbers of parents who The Future of the Freedom Party By Alton H. Maddox, Jr. (Excerpted) Before I departed New York City to attend my aunt’s homegoing service in Georgia, I attended the third consecutive UAM membership meeting on a Saturday. The topic has been the need for an office for UAM and the Freedom Party. Before January 1, 2010, UAM had never been without an office in its history. No grass roots organization in the past two decades has achieved UAM’s success. Its success, for more than two decades, has been attributed to an office and competent personnel in it. This lack of an office is putting a serious strain on only two households. Miraculously, UAM has been able to continue to do business despite these obstacles. No quorum has been achieved at any of these Saturday meetings. Blacks need a political education more than they need a political party. This is like urging a were obviously involved and actively pursuing better schools for their children reduced to a number and dependent on that number being drawn from hundreds and the tears and anxiety on the faces of the students made my heart ache and the tears flow. I cry because we have allowed ourselves to become totally dependent on alien systems. Overcoming dependency requires us to heal our relationships with self and others. SAVING OUR CHILDREN is up to us...turning our homes into training camps. Beginning January 1970 and ending January 1976, I gave birth to five children, making me the mother of seven children. Two older sons died and I gained another daughter and son, Debbie and Daniel, through marriage. Needless to say, it was a busy time with the five so close in age. Fortunately, the EAST became the community where values were shared - I could contribute my skills and continue to grow while my children attended Imani Day Care and Uhuru Sasa allowing some much-needed separate time for us all. Dealing with five determined, opinionated children 12 years and under was challenging to put it nicely. Dealing with those five during adolescence was downright scary. I enrolled in my first parent workshop and I was amazed and eternally grateful for the information that helped me survive the turbulent teens. Over the years I watched them mature - from physical fights quelled by emergency family meetings where everyone was allowed to vent their feelings. Each sentence had to begin with “I felt (blank) when”. The sessions would always end with them going to the store for snacks, arms around each other. Now as adults, they pursue their individual interests, support each other and they’ve got my grandchildren’s backs. They include the three adult children of my oldest son, Pamoja. In fact, the girls, Asha and Afriyie, handled the decorations for my party while Gyasi (Jah-C) was MC and DJ. While living and working in Kentucky, Makini could allow Dakari, 13, to fly to New York for basketball tournaments, and Kweli or Kojo were at the airport to meet him and to get him to Coach Tommy. Kweli’s youngest, Nazim, has spent summers in Kentucky... Kojo, father of three girls, is a great mentor for his nephews; Michael, a freshman at Coppin State, and Dakari, a high school freshman, being their unofficial basketball coach. Hazina and Daniel, living in Birmingham, travel to connect with Makini and Dakari when there’s a tournament in a Southern city. Auntie Nandi is planning to have her nieces and nephews come to New Orleans for a week. Being an only child, I am amazed at their connectedness and also with their friends whom I’ve inherited. And I truly see that regaining Africans’ highest-held value of relationships between persons is the battle to be fought and won. In retrospect, I give their father and me an “A” for not comparing them to each other or others, for allowing them to express their opinions and make choices, for assigning them areas of responsibility and for tolerating their protests. Each of them is an advocate in some area or another. And home is the place where it began. person to pursue a medical career before pursuing a medical education. Putting the cart before the horse will never work in any endeavor. This lack of political knowledge will harm the Freedom Party. From top to bottom, Black elected officials lack any knowledge of political science much less any knowledge of politricks. Only white politicians like Rudolph Giuliani, Michael Bloomberg and Andrew Cuomo see the need for a third party. On the other hand, Black politicians see no need for a third party. To win a citywide or statewide office in New York, a candidate must enter the race with at least two horses. Blacks have no interest in governing whites. To make matters worse, the Freedom Party is also without an office. Thus, there is no platform for the Freedom Party, no informative and working Web site, no voter registration campaign, no continuing political education program and no outreach program for young people and felons. Voter registration will end on October 8. Malcolm X said that “land is the basis for all revolutions”. Land is also the basis for any freedoms in the United States and the acquisition of land is a condition precedent to any liberation movement. Predatory lending may be the last stage of stopping any effort to achieve Black liberation. Gentrification is a mop-up action. The question of who acquires, who uses and who maintains land is a political decision. This was the basis for the American Revolution. George Washington was the biggest landlord in the colonies. “The power to tax is the power to destroy.” Without political representation, no landowner nor landlord is safe. Thus, Washington went to war to stop the concept of “taxation without representation”. Any civilized people seeks to participate in political decision-making. During a period of disenfranchisement, Blacks saw landownership dwindle and take a big hit. Malcolm X said “it is the ballot or the bullet”. In fact, the ballot is a bullet. Without political representation, and not simply political presence, Blacks are defenseless. There is a difference between voter education and political education. Voter education is key to the maintenance of plantation politics. Blacks are used as political pawns and political caddies. These sycophants refuse or fail to demand a quid pro quo for their political support. Plantation politics is an economic bonanza for the Democratic Party and for leading Blacks who have an interest in keeping Blacks on the plantation. They view themselves as gatekeepers and their economic well-being is associated with the well-being of whites. When a political party is structured from top-to-bottom rather than from bottom-to-top, the top will inevitably exploit the bottom. The structure of any organization will determine its outcome. See, for example, the National Action Network and the Freedom Party. The absence of a continuing political education program and presence of a flawed organizational structure will only aggravate the with his location and mecanics. This past Monday Burnett was “Burned” for seven runs and was pulled out of the game in the third inning. This has raised several questions about Burnett and his durability in a potential start in the playoffs. When Girardi was asked about his right-hander Girardi said “ He was big for us in the playoffs last year, but iam not going to talk a whole lot about the playoffs until we know were in. We’ve got to get their first, and we’re not in. Burnett spoke to reporters this past week and he said “ The way my season’s been, iam not going to let it affect me. it’s a matter of turning the page and getting over it”. Burnett is 10-15 with a 5.33 ERA. Burnett has 1 win along with 7 losses in his last 10 starts. After that the Yanks probably will hand the ball over to the crafty Left-Hander Andy Pettitte, who until he went on the disabled list has an 11-2 record. For an if- necessary game 4 the yanks should turn to 17-game winner Phil Hughes as the Yankees will most likely go with a rotation of 4 pitchers. Now as we get geared-up for the playoffs, there are a few scenarios leading to the Yankees potential first-round opponent. If the Yankees win the AL East, they will draw a date with the AL West champions, the Texas Rangers, who swept the Yanks in a recent 3-game series in Arlington Texas. The Rays will then win the wild card and play the Minnesota Twins. If the Rays win the east, the Yankees will have to play the Minnesota Twins. The Yankees have had recent success against previous Twins teams, but on to reality, the Twins have a 56-25 record at home which is the best in the American League. So with some many questions regarding the pitching rotation as well as the Yanks recent hitting woes, Girardi and company have 1 week to get his team together in preparation for the 2010 Post-Season. The season finale is this coming weekend and maybe the whispers of October baseball will help the Yankees into another possible championship run to a 28thWorld Championship. SPORTS The Scent Of October By Eddie Castro As we approach the last week of the regular season, the Yankees remain in a scratch and crawl affair with the Tampa Bay Rays for first place in the American League East division. Playoff teams are still fighting for placement in who they will be facing in the first round of the Divisional Series. The Yankees and Rays have yet to make a strong push to grab the division title as well as home-field advantage throughout the playoffs which is important to both teams being that the world series will start in a National League ball park this year. It seems like the Orioles, BlueJays and Redsox plan to play spoiler in where they [yanks/rays] will finish. It has been a bizarre week as the Yankees are struggling towards the ending of this season which creates a tough decision on how manager Joe Girardi uses his players. The Yankees must have a good ending to their season and win their division to gain confidence heading towards October. It is more than certain that the Yankees will start 20-Game winner and CY Young candidate C.C. Sabathia in game 1 of the divisional series. After that Girardi has a big decision in who to pencil in as his number 2 starter. Last year’s number 2 starter A.J. Burnett has struggled all season long Continued on Page 11 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 9 WHERE TO GO in Central Brooklyn and Beyond ANTIQUES Clinton Hill/Ft. Greene EDDIE’S FURNITURE 224 Greene at Grand. Cleanouts, Architectural Salvages, Demolition Eddie Hibbert 917-627-3170 Bedford-Stuyvesant Bedford Galleries Buy & Sell Antiques Fine Used Furniture - Luis 718-230-1298 1167Bedford Avenue The Victorian Antiques Architectural Artifacts 403 Tompkins Avenue Dalton Taylor -718-919-6808 AUTOMOBILE Fitz’s Custom Auto & Furniture 1027 Bedford Ave. 718-399-0914 BAKERIES Bedford-Stuyvesant Abu’s Bakery 1184 Fulton St/Bedford Hours: M-S: 10:30a-10p Sun: 12n - 5p 718-230-1115 BARS Clinton Hill Mirrors On Grand 284 Grand Ave. 718-622-2277 Bedford-Stuyvesant Therapy Wine Bar 364 Lewis Avenue/Halsey (718) 513-0686 - Angela BICYCLES Bedford Stuyvesant Fulton Bike Shop 1580 Fulton @ Marcus Garvey 718-778-2887 Terrifics Video & Bikes 1547 Broadway/Hancock 718-453-1575 BOOKSTORES Bedford -Stuyvesant True South Books 492 Nostrand Avenue 718-638-4097 House of Art Where Art is a Necessity 373 Lewis Avenue www.nychouseofart.com 347-663-8195 Families, Residents & Fitness YMCA of Greater New York Bedford-Stuyvesant 1121 Bedford Avenue www.ymcanyc.org 718-789-1497 The Parlor Gallery 512 Hancock Street 917-658-5711 theparlorgallery.blogspot.com Job Training BUILD (Brooklyn United for GEN. CONTRACTING Build Well General Contracting 1184 Bedford Avenue (718) 230-7023 Innovative Local Development) 485 Hudson Avenue 718-230-7095 www.buildbrooklyn.org EVENT PLANNER TruOpulence 200 Decatur St. www.truopulence.com 718-809-6048 FARMERS’ MARKET Hattie Carthan Community Farmers’ Market Clifton Pl. & Marcy Ave. Sats. 9a-3p through Nov. 20 hattiecarthangarden.com 718-638-3566 FASHION Calabash 405 Tompkins Ave. Anne Ince 718-455-7212 Tribal Truths 117 S. Oxford St/Fulton Ms. Brenda Brunson-Bey 718-643-8322 FLORISTS Flowerworks 547 Nostrand Ave. 718-230-9393 FRAMING Clinton Hill Simply Art & Framing 583 Myrtle Ave/Classon 718-857-0074 Lewis Gallery Eclectic Gift & Frame Shop 225 Decatur Street,on Lewis. 718-624-8372 Gwen Lewis FUNERAL HOMES Fairhaven Funeral Chapel 1045 Fulton Street 718-622-4442 60 Years of Service “We’re Here for You.” CAFE Stuyvesant Heights Bread Stuy 401 Lewis Avenue 718-771-0633 Clinton Hill Desserts by Michael Allen 1015 Fulton St. Custom Cakes, Pastries www.michaelallendesserts.com 718-230-3360 Urban Vintage Goodies & Café Grand at Clifton Brooklyn Job Corps Academy Kai Smith 585 DeKalb Avenue 718-623-4079 Goods, COMMUNITY BUILDERS Children & Young People Youth Arts Academy 1398 Fulton Street Peggy Alston Family Funeral Service, Inc. 333 Tompkins Ave/Monroe Ron Prioleau, Lic. Director Free Caskets Offered 718-443-2113 646-327-1450 GALLERIES Hewitt Gallery of Art Marymount Manhattan College 221 East 71st Street - NYC Curator: Millie Burns 212-517-0400 GIFTS Lewis Gallery Eclectic Gift & Frame Shop 225 Decatur, on Lewis 718-624-8372 Gwen Lewis GREEN CLEANING Go Green Brooklyn 485 Atlantic Ave.nr. 3rd [email protected] 718-625-0260 Greenhouse Eco-Cleaning M-Sat. 10a-6p/Appointment Tel: (718) 303-7029 HAIR SALONS Bedford Stuyvesant Lenora’s Salon Hair. Nails.Skincare Wednesday Specials. 1163 Bedford Ave. 347-745-8939 HANDYMAN Dr. Fix-It Carpentry-Electrical Plumbing-Auto Repair Berris Alston 347-370-0568 HARDWARE Abedin Building Supplies Hardware and Tool Rentals 1114 Bedford Ave. 718-638-7760 Oz Hardware & Therapeutate 302 Malcolm X Blvd. Therapeutate.etsy.com 718-484-8830 Sisters Community Hardware 900 Fulton Street Ms. Bakr and Mr. Bridgers 718-399-7023 HEALTH CENTER Community Health Bedford-Stuyvesant Family Health Center 1413 Fulton Street 718-636-4500 Holistic Health P.E.A.C.E. Health Center 582 Halsey Street Acupuncture, Counseling and Naturopathic Services Dr. Shadidi Beatrice Kinsey 718-789-3264 HEATING – Commercial E.C. Mechanical & Consultant, Air Conditioning, Heating, Plumbing-24-Hour Service 12 Claver Place 718-857-0822 917-319-5209 HOME IMPROVEMENT, CONSTRUCTION A.J. Archer Construction & Management 1157 Bedford Avenue seeuraver@earthlink,net Vira Lynn Jones 646.338.2748 D&S Supply Expo Outlet Bathroom Supplies Mirrors, sinks, tiles, cabinets, Shower heads, accessories 589 New Lots Ave./Hendrix 347-533-6777 Samantha Construction, Inc. 12 McDonough St. Commercial-residentialIndustrialm-“A Full Service Contracting Company” 718-789-7142 -Sam Williams/ Licensed Stripper Stain & Supplies, Inc. Kitchens Tiles Granite Flooring Countertops VCT 1184 Bedford Avenue Marion Little [email protected] 718-399-1437 INSURANCE William T. Taylor Independent Insurance Agent Tel: 917-446-5108 Fax: 212-876-8686 e-mail: [email protected] IRON WORKS Custom Metal Products 764 Madison Street www.ironworkny.com Mr. Irving Boyce-El 718-602-2819 MARTIAL ARTS Chief Master Sabu’s Humble Dojang of Martial Arts 973 Fulton St. 718-398-7228 Children’s Self-Defense, Skills, Safety, MEN’S WEAR Al’s Men’s Shop, Inc. 1140 Fulton Street Hats & Caps, Work Clothes, Dress Accessories www.alsmenshopinc.com 718-622-7106 PIZZA Bedford-Stuyvesant Brownstoner’s Cafe & Pizza 212 Patchen Ave./Macon 718-453-3360 Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner Monday-Saturday, 10a-10p Rocco’s Pizza 765 DeKalb Avenue 718-218-9200 Open 7 Days-Free Delivery PLUMBING – Commercial E.C. Mechanical & Consultant, Inc. Air Conditioning, Heating, Plumbing, 24-Hour Service 12 Claver Pl.718-857-0822 917-319-5209 PUBLIC RELATIONS Barfield Public Relations www.barfieldny.com 212-736-0404 REAL ESTATE AM LUXE/CORCORAN Anthony Tmor Morris Vice President 646-523-5711 [email protected] Cross Boro Realty Co. 1514 Fulton Street Ms. Joyce P. Turner [email protected] 718-467-1800 Stuyvesant Heights Brokerage 364 Stuyvesant Ave Mr. Charles Atwell, Broker (718) 953-3254 888-360-5757 RESTAURANTS Bedford-Stuyvesant Rowe’s Restaurant 310 Tompkins Avenue 718-638-3127 Caribbean, International Clinton Hill BUKA New York 946 Fulton St./St. James 347-763-0619 Authentic Nigerian dishes Happy Hour: 4p-8p daily Just Taste It 901 Fulton St. Seafood, Burgers, Salads 718-230-TASTE MONUMENTS Vicksells Monuments 1556 Fulton Street Mausoleums, Memorials Ellen K. Smalls, Proprietor 718-221-9895 Le Grand Dakar 285 Grand Ave. 718-398-8900 www.granddakar.com Contemporary West African Cuisine and live music OPTICAL Ft. Greene Optical Solutions 711 Fulton Street Mon-Sat. 11am-7p SPA Cynergy Spa 87 Ft. Greene Place 718-403-9242 Clinton Hill PET TRAINING Legend Pet Food and Supplies Canine Obedience Training 168 Sumpter Street www.legendpetfood.com (718) 826-8812 TRAVEL Our Gang Travel 1514 Fulton Street 718-467-1884 www.ourganggroup.com TREE SERVICE Lawson’s Tree Service Tree Cutting, Pruning, Stump Grinding, All Size Trees. FREE ESTIMATES 718-763-0087 UPHOLSTERY Fitz’s Custom Auto & Furniture - 1027 Bedford nr. Lafayette/ 718-399-0914 Serving the Community Since. “Where Dependabilty is a Tradition”/10% off all work from now through December. Just ask for Fitz. VINTAGE Clothing: Lewis Gallery Eclectic Gift & Frame Shop 225 Decatur Street, on Lewis Avenue. VETERINARY BrooklynCares Veterinary Clinic 944 Fulton Street www.brooklyncaresvet.com 718-783-5500 New Bed-Stuy Animal Spa 413 Tompkins Ave. 718-453-5311 WINES Olivino 426d Marcus Garvey Blvd. @ Halsey 718-249-0721 Mon-Sat. 12n-9p Sun. 12n - 7p WOODSTRIPPING SUPPLIES Stripper Stain & Supplies, Kitchens Tiles Granite Flooring, Countertops, VCT 1184 Bedford Avenue Ask for Mr. Marion Little [email protected] 718-399-1437 Lewis Gallery Eclectic Gift & Frame Shop in Stuyvesant Heights Looking for a unique gift, pick up a greeting card, frame your memories, accessorize yourself, or decorate your home? you’ll find all of these and more at Lewis Gallery. Also, - Custom Framing Handmade Cards Vintage Clothing - Assorted Home Furnishings - Jewelry & AccessoriesChildrens’ Dolls Crafting Classes. 225 Decatur@ Lewis 718-624-8372 10 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 LEGAL NOTICES BUSINESS FORMATIONS Notice of Formation of HM Electric LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 08/03/06. Office location Kings County. Secretary of State of New York designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to HM Electric, 70 Overhill Rd. East Brunswick, NJ 08816. Purpose electrical contracting. BROOKLYN PRESERVATION LLC a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Sec of State of NY on 8/13/10. NY Office location: Kings. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her to Matthew Rosenzweig/Paul Murphy, 135 Pacific St., Brooklyn, NY 11201. General Purposes. Notice of Formation of Dumbo 7E LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 5/17/10. Office location: Kings County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 80 Chambers St., #9F, NY, NY 10007. Purpose: any lawful activities. Notice of Formation of Scailine Partners LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 08/12/2010. Office location Kings County. Secretary of State of New York designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Scailine Partners LLC, 110 Green Street, #B507, Brooklyn, NY 11222. Purpose any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Indian Larry Motorcycles NYC, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 5/28/ 10. Office location: Kings Co. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 400 Union Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11211. Purpose: any lawful activities. Ave J Royal Care Pharmacy LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/4/10. Office in Kings County. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to David Faour, 1400 Ave Z Ste 501, Brooklyn, NY 11235. Purpose: General. Notice of Formation of Embrace Her Legacy, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/29/2010. Office location: Kings Co. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Embrace Her Legacy, LLC, 215 Cozine Ave., Apt 11A, Brooklyn, NY 11207. Purpose: any lawful activities. Notice of Formation of Le Salon Jerome Obry LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/22/10. Office location: Kings Co. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Jerome Obry, 2701 South Bayshore Dr. Ste 402, Miami, Fl 33133. Purpose: any lawful activities. Notice of Qualification of GARRISON KENT LLC. Authority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 08/18/10. Office location: Kings County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 08/17/10. Princ. office of LLC: 1350 Ave. of the Americas, 9th Fl., NY, NY 10019. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. DE addr. of LLC: 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of DE, Div. of Corps., 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity. NOTICE OF FORMATION of limited liability company (LLC). NAME: 365 17th STREET LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 07/30/2010. Office location: Kings County. Principal office of LLC: 146 7th Avenue, Brooklyn NY 11215. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: JOSEPH BOLTIZAR MICHAEL, 146 7th AVENUE, BROOKLYN, NY 11215. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of LAW OFFICES OF YEVGENY LEVIN, PLLC, a Prof. LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 12/04/2009. Office location: Kings County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: 3738 Shore Parkway, Apt. 1R, Brooklyn, NY 11235. Purpose: To Practice The Profession Of Law. SUMMONS AND NOTICE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF KINGS INDEX NO. 28821/09. NYCTL 2008-A TRUST, AND THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS COLLATERALAGENT AND CUSTODIAN FOR THE NYCTL 2008A TRUST, Plaintiffs –against- ALBAN A. MILES, if living and if he/she be dead, any and all persons unknown to plaintiffs, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or generally or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely, the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, distributees, descendents, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, successors in interest and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, I think that the community has to look for people who have aspect of the teaching and went beyond the the community feeling. Continued From Page 2 occurred in 1968. So we took on the UFT and fought a lot of battles and had a strong voice. I was also involved with Youth-InAction. I was on the first board of Bed-Stuy Restoration. OTP: This was based on your teaching and work? Vann: Based on being involved in the African-American Teachers Association, teaching was a base I guess and then organizing teachers and parents was an classroom and school and into the community. The parents had to be orientated and told what was going on and so that put me out there in the community, but I still wasn’t thinking political or making it in elected office. It took others who had to say “maybe you would want to consider that.” So it was involvement in the community that evolved to a point, as opposed to now people saying they want to be in office for whatever reason and some of them good and some may not be. And then they do what they got to do: put up some flyers and raise some money to put it out there. And then people or title to said real property by, through or under them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, distributees, descendents, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, successors in interest, and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiffs, and “JOHN DOE No. 1” through “JOHN DOE No. 100” inclusive, the names of the last 100 defendants being fictitious, the true names of said defendants being unknown to plaintiff, it being intended to designate fee owners, tenants or occupants of the liened premises and/or persons or parties having or claiming an interest in or a lien upon the liened premises, if the aforesaid individual defendants are living, and if any or all of said individual defendants be dead, their heirs at law, next of kin, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, committees, devisees, legatees, and the assignees, lienors, creditors and successors in interest of them, and generally all persons having or claiming under, by, through, or against the said defendants named as a class, of any right, title, or interest in or lien upon the premises described in the complaint herein, Defendants. PROPERTY ADDRESS: VACANT LAND, EASTERN PARKWAY, BROOKLYN, NY. BLOCK 1442, LOT 46. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action within twenty days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service or within thirty days after service is completed if the summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT. THE OBJECT of the above entitled action is to foreclose a tax lien for the amount due and interest, recorded in the office of the Register/Clerk of the County of KINGS on the 15th day of July, 2008 and bearing County Register File Number 2008000280709 covering premises described as follows: ADDRESS: VACANT LAND, EASTERN PARKWAY, BROOKLYN, NY. BLOCK: 1442 LOT: 46 COUNTY: KINGS. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the tax lien described above. Plaintiff designates KINGS County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the county where the Property being foreclosed upon is located. WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT, ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Dated: AUGUST 23, 2010 New York, New York. WINDELS MARX LANE & MITTENDORF LLP, MICHAEL H. RESNIKOFF, ESQ. ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFFS 156 WEST have to decide if they’re worthy or not. I don’t expect everybody’s preparation to be mine. But I think that the community has to look for people who have the community feeling. If you’re not trying to do something for the community before you get elected, you mean you’re going to start trying after you get elected? There’s no history there. OTP: How is the community changed when you first came into office there was a wave African-Americans in office. How has the community change throughout the years? I think you mentioned when I came in, 56TH STREET, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10019. PHONE: (212) 237-1102. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of the Court dated JUNE 8, 2010 and filed along with the supporting papers in the KINGS County Clerk’s Office. This is an action to foreclose a tax lien. SCHEDULE A DESCRIPTION ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land with the building and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Brooklyn, City and State of New York, designated on the tax map of the City of New York, for the Borough of Brooklyn, as said Tax Map was on May 27, 1981. Block 1442, Lot 46. Reference #: 700777.231 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF KINGS. NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE COMPANY Plaintiff, AGAINST LYNN CATALDO, et al. Defendant(s) Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly dated 5/11/2010, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Room 224 Kings County Supreme Court on a Thursday afternoon at 3:00 P.M., 360 Adams Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201 on 8/19/2010 at 3:00PM premises known as 535 Throop Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11221. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the New York City, Borough of BROOKLYN, County of Kings and State of New York Section, Block and Lot: -1836-4 Approximate amount of judgment $802,654.49 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #37855/ 04. Michael C. Forth, Referee. Steven J. Baum PC, Attorney for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 1291, Buffalo, NY 14240-1291 Dated: 7/20/ 2010 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF KINGS EMC MORTGAGE CORPORATION Plaintiff, AGAINST GREGORY TAYLOR, et al. Defendant(s). Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly dated 4/14/ 2010,the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Room 224 of Kings County Supreme Court, 360 Adams Street, Brooklyn, New York on 7/22/2010 at 3:00PM premises known as 1554 EAST 45TH STREET, BROOKLYN, New York 11234 All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the New York City Borough of BROOKLYN, County of Kings and State of New York Section, Block and Lot: Block 7842 Lot 41 Approximate amount of judgment $479,010.77 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #36832/07 Luther C. Williams, Referee. Steven J. Baum PC, Attorney for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 1291, Buffalo, NY 14240-1291. Dated: 6/21/2010. that really was the beginning of the political movement. We had gone through the Black Power Movement in the sense of Black consciousness: we were identifying ourselves as African-Americans now and Buy Black was occurring and then the next stage of that was the quest for political power. We didn’t have a lot of Black elected officials and the coalition for community empowerment. We were the group that began to elect Blacks around the borough. Roger Green, Clarence Norman, Thomas Boyland, Velmanette Montgomery, so it goes Continued on Next Page OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 HAT MILLINER 11 LAWYER The Law Office of Antar P. Jones A Professional Limited Liability Company Tel. (718) 636-2270 Fax (718) 636-2272 e-mail [email protected] • Will Drafting and Estate Planning • Probate and Administration Proceedings • Business Law and Business Formation; and • Real Estate Free Consultation Thorough. Thoughtful. Competent. Responsive. Future of the Freedom Party Continued From Page 8 political plight of Blacks. Political myths already permeate the Black colony. These myths were created by persons and organizations that benefit from plantation politics. The Freedom Party is mired in mud because Students Rally Continued From Page 3 are disproportionately affected by what goes on in the New York City public schools because of these safety agents,” said Councilman Daniel Dromm at the rally. Hernandez feels that her school is targeted because of the high population of minority students. “It’s exactly like the Vann Continued From Page 10 on and on from there. So it was an explosion and it was a continuation of a movement, not just running campaigns. That was the generation we were a part of and from that, because of that I was in position, when I was in the Assembly, I chaired the Black and Puerto Rican Caucus. Where we had an opportunity to sue the city and the state and able to create a lot more power seats for our people with two congressional districts, we increased the number of city council districts. This is power. We created political districts for our people that were not there before. So all those seats of power came about from the movement that I and others led. And it was not just me, Major Owens obviously played a key role and we moved from there. So that’s what happened. Now where are we today? Probably a lot is taken for granted and obviously there is not that same sense of urgency now, people are used to having Black elected officials. I’m not sure we were as critical of our own elected officials as we should be. We tend not to have, even in my younger days the Black community never had a way of judging and/or keeping the elected officials accountable. I used to say when we were up in Albany, I mean you can do almost anything, and unless it’s a major issue that gets a lot of coverage in the papers, people don’t know. They could be up there and drink wine and who would know. In our of a flawed, structural problem. A political party is different from a political campaign. A candidate controls a political campaign. Blacks must control a political party and seize the bronze; that is, the exercise of the balance of power. Otherwise, the Freedom Party will emulate the Independence Party which was established and maintained through the employment of fraudulent methods. Party officials profit from the cluelessness of those members at the bottom. The Independence Party now enjoys the balance of power in New York and its endorsements are for sale. Most persons who are enrolled in the Independence Party believe that it is the political track for political “independents”. Nothing is further from the truth. In the meantime, the Independence Party has no appetite for making policy. It is simply a cash-and-carry cartel. This format is profitable for top party officials. The Freedom Party must avoid this format at all costs. It could happen, however. UAM’s mission is not only to save itself but also to jump-start the Freedom Party. Political planning and political forecasting are crucial to the political success of Blacks. Constitutional squatters are incapable of employing either tool. The Freedom Party is on an historic mission. It must succeed on November 2. streets,” she said in an interview. “The cops stop the black and Latino students because they look suspicious or maybe they fit a certain type … the same exact things happen in school, the same exact stereotypes, the same racial profiling happens.” “Catholic schools don’t have metal detectors, private schools don’t have a bunch of cameras and safety agents and they get through their tests just fine, so why can’t we?” said Hernandez. Many students share similar experiences of being targeted by School Safety Officers and cite abuses of power and harsh treatments at the hands of the officers. “Safety agents think we are just criminals waiting to happen,” said Desmairs. The Student Safety Act also aims to simplify the process to file a complaint against a School Safety Officer. As of now, even though the complaint process is difficult to navigate, about 1,200 complaints have been filed, of which 27 percent are substantiated, according to the NYPD’s Internal Affairs Bureau. The NYCLU sees the bill as a first step in creating a safer environment in NYC schools, according to Jones. Once there is raw data concerning the types of students who are being targeted, educators and advocates could use this information to create safer educational practices that would engage those students who are likely to attract police attention. The union is looking to get the legislation passed in the City Council by December of this year. “The NYCLU has been working very hard with the City Council and the Department of Education, even with the NYPD to pass a bill that everyone is happy with. The DOE is concerned about student privacy, and so are we. … Now we are working with the NYPD to make sure their concerns are put to rest and that we get a bill that’s as strong as possible,” said Jones. William McDonald, a representative from the NAACP who spoke at the rally, said that the organization was backing the bill. “One thing I can tell you for a fact—We will stop sending more students to Rikers Island than to college,” he said. community there was no local paper, other than the Amsterdam, to keep us abreast of the votes on the issues and so forth. So there were some people, I’m not saying who, Black or white, they would love to come up to Albany because it takes them away from the community and the demands and they could just chill. They’ll tell you how to vote. You can chill for three or four days and come back and deal. So I think [we] the community is responsible in the sense of not being able to hold us accountable by knowing what it is that we are supposed to be doing, making sure, it’s always been a problem in the Black community. But then again this means that unless the elected official is self-motivated and strongly committed, then you can be taken off. Because there’s a lot of games that are played in these legislative bodies. They’re leadership-driven and there’s not necessarily a lot of room for independent thinking or independent action. Therefore, you have to know who you are, you have to be very strong and what I found however, is that the “powers-that-be” respect integrity. They may not have it, but they respect it and they respect independence. So if you’re coming from the community and your community is indeed your priority, then you’ll do OK – you’ll do fine. It’s when you try and be like the others that problems begin because you can’t have two masters. You can’t have the community as your master and the leadership of any House as your master. You deal with that by being as supportive as you can, but there are issues, values and principles that you cannot give to anyone and I think that makes a difference. Next Week, Part 2 Missing Girl Safe at Home Continued From Page 3 by a Bloods gang member. The older male manipulated her and took her money. Through a series of events, Herbert’s family worked with NYPD and tracked the location where his niece was being held across the street from the Howard Houses on Mother Gaston Blvd. Herbert said adult males manipulate young girls into thinking the male is her boyfriend while planning to groom the girl in preparation to having her strip and have sex with other males for money. Herbert got wind that that was the plan for his niece. From that experience, Herbert decided to challenge the targeting of young girls by adult males and be an advocate to stop the practice of adult males having sex with young girls then putting them on the streets to prostitute. Herbert has included in his Save Our Community Initiative an education component which would make the community aware of how young girls are manipulated out of their homes via the Internet and cell phones. SOCI plans to have sororities conduct self-esteem workshops with young ladies so that they will not be seduced by thug-type males they see on music videos. Herbert’s sense of responsibility comes from being a father: he has a 21-year-old daughter, and 15- and 13-year-old sons. Herbert said a campaign needs to be launched sending the message to adult males that soliciting young girls is not appropriate. “These guys need to understand,” Herbert said, “how would they like someone to do that to their young child? There needs to be a ‘guilting’ campaign. But some of these guys just don’t care.” Herbert said there are a lot of pedophiles in our community. “They are coming out of jail. They don’t go into jail as pedophiles, but come out that way. They were raped and sexually assaulted in jail,” he said. “Not all, but a large portion are violated in jail. When they come out, they are angrier than when they went in.” Tony Herbert assisted in the safe return of Sahara despite experiencing a personal family tragedy. Last week, gun violence claimed a family member. Herbert’s 23-year-old nephew, Lawrence Andre Sykes, was shot multiple times Sept. 16 in broad daylight on the street in Richmond, Virginia. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The suspects in Sykes murder are 24year-old Rashaan Tigean Williams, who surrendered to police, and 21-year-old Lamar Elias Defairia. 12 OUR TIME PRESS September 30-October 7, 2010 On Thursday, October 2 Ola, Renee BEST SELVES Continued From Page 2 do not preclude altruism; you can galvanize a public with grace as much as you can with gaucheness, and in defeat there can be victory; from victory, loss. You can sit at the feet of Anna Jefferson and Elsie Richardson, founders of Medgar Evers College (see the cover) and learn more about politics and campaigning in one hour than in four years at Harvard. But you, certainly need not look too far for role models. Nor for education. Ladies, they happen to be right by your sides -- your dynamic and wonderful mothers. But while you’re rediscovering what you probably already have been taught, here’s some advice: Learn from yours and others’ mistakes, but don’t cast fault or aspersion; enjoy successes, but do not think it’s all about you. If you’ve decided to stay in the public eye, act your best selves, but try not to act out unless it’s for the benefit for your family and community. And remember, it’s just an election. You’ll always have a chance to do it again. -Bernice Elizabeth Green OUR TIME PRESS to Launch Health, Fitness & Wellbeing column featuring resource information and advice from wellness advocates of national, regional and local centers. Next Week’s Focus: Diabetes with comments from experts at The BedfordStuyvesant YMCA, Bedford Stuyvesant Family Health Center, P.E.A.C.E., Kings County and area hospitals. 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