Club p8 Armory p3 District p7 Liseth and Andreas
Transcripción
Club p8 Armory p3 District p7 Liseth and Andreas
april 2 - april 8, 2014 • Vol. 15 • No. 14 N O RT H E R N M A N H AT TA N ’ S BILINGUAL washington Heights • Inwood • HARLEM • EAST HARLEM N E W S PA P E R E L P E R I O D I C O B I L I N G U E D E L N O R T E D E M A N H AT TA N DAY NOW EVERY WEDNES ES OL RC MIE S LO S TODO Of love and loss p4 De amor y pérdida Liseth and Andreas p4 District p7 Club p8 Armory p3 Going Full Frontal “We get enthusiastic,” says playwright Eddie Antar, with creative partner and director Leslie Kincaid Burby. Story and photos by Sherry Mazzocchi I n Full Frontal, a young fumbling couple in the back seat of a car has their first sexual experience. “In a film, as soon as they go under sheets, they pan away,” playwright Eddie Antar said. “We don’t.” Full Frontal is an evening of five short plays about sex and sexuality, all written by Antar. In one play, a married middle-aged Jewish woman decides to follow a young Hispanic man. Two other plays deal with same-sex attraction. In yet another, a couple going through a difficult time in their marriage gives a lift to a young girl with no filter. “They are in the front seat and they don’t know what to do,” Antar said. There’s no nudity in the plays. Instead, people bare their souls. “The way that people deal with sex and being naked in front of another person says a lot about the human condition,” said Antar. “It doesn’t get much more vulnerable than sex,” said director Leslie Kincaid Burby. “That is where it all comes down to for a lot of us.” Burby and Antar have worked together on and off for more than a decade. She directed Antar’s hit play, The Navigator, about a man who realizes the GPS in his car has all the answers to his questions. The 2011 play was nominated for a slew of awards. Burby took home a New York Innovative Theatre Award for Outstanding Direction. Antar and Burby are both married (not to Yendo Full Frontal Historia y fotos por Sherry Mazzocchi E n Full Frontal, una torpe pareja de jóvenes tiene su primera experiencia sexual en el asiento trasero de un coche. El dúo de Inwood ha colaborado de forma intermitente durante más de una década. 2 “En una película, tan pronto están debajo de las sábanas, se arrepienten”, dijo el dramaturgo Eddie Antar. “Nosotros no”. Full Frontal es una velada de cinco obras cortas sobre el sexo y la sexualidad, todas escritas por Antar. En una obra, una mujer judía, casada, de mediana edad, decide seguir a un joven hispano. Otras dos obras lidian con la atracción por el mismo sexo. En otra, una pareja pasando por un momento difícil en su matrimonio le da un aventón a una joven sin filtro. “Ellos están en el asiento delantero y no saben qué hacer”, dijo Antar. No hay desnudez en las obras. En cambio, la gente desnuda sus almas. “La forma en que la gente lidia con el sexo y el estar desnudo delante de otra persona dice mucho acerca de la condición humana”, dijo Antar. “No puede volverse mucho más vulnerable que el sexo”, dijo la directora Leslie Kincaid Burby. “Es a lo que todo se reduce para muchos de nosotros”. Burby y Antar han trabajado juntos de manera intermitente durante más de una década. Dirigió la exitosa obra de Antar, The Navigator, sobre un hombre que se da cuenta que el GPS de su carro tiene todas las respuestas a sus preguntas. La obra de 2011 fue nominada para una gran cantidad de premios. Burby se llevó a casa un premio de teatro innovador de Nueva York por Mejor Dirección. Antar y Burby están casados (no entre sí) y viven en Inwood. Uno de los secretos de su éxito es el tren A. Antar se sienta en los ensayos, generalmente hablando poco. Pero es en el tren de regreso a casa donde él y Burby revisan y explican todos los detalles. Si una escena no funciona, investigan por qué y deciden qué hacer. “La discusión en el tren es tan emocionante. Sé que subimos el volumen”, dijo. “Nos ponemos entusiastas”. Eso de dar y recibir, y la disposición para escuchar las ideas del otro, genera confianza. También les gustan las mismas Full Frontal es una velada de cinco obras cortas sobre el sexo y la sexualidad, todas escritas por Antar. Vea FRONTAL p23 april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com Joe Boover and Laura Darrell appear in Perfect Tension. Photo: Gerry Goodstein each other) and live in Inwood. One secret of their success is the A train. Antar sits in on rehearsals, usually saying little. But it is on the train ride home that he and Burby review and explicate every detail. If a scene isn’t working, they figure out why and decide what to do. “The discussion on the train is so exciting. I know we get loud,” he said. “We get enthusiastic.” That give-and-take and a willingness to listen to each other’s ideas created trust. They See FRONTAL p23 Uptown Games return Story by Erik Cuello Photos by QPHOTONYC ONLINE M ore than 500 students from nearly two dozen schools flocked to The Armory this past Sat., Mar. 29th for the Third Annual EmblemHealth Uptown Games. The annual event, which draws hundreds of local residents, is produced by the New York Road Runners (NYRR). The running organization actively promotes physical activity among local youth; among its annual events is the Washington Heights 5K, which took place earlier this month. The Games, a non-competitive program open to local students, were sponsored by EmblemHealth. Students from grades 3-8 received athletic instruction from NYRR and Armory staff members before participating in a number of events, such as short and long distance races, team relays, hurdles, shot put and more. Among those in attendance were students from PS 28 Wright Brothers Elementary in Hamilton Heights and Inwood Academy for Leadership Charter School on Dyckman Street in addition to local elected officials including Congressman Charles B. Rangel, Senator Adriano Espaillat, Assemblymember Gabriela Rosa and Councilmember Ydanis Rodriguez. The event focused on promoting health and physical activity. “With childhood obesity rates in our community among the highest in the city,” said Sen. Espaillat, “and school physical education programs being slashed, few options remain for children to be active on their own.” The Uptown Games, he explained, provided an opportunity for non-runners and runners alike to engage in a day of fitness. The Armory, located on in Spanish Vea la versión EN LINEA en español On her mark. No breaking her stride. 168th Street and Fort Washington Avenue, is a New York City non-profit institution and a mission of “Keeping Kids on Track.” Having recently celebrated its centennial, the Armory hosts more than 100 track and field meets and welcomes more than 125,000 individual athletes. For more on the EmblemHealth Uptown Games, please visit www. manhattantimesnews.com. Friendly competition. NYPD Document SHREDDING Over 500 students participated. "Police & Community Working Together" PREVENT IDENTITY THEFT Come join the NYPD's Crime Prevention Section to shred your documents containing your personal / sensitive information. This is a FREE service. You can also register your electronic devices with the NYPD's Operation ID Program. Identity Theft Prevention 145th Street & Broadway New York, New York 10031 Also Offering Hard Drive Destruction The Uptown Games have become a tradition. Front of Popular Community Bank Sunday, April 6, 2014 11:00AM - 2:00PM Police Commissioner William J. Bratton april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com 3 “From all this tragedy, I get beauty” After the blast The tragic explosion in East Harlem claimed the lives of 8 residents, leveled two residential buildings and injured nearly 70. Scores of families have been displaced, and many small uptown businesses and organizations affected have been unable to reopen or resume operations. After the Blast will offer a glimpse into the lives of those struggling to recover since the events of Wed., Mar. 12th. Story by Robin Elisabeth Kilmer L iseth Pérez and Andreas Panagopoulos met each other only months after they both arrived in New York City in 2000. At first they began hanging out with mutual Andreas Panagopoulos was killed in the East Harlem explosion. friends—through a distant cousin of his who wasn’t really a cousin. It became clear that Panagopoulos was smitten with Pérez, and their friends arranged for the two to go on a date. Pérez doesn’t remember where they went—but she does remember being impressed by Panagopoulos. “He was a very smart guy. You could literally talk to him about anything,” said Pérez. “You really learn when you talk to him.” Soon Pérez, from Venezuela, and Panagopoulos, from Greece, were married. It was a classic, made-in-New-York love story. The two shared their cultures—making it a point to visit Greece and Venezuela every year. They made sure there were other detours along the way—to places that frequently grace the covers of travel magazines: Spain, Turkey, Paris, Argentina, a wedding in the Dominican Republic here, a trip to London there. The two lived it up, going dancing, going to birthday parties, enjoying food. “We always had something to do,” said Pérez. “He was very into having fun.” The two lived in an apartment on Park Avenue, between East 116th Street and East See BLAST p21 “De toda esta tragedia, obtuve belleza” Tras la explosión La trágica explosión en el este de Harlem cobró la vida de 8 residentes, destruyó dos edificios de viviendas e hirió a casi 70 personas. Decenas de familias han sido desplazadas y muchos pequeños negocios y organizaciones afectadas del norte del condado no han podido reabrir o reanudar sus operaciones. Tras la explosión ofrecerá un vistazo a las vidas de aquellos que luchan por recuperarse desde los acontecimientos del miércoles 12 de marzo. Historia por Robin Elisabeth Kilmer L iseth Pérez y Andreas Panagopoulos se conocieron sólo unos meses después de que ambos llegaron a la ciudad de Nueva York en el año 2000. Al principio empezaron pasando el rato con amigos mutuos, mediante un primo lejano que no era realmente un primo. Se hizo evidente que Panagopoulos estaba embelesado con 4 “Nunca había sido amada de esa manera”, dice la viuda de Panagopoulos, Liseth Pérez. Foto: L. Pérez Pérez y sus amigos les organizaron una cita. Pérez no recuerda a dónde fueron, pero quedó impresionada por Panagopoulos. “Era un tipo muy inteligente. Literalmente podía hablar con él de cualquier cosa”, dijo Pérez. “Realmente aprendes cuando hablas con él”. Pronto Pérez, de Venezuela, y Panagopoulos, de Grecia, estaban casados. Fue un clásico, una historia de amor hecha en Nueva York. Los dos compartieron sus culturas, haciendo lógico visitar Grecia y Venezuela cada año. april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com Se aseguraron de que hubiera otros desvíos en el camino a los lugares que con frecuencia adornan las portadas de las revistas de viajes: España, Turquía, París, Argentina, una boda en la República Dominicana aquí, un viaje a Londres por allá. Los dos disfrutaban de la vida, yendo a bailar, a fiestas de cumpleaños, disfrutando de la comida. “Siempre teníamos algo que hacer”, dijo Pérez. “A él le gustaba mucho divertirse”. Los dos vivieron en un apartamento en Park Avenue, entre las calles 116 y 117 este. Panagopoulos fue un músico y la residencia era lo suficientemente amplia para su equipo, que incluía cuatro guitarras. Estar en El Barrio significaba que Panagopoulos podría absorber directamente más de la cultura latina de su esposa, algo que ella siempre agradeció. No dio su amor por sentado. Cada día le decía lo hermosa que era y pasó semanas deliberando sobre qué regalarle para su cumpleaños. “Él hizo lo que tenía que hacer para hacerme feliz”, recordó. “Nunca he sido amada así antes y probablemente nunca seré amada así de nuevo”. El miércoles 12 de marzo, aproximadamente a las 8:15 de la mañana, Pérez fue a su trabajo como editora en el periódico de la lengua española El Diario La Prensa, sin saber que estaría dejando atrás la vida como la había conocido siempre. A las 9:30 a.m., su departamento y el de al lado, se derrumbaron. Su casa fue devorada por las llamas después de una explosión de gas Vea EXPLOSIÓN p21 It’s happening at Columbia in April Tuesday, April 1–Saturday, May 31, 2014 Thursday, April 10 Wednesday, April 16 Exhibition: The Raging ’70s, Latino New York as Seen by El Diario’s Bolívar Arellano 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. 420 Hamilton, Morningside campus Defying Injustice: Lessons from Defeating Apartheid to the Arab Spring 6:00 p.m. Jerome Greene Annex, Columbia Law School, 435 W. 116th St. Hostile Charity: Somali Refugees and Risk in a New Security Age 6:16 p.m. Second Floor Common Room, Heyman Center, Morningside campus For more info, call (212) 854-0507 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/cser. This panel discussion celebrates the acquisition of the Gay McDougall South Africa and Namibia Papers by Columbia Libraries’ Center for Human Rights Documentation & Research. For more info, call (212) 854-7309 or visit http://library.columbia.edu/news/ exhibitions. Speakers: Catherine Besteman, Colby College, and Daiel Goldstein, Rutgers University. For more info, call (212) 854-8443 or visit www.heymancenter.org. Tuesday, April 1 Columbia Summer Camp Scholarship Applications Due Columbia University offers 25 scholarships per summer based upon financial need for children from the Manhattanville area to attend Roar-ee’s Cubs Summer Camp run by Columbia Athletics. One scholarship is equal to one week of summer camp. Campers must be ages 6-12. All scholarship applications must come to Columbia University through the West Harlem Development Corporation. For more info, call (646) 476-3394 or visit www.westharlemdc.org. Friday, April 4 Exhibition: Warhol at Columbia 4:30 p.m. Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, 826 Schermerhorn, Morningside campus Speakers: Neil Printz, co-editor of Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné; art critic Blake Gopnik; Larissa Harris, curator, Andy Warhol’s 13 Most Wanted Men and the 1964 World’s Fair, Queens Museum; and Tom Kalin, filmmaker, I Shot Andy Warhol. For more info, call (212) 854-7288 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/wallach. Monday, April 7 An Evening with Author Junot Diaz 7:15 p.m. Roone Arledge Cinema, Lerner Hall, Morningside campus Speakers: author Junot Diaz; Frances Negrón-Muntaner, Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race, Columbia University; and Alondra Nelson, Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality, Columbia University. For more info, call (212) 854-0507 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/cser. Tuesday, April 8 Storytelling in the Digital Media Age 4:30 p.m. 523 Butler Library, Morningside campus Speaker: Jeff Gomez, founder, Starlight Entertainment. For more info, call (212) 854-0507 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/cser. Wednesday, April 9 Writing Lives Series: Jeffrey Eugenides 7:00 p.m. Davis Auditorium, 412 Schapiro Center, Morningside campus Speaker: Jeffrey Eugenides, Princeton University. For more info, call (212) 854-8443 or visit www.heymancenter.org. Thursday, April 10 Composer Portraits: Liza Lim 8:00 p.m. Miller Theatre, Morningside campus Tickets $20/$30. For more info, call (212) 854-7799 or visit www.millertheatre.com/events. Friday, April 11 Stargazing and Lecture: Cataclysmic Events in Binary Stars 8:00 p.m. 301 Pupin, Morningside campus Speaker: Emir Karamehmetoglu, Columbia University. Lecture will be followed by stargazing with telescopes, weather-permitting. For directions, weather and more info, visit http://outreach.astro.columbia.edu. Guastavino’s Palaces for the People: From Archive to Exhibit 12:30 p.m. 523 Butler Library, Morningside campus Speakers: John Ochsendorf, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Janet Parks, Columbia University. For more info, call (212) 854-7309 or visit www.library.columbia.edu/news/exhibitions. Monday, April 14 Café Columbia: Public Books and the 21st Century 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Columbia Alumni Center, 622 W. 113th St. Speaker: Sharon Marcus, Columbia University. $10 per person. Seating is limited. For more info, call (877) 854-2586 or visit www.cafes.columbia.edu. Wednesday, April 16 Japan 1941: Countdown to Infamy Noon Lehman Center, 406 International Affairs, Morningside campus Speaker: Eri Hotta. For more info, call (212) 854-2927 or visit www.columbia.edu/cu/lehmancenter/seminars. Screening: Divine Intervention 6:00 p.m. Davis Auditorium, 412 Schapiro Center, Morningside campus A screening of this modern-day tragicomedy will be followed by a Q&A with director Elia Suleiman. For more info, call (212) 854-2875 or visit www.arts.columbia.edu. Farmers: Between Nature and Architecture 6:30 p.m. Wood Auditorium, 100 Avery, Morningside campus Speaker: Sou Fujimoto, Sou Fujimoto Architects. For more info, call (212) 854-3414 or visit www.arch.columbia.edu/events. Thursday, April 17 Bach Revisited: Tower and Bach 8:00 p.m. Miller Theatre, Morningside campus The Bach series is back with a special anniversary twist: three extraordinary living composers featured in past Composer Portraits concerts return to curate a special evening pairing their music with favorite pieces of Bach. Tickets $25/$35. For more info, call (212) 854-7799 or visit www.millertheatre.com/events. Saturday, April 19 Music: Peter and the Wolf 5:00 p.m. Miller Theatre, Morningside campus Columbia Sounds For Families presents the Columbia University Orchestra under the baton of Professor Jeffrey Milarsky along with acclaimed soprano and Columbia voice teacher Sarah Wolfson presenting the classic tale Peter and the Wolf. For more info, call (212) 854-7799 or visit www.millertheatre.com/events. Thursday, April 24 Deadline: Community Scholars Program Applications Due 5:00 p.m. The Columbia Community Scholars Program is seeking nominations and applications for its next class; the deadline is Thursday, April 24. The program, one of the benefits associated with the Manhattanville campus expansion, offers independent, community-based scholars from Northern Manhattan access to a suite of Columbia resources to work toward the completion of a project or attain skill in a particular area. For more info, call (212) 854-4289 or email communityaffairs@ columbia.edu. Thursday, April 24 Thursday, April 24 Book Talk: The Reckoning: Financial Accountability and the Rise and Fall of Nations 6:15 p.m. Second Floor Common Room, Heyman Center, Morningside campus Speaker: author Jacob Soll, University of Southern California. For more info, call (212) 854-8443 or visit www.heymancenter.org. Asylums, Prisons and the Political Economy of a Punitive Society 11:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. 532B Allan Rosenfield Building, Columbia University Medical Center, 722 W. 168th St. Linda P. Fried, dean, Mailman School of Public Health, and Lisa Metsch, chair, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, host a series of seminars on incarceration in the United States. A light lunch will be served. RSVP to [email protected]. For more info, call (212) 305-0757. Western Antarctic Peninsula: Rapid Climate Change and an Ecosystem Near a Tipping Point 6:00 p.m. Faculty Room, Low Library, Morningside campus Speaker: Hugh Ducklow, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University. RSVP recommended. For more info, call (845) 365-8998 or email [email protected]. Friday, April 25 Dance: Barnard/Columbia 7:00 p.m. Miller Theatre, Morningside campus The Barnard College Department of Dance presents student performances in new works, including Treefrog in Stonehenge by dance iconoclast Twyla Tharp, a new contemporary work by Andrea Miller, and a new ballet by Robert La Fosse. Tickets $12/$20. For more info, call (212) 854-7799 or visit www.millertheatre.com/events. Tuesday, April 29 Writing Lives Series: Michael Ondaatje 6:15 p.m. Davis Auditorium, 412 Schapiro Center, Morningside campus Speaker: Michael Ondaatje, author of the Booker Prize– winning The English Patient. For more info, call (212) 854-8443 or visit www.heymancenter.org. Lifelong Learners Auditing Program The Lifelong Learners Auditing Program was launched in 1986 by Columbia’s School of Continuing Education and the Brookdale Institute on Aging and Adult Human Development with the aim of establishing at the University a community of learners committed to lifelong education. Individuals over 65 years of age who are interested in auditing courses may enroll at a discount as Lifelong Learners. Because there is limited space available to auditors, and seats are taken on a first-come, first-served basis once registration is open, applicants are encouraged to apply as soon as the courses are posted 1 month prior to the start of classes. For more info, call (212) 854-9666 or www.ce.columbia.edu/auditing. This is a small sampling of the public events at Columbia. For additional CUID events or general information visit www.columbia.edu or call (212) 854-2871. For Columbia sports info, visit www.gocolumbialions.com. Guests in need of disability services should call (212) 854-2284 prior to the event. april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com 5 10 Things You Need to Know After Op/Ed 10 Cosas que necesita saber luego de que su niño/a es diagnosticado con autismo Your Child Is Diagnosed with Autism n reconocimiento al Mes de I n recognition of Autism Awareness Month, Dr. Catherine Lord, director of the Center for Autism and the Developing Brain at NewYorkPresbyterian Hospital, and a national authority on autism spectrum disorders (ASD), offers families guidance and tips for coping with a child’s diagnosis. • Have hope. Every day we learn more about how to help people with ASD. • Remember that your child is an individual. Your child is first and foremost his or her own unique person, then a child, then a child with strengths and difficulties, and only then a child with ASD. • Build a strong support system. Find people you can trust to support you as an individual, and then to support you as a parent of a child with autism. • Find credible sources. You will hear many contradictory and unfounded pieces of information. Find professionals and resources in which you have faith. • Enjoy each other. Do things every day that you and your child can enjoy together. While opportunities for learning are important, shared enjoyment is even more important in a family. • Set goals. Try to concentrate on setting small, reasonable goals for your child and figuring out how to accomplish these goals. These goals should be something that you can see happening as a next step, not miles down the road. • Make time for your partner. Set aside some time, even just a few minutes, to focus on each other and not the child. Listen to each other’s needs and perspectives as you consider what you will do for your child. • Be involved. Children with ASD who have families that devote time to learning and playing with them show more improvements than families who are less involved. • Have reasonable expectations for your child’s behavior. Do not let your child do things that you would not let another child of the same age do, such as biting people or climbing on counters. Do not punish, but respond quickly and offer a distraction if things are not going well. • Find the resources in your community. Other parents can be important sources of information, but every child with ASD is different. Stand up for what you think are the needs of your child. About Dr. Catherine Lord Dr. Catherine Lord is the director of the Center for Autism and the Developing Brain at NewYorkPresbyterian Hospital, a joint center with Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia University Medical Center. She is a clinical psychologist who codeveloped some of the key diagnostic tools to help clinicians recognize autism in individuals of varying ages. Dr. Lord is renowned for her research in the field, especially longitudinal Dr. Catherine Lord studies of children with autism that observe the progression of their social development and communication skills. The focus of her research is often to find more effective ways to treat patients. Center for Autism and the Developing Brain at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital The Center for Autism and the Developing Brain is a comprehensive, state-of-theart institute dedicated to addressing the pressing clinical needs of individuals living with autism spectrum disorders and other developmental disorders of the brain, across their lifespan. NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, along with its affiliated medical schools, Weill Cornell Medical College and Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, has collaborated with New York Collaborates for Autism (www.nyc4a.org) to establish the Center for Autism and the Developing Brain. For more information, visit http://nyp.org/services/center-autismdeveloping-brain.html. E Conciencia Sobre el Autismo, la Dra. Catherine Lord, directora del Centro de Autismo y Desarrollo Cerebral en el Hospital New York-Presbyterian, y una autoridad nacional en los trastornos del espectro autista (ASD, por sus siglas en inglés), ofrece a las familias orientación para lidiar con el diagnóstico de un niño. • Tener esperanza. Todos los días aprendemos más acerca de cómo ayudar a personas con ASD. • Recuerde que su niño es un individuo. Su niño/a es en primer lugar y ante todo su propia única persona, entonces un niño/a, entonces un niño/a con fortalezas y dificultades, y solo entonces un niño/a con ASD. • Construya un fuerte sistema de apoyo. Encuentre personas en las que usted confía para apoyarlo como individuo, y entonces para apoyarlo como padre de un niño/a con autismo. • Busque fuentes fidedignas. Usted escuchará muchas piezas de información contradictorias y sin fundamentos. Busque profesionales y recursos en los cuales usted tenga fe. • Disfrute el uno al otro. Haga cosas todos los días que usted y su niño/a puedan disfrutar juntos. Aunque las oportunidades para aprender son importantes, disfrutar la diversión es aún más importante en una familia. • Fije metas. Trate de concentrarse en fijar metas pequeñas, razonables para su niño/a y trate de ver como lograr estas metas. Estas metas deben de ser algo que usted siente puede ocurrir en un próximo paso, no a millas de distancia. • Saque tiempo para su pareja. Coloque a un lado algún tiempo, aunque sea algunos minutos para enfocarse el uno al otro y no en el niño/a. Escuche las necesidades y perspectivas de cada uno mientras considera que hará para su niño/a. • Involúcrese. Los niños con ASD que tienen familias que dedican tiempo a [email protected] FOUNDERS/ PUBLISHERS Luis A. Miranda Jr. David Keisman Roberto Ramirez Sr. 6 EDITOR Debralee Santos EDITORIAL STAFF Robin Elisabeth Kilmer Adrian Cabreja PRODUCTION Ramon Peralta Adam Samuel Chertoff TRANSLATOR Yamilla Miranda OFFICE MANAGER Jennifer Saldaña PROJECT MANAGER Erik Cuello DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Landa M. Towns april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com aprender y jugar con ellos muestran más mejoras que las familias que están menos envueltas. • Tenga expectativas razonables para el comportamiento de su niño/a. No deje hacer a su niño/a cosas que no dejaría hacer a otro niño/a de la misma edad, tales como morder personas o treparse en mostradores. No castigue, pero responda rápidamente y ofrezca una distracción si las cosas no van bien. • Encuentre los recursos en su comunidad. Otros padres pueden ser importantes recursos de información, pero cada niño/a con ASD es diferente. Defienda lo que usted cree son las necesidades de su niño/a. Acerca de la Dra. Catherine Lord La Dra. Catherine Lord es la directora del Centro de Autismo y Desarrollo Cerebral en el Hospital New York-Presbyterian, un centro unido al Colegio Médico Weill Cornell y el Centro Médico de la Universidad Columbia. Es sicóloga clínica que a co-desarrollado algunas de las principales herramientas de diagnóstico para ayudar a los médicos a reconocer el autismo en individuos de diferentes edades. La Dra. Lord es conocida por su investigación en el campo, especialmente en estudios longitudinales de niños con autismo que observan la progresión de su desarrollo social y destrezas de comunicación. El enfoque de su investigación a menudo es el encontrar maneras más efectivas de tratar pacientes. Centro para el Autismo y Desarrollo Cerebral del Hospital New York-Presbyterian El Centro para el Autismo y Desarrollo Cerebral es un instituto completo, con avanzada tecnología dedicado a atender las apremiantes necesidades clínicas de individuos viviendo con trastornos del espectro autista y otros trastornos del desarrollo del cerebro, a través de su vida. El Hospital New YorkPresbyterian, junto a sus escuelas médicas afiliadas, el Colegio Médico Weill Cornell y el Colegio de Médicos y Cirujanos Columbia, ha colaborado con Nueva York Colabora para el Autismo (www.nyc4a.org) para establecer el Centro para el Autismo y Desarrollo Cerebral. Para más información visite, http://nyp.org/ services/center-autism-developing-brain.html. www.manhattantimesnews.com 5030 Broadway, Suite 801 New York, NY 10034 T: 212-569-5800 F: 212-544-9545 MEMBER: Chamber of Commerce of Washington Heights and Inwood Story by Robin Elisabeth Kilmer L ong before he was elected in 2009 to the New York City Council, Ydanis Rodríguez worked and served within the Northern Manhattan community he would come to represent. He put in long hours as a livery cabdriver after moving to the city from the Dominican Republic and while he studied for his master’s degree at the City College of New York. During his graduate school tenure, he helped organize a system-wide strike to protest tuition hikes. In 1992, he was a founding member of Gregorio Luperon High School. Now in office, the Councilmember has not stopped making noise. In 2012, he was named in Time Magazine’s Person of the Year issue, in which protesters were recognized for their work at Occupy Wall Street, the Arab Spring and other movements around the world. Councilmember Rodríguez, who had been arrested for disorderly conduct, had been a fixture at Zuccotti Park during the 2011 Occupy Wall Street protests. Just this month, he received the highest human rights rating of any member of the City Council by the Human Rights Project at the Center for Urban Justice. Re-elected this year, Councilmember Rodríguez is gearing up for his second term. A man of state “We must unite as a community and decide our future,” says Councilmember Ydanis Rodríguez. Photo: E. Hoepelman This Sunday, he will deliver his State of the District address, which he previewed with The Manhattan Times. Councilmember Rodríguez said he has noticed many positive changes during his time in office, including in public safety. Last year, there was only one recorded homicide in the district, and none reported so far this year. But there have also been some challenges. New businesses have been moving into the area, while many older businesses are being priced out. Rents have increased in the area, pushing out some longtime residents lacking sufficient or any employment to support higher rents. Councilmember Rodríguez said he supports Mayor Bill de Blasio’s call for a rent-freeze for rent-stabilized housing. “These shifts highlight why education, job creation and development are so important,” he said. Since his election, Councilmember Rodríguez has made college readiness, affordable housing, better health and See STATE p15 Un hombre de estado Historia por Robin Elisabeth Kilmer M ucho antes de ser elegido en 2009 para el Concejo de la ciudad de Nueva York, Ydanis Rodríguez trabajó y sirvió a la comunidad del norte de Manhattan que representaría. Pasó largas horas como taxista después de mudarse a la ciudad desde la República Dominicana y mientras estudiaba su maestría en el City College de Nueva York. Durante su permanencia en la escuela de posgrado, ayudó a organizar una huelga en todo el sistema para protestar por los aumentos en la matrícula. En 1992, era un miembro fundador de la escuela secundaria Gregorio Luperón. Ahora en el cargo, el concejal no ha dejado de hacer ruido. En 2012, fue mencionado en el ejemplar de persona del año de la revista Time, en la que los manifestantes fueron reconocidos por su trabajo en Occupy Wall Street, la Primavera Árabe y otros movimientos de todo el mundo. El concejal Rodríguez, que fue arrestado por conducta desordenada, fue un elemento fijo en Zuccotti Park durante las protestas de 2011 en Wall Street. Este mismo mes, recibió la calificación más alta en derechos humanos que cualquier otro miembro del concejo de la ciudad por el Proyecto de Derechos Humanos en el Centro de Justicia Urbana. Reelegido este año, el concejal Rodríguez se está preparando para su segundo mandato. Este domingo, él entregará su discurso del informe de distrito, que presentó preliminarmente a The Manhattan Times. El concejal Rodríguez dijo que ha notado muchos cambios positivos durante su tiempo en el cargo, incluso en la seguridad pública. El año pasado, sólo hubo registro de un homicidio en el distrito, y ninguno se ha reportado en lo que va del año. Pero ha habido también algunos desafíos. Los nuevos negocios se han estado moviendo hacia la zona, mientras que muchos negocios más viejos están siendo excluidos. Los alquileres han aumentado en el área, haciendo que algunos antiguos residentes que carecen de suficiente empleo, o que no tienen ninguno, no puedan pagar las rentas más altas. El concejal Rodríguez dijo que apoya el llamado del alcalde Bill de Blasio por un alquiler congelado para la vivienda de renta estabilizada. “Estos cambios ponen de relieve por qué la educación, la creación de empleos y el desarrollo son tan importantes”, dijo. Desde su elección, el concejal Rodríguez ha hecho de la preparación universitaria, la vivienda asequible, el mejoramiento de la salud y la nutrición, la creación de empleo y la limpieza de las calles, sus cinco principales iniciativas. “Esto es lo que puede conducir a una comunidad floreciente”. Dijo que seguirá pidiendo a todos los miembros Vea ESTADO p15 March 24 – March 29 The 4th installment of Sunday Movies at the Palace with Lin-Manuel Miranda features the original King Kong from 1933 and goes down on April 27th. The movie will be shown with Spanish subtitles. Master of Ceremonies Lin-Manuel will introduce the film with a stage show as well as special surprise guests. If the fundraising goal is reached on the United Palace’s current Indiegogo crowdsourcing campaign, the brand spanking new screen will be unveiled on this occasion. As always, guests in tuxedos or gowns are welcome to a free bag of popcorn at the concession stand. The wait is finally over. Frankie P’s long awaited Hazy Nights In The Heights II is now available worldwide. So this is what you have to do - take a listen on our site, then, after having your mind blown, head over to iTunes, Amazon, or wherever you purchase your digital downloads and show that man some love. In keeping with the ethos of the first Hazy Nights In The Heights, the second delivers that same exacting craftsmanship, energy and verve. Get yours ASAP! While you are it, check out the latest song from the very talented Tellie Floydd, Real Hip-Hop. Speaking of Uptown talent, the super funny Chloé Michelle Fischbach has a hilarious new video entitled Annoying Sh*t People Say. In the sidesplitting video, Chloé unleashes her arsenal of spot on april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com impersonations and their conversational foibles. Our Uptown Tweet of the Week featured a tweet from Lin-Manuel that highlighted a short video montage of the closing night of In The Heights on Broadway. Guess what? Our very own Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez earned high marks from The Human Rights Project at the Urban Justice Center based on his admirable stance on such important issues as housing, disability rights and government accountability. Kudos Councilman! We also reposted a great story from the Columbia University Medical Center site on the Young Docs program, which visits local schools once a month to teach kids about the human body and what it is like to be a doctor. If you’re like me, you have had it with this past winter; please check out my love letter to spring, I Hate My North Face: An Ode To Spring. Keep checking us out at www.uptowncollective.com. Led Black Editor-in-Chief The Uptown Collective The UC’s mission is to become “the” definitive, transformative and community-based force impacting the arts, culture, business and New York City’s overall perception of Upper Manhattan. Its objective is to reset, reboot and positively redefine Uptown’s artistic, political, cultural and business spheres via the online space as well the collective’s initiatives and functions. 7 In bloom? Books! Story and photos by Sherry Mazzocchi K evin Klepper saw opportunity in a pile of discarded books. The Washington Heights resident followed his instincts into the building from which he’d seen the books had been carried out. The super there happened to be a friend and led him into a three-bedroom apartment with a large floor-to-ceiling library. The tenant, an elderly woman, had died. The super had to remove all her belongings. Klepper called his friends and loaded his car with as many books as it could hold. Thus the Concetta T. Briollet Memorial Starbucks Free Library was born. The “library” is a bookshelf in front of Starbucks on 181st Street and Fort Washington Avenue Anyone is free to take and donate books. Klepper said that the inventory turnover is about one to every two days. It’s been so successful that Klepper, a contractor by trade, started a book club. The NOMAT Book Club, co-hosted by Indira Anico, meets at Le Chéile restaurant (839 West 181st Street). Their next meeting is April 6 at 5:30 p.m. Klepper envisions adding a Spanish language book club, as well as nonbook parties with music and food. It’s more about establishing a sense of community and having fun than reading books. “I don’t care if you’ve read the book or not,” Klepper said. “I just want to see you.” Moriah Senior Center’s book club discussions often host 10-20 members. Photo: Moriah Senior Center “I just want to see you,” said Concetta T. Briollet Memorial Starbucks Free Library founder Kevin Klepper. Book clubs are blooming all over Northern Manhattan. Word Up Community Book Shop (2113 Amsterdam Ave.) started Novels With A Social Conscience, led by Bob Lamm, which meets the first Sunday of the month at 3 p.m. Lamm, a writer who teaches at NYU, said book clubs were originally an experiment in self-education by women who were denied access to higher education. “It was a radical idea at the time,” he said. “Anyone who’s interested in a book club should honor that they were pioneers.” Their next book is The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz. Lamm said Word Up’s programs attract an interesting mix of people. “I feel honored to be a part of it,” he said. The groups are typically intimate, with about five people attending. “We’ve had very good discussions,” he said. Moriah Senior Center’s (90 Bennett Avenue) discussions are larger. Director Shuli Gutman said between 10 and 20 people attend the monthly meetings. Attendees must be members of the Center. Membership is free and open to anyone over 60. Gutman favors historical fiction. “But I’m open to suggestions,” she said. The book club’s all-time favorite was You Before Me, a novel by JoJo Moyes, about a man who becomes paralyzed and wants to end his life. “It’s very powerful,” Gutman said. “Every single person in the book club liked it.” Moriah members get a free loaner copy of the book ahead of time, courtesy of the Fort Washington Library. A librarian also leads the discussion. “It’s a wonderful thing that the Library does,” she said. The Fort Washington Library (535 West 179th St.) also has its own monthly Saturday morning book group. The newly renovated Washington Heights Library (1000 St. Nicholas Ave.) will begin book club programming by the end of April. The Inwood Library (4790 Broadway) also has a book discussion group and also offers a real jewel in its program Shakespeare Saturdays. Local actress, director and composer Donna Kendall Stearns has produced the free afternoon programs since 2004. Last fall she hosted a series of Sonnet Slams. The April 5th event at 2:15 p.m. is a screening of Joss Whedon’s Much Ado About Nothing. It’s a 2012 black and white comedy, shot in the actor’s home over a period of 12 days. On April 26th at 3:00 p.m., she’ll host ¿Floreciendo? ¡Libros! See BOOKS p20 54 Nagle Ave. (Broadway and W. 195th St.) www.ywashhts.org 212-569-6200 [email protected] Follow us! Facebook.com/ YWashHts, @YWashHts Earth Day at the Y! El club de lectura NOMAT se reúne en Le Chéile. Historia y fotos por Sherry Mazzocchi K evin Klepper vio la oportunidad en una pila de libros desechados. El residente de Washington Heights siguió sus instintos hacia el edificio desde el cual vio que los libros habían sido sacados. El súper resultó ser un amigo y lo llevó a un departamento de tres habitaciones con una gran biblioteca de piso a techo. La inquilina, una mujer mayor, había muerto y sus pertenencias tenían que ser retiradas. Klepper llamó a sus amigos y cargó su coche con la mayor cantidad posible de libros. Así, la biblioteca gratuita conmemorativa Concetta T. Briollet Starbucks, nació. La “biblioteca” es una estantería frente al Starbucks de la calle 181 y la avenida Fort Washington. Cualquier persona es libre de tomar y donar libros. Klepper dijo que la rotación de 8 inventario es de aproximadamente uno cada dos días. Ha sido tan exitosa que Klepper, un contratista de profesión, comenzó un club de lectura. El NOMAT Book Club, co-organizado por Indira Anico, se reúne en el restaurante Le Chéile (839 de la calle 181oeste). Su próxima reunión es el 6 de abril a las 5:30 p.m. Klepper prevé la adición de un club de lectura en español, así como fiestas sin libros, sólo música y comida. Se trata más de establecer un sentido de comunidad y divertirnos que leer libros. “No me importa si has leído el libro o no”, dijo Klepper. “Sólo quiero verte”. Los clubes de lectura están floreciendo en todo el Norte de Manhattan. La librería Word Up Community (2113 de la avenida Ámsterdam) inició Novels With A Social Conscience, dirigido por Bob Lamm, quienes se reúnen el primer domingo del mes a las 3:00 p.m. Lamm, un escritor que enseña en la Vea LIBROS p20 Join us at the Y on April 6th from 2PM-5PM for our annual Earth Day event. Raffles, Giveaways, eco-friendly activities for kids, interactive activities for adults, and more! Learn how you can make our world a better place through fun and interactive programs. Help the environment by bringing in your old textiles or cloths to recycle. Camp Yomawha registration is open… ...and spots are filling up quickly! Make sure to register today to reserve your child’s spot for an unforgettable summer. Register on our website or at the Y. For more information contact Adam at [email protected] (ext. 236). ‘Smoke-Free in the Heights’ Youth Summit Calling all Teens! Want to make your neighborhood cleaner? Help increase awareness of tobacco control issues in your community. Join us on April 7th from 5:30-7PM for our Smoke-Free Youth Summit and discover how you can make a change. To register, contact [email protected]. In conjunction with the Manhattan Smoke-Free Partnership. april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com Soaring high REGISTERED NURSES PHYSICAL THERAPISTS SOCIAL WORKERS CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDES Dad survived his stroke. His independence didn’t. Now what? ONLINE in Spanish Vea la versión EN LINEA en español “I get to express what I’m feeling and tell a story,” explains Alvin Ailey’s Tyler Brown. Photo: Eduardo Patino Story by Robin Elisabeth Kilmer T yler Brown was born to dance. At 21, she is well on her way to following her dream of becoming a dancer in the Alvin Ailey II, which Brown describes as the company’s “minor leagues.” She was chosen as one of the troupe’s featured dancers for the 40th season at the Ailey Citigroup Theater. “I know I’m at the right place, at the right time,” she said. Brown was born in the Kingsbridge area of the Bronx, and grew up in Marble Hill. Though she later moved to Baltimore with her family, she still has plenty of connections to her uptown upbringing. “It’ll always be home for me,” she said. Her favorite memories as a kid was going to the Bronx Zoo, attending Saint Stephen’s “She has a goddess-like quality,” says Troy Powell, the Artistic Director of Alvin Ailey II. Photo: Eduardo Patino No matter what kind of home care your loved one needs, the Visiting Nurse Service of New York (VNSNY) has you covered. We have skilled staff trained in managing specific conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. We also offer private home care services such as companionship, meal preparation and personal grooming. This helps ensure continuity of care when you want or need care beyond what insurance covers. Whatever your loved one needs, VNSNY is the right care now. CALL NOW TO LEARN HOW WE CAN DELIVER THE RIGHT HOME HEALTH CARE FOR YOUR LOVED ONE’S NEEDS. 1-855-VNSNY-NOW • www.vnsny.org See SOARING p16 Our services are usually covered by Medicare, Medicaid, most insurers and private pay. april 2, 2014 • Manhattan TimesVNSNY0187_ProviderSvcs_MT_FINAL.indd • www.manhattantimesnews.com 1 MATERIALS PREPARED BY SEIDEN • 212.223.8700 3/22/13 2:04 PM9 •APPROVAL STAMP• APRIL FEATURED EVENTS 05 | SAT 08 | TUE 15 | TUE Healing Through the Arts: An open mic opportunity to share your song, poetry, dance or artwork. 4:00–6:00 pm For more info call: 212-865-0775 (Ext) 2128/2127 Understanding Asthma Medications 2:30–3:30 pm HEALTHWISE: Handling Emergencies for You & Your Family Get a free Healthwise Handbook 2:30–3:30 pm 12 | SAT Afrofusion Fitness: Rhythms, Body Toning & Aaerobics 3:30–4:30 pm (EmblemHealth members only) PUT CARE ON YOUR CALENDAR 02 WED Sitting Chi Breath/Stretch 5:30–6:30 pm (Must call to reserve) 03 THU Afrofusion Fitness: Rhythms, Body Toning & Aerobics 5:30–6:30 pm 05 SAT Intro to Tai Chi and Qigong 11:30 am –12:30 pm (Must call to reserve) 07 MON Walk Away the Pounds 11:00 am –12:00 Noon Low Impact Zumba w/Antonia 6:00–7:00 pm 08 TUE Eating for Health w/Max 5:30–6:30 pm Moving For Life: Dance Exercise for Cancer Recovery (Family members welcome) 5:45–6:45 pm 09 WED 14 MON (Must call to reserve) 15 TUE Friends in Deed: Support Group for Serious Illness, Grief or Loss 12:00 Noon –1:00 pm Sitting Chi Breath/Stretch 5:30–6:30 pm 10 THU Cell Phone Literacy For Older Adults 2:00–3:30 pm 11 FRI Come Talk With Greg— One on One FREE Caregiving Session 11:00 am –4:00 pm Walk Away the Pounds 11:00 am –12:00 Noon Intro to Yoga 5:45–6:45 pm Meditation Made Easy 1:00–2:00 pm SHARE: Breast Cancer Support Group for Women of African, African American & Caribbean Heritage 4:00–5:30 pm Moving For Life – Dance Exercise for Cancer Recovery (Family members welcome) 5:45–6:45 pm (Call for appointment) Walk Away the Pounds 11:00 am –12:00 Noon Bed Aerobics: Easy Bed Exercises for the Mind, Body & Spirit 5:30–6:30 pm (Must call to reserve) 12 SAT Intro to Tai Chi and Qigong 11:30 am –12:30 pm (Must call to reserve) FREE 15 Minute Chair Massage 1:00–4:00 pm (Call for appointment) Visit us at the Neighborhood Room 215 West 125th Street At EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care you’ll find new programs every month to help you stay healthy, get well and live better. All classes are FREE and open to the public. Group Health Incorporated (GHI), HIP Health Plan of New York (HIP), HIP Insurance Company of New York and EmblemHealth Services Company, LLC are EmblemHealth companies EmblemHealth Services Company, LLC provides administrative services to the EmblemHealth companies. Neighborhood Care is a division of EmblemHealth. ©EmblemHealth Inc. 2014, All Rights Reserved. Full event calendar at ehnc.com 1-866-469-0999 to RSVP 10 april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com O n Wed., March 19th, students from Central Park East Middle School advocated against tobacco and about the harmful effects of tobacco smoke. They joined thousands of youth nationwide for the 19th annual Kick Butts Day, an annual celebration of youth leadership and activism. The youth focused on reducing secondhand smoke in the East Harlem community. The students collaborated with the Partnership for a Healthier Manhattan to canvas the neighborhood and ask business owners to sign a voluntary pledge to keep their sidewalks “smoke-free.” Local businesses and organizations are uniquely positioned to combat secondhand smoke—their outdoor areas can be home to not only tobacco smoke, but also to cigarette butts, which are the most common form of litter and can take decades to decompose. In 2011, the city had a milestone moment when businesses on 110th Street supported it becoming the first city block to be voluntarily smoke-free. For this reason, the students kicked-off their event on 110th Street in front of East Harlem Asthma Center of Excellence (EHACE). “We are thrilled to see these youth share their creativity and their voices and call attention to how tobacco has harmed their community,” said La’Shawn Brown-Dudley of the East and Central Harlem District Public Health Office. “Their activism will inspire others to understand that we all share the air, and we need to be mindful of those around us.” Sharing the air Students from Central Park East Middle School advocated against tobacco. Over 12 businesses signed the “smokefree” air pledge; each participating business was given both a certificate of thanks and given a “We Share Air” decal to display. While smoking rates are at an all-time low in New York City, smoking and second-hand smoke exposure remain leading causes of death and disease. The Partnership for a Healthier Manhattan at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai is committed to improving the health of Manhattan Residents by making the healthy choice the easy choice. Healthier Manhattan is part of a citywide april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com Smoking and second-hand smoke exposure remain leading causes of death and disease. initiative, funded through a Community Transformation Grant (CTG) received by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Please visit and learn more at www.HealthierNYC.org. 11 Y.U.M. young URBAN moms Understanding Autism T By Carolina Pichardo his past week, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released new findings on autism. The results demonstrate a continuation of an upward trend. In 2012, approximately one child out of 88 suffered from the disorder, and now it’s believed one in 68 is affected by autism. What does this mean for families living with the condition, and what resources are available to help us all in understanding it better? Diagnosis and Treatment Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a wide-spectrum disorder. Symptoms typically start to appear after a child is eighteen months. Because symptoms vary from child to child, and there is no medical test available to diagnose autism, it can be difficult to identify the condition. But there are signs and developmental milestones to look out for. Parents are usually the first to notice. Be mindful of a child’s social skills, her physical and emotional development, her sensitivity to noise, patterns of speech, and learning styles. Should you have any concerns, please seek medical attention immediately. Early intervention is very important. An evaluation consists of an interview with the parents, a thorough medical exam, tests for hearing and speech, and other cognitive and sensory-motor evaluations. There is help and assistance. Wherever you and your family are in the process, rest assured you are not alone. Myths Since diagnosis has been on the rise, so have been the myths associated with the condition. Here are a few to disregard. • Vaccines. No direct link or correlation has been proven as regards vaccines and autism. That hasn’t kept many from insisting that there is a connection. Vaccines offer protection from a variety of diseases that could prove harmful, or even lethal, to young children. The recent measles outbreak in Northern Manhattan and the Bronx serve as a reminder of the need to protect our most vulnerable. Speak directly with your doctor and learn what the best approach to handling vaccines for your family is. • Causation. What causes autism is still unclear. But what has been soundly debunked are notions that specific food items or that a mother’s psychological temperament (the so-called “refrigerator mothers”) are linked to autism. Ongoing medical research continues to look at the many angles of autism and provide us with more answers. Local support groups, parents of autistic children, and reputable online resources can offer a better understanding of the condition. • Slow learners. Autistic children have different learning styles. Many have righton-the-mark IQ scores as compared to their peers; others have above average scores. 12 Autism affects all communities. The Get informed. Remember me? One thing not to lose sight of, ever: when we speak of autism, we speak of individuals, not merely a condition. Every child and every adult with autism is a uniquely gifted individual, one with a personality and disposition all his or her own. Letting go of the stigma and irrational fears around autism will open up new possibilities and the joy of getting to know another human being. Support As the numbers indicate, we are all affected by autism. Whether it’s your own child or a family member, or whether it’s a friend’s child or someone in the building or at school, we are all living with the reality of autism. Life after diagnosis is challenging, but raising awareness and forging the greatest access to the necessary resources will help. So will the emotional, physical and social support we as family, friends and community residents can provide. Compassion, understanding and pitching in – these are the hallmarks of serving together in community-building and parenting. Join in celebrating World Autism Awareness Day on Wednesday, April 2nd and National Autism Awareness Month all through the month of April. Share your own stories and concerns. Remember, it takes a village. Here are a few online resources to get you and your family started: Autism Speaks: www.autismspeaks.org The National Institutes of Health: www. ninds.nih.gov/disorders/autism/detail_ autism.htm The Centers for Disease Control and Protection: www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/autism/ index.html Vea HEAD p17 Entendiendo el autismo L autismo? Por Carolina Pichardo a semana pasada, el Centro para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades (CDC por sus siglas en inglés), publicó nuevas conclusiones sobre el autismo. Los resultados demuestran una tendencia creciente. En 2012, aproximadamente uno de cada 88 niños sufrió de la condición, y ahora se cree que uno de cada 68 se ve afectado por el autismo. ¿Qué significa esto para las familias que viven con la condición y qué recursos están disponibles para ayudarnos a entender mejor el Diagnóstico y tratamiento El Trastorno del Espectro Autista (TEA) es uno de amplio espectro. Generalmente, los síntomas comienzan a aparecer después de que un niño tiene dieciocho meses. Debido a que los síntomas varían de un niño a otro, y que no hay ninguna prueba médica para diagnosticar el autismo, puede ser difícil identificarlo. Pero hay señales e hitos del desarrollo a tener en cuenta. Los padres suelen ser los primeros en notarlo. Sea consciente de las habilidades sociales de su niño, su desarrollo físico y emocional, su sensibilidad al ruido, los patrones del habla y estilos de aprendizaje. Si tiene alguna inquietud, por favor busque atención médica inmediatamente. La intervención temprana es muy importante. La evaluación consiste en una entrevista con los padres, un examen médico completo, pruebas de audición y lenguaje, y otras evaluaciones cognocitivas y sensoriales y motoras. Hay ayuda y asistencia. Dondequiera que usted y su familia estén en el proceso, pueden estar seguros que no están solos. comprensión de la condición. • Lento aprendizaje. Los niños autistas tienen diferentes estilos de aprendizaje. Muchos tienen puntuaciones de CI similares a sus compañeros, mientras que otros tienen promedios superiores. Busque información. ¿Me recuerda? Una cosa para no perder de vista nunca: cuando hablamos de autismo, hablamos de personas, no simplemente una condición. Cada niño y cada adulto con autismo es una persona excepcionalmente dotada, con una personalidad y disposición propias. Dejar de lado el estigma y los miedos irracionales en torno al autismo, abrirá nuevas posibilidades y la alegría de conocer a otro ser humano. Apoyo Como los números lo indican, todos estamos afectados por el autismo. Ya sea en su propio hijo, un familiar, el hijo de un amigo o alguien en el edificio o en la escuela, todos estamos viviendo la realidad del autismo. La vida después Mitos del diagnóstico es un reto, Dado que el diagnóstico ha pero la sensibilización y ido en aumento, también lo han forjar el mayor acceso a hecho los mitos asociados con la los recursos necesarios, enfermedad. Aquí están algunos Involucre a su médico y ayudará, así también el apoyo para ignorar. emocional, físico y social • Vacunas. Ninguna relación discuta sus preocupaciones. que nosotros como familia, directa ni correlación se ha demostrado en cuanto a las vacunas y el autismo. amigos y residentes de la comunidad podamos proporcionar. La compasión, la comprensión Eso no ha logrado que muchas personas dejen y echar una mano son las características de de insistir en que hay una conexión. Las vacunas servir juntos en la creación de comunidades y la ofrecen protección contra una variedad de crianza de los hijos. enfermedades que podrían resultar perjudiciales, Únase a la celebración del día mundial de o incluso letales, para los niños pequeños. El concientización del autismo el miércoles 2 de reciente brote de sarampión en el norte de abril, y el mes nacional de la conciencia del Manhattan y el Bronx sirve como un recordatorio autismo durante todo el mes de abril. Comparta de la necesidad de proteger a nuestros más sus propias historias y preocupaciones. vulnerables. Hable directamente con su médico y Recuerde, necesitamos de todos. aprenda cuál es el mejor enfoque para el manejo de las vacunas para su famili. Éstos son algunos recursos en • Causalidad. Lo que causa el autismo línea para que usted y su familia todavía no está claro. Pero lo que se ha inicien: desacreditado profundamente son nociones Autism Speaks: www. de que determinados alimentos o que el autismspeaks.org temperamento psicológico de la madre (las The National Institutes of llamadas “madres refrigerador”) están vinculados Health: www.ninds.nih.gov/ con el autismo. La investigación médica en curso disorders/autism/detail_autism.htm observa los muchos ángulos del autismo y nos The Centers for Disease Control dará más respuestas. Los grupos locales de and Protection: www.cdc.gov/ apoyo, los padres de niños autistas, y recursos ncbddd/autism/index.html en línea de renombre pueden ofrecer una mejor april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com ADVERTISEMENT AcaciaAnswers with Dr. Robert Balthazar Should I be worried about this latent infection? Dear Doctor, I was born in Mexico and moved here when I was five. I’m now 22. I got my first Tuberculosis PPD test recently because I’m starting work at a hospital. The test came back positive. I took a chest x-ray after and it showed that I’m okay. There wasn’t much discussion after that, but I’m worried. I want to have a family and children. Could this get in the way? -Carl well, getting enough rest and exercise and avoiding stress when you can. And, of course, visit your doctor regularly. 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(212) 690-4002 Dr. Robert Balthazar Primary Care Physician Tarsheema Copeny Office Manager Senaida Santiesteban Medical Assistant “Celebrating 45 Years of Keeping the Promise” BARBEE FAMILY HEALTHCARE CENTER 266 West 145th Street, Manhattan For a full listing of all Acacia’s locations and services throughout New York, please visit www.acacianetwork.org. www.acacianetwork.org april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com 13 Story and photos by Sandra E. García I t’s that time of year. While many look to the break of spring to raid the local drugstores for chocolate eggs or Peeps, others turn to another special treat: habichuelas con dulce, or sweet beans. Here, we present an earlier piece written in 2012 on the delicacy. Dig in! Dollars for beans Got a dollar? Then step right up, as just 4 quarters or a single dollar bill will buy you some of Ladles are constantly filled. the sweetest delight you’re ever to find in a steaming Styrofoam cup. why he is still here.” Known as “habichuelas con dulce,” or, The taste for some is an instant jolt of literally, “sweet beans,” the portable liquid happiness for others, a reminder of home. delicacy is precisely that: sweet. “This is a tradition of ours (Dominicans) Reminiscent of hot cocoa but sweeter, that I am happy I can find here,” said Miguel habichuelas con dulce is a creamy, silky, Díaz as he fidgeted around to stay warm. “In sweet broth flavored with cinnamon and my country, we don’t eat this all year long, vanilla, and filled with dense morsels of but to find it this good here, I’ll eat a cup beans and raisins. It is a every day,” he added, raising his voice to classic, traditional make sure the vendor heard his praise. Dominican drink/ An elated customer receives a Ladles are constantly filled at the corner, dessert/snack that cup of habichuelas con dulce. and their contents are carefully poured can be served into small cups and containers, for some cold, but is more relegated to seasonal but opting for anonymity, dutifully ladled out bringing them back to a tradition and taste frequently doled appearances. Any time his sweet beans and ducked his head shyly in of home, for others simply offering a sweet out hot and quick, of the year, be it chilly response. respite from the cold. particularly along or balmy, venturing “That’s the reason why people keep coming Whatever your reason, bring your dollar, St. Nicholas Avenue out onto St. Nicholas back,” continued Pérez, “because the flavor of join the line and be patient. near and around Avenue for a sweet his habichuelas con dulce is like no other. It’s The rewards will be, well, sweet. West 182nd Street, Coolers filled with habichuelas con beans fix will net you ur. ho where street vendors dulce run out about every happy results. have created a brisk Small round vanilla crackers are business from shopping carts outfitted with usually thrown into each small cup so that huge Thermoses and neat rows of plastic you can experience a gentle crunch as cups and spoons. contrast against the silky texture. And while “I’ve bought habichuelas con dulce some like it cold, most prefer the sweet snack in other places and it just doesn’t taste as as a beverage, slowly sipped and piping hot. good!” exclaims Ybelkis Sánchez, who On a recent crisp 32-degree afternoon, traveled from New Jersey on a recent wintry against sharp 25 m.p.h. winds, the food stand afternoon to enjoy a cup then, and a two- prevails, as do its customers, who line up in dollar container to enjoy later. a snaking line that extends onto Amsterdam *Subscribers to the Rangel E-news are the first to receive updates from me. “I’ve been coming here for the last 5 Avenue. Young and old alike await a sweet Please visit rangel.house.gov to sign up. years. It’s the best recipe I’ve ever had,” cup of warmth, anticipating cupping their added Sánchez, who even went so far as to gloved hands around a cup. And while impugn family for the sake of celebrating others make noise about the wait and stamp the habichuelas con dulce she was enjoying. their feet impatiently, others, particularly “My mother’s recipe is not even this as they inch closer and closer to the stand, good,” laughed Sánchez. quietly rejoiced. While habichuelas con dulce are a staple “He’s been doing this for so long he’s of Easter season, and are typically made created his own flavor,” said Yesenia Pérez, in large batches of home-made vats just referring to the shy vendor to whom she before Good Friday, the beans are far from happily paid her dollar. “He,” famed locally, Monday, May 5, 2014 / 5:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. Rep. Rangel's Annual Congressional Art Competition for High School Students Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building Second Floor Art Gallery 163 West 125th Street, New York, NY 10027 Entry Rules for Participation and Deadlines: All artwork entries must be submitted to my District Office staff by April 11, 2014. Contestants must be high school students, living within the Thirteenth Congressional District of New York. To submit an entry, contestants must first send a picture of the artwork via email to [email protected] no later than April 3, 2014 at 5:00 PM. Submitted entries will be displayed in the Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building Art Gallery and my Social Media websites. Those art pieces that receive the most "likes" will go on to a second round where a panel of judges will decide the winning art piece that will be displayed in the U.S. Capitol. The winner will have the opportunity to participate in a National Art Competition and view their work on display in our Nation’s Capitol. For more information and voting for finalists: A dollar can buy you a cup of the sweet delicacy along St. Nicholas Avenue virtually any time of the year. 14 facebook.com/cbrangel rangel.house.gov/art @cbrangel (212) 663-3900 april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com STATE from p7 nutrition, job creation and clean streets his top five initiatives. “These are what can lead to a flourishing community.” He said that he would continue to call on all community members to actively participate in the civic process, by joining or forming at tenants association to fight an unfair landlord, starting a parents association in a struggling school, or opening up a business. “We have more than capable people in this community.” he said. “I want to help provide tools that will unleash the collective potential of Upper Manhattan and Marble Hill.” This year, the Councilmember adds another priority to his list: transportation. He has been named the Chair of the City Council’s Committee on Transportation. He said he will be looking for ways to expand access to mass transit to communities that are underserved, as well as improving safety on the streets, trains, and buses. Ways to make transportation more environmentally sustainable are one area of focus, and he said he would hold hearings about how the city transports its food, as it is often trekked over thousands of miles, using tons of oil and gas. On Sunday, the Councilmember will focus on increasing affordable housing, the need for educational resources—especially in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), and providing greater support for small businesses. He will also tout the success stories of which he has been part. The High Bridge, the bridge connecting High Bridge Park with University Heights in the Bronx, will be opening this summer, and other major renovations are scheduled at the This year, the address will be held in the Alumni Auditorium in the William H. Black Building. Photo: Gregg McQueen park for this year and next. Also in the works is an effort to bring green roofs to Northern Manhattan so residents can grow their own produce at home while at the same time helping to mitigate climate change. And he says he will stress the importance of participation and collaboration among residents. “We must unite as a community and decide our future, lest it be decided by others,” he said. The State of the District Address will be held on Sun. ,Apr. 6th at the Columbia University Medical Center in the Alumni Auditorium in the William H. Black Building at 650 West 168th Street, New York, NY 10032. Doors open at 2 p.m., and the address will start at 2:30 p.m. ESTADO de p7 de la comunidad que participen activamente en el proceso cívico, uniéndose a, o formando, asociaciones de inquilinos para luchar contra un arrendador injusto, organizar una asociación de padres en una escuela con problemas o abriendo un negocio. “Tenemos gente más que capaz en esta comunidad.”, Dijo. “Quiero ayudar a proporcionar herramientas que den rienda suelta al potencial colectivo del alto Manhattan y Marble Hill”. Este año, el concejal añade otra prioridad a su lista: el transporte. Ha sido nombrado presidente del comité de transporte del consejo de la ciudad. Dijo que buscará formas para ampliar el acceso al transporte público en las comunidades que se encuentran marginadas, así como mejorar la seguridad en las calles, trenes y autobuses. Cómo lograr que el transporte sea más sustentable con el medio ambiente es un punto importante, y dijo que llevará a cabo audiencias sobre cómo la ciudad transporta su comida, ya que a menudo es un largo paseo a través de miles de kilómetros, utilizando toneladas de petróleo y gas. El domingo, el concejal se centrará en aumentar la vivienda asequible, la necesidad de recursos educativos, especialmente en los campos de la ciencia, tecnología, ingeniería y matemáticas (STEM por sus siglas en inglés), y un mayor apoyo para los pequeños negocios. También impulsará las historias de éxito de las que ha formado parte. High Bridge, el puente que conecta High Bridge Park con University Heights en el Bronx, se abrirá este verano, y otras renovaciones importantes se han programado en el parque para este año y el próximo. También en las obras hay un esfuerzo por llevar azoteas verdes al norte de Manhattan para que los residentes puedan cultivar sus propios productos en casa, y al mismo tiempo ayudar a mitigar el cambio climático. Y dice que va a insistir en la importancia de la participación y la colaboración entre los residentes. “Debemos unirnos como comunidad y decidir nuestro futuro, para que no sea decidido por otros”, dijo. El discurso del informe del distrito se llevará a cabo el domingo 6 de abril en el auditorio Alumni del Centro Médico de la Universidad Columbia en el edificio William H. Black, ubicado en el número 650 de la calle 168 oeste, Nueva York, NY 10032. Las puertas se abren a las 2 p.m. y el discurso inicia a las 2:30 p.m. DINING ABOUT TOWN Try one of these eateries for your next meal or party. IndIan Road Café Eclectic American 600 W. 218th St. at Indian Rd. 212-942-7451 www.indianroadcafe.com Mon-Thu: 7am-10pm Fri-Sat: 7am-11pm Sun: 8am-9:30pm LOCAL OWNERS, LOCAL EMPLOYEES, LOCAL FOOD With curated coffee, wine, & cocktail lists with the largest craft beer selection in Northern Manhattan. Locally sourced eclectic American comfort food. Call Today Llame Hoy Manolo tapas Cuisine from Spain 4165 Broadway (between 176th &177th Streets) by La Rosa Fine Foods 212-923-9100 www.manolotapas.net Mon-Thu: 12pm - 1am Fri-Sun: 12pm -2am Flamenco LIVE! on Wednesdays Dominican Steakhouse 4139 Broadway at W. 175th St. 212-781-3231 The grill is front and center at El Conde so you know you will get your steak cooked to perfection. Families also flock here for seafood, specialty pastas and salads. Ask about drink specials from the fully stocked bar. e iD gu thern Manhattan The Dining 2014 of nor El CondE REstauRant saggIo CaRRot top BakERy CafE 829 W. 181st St. near Pinehurst Ave. 212-795-3080 Authentic Sicilian cuisine featuring daily handmade pastas, slow-cooked ragus, fresh seafood, and a great selection of Italian wine and beer in a warm atmosphere. Half-price happy hour Monday through Friday from 4-7pm. Weekend brunch from 10am to 3:30pm. Private party or catering event 3931 Broadway near W. 165th St. 212 927-4800 Mon-Sat: 6am to 9pm Sun: 7am to 6pm 5025 Broadway (located at 214th St. and Broadway) 212 569-1532 Mon-Fri: 7am to 8pm Sat: 7am to 7pm Sun: 9am to 6pm www.carrottoppastries.com We Cater Italian American TEL: 212-569-5800 [email protected] april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com 15 SOARING from p9 United Methodist Church in Marble Hill with her grandmother, and later going to the nowdefunct Pivot Diner every Sunday. She still comes to Marble Hill to visit her grandmother—and to get her hair done at Estela’s Hair Salon, also in Kingsbridge. She likes the friendly atmosphere she has grown used to since childhood when her grandmother took her to the salon. “It feels like family every time I go there,” she said. As a child, Brown’s love of dance was supported by her parents, who enrolled her in classes at an early age. She recalls her mother driving her to class, while she did her homework in the car. At 18, Brown was accepted on scholarship to attend the Ailey School, the world-class dance academy affiliated with the dance company, and moved to New York City on her own. Students at the school take classes and collaborate with Alvin Ailey’s principal company. Since joining Ailey II, she has traveled outside of the country for the first time to France, Germany and Poland, experiencing new cultures and performing in front of diverse audiences. But there have been challenges. “The hardest [thing] for me was understanding the concept of letting go and presenting who I really am. Naturally I take a longer time to show who I am, or to warm up to people,” she said. “The dance world doesn’t have time for that. Approaching every ballet, routine or choreography with confidence, and showing off what makes me. That didn’t come natural.” “Will always be home for me,” she says of her uptown roots. Photo: Eduardo Patino But her perseverance has paid off – and her hard work is readily acknowledged by her mentors. “She’s very talented—one of the best dancers in the school,” said Troy Powell, the Artistic Director of Alvin Ailey II. “Tyler was always the type of dancer that has such sensitivity about her,” he added. “She has a goddess-like quality.” That sensitivity has been put to good use in the works Brown will appear in this year. She is the featured dancer in several dances, including the premiere of Cuore Sott’olio (“Heart submerged in oil”) by Polish choreographer Katarzyna Skarpetowska. The dance tells the tale of a woman reliving her past relationships. One of her favorite moments in the piece, explained Brown, is when she slowly walks across the stage in a moment of reflection. She said she draws from personal experience to bring out the essence of the moment. “I think about where I came from, and my family. I channel that: looking into the past and going to the future.” That touch of theater within dance is what she enjoys the most. “I get to express what I’m feeling and tell a story for the audience,” she said. Her own story has provided lessons she hopes will be of use to aspirants seeking to follow in her pointe shoes. “Stay optimistic and trust in your ability and in who you are,” she urges. A dream board will also help, she said. A dream board is a bulletin board or a poster that one designs with images that represent their dreams come true. It can be placed above one’s bed or anywhere it is visible and is meant to serve as a visual encouragement. Growin up, Brown’s dream board was filled with images of dancers. “I clearly remember putting pictures of Alvin Ailey on my door,” she recalled. “The most important thing is to stay inspired.” For more information on Tyler Brown and the Alvin Ailey II performances, please visit www.alvinailey.org/aileyII or call 866.811.4111. “The most important thing is to stay inspired,” urges Brown. Photo: Eduardo Patino “My Apple Bank has FREE Business Checking — PLUS Special Offers of Up to $120 Value!” . PLUS. . 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Gifts available while supplies last. 16apple bk - MANHATTAN TIMES - BUSINESS CHECKING AD - 10-25-2013.indd 1 april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com 11/7/2013 3:30:39 PM T Preventing Falls with VNSNY Choice his past Thurs., Mar. 27th, VNSNY CHOICE, together with State Senator Bill Perkins, held a free community health workshop for Harlem seniors regarding fall prevention at the Canaan Senior Service Center in Harlem. Falls are the leading cause of fatal and nonfatal injuries for seniors, with roughly 70% of falls occurring in the home. “New York State is continuously seeking ways to best protect the health, safety and quality of life of our residents,” said Sen. Perkins. “This workshop offers valuable information to prevent serious injuries that are too often the result of a fall.” Allison Simms, Rehabilitation Clinical Manager at VNSNY CHOICE, provided tips and techniques to those in attendance on how to avoid falls, assessing one’s home environment for potential fall hazards, choosing the right footwear and ensuring walking aids for stability, and how to find local resources that can help seniors be more active in building strength and increasing their balance. Some of the workshop’s tips on preventing falls include: · Staying Safe at Home—Use a home safety assessment checklist to review all rooms and outdoor areas; remove clutter on the floor; arrange furniture to widen pathways; E Allison Simms, Rehab Clinical Manager at VNSNY CHOICE, leads more than 75 seniors in exercises demonstrating the importance of staying active. Photo: Lorenzo Ciniglio keep commonly used items in easy reach; do not use step stools; fix uneven surfaces. · Staying Safe Wherever You Are— Always wear shoes; use handrails on stairs; avoid wet floors and wipe up spills immediately; be sure chairs and other furniture are stable; check for adequate lighting; consider safety items such as grab bars, raised toilet seats, non-skid tub mats and carry a cell or portable phone for easy access, especially if you live alone. • Balance, Strength and Mobility—Work on strength and balance by being active; consider activities such as exercise programs, weight training, walking programs, Tai Chi, yoga, and hobbies like bowling, dancing and gardening. • Multiple Medications—Review all drugs, even over-the-counter ones, with your doctor and pharmacist; always carry a list of your medications; do not share or “borrow” medications; know the common side effects for each drug; and remember to take medications as described. • Most importantly, know your PERSONAL risk factors for falls—Be mindful of whether you suffer from weakness in the legs, previous history of falling, cognitive impairment, dizziness, urinary incontinence, being over age 80, walking and balance problems. For more information, please visit www. VNSNYCHOICE.org or call 1.855.282.4642. Previniendo caídas con VNSNY Choice l pasado jueves 27 de marzo, VNSNY CHOICE, junto con el senador estatal Bill Perkins, realizó un taller gratuito de salud comunitaria para las personas mayores de Harlem, relativo a la prevención de caídas, en el Centro de Servicio Canaán para personas mayores, en Harlem. Las caídas son la causa principal de lesiones fatales y no fatales para las personas mayores. Alrededor del 70% de las caídas ocurren en el hogar. “El estado de Nueva York está buscando continuamente formas de proteger mejor la salud, la seguridad y la calidad de vida de nuestros residentes”, dijo el senador Perkins. “Este taller ofrece información valiosa para evitar lesiones graves, que con demasiado frecuencia son el resultado de una caída”. Allison Simms, Gerente de Rehabilitación Clínica en VNSNY CHOICE proporciona consejos y técnicas a los asistentes sobre cómo evitar caídas, evaluar el entorno en casa para peligros de potenciales de caídas, la adecuada elección del calzado, garantizar ayuda para caminar con la estabilidad y cómo encontrar recursos locales que pueden ayudar a las personas mayores a ser más activas en cuanto a desarrollo de fuerza y aumentar su equilibrio. Algunos de los consejos del taller sobre la prevención de caídas incluyeron: • Mantener la seguridad en casa— De izquierda a derecha: Luis Fonseca, gerente de alcance comunitario en Visiting Nurse Service de Nueva York; Rafael Escano, asistente legislativo del Senador Bill Perkins y Dominic Mascara, director de alcance comunitario en Visiting Nurse Service de Nueva York. Foto: Lorenzo Ciniglio Utilice una lista de evaluación de la seguridad en casa para revisar todas las habitaciones y áreas al aire libre, eliminar el desorden en el suelo, arreglar los muebles para ensanchar los caminos; mantener los objetos de uso común al alcance de la mano sin usar banquitos y corregir superficies irregulares. • Estar seguro en cualquier lugar—Siempre use zapatos, utilice los pasamanos en escaleras, evite suelos mojados y limpie los derrames inmediatamente, asegúrese de que las sillas y otros muebles sean estables; revise que la iluminación sea adecuada; april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com considere temas de seguridad, tales como barras de apoyo, asientos alzados de inodoros, tapetes antideslizantes en la tina y lleve un celular o un teléfono portátil para un fácil el acceso, especialmente si vive solo o sola. • Balance, fuerza y movilidad— Trabaje en la fuerza y el equilibrio estando activo; considere actividades como programas de ejercicios, entrenamiento con pesas, programas de senderismo, Tai Chi, yoga y pasatiempos como boliche, baile y jardinería. • Múltiples medicamentos— Revise todos los medicamentos con su médico y farmacéutico, lleve siempre una lista de sus medicamentos, no los comparta ni los “preste”, conozca los efectos secundarios más comunes y recuerde tomarlos según fueron prescritos. • Muy importe: conozca sus factores PERSONALES de riesgo para las caídas— Sea consciente de si usted sufre de debilidad en las piernas, tiene antecedentes de caídas, deterioro cognitivo, mareos, incontinencia urinaria, problemas de equilibrio y al caminar y tener más de 80 años de edad. Para más información por favor visite www.VNSNYCHOICE.org o llame al 1.855.282.4642. 17 Hot and soothing By Nancy Bruning W hen you think of a massage, what’s the first thing that comes to mind? Strong, sensitive hands? Check. Fragrant oils? Check. Soothing music? Check. Hot stones? Check. Wait – hot stones? Yes! If you work out, even if you stretch properly, you’ll probably feel a little sore sometimes. Add the stresses of life, all of which result in clenched muscles and outof-whack posture. It’s why I was intrigued by the idea of a Hot Stone Massage, a specialty of Teany Hidalgo, proprietor of Sánese Spa in Inwood. Hildalgo explained that the word “Sánese” means to heal oneself in Spanish. She created her spa with the idea that therapeutic work does not do the healing itself, but that it assists in the process. “Here we practice modalities that encourage, soothe, release, and overall promote healing,” she says. Her goal is to help your body’s immune system to work, your mind to rest, and your spirit to soar. I decided to try it for myself. Hot Stone Massage is a therapeutic massage incorporating smooth basalt rocks that add soothing heat. After beginning with a deep Swedish–type massage, Hidalgo used the stones as an extension of her hands, reaching into the tight nooks and crannies on my back and shoulders, using long, firm massage strokes. The hot stones are really warm stones—so no getting burned. They are reputed to improve circulation and calm your nerves; Hidalgo describes it as “melting” your muscles into a relaxed state. As a long-time massage lover, I can say the stones were a lovely addition that left me relieved of stress yet energized. Where did this Hot Stone Massage originate? Apparently, it is an ancient technique that can be traced back to China and India 3,000 years ago. There is also a connection to Japan, which has a history of using naturally hot mineral springs to heal a variety of conditions. It is thought that the smaller stones in the springs eventually came to be used to massage necks and shoulders. Hot stones were also used by Native Americans, who used fire to warm them. At Sanese, the therapeutic stones are sanitized and heated in a bath of hot water. The basalt stones are a black volcanic rock high in iron that absorbs and retains the heat of the water. They’re wonderfully smooth, thanks to constant abrasion by currents in a river or the waves of the sea. You’re in good hands with Teany Hidalgo. Hidalgo is a Licensed Massage Por Nancy Bruning C uando se piensa en un masaje, ¿Qué es lo primero que le viene a la mente? ¿Manos fuertes, sensitivas? Verificado. ¿Aceite perfumado? Verificado. ¿Música relajante? Verificado. ¿Piedras Calientes? Verificado. Espere - ¿piedras calientes? ¡Si! Si usted hace ejercicio, incluso si te estiras correctamente, probablemente usted algunas veces se siente un poco rígido y adolorido. Añada el estrés de la vida, todo lo cual resulta en músculos tensos y mala postura. Por eso estaba intrigada con la idea de un Masaje con Piedra Caliente, especialidad de Teany Hidalgo, propietaria de Sánese Spa en Inwood. Hidalgo explicó que la palabra ‘Sánese’ significa sanarse uno mismo en español. Ella creó su spa con la idea de que el trabajo terapéutico no hace la sanación – en su lugar, asiste en el proceso de sanación. “Aquí nosotros practicamos modalidades que animan, suavizan, relajan y en general promueve la sanación”, dijo. Su meta es ayudar al sistema inmunológico del cuerpo, su mente a descansar y su espíritu se eleve. El Masaje con Piedras Calientes es un masaje terapéutico incorporando suaves piedras de basalto que añaden relajamiento, un suave calor. Luego de comenzar con un profundo masaje tipo sueco, Hidalgo entonces utiliza las piedras como una extensión de sus manos, llegando a los fuertes nudos y tensiones en mi espalda y brazos, utilizando largos y firmes trazos de masaje. Las piedras calientes realmente son piedras tibias – Therapist with over six years of experience. She also offers these other types of massage, some of which can incorporate hot stones: Relaxation Massage (Swedish); Therapeutic (Deep tissue); Medical Massage; Energy Balancing Massage; and Reflexology. She is also a Life Coach, providing individual coaching as well as workshops for organizations. She specializes in topics such as working women, working moms, and Hispanic culture Issues, and has workshops in Parent-Infant Massage Instruction and Self Massage for Working Professionals and more. For more information, please call 202.630.7263, visit www.sanesespa.com or send an e-mail message to teany@ sanesespa.com. The spa is located at 5030 Broadway (at 213th Street), Suite 675. Nancy Bruning has a master’s degree in public health, is a certified personal trainer, and is the author or co-author of over 25 books on health and fitness, including the just-published “Nancercize: 101 Things to Do on a Park Bench.” She also is the Chair of the Friends Committee of the Fort Tryon Part Trust and leads outdoor fitness experiences and weight loss workshops. Visit Nancy’s web site at www.Nancercize.net. A hot stone massage incorporates warm smooth basalt rocks. Caliente y relajante “Nosotros practicamos modalidades que promueven la sanación”, dijo Teany Hidalgo, Terapeuta de Masaje Licenciada. así es que no se preocupe acerca de quemarse. Se dice mejoran la circulación y calman los nervios; Hidalgo lo describe como ‘derritiendo’ sus músculos a un estado de relajación. Puedo decir que las piedras fueron una agradable adición que me dejó aliviada del estrés aunque con energía. ¿Dónde se originó este Masaje de Piedras Calientes? Aparentemente es una antigua técnica que se remonta a China e India desde hace 3,000 años atrás. También hay una conexión con Japón, quien tiene una historia de utilizar aguas minerales naturalmente calientes para sanar una variedad de condiciones. Se piensa que las pequeñas piedras de las aguas eventualmente pasaron a ser utilizadas en masajes de cuello y brazos. Las piedras calientes también fueron utilizadas por los Nativos Americanos, que utilizaban el fuego para calentarlas. Hoy, las piedras terapéuticas son limpiadas y calentadas en un baño de agua caliente. Las piedras de basalto son una piedra volcánica negra alta en hierro que absorbe y retiene el calor del agua. Son increíblemente suaves, gracias a la constante abrasión de las corrientes de un río o las olas del mar. El masaje con piedras calientes es una april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com moderna modalidad añadida a muchos spas, y ahora nosotros tenemos ese servicio aquí mismo en nuestra comunidad. Está en buenas manos con Teany Hidalgo. Hidalgo es Terapeuta de Masaje Licenciada con más de seis años de experiencia. También ofrece estos otros tipos de masajes, los cuales en algunos se pueden incorporar las piedras calientes: Masaje de Relajación (sueco); Terapéutico (Tejido Profundo); Masaje Médico; Masaje Mente Cuerpo; Masaje de Balanceo de Energía y Reflexología. También es Entrenadora de Vida y provee entrenamiento individual como también talleres para organizaciones. Se especializa en Mujeres de Trabajo, Mamás que Trabajan y Asuntos de Cultura Hispana, y tiene talleres de Instrucción de Masaje Padre-Infante y Auto Masaje para Profesionales Trabajando y más. Para más información, favor de llamar al 202.630.7263, visite www. sanesespa.com o envíe un mensaje al correo electrónico teany@sanesespa. com. El spa está localizado en el 5030 Broadway (en la Calle 213) Suite 675. Nancy Bruning tiene una maestría en salud pública, es una entrenador personal certificada, y es la autora y coautora de más de 25 libros de salud y ejercicios, incluyendo su último, “Nancervize: 101 Thing to Do on a Park Bench”. También es la presidenta del Comité de Amigos del Fideicomiso del Parque Fort Tryon y dirige experiencias de ejercicios al aire libre y talleres de pérdida de peso. Visite la página electrónica de Nancy en www.Nancercize.net. 19 BOOKS from p8 Shakespeare’s Big 450th Birthday Concert, which features songs from the plays. “It’s not every day you turn 450,” Stearns said. If Shakespeare’s not your thing, East Harlem’s La Casa Azul Bookstore (143 East 103rd St.) has a more East Harlem’s contemporary focus. The La Casa Azul Rice and Beans Book Club Bookstore’s meets on the first Wednesday club has a more of the month at 6:30 p.m. and contemporary Immigrant Voices Book focus. Club meets on the second Pharmacy (4953 Broadway) on the last Tuesday of the month, also at 6.30 p.m. Wednesday of the month. The Inwood Book Depending on the audience, discussions are in Club meets in the basement at 6:30 pm. either English or Spanish, said owner Aurora Their next book is the Egyptian novel The Anaya-Cerda. Yacoubian Building by Alaa Al-Aswany, and Future Rice and Beans Club books include after that The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt. When I Was Puerto Rican by Esmeralda Myra Alperson founded the group. She also Santiago and Song of the Water Saints by leads Noshwalks, culinary tours of New York Nelly Rosario. Upcoming Immigrant Voices neighborhoods. The book club’s location, offerings are The Guardians by Ana Castillo right by the A train, is very convenient. and Odyssey to the North by Mario Bencastro. “The bathroom is right there and we can run La Casa Azul sells all book club titles at 20 upstairs and get snacks,” she said. They’ve percent off, all year. read mostly fiction, including Middlesex by Sister’s Uptown Bookstore and Cultural Jeffrey Eugenides but plan on reading Gary Center’s (1942 Amsterdam Avenue) book Shteygart’s memoir, Little Failure. club meets on the last Saturday of the month Alperson started her book club after two at 3:00 pm. About 15 people typically attend, others she’d been in faded out and people said Michael, a spokesman for the store. weren’t getting along. Previous titles included The Warmth of Other Klepper doesn’t want his book group Suns by Isabel Wilkerson and Twelve Gates to become clique-ish, either. He’s already to the City by Daniel Black. The store gives planning a combination book club and customers a 10 percent discount on book club community barbecue at his home, which has titles. outdoor seating. Inwood book lovers can visit Dichter “No other book club has that,” he said. shop uptown p sho PET CARE uptown shop uptown shop uptown Inwood Animal Clinic We treat your pets like family. Dogs, Cats, and Exotics All Medical and Surgical Services • Vaccines • Dentistries • Exotics • Emergencies • Spay / Neuter • Prescription Food • X-Rays • Grooming 4846 Broadway 212-304-VETS (8387) www.inwoodanimalclinic.com Call today to List your Business or Service Llame hoy para anunciar su Negocio o Servicio TEL: 212-569-5800 [email protected] 20 Klepper incluso ofrece asientos. LIBROS de p8 Universidad de Nueva York, dijo que los clubes de lectura fueron originalmente un experimento de auto-educación de las mujeres, a quienes se les negó el acceso a la educación superior. “Fue una idea radical en el momento”, dijo. “Cualquiera que esté interesado en un club de lectura debe honrar que fueron pioneras”. Su siguiente libro es The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao de Junot Díaz. Lamm comentó que los programas de Word Up atraen a una interesante mezcla de gente. “Me siento honrado de ser parte de él”, dijo. Los grupos suelen ser íntimos, con unas cinco. “Hemos tenido muy buenas discusiones”, dijo. Las discusiones del Moriah Senior Center (90 de la avenida Bennett) son más grandes. La directora Shuli Gutman dijo que entre 10 y 20 personas asisten a las reuniones mensuales. Los asistentes deben ser miembros del Centro. La membresía es gratuita y está abierta a cualquier persona mayor de 60 años. Gutman favorece la ficción histórica. “Pero estoy abierta a sugerencias”, dijo. El favorito absoluto del club de lectura fue You Before Me, una novela de JoJo Moyes sobre un hombre que se paraliza y quiere acabar con su vida. “Es muy poderoso”, dijo Gutman. “A todos en el club de lectura les gustó”. Los miembros de Moriah obtienen una copia de préstamo gratuito del libro con anticipación, cortesía de la Biblioteca Fort Washington. Un bibliotecario también dirige la discusión. “Es una cosa maravillosa que hace la biblioteca”, dijo. La biblioteca Fort Washington (535 de la calle 179 oeste) también tiene su propio grupo de lectura mensual un sábado por la mañana. La recientemente renovada biblioteca Washington Heights (1000 de la avenida St. Nicholas) iniciará la programación de un club de lectura a finales del mes de abril. La biblioteca Inwood (4790 de Broadway) también cuenta con un grupo de discusión de libros y ofrece una verdadera joya en su programa Shakespeare Saturdays. La actriz local, directora y compositora Kendall Donna Stearns ha producido los programas gratuitos vespertinos desde 2004. El otoño pasado fue la anfitriona de una serie de Sonnet Slams. El evento del 5 de abril a las 2:15 pm es la proyección de Much Ado About Nothing de Joss Whedon. Es una comedia en blanco y negro de 2012, rodada en la casa del actor en un período de 12 días. El 26 de abril a las 3:00 pm, será anfitriona del Gran Concierto de cumpleaños 450° de Shakespeare, que incluye canciones de las april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com obras. “No todos los días cumples 450”, dijo Stearns. Si Shakespeare no es lo tuyo, la biblioteca La Casa Azul de East Harlem (143 de la calle 103 este) tiene un enfoque más contemporáneo. El club de lectura Rice and Beans se reúne el primer miércoles de cada mes a las 6:30 pm y el club Immigrant Voices se reúne el segundo martes de cada mes, también a las 6:30 p.m. Dependiendo de la audiencia, las discusiones son en inglés o en español, dijo la propietaria Aurora Anaya-Cerda. Las lecturas futuras del club Rice and Beans incluyen: When I Was Puerto Rican de Esmeralda Santiago y Song of the Water Saints de Nelly Rosario. Immigrant Voices ofrecerá The Guardians de Ana Castillo y Odyssey to the North de Mario Bencastro. La Casa Azul vende todos los títulos del club de lectura con 20 por ciento de descuento, todo el año. El club de lectura de la Librería y Centro Cultural Sisters Uptown (1942 de la avenida Ámsterdam) se reúne el último sábado del mes a las 3:00 p.m. Unas 15 personas suelen asistir, dijo Michael, portavoz de la tienda. Los títulos anteriores incluyen The Warmth of Other Suns de Isabel Wilkerson y Twelve Gates to the City de Daniel Black. La tienda ofrece a los clientes un descuento del 10 por ciento en los títulos del club de lectura. Los amantes de la lectura de Inwood pueden visitar Dichter Pharmacy (4953 de Broadway) el último miércoles del mes. El club de lectura Inwood Book se reúne en el sótano a las 6:30 p.m. Su siguiente libro es la novela egipcia The Yacoubian Building de Alaa Al-Aswany, y seguirán con The Goldfinch de Donna Tartt. Myra Alperson fundó el grupo. Ella también lidera Noshwalks, visitas guiadas culinarios de los barrios de Nueva York. La ubicación del club de lectura, junto al tren A, es muy conveniente. “El cuarto de baño está ahí y podemos correr escaleras arriba y conseguir bocadillos”, dijo ella. Han leído sobre todo ficción, incluyendo Middlesex de Jeffrey Eugenides pero planean leer las memorias de Gary Shteygart, Little Failure. Alperson comenzó su club de lectura después de que otros dos en los que había estado se desvanecieron y la gente no se llevaba bien. Klepper no quiere que su grupo de lectura se convierta en un grupo cerrado. Ya está planeando una combinación de club de lectura y barbacoa comunitaria en su casa, que cuenta con mesas al aire libre. “Ningún otro club de lectura tiene eso”, dijo. BLAST from p4 117th Street. Panagopoulos was a musician and the residence was spacious enough for his equipment—which included four guitars. Being in El Barrio meant that Panagopoulos could more directly take in more of his wife’s Latin culture—something she always appreciated. He did not take her love for granted. Every day he told her how beautiful she was—and he spent weeks deliberating on what to get her for her birthday. “He did whatever he needed to do to make me happy,” she recalled. “I have never been loved like that before, and I’ll probably never be loved like that again.” On Wed., Mar. 12th, at approximately 8:15 a.m., Pérez, left for her editing job at the Spanish language paper El Diario La Prensa—not knowing that she would be leaving behind life as she knew it forever. At 9:30 a.m., her apartment building and the one next to it collapsed. Her home was devoured in flames after a natural gas explosion. The incident injured 70 people, and killed eight, including Panagopoulos. The loss has left Pérez, and many others, at a loss. Friends remember Panagopoulos as being vibrant, friendly and full of life. Noted by all was how much he loved Pérez. “He was a wonderful man. He loved her very much. He was very bright, and very opinionated. He was just a very cool person to be around,” said Geraldine Cols Azocar, who is the president of National Association of Hispanic Journalists, of which Pérez is a member. Her fellow NAHJ members have rallied to her side. Liseth Pérez left her home early on Wed., Mar. 12th. “I had no idea one of our members had been affected by the explosion. When I found out, I was like ‘Whoa, we have to do something as an association to help her out’,” said the organization’s secretary Octavio Blanco, a Washington Heights resident. When Blanco floated the idea of starting a fund to help Pérez, the response was immediate. The NAHJ launched the fundraiser on Give Forward; the goal of raising $40,000 has mostly been met. Blanco did not get to meet Panagopoulos, but he has been learning more about him. Free-spirited, larger than life, big-hearted, and “the really cool Greek guy” are just some of the ways he has been described. “It was so clear that he touched a lot of people in a positive way,” said Blanco. He also went to Papanopoulos’s wake two weeks ago at Evangelismos Greek Church on the Upper West Side, where Pérez shared memories about her husband. “He told me every morning how beautiful I looked. He spent one month looking for the best present for me for every birthday,” she said at the wake. “Special, unique, different, that’s how he was. Rest in peace Andreas; it’s not going to be easy without you,” she also wrote on her Facebook wall in Spanish. Pananopoulos’s funeral was held in Astoria, Queens, and he was buried in Greece. The money from the fundraiser will help cover travel and funeral expenses, and there are no specifications on how Pérez uses the EXPLOSIÓN de p4 natural. El incidente lesionó a 70 personas y mató a ocho, incluyendo a Panagopoulos. La pérdida ha dejado a Pérez, y a muchos otros, quebrantados. Los amigos recuerdan a Panagopoulos como vibrante, amable y lleno de vida. Fue conocido por todos lo mucho que amaba a Pérez. “Era un hombre maravilloso. Él la amaba mucho. Era muy inteligente y muy obstinado. Era simplemente una persona genial para tener cerca”, dijo Geraldine Cols Azocar, quien es la presidenta de la Asociación de Nacional de Periodistas Hispanos, de la cual Pérez es miembro. Sus compañeros de la NAHJ (por sus siglas en inglés) se han manifestado a su lado. “No tenía idea de que uno de nuestros miembros se hubiera visto afectado por la explosión. Cuando me enteré, pensé, ‘tenemos que hacer algo como una asociación para ayudarla’”, dijo el secretario de la organización Octavio Blanco, un residente de Washington Heights. Cuando Blanco lanzó la idea de crear un fondo para ayudar a Pérez, la respuesta fue inmediata. La NAHJ inició la recaudación de fondos en Give Forward, la meta de recaudar $40,000 dólares casi se ha cumplido. Blanco no llegó a conocer a Panagopoulos, pero ha estado aprendiendo más acerca de él. De espíritu libre, más grande que la vida, de gran corazón, y “el chico griego realmente genial” son sólo algunas de las maneras en que ha sido descrito. “Fue muy claro que él tocó a mucha gente de una manera positiva”, dijo Blanco. También asistió al funeral de Papanopoulos hace dos semanas en Iglesia griega “Ahora sólo tengo que salir adelante”, dice Pérez. Foto: L. Pérez Evangelismos en el Upper West Side, donde Pérez compartió recuerdos de su esposo. “Me decía cada mañana lo hermosa que me veía. Pasó un mes buscando el mejor regalo para mí para cada cumpleaños”, dijo en el velorio. “Especial, único, diferente, eso es lo que era. Descansa en paz Andreas, no va a ser fácil sin ti”, también escribió en su muro de Facebook en español. El funeral de Pananopoulos se celebró en Astoria, Queens, y fue enterrado en Grecia. El dinero de la recaudación de fondos ayudará april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com funds to help rebuild. Azocar and Blanco are both heartened by the outpouring of help that has come since they started the fundraiser. Half of the funds were raised within 48 hours, and the first installment has already been sent to Pérez. “I’m extremely, extremely amazed at the response people had,” said Azocar. “It was surprising and extremely moving.” Blanco agreed. “It was heart-warming and validated my belief that people want to do good,” he said. “It was a surreal experience to see so many people contribute.” The contributors, over 470 of them to date, range from fellow NAHJ members to college classmates of Paganopoulos, and many, many strangers who knew neither Pérez or Panagopoulos. Pérez says she will seek to use the funds to find an apartment soon. She has been staying with friends in the meantime. She will have to rebuild from scratch. Sometimes it occurs to her that she should get new clothes—those, too, are gone—but the thought quickly passes, as do thoughts about the furniture, dishes, and other such concerns. “At this point, I don’t care. It feels like it doesn’t matter anymore.” The support of friends and strangers alike has uplifted her. “From all this tragedy, I get beauty,” she says. “It’s been really touching. Now I just have to keep going.” If you would like to donate, please visit www.giveforward.com/fundraiser/6864/ help-Liseth-Pérez. a cubrir los gastos del viaje y del funeral, y no hay especificaciones sobre cómo Pérez utilizará los fondos para ayudar a reconstruir. Azocar y Blanco se animaron por el derramamiento de ayuda que llegó desde que comenzaron la recaudación de fondos. La mitad se reunió en 48 horas y la primera cuota ya ha sido enviada a Pérez. “Estoy muy, muy sorprendida por la respuesta que la gente tuvo”, dijo Azocar. “Fue sorprendente y muy conmovedor”. Blanco estuvo de acuerdo. “Fue conmovedor y validó mi creencia de que la gente desea hacer el bien” dijo. “Fue una experiencia surrealista ver a tanta gente contribuyendo”. Los contribuyentes, más de 470 hasta la fecha, van desde colegas miembros de la NAHJ hasta compañeros de clase de la universidad de Paganopoulos, y muchos, muchos extraños que no conocían a Pérez ni a Panagopoulos. Pérez dice que va a tratar de utilizar los fondos para encontrar un apartamento pronto. Mientras tanto ella ha estado viviendo con amigos. Tendrá que reconstruir desde cero. A veces piensa que debe conseguir ropa nueva, esa, también, se consumió, pero el pensamiento pasa rápidamente, al igual que los pensamientos sobre los muebles, platos y otras preocupaciones. “En este momento, no me importa. Se siente como que ya no importa”. El apoyo de los amigos y extraños, por igual, la ha ayudado. “De toda esta tragedia, obtuve belleza”, dice ella. “Ha sido realmente conmovedor. Ahora sólo tengo que seguir adelante”. Si desea realizar una donación, por favor visite www.giveforward.com/ fundraiser/6864/help-Liseth-Pérez. 21 E l miércoles 19 de marzo, los estudiantes de la escuela secundaria Central Park East abogaron en contra del tabaco y sobre los efectos nocivos del humo. Se unieron a miles de jóvenes en todo el país para el 19° día anual ‘Kick Butts,’ una celebración anual de liderazgo juvenil y activismo. La juventud se centró en la reducción del humo de segunda mano en la comunidad de East Harlem. Los estudiantes colaboraron con la Asociación para un más saludable Manhattan para hacer campaña en el vecindario y pedir a los propietarios de negocios firmar un compromiso voluntario para mantener sus aceras “libres de humo”. Las empresas y organizaciones locales están en una posición única para combatir el humo de segunda mano, sus áreas al aire libre pueden ser el hogar no sólo el humo del tabaco, sino también de colillas de cigarrillos, que son la forma más común de basura y pueden tardar décadas en descomponerse. En 2011, la ciudad tuvo un momento histórico en que los negocios de la calle 110 se convirtió en la primera cuadra de la ciudad en volverse voluntariamente libre de humo. Por esta razón, los estudiantes lanzaron su evento en la calle 110, frente al Centro East Harlem Asthma of Excellence (EHACE). “Estamos encantados de ver a estos jóvenes compartir su creatividad y sus voces, y llamar la atención sobre cómo el tabaco ha perjudicado a su comunidad”, dijo La’Shawn Brown-Dudley de la Oficina del Distrito de Harlem del este y central de Salud Pública. “Su activismo inspirará a otros a entender que todos compartimos el aire y tenemos que ser conscientes de aquellos que nos rodean”. 22 Compartiendo el aire The Manhattan Times wants to publish your creative writing in our Literary Pages Las empresas participantes recibieron una calcomanía “We Share Air”. Más de 12 empresas firmaron el compromiso de aire “libre de humo”, a cada empresa participante se le dio un certificado de agradecimiento y una calcomanía con la frase “We Share Air” para mostrar. Si bien las tasas de tabaquismo están en un mínimo histórico en la ciudad de Nueva York, el tabaquismo y la exposición al humo de segunda mano siguen siendo las principales causas de muerte y enfermedad. La Alianza para un Manhattan más saludable en la escuela Icahn de Medicina en Mount Sinai se ha comprometido a mejorar la salud de los residentes de Manhattan haciendo que la opción saludable sea la más sencilla. Manhattan más saludable es parte de una iniciativa en toda la ciudad, financiada a través de una subvención de Transformación de la Comunidad (CTG por sus siglas en inglés) recibida por el Departamento de Salud e Higiene Mental de la ciudad de Nueva York, de los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades. Por favor, visite y aprenda más en www.HealthierNYC. org. april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com Send us your: Fiction Poetry Essay Screenplay for consideration. Email [email protected] for more information. Border Crossing features Amanda Sayle Rinzel, Katie Braden and Tom Pennacchini. Photo: Gerry Goodstein FRONTAL from p2 also like the same things in theater. “Not everyone does,” Burby said. “We like genuine moments, genuine listening, spontaneity.” “We’ll give up a laugh for sincerity,” Antar added. “We don’t see them as mutually exclusive, but we don’t go for the gag. The humor has always got to come out of the sincerity.” There is a lot of humor in Full Frontal. Some of it will result in nervous laughter from the audience. Antar considers a pause a line of dialogue. “Without that pause, the next line doesn’t make sense,” he said. “It’s a response to the pause. It’s a response to the awkwardness.” “My job is to help the actors find a way to make it work,” Burby said. In the first and most explicit play, the actors climb in the back seat of car and have sex. Acreditan al tren A como ayuda para su proceso creativo. The audience doesn’t see everything because it’s dark. Burby didn’t start rehearsals with the physicality. The actors read it through a few times. They talked about the characters’ back stories. They also talked about what their real-life friends or significant others would think if they saw the play. Only after that did they get into the back seat – fully dressed – to choreograph the moves. Eventually the actors got more comfortable with the scene. “The trust builds and they’re just doing this incredible courageous work now,” Burby said. “It’s really beautiful.” Full Frontal runs from April 3 to April 12 at the Jewel Box Theater, 312 West 36th Street, 4th Floor. For more information, please visit www.workshoptheater.org. FRONTAL de p2 cosas en el teatro. “No con todo el mundo es así”, dijo Burby. “Nos gustan los momentos genuinos, escuchar genuinamente, la espontaneidad”. “Reiremos por sinceridad”, añadió Antar. “Nosotros no los vemos como mutuamente excluyentes, pero no vamos por la broma. El humor siempre tiene que salir de la sinceridad”. Hay mucho humor en Full Frontal. Algo de ello se traducirá en una risa nerviosa de la audiencia. Antar considera una pausa una línea de diálogo. “Sin esa pausa, la siguiente línea no tiene sentido”, dijo. “Es una respuesta a la pausa. Es una respuesta a la incomodidad”. “Mi trabajo es ayudar a los actores a encontrar una manera de hacer que funcione”, dijo Burby. En la primera y más explícita obra, los actores suben en el asiento trasero del coche y tienen relaciones sexuales. El público no ve todo porque april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com está oscuro. Burby no comenzó los ensayos con el mundo físico. Los actores la leyeron un par de veces. Hablaron de historias detrás de los personajes, también de lo que sus amigos de la vida real o parejas pensarían si vieran la obra. Sólo después de eso se acomodaron en el asiento trasero -completamente vestidos- para coreografiar los movimientos. Eventualmente, los actores pudieron sentirse más cómodos con la escena. “La confianza se construye y ellos simplemente están haciendo ahora esta increíble y valiente labor”, dijo Burby. Es realmente hermoso”. Full Frontal se presentará del 3 al 12 de abril en el teatro Jewel Box, ubicado en el 312 de la calle 36 oeste, 4° piso. Para más información, visite por favor www.workshoptheater.org. 23 ADVERTISEMENT AcaciaAnswers Un cafecito con ACDP How do I help my daughter? Dear Social Worker: I am worried about my teenage daughter. The past couple of months, she seems sad and withdrawn from me and her brothers and sisters. She doesn’t want to go to school or socialize with friends much either. She eats less at meals and is losing weight. She used to be so affectionate, now she hardly even looks at me. I’m really worried. What’s the matter with my baby? Marie Dear Marie: Adolescence is full of ups and downs for teens, and their families. Few troubled teens will seek help on their own so it’s our job, as parents, to keep watch on their emotional health. Your writing to me demonstrates your concern. The symptoms you describe— weight loss, withdrawal from activities and people— are classic symptoms of depression. Approximately 11% of teens have had some bout of depression by age 18. Although temporary sadness is a normal reaction to some of life’s events, depression is more intense and lasts longer than several weeks. It’s also possible that your daughter may be reacting to some loss in her life, anxiety about school or a family situ- ation, or she may have selfesteem issues related to her weight or to bullying and pressure from peers. She may feel like she can control the pressures by controlling eat- Have a question or a concern? We invite you to write us at [email protected] so that your issue is addressed in our next “Cafecito” column. ing. Our society tends to display an unhealthy focus on dieting, appearance and weight, which could affect your daughter’s ability to eat a healthy diet and feel satisfied with how she looks. Regardless of the cause, she is suffering. Teenagers have such strong emotions and so little experience dealing with them that depression, grief and bullying can feel utterly overwhelming, and it may seem like nothing will ever change. But it will, and you can help. Your daughter should recieve an assessment at ACDP’s Mental Health Clinic to de- Yerany Marasco, LMSW termine if she’s depressed or suffering from an eating disorder. The sooner her diagnosis is determined, the sooner treatment can begin and your baby can make a full recovery. She’s also a good candidate for our Audubon Youth Program, where she can connect with other teens experiencing similar issues. We can also help you and her siblings better understand what she’s going through and work through it as a family. ¿Tiene usted alguna pregunta o una preocupación? Le invitamos a que nos escriba a [email protected] para que contestarle en nuestra próxima edición de “Un cafecito”. Acacia in the Community Asociación Comunal de Dominicanos Progresistas (ACDP) 3940 Broadway New York, NY 10032 212.781.5500 www.acdp.org Audubon Partnership for Economic Development (APED) 513 West 207th Street New York, NY 10034 212.544.2400 www.audubonpartnership.org Barbee Family Health Center 266 West 145th Street New York, NY 10030 212.690.4002 East Harlem Council for Community Improvement, Inc. 413 E 120th Street New York, NY 10035 212.410.7707 Acacia en la Comunidad For a full listing of all Acacia’s locations and services throughout New York, please visit www.acacianetwork.org. www.acacianetwork.org 24 april 2, 2014 • Manhattan Times • www.manhattantimesnews.com