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Brooklyn

Going Bagless in Brooklyn

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Loretta Gendville didn’t want to become a bag lady.

But a law enacted last year required Gendville, owner of Brooklyn’s Area chain of children’s stores, to put out large containers to collect and recycle plastic bags. So the reluctant bag gatherer recently took a drastic step: she eliminated bags altogether.

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Girls Explore the Science of Fashion

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Fashion designer Diana Eng is using her work to spur girls’ interest in math and science.  At her Feb. 24 Fairy Tale Fashion Show, Eng invited 17 students from the Urban Assembly Institute of Math and Science for Young Women in Brooklyn to see her latest tech-inspired fashions.

Eng, the 26-year-old author of “Fashion Geek: Clothing, Accessories, Tech,” hopes to inspire more girls to take up math- and science-based careers.

Dying For Yoga – in a Funeral Home

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

What happens to a funeral home when it’s no longer a funeral home?

For Ava Gerber, who recently bought the Robert F. Cranford Funeral Home near Fort Greene Park on DeKalb Avenue, the answer was obvious: turn it into a yoga studio.

Then, bring students to the embalming room and help them meditate on death.

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Daycare in Gentrifying Areas Faces Ax

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Five dollars a week.

That’s what Fort Greene resident Nia Hoyte pays so that her three-year-old son, Kaiden Neith, can learn to read. These days, although he’s not old enough to understand all of the words, Kaiden’s a bit of a bookworm.

“Every day he comes home he’s like, ‘Mommy, read, read, read,’” Ms. Hoyte said last Tuesday morning after dropping her son off at Duffield Children’s Center on Fleet Place, a 15-minute walk from their apartment. “We read on the bus, we read on the train.”

Duffield, which is run by the Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service (BBCS), is a publicly funded day care center serving a number of children from nearby public housing developments and lower income families. Duffield also is one of two centers in Fort Greene that might have to close if a proposal to shutter 15 care centers in gentrifying areas citywide goes through.

To the city, the leases for some of the centers — the list of which also includes Farragut Day Care Center on Gold Street — are draining money from a tight budget. Located in neighborhoods where real estate values are rising, the spaces themselves are no longer affordable.

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Gay-Friendly Bar Faces Final Curtain

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Scraping by on Scrap Metal

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

On The Run For MetroCards

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Merchants Sour on Lollipop Meters

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

‘Obama Oil’ an Atlantic Ave. Hit

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009