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Youthful Twist & Dance To Old School Tunes

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Break-dancing, as performed by students from P.S. 140 on Saturday, has had a big part in the musical history of the Bronx.

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  Students from Public School 140 performing as Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, with Khalil Wilson, center, as Lymon.

Youthful Twist & Dance To Old School Tunes 

Khalil Wilson’s braids bounced as he bobbed his head, snapped his fingers and sang a cappella, his high-pitched voice carrying across the ballroom. The cheers he drew from the audience were nothing new for a boy who has been singing since age 3 and once auditioned for a role in “The Lion King.”

Yet these spectators were excited about much more than Khalil’s precocious performing skills. It was the context of his performance that seemed most captivating.

Khalil, 11, and several of his classmates from Public School 140 in the Bronx were playing the roles of Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, doo-wop sensations of the 1950s. Singing the hit “Why Do Fools Fall in Love,” these youngsters were a dancing, singing history lesson.

Bringing history to life was a prevailing theme on Saturday as students from several New York City public schools displayed exhibits and put on performances at the annual convention for the Organization of American Historians, which was held in Midtown Manhattan. This was the first time that students have participated in the convention.

Some considered it a breath of fresh air for an event that can be dull and insular, with scholars spending much of their time reading and discussing their work with one another.

“Now you’re bringing the student work into the convention,” said Mark Naison, a professor of African-American studies and history at Fordham University and an organizer of the exhibition. “It’s like saying history should not be in an ivory tower. History is a place where people can carry on a discussion, which goes from the university to the community college to the high school to the elementary school, and all of these people can communicate with each other.”

Professor Naison, a 61-year-old with round, thick-framed glasses and ruffled gray hair that is receding, perhaps best got his point across when he took to the stage.

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Hunts Point Subway Station Shutdown Due To Fuel Leak

Hunts Point Subway Station Shutdown Due To Fuel Leak

Hunts Point Subway Station Shutdown Due To Fuel Leak

1/19/2008 

Gasoline leaked into the Hunts Point Avenue station on the No. 6 line.

The source was a storage tank from the BP gas station above the Bronx subway stop.

The station was evacuated and power was shut off.

Trains in both directions bypassed the Hunts Points station.

Brooklyn Bridge-bound trains were running express from the Parkchester Station to the Third Avenue-138th Street station. Trains skipped the following stations: St. Lawrence Avenue, Morrison-Soundview Avenues, Elder Avenue, Whitlock Avenue, Longwood Avenue, E 149th Street, E 143rd Street-St.Marys’s Street, Cypress Avenue and Brook Avenue.

The MTA advised passengers to take the Pelham Bay Park-bound trains to the Parkchester Station and then take a Brooklyn Bridge-bound train.

Hazmat workers were cleaning up the gasoline.

SOURCE: MyFoxNY.com

 

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