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Born In The Bronx .. Hip Hop’s Baby Picture Album

Born in The Bronx cover

Born In The Bronx

Joe Conzo

Joe Conzo: Co-Author Of The Book Born In The Bronx

Born In The Bronx .. Hip Hop’s Baby Picture Album  

Joe Conzo accredited to being Hip Hop’s 1st photographer took a minute to talk it up with Talk Bronx about his new book Born In The Bronx and the book signing.

Through Born in the Bronx, Joe Conzo presents a unique cross-section of an explosive and experimental time in music history. Born in the Bronx is a striking anthology of Hip Hop’s baby steps. Not only does it capture the emergence of a burgeoning culture but also the fashion and character of the surrounding community through rare photographs of MC’s and DJs to records, flyers, and other ephemera.

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Elephant Ensemble Theater Brings New Production to Bronx Hospital

Elephant Ensemble To Perform “Thumbelina” to Kids at Montefiore

Elephant Ensemble Theater will bring their 2008 production of “Thumbelina: The Story of a Brave Little Girl” to the Bronx when they perform on March 1st at The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore.

Elephant Ensemble Theater will bring their 2008 production of “Thumbelina: The Story of a Brave Little Girl” to the Bronx when they perform on March 1st at The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore.

This represents Elephant’s mission to bring free theater to children in New York City and outer borough hospitals who do not have significant programming.

Elephant Ensemble presents valuable role models for the children and leave them with a heightened sense of morale.

Their current show is a Thumbelina for modern times, a spunky little girl who, once lost, fights her way back home to safety. The production utilizes many classic children’s theater techniques such as audience participation, best illustrated when Thumbelina drives off an on-coming storm by blowing the clouds away with the help of her audience.

Thumbelina debuted in October 2007 at Mt. Sinai Hospital and performed in a production studio in front of a blue screen, where the play was then broadcasted live into children’s rooms. This time they will perform in a playroom in front of a live audience when they bring the show to Montefiore.

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Bronx’s Mamosa Lounge Hosts Clinton Support Event

The Mamosa Lounge hosted a Clinton event Thursday night.

 The Mamosa Lounge hosted a Clinton event Thursday night.

Ana tries to sway another voter toward Hillary.

 Ana tries to sway another voter toward Hillary.

The salsa dancers only waited a few minutes after the debate to start dancing.

 The salsa dancers only waited a few minutes after the debate to start dancing.

Bronx’s Mamosa Lounge Hosts Clinton Support Event

Only in New York City could you find a woman from the Honduran rainforests trying to convince an Indian man to vote for a woman president while they smoked cigarettes outside a salsa bar.

That scene took place Thursday night after Sen. Hillary Clinton supporters watched her debate Sen. Barack Obama over beers and munchies at the Mamosa Lounge in the East Bronx. The Bronx County Democrats put on the event and several political heavyweights attended, including the potential next mayor of the city - comptroller Bill Thompson. This wasn’t a surprise considering 48 of 52 elected officials in the Bronx support Clinton.

But 32-year-old Ana Mejia stood out as a non-politico in a stylish Hillary t-shirt and slacks. Most of the suit-wearing crowd treated the event as a schmooze-fest with free drinks. A few paid attention to the debate. Mejia, who said she recorded the debate at home, had another agenda. The Bronx resident wanted to talk to politicians about a multicultural voter registration drive that would include blood donations, job applications and free condoms.

“I’m here to network and get things done,” said Mejia, who moved to the Bronx from San Pedro Sula, Honduras in 1992 and became a citizen a decade later.

And she also tried to sway voters, including this reporter. Mejia led a 60-person bus trip to New Hampshire for the primary. She organized a canvassing group in Manchester and said that she swayed a lot of voters using what she called the five P’s (Proper Preparation Prevents Poor Performance) — a sales tool she learned when she worked retail.

“I told [the canvassers in New Hampshire] that they had to listen to what the voters said, which is a big part of sales and then speak from your heart,” she said with a sensational smile. “She won that election in New Hampshire by a small margin and I think it’s because of people like me and the people that were on that bus.”

As she sipped on a Corona, she talked more about why she didn’t support Obama, even though she liked him.

“Obama inspires me. He’s black. I’m Hispanic. I’m a minority. Now I think I have a chance too,” said Mejia, who took vacation days Thursday and Friday to volunteer for Clinton. “But do I believe he has experience or backbone? No.”

When asked about the recent media coverage of the perceived divide between blacks and Latinos, Mejia didn’t hesitate to answer.

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A Bronx Family Struggles To Survive Financially & In Heath

A Long Illness Compounds Dubious Financial Decisions

A Bronx Family Struggles To Survive Financially & In Heath

“For now,” Ms. Santiago said.

“The mortgage company owns it,” her husband added.

“Right now,” Ms. Santiago, 48, said, “we’re practically out the door.”

Their two-family home, in the Bronx’s Little Italy, is sparsely furnished, with a folding table and chairs in the dining room. A picture taken on their wedding day hangs high on the wall.

The Santiagos have two sons at home, Timothy, 16, and Nicholas, 20; and twin granddaughters, Tiffanie and Stephanie Caprio, 14, whose mother is unable to care for them.

For 23 years, Mr. Santiago, 58, has worked at a Bronx car service as a manager and dispatcher. Until last summer, he was earning $635 a week.

They bought their house for $155,000 in 1998, using $20,000 in savings as a down payment. Their mortgage payments started at about $1,000 a month, but over the years, in the thrill of first-time homeownership, the Santiagos made some refinancing decisions they now regret. Their monthly payments swelled to $3,599, they said. The family was living paycheck to paycheck, but they were making it.

Then, last year, Mr. Santiago had a heart attack.

“It wasn’t a real big heart attack where I fell on the floor,” he said. “It was just a lot of chest pains that wouldn’t go away. I thought it was heartburn.”

On July 2, he drove himself to St. Barnabas Hospital.

Later that day, he was transferred by ambulance to Montefiore Medical Center. Three days later, he had surgery to unblock a clogged artery.

Recovery took almost four months, and during that time Mr. Santiago could not work. Ms. Santiago does not work: She has epilepsy, and her seizures are not well controlled by medication. She cares for her husband at home.

While he was hospitalized, Mr. Santiago learned that he had diabetes. He has a fear of needles, so his wife gives him his daily insulin injections, as he looks away.

“I tried letting him do it himself and he got upset,” she said. “He wouldn’t do it.”

The family income shrank to $340 a month in disability payments. The Santiagos soon exhausted their savings and fell behind on their mortgage payments and other bills.

Mr. Santiago returned to work at the end of October. By then, they owed about $14,000 in mortgage payments and had received a notice of foreclosure. Mr. Santiago is not strong enough to resume all of his previous duties, and now works four days a week as a dispatcher, earning $350.

Their monthly income is supplemented by $1,646 collected from two tenants who rent parts of the house. They also receive $772 in food stamps each month.

With Mr. Santiago back at work, they were able to resume making mortgage payments. For help with bills, they turned to the Children’s Aid Society, one of seven agencies supported by The New York Times Neediest Cases Fund.

In the fall, $1,388.51 in Neediest Cases money covered the family’s $910.82 Con Edison bill and a $477.69 water bill. “That was a great help because I didn’t have the money,” Mr. Santiago said.

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New Recycling Sites In Bronx

New Recycling Sites In Bronx

BROOKLYN — Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Sanitation Commissioner John J. Doherty earlier this week announced that four new heavily trafficked sites have been added to the Department of Sanitation’s (DSNY) successful Public Space Recycling Program.

Sixteen new sets of blue and green recycling receptacles have been placed at the four sites, which were selected based on pedestrian traffic volume, proximity to commercial districts and transportation facilities, and the volume of recyclable materials that were entering the waste stream in litter baskets. “Now New Yorkers who read the paper on the subway or drink a bottle of water while commuting have more places to recycle their paper and plastics,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “Increasing recycling rates is one of the ambitious goals in our Solid Waste Management Plan, and I hope to further expand public space recycling in the future.”

The new public space recycling locations are:

• Bronx — White Plains Road: Brady Avenue to Pelham Parkway;
• Brooklyn — Pennsylvania Avenue: Starrett City;
• Brooklyn — Front Street: Brooklyn Heights; and
• Staten Island — Staten Island Borough Hall: Stuyvesant Place at Hyatt Street.
The existing public space recycling locations are:
• Bronx — Poe Park;
• Brooklyn — Columbus Park;
• Manhattan — Battery Park City;
• Manhattan — Union Square Park;
• Manhattan — Whitehall Street Staten Island Ferry terminal;
• Queens — Main Street commercial district in the Flushing section;
• Queens — Hoffman Park;
• Staten Island — Clove Lake Park; and
• Staten Island — Saint George Staten Island Ferry terminal.

SOURCE: BrooklynEagle.com

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