HARLEM HAPPENINGS

Indian Road Café

January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

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* Weekly Events / Updates *

* @ Indian Road Café *

* January 16 2008 *

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Dear Friends and Neighbors,

We are pleased to announce the addition of Brian Newman, our new Executive Chef.

Brian Newman comes to “Indian Road Café” from Southern Florida where he worked as a chef for more than 12 years. He began his career learning from his mother (who is also a chef) at her restaurant “The Gun Club Café” located in West Palm Beach.

Having no formal restaurant schooling, Brian eventually left the family nest and to work and train under Master Chef Daniel Ignizio at Vero Beach’s “The Black Pearl.” In time, Ignizio moved on and Brian took over all Executive Chef duties. Within his first year at “The Black Pearl” Brian was awarded two of Florida’s prestigious “Golden Fork” awards.

After moving to New York in 2007, Brian accepted an Executive Chef position at “44 Tapas” in Croton on Hudson, where he took on the challenge of starting a business from scratch. After designing the “44 Tapas” menu, Brian was honored to have some of his dishes featured in The New York Times Magazine and Westchester Magazine.

Brian now joins the staff of Indian Road Café as Executive Chef, bringing seasonal and creative comfort food such as Lobster Macaroni & Cheese and Chicken Pot Pie with Jalapeno Cornbread to Northern Manhattan.

We’ll be announcing more of Brian’s new menu additions in the following weeks.

As Always visit our Event Calendar on our website for Updated Events (htt p://indianroadcafe.com/Calendar.html)

See You There!

    Indian Road Café & Market

    Contact Information

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    phone: 212-942-7451
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    Categories: GENERAL

    WEEK-END ACTIVITIES

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

    NYRR THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE RACES 2009{CQ} The second of four indoor track races for those 19 and older, with lengths from 800 meters to two miles. Registration, 6:15 p.m. Races, 7 p.m. Sponsored by the New York Road Runners.{cq} New Balance Track and Field Center at the Armory{cq}, 216 Fort Washington Avenue, at 168th Street, Washington Heights{cq}, (212) 860-4455{cq}, nyrr.org{cq}; $10.

    URBAN TRAIL CONFERENCE{CQ} Sunday at 12:30 p.m., a hike of more than four miles in the South Bronx, meeting in Manhattan at the Bx15 bus stop at 125th Street and First Avenue. (212) 924-7486{cq}, urbantrail.org{cq}; $3.{cq}

    CELEBRATE THE DREAM{CQ} Monday at 6:30 p.m., a tribute to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., presented by the JCC in Manhattan, with performances by the klezmer clarinetist David Krakauer, the trombonist Fred Wesley, the soul singer Kyle Rifkin and the rap artists Socalled and C-Rayz. There will also be a video presentation, and remarks by the city comptroller, William C. Thompson Jr. {cq} Symphony Space{cq}, 2537 Broadway, at 95th Street{cq}, symphonyspace.org{cq}; free.

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    Categories: GENERAL

    Black History, Alive in Washington

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

    Brendan Smialowski for The New York Times

    A quilt, part of the exhibition “Jubilee: African American Celebration,” at the Anacostia Community Museum.

    Black History, Alive in Washington

    By HOLLAND COTTER

    In 1957 Washington officially became the country’s first city where blacks were the majority. But by then, artists, writers and performers of African descent had been flourishing there for a century and a half or more. Seeking out their traces makes for a lively city tour, and one very much of the moment as an African-American first family makes Washington its home.

    But before the tour, a shout-out of names you’ll be looking for: Alma Thomas, Frederick Douglass, Duke Ellington, Elizabeth Catlett, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Sweet Daddy Grace, Lois Mailou Jones and Marian Anderson, not to mention Marvin Gaye and the godfather of Go-go — the D.C. version of funk — Chuck Brown. All long-term or short-term Washingtonians; all in spirit or person still here read more…

    Categories: GENERAL

    Beware of IRS e-mail scams

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

    Beware of IRS e-mail scams

    Posted: 02:22 PM ET

    Tax season isn’t quite here yet, but scammers are already making the rounds. The IRS is warning consumers about bogus e-mails that dupes people into giving away private information.

    gerri.willis

    1) Don’t be fooled

    The aim of these e-mails is to trick you into giving away personal info — like your bank account numbers or your Social Security number. The scam artists then use this information to steal your identity or to get access to other personal info or your money. These e-mails may say you’re eligible for a tax refund or indicate that you qualify for a payment from last year’s economic stimulus plan.CLICK FOR FULL ARTICLE

    [CNN]

    Categories: GENERAL

    TRANSITIONED – Catherine Prioleau, age 66

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment


    Catherine Prioleau, age 66.

     Died Monday, January 12, 2009, in the Chambersburg, PA Hospital after battling breast cancer for several years. Catherine was a retired Colonel in the U.S. Military, she attended the Harlem School of Nursing, earned her BS degree from Temple, and her Masters from NYU.

     She was Director of Nursing in Harlem Hospital for several years, and was very proud of her service there. She was also a nurse at several hospitals in the New York area. Surviving is her husband, Efraim Capestany, 8 sisters, 1 brother, & several nieces & nephews. Funeral services are being held at Corpus Christ Cemetery, Chambersburg, PA.

    Categories: GENERAL · UPTOWN FLAVOR
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    School of Hard Knocks: Edward Jones Still Sells Investments Door-to-Door

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

    School of Hard Knocks: Edward Jones Still Sells Investments Door-to-Door

    Turnover Is High, but the Company Is Hiring; Jim Haston Sees Some Sales Resistance

    MONETT, Mo. — At least three times a week, Jim Haston puts on a suit and tie and goes door-to-door in this town of 7,500. He’s pitching investments during the chilliest of bear markets.

    In the 13 months since he started working the streets, Mr. Haston, 41 years old, has had dozens of doors slammed in his face. He has climbed a tree to rescue a stranded child. He has walked through summer heat and below-freezing winter weather. He has also attracted $2.1 million in new assets.

    "I get nervous all the time," says Mr. Haston, a financial adviser for St. Louis investment firm Edward Jones. He sometimes breaks out in a sweat in his gleaming green 2001 Chevy pickup before he walks up to a house.

    In the midst of the worst stock market since the 1930s, Edward Jones has been growing the old-fashioned way: knocking on doors. The company is unrivaled in that business. Whereas other securities firms are shrinking, its 12,000-broker force has added 998 brokers this year. It plans to add another 5,000 by 2012, according to Jim Weddle, the firm’s chief executive.

    Mary Pilon

    Jim Haston, looking for investors in Monett, Mo.

    In its school of hard knocks, Edward Jones puts all of it brokers through a five-day training session before sending them out on the street. They are taught to hold a golf ball in their hands so that knocks are loud and knuckles don’t wear down.

    Sixty percent of the people Edward Jones hires quit in the first six months on the job, says Kevin Alm, head of training. He started out as a financial adviser in Minnesota one winter several years ago. "People are really nice to you when it’s that cold out," Mr. Alm says.

    Mr. Weddle, the company’s managing partner, still knocks on the occasional door himself, and shadows advisers. Many years ago, he was chased by a bull while door-knocking in Connersville, Ind. He found refuge behind a tractor driven by a farmer.

    While the rest of Wall Street was transformed by everything from low-cost trades to alternative investments, Edward Jones follows much the same model it did when it was founded in 1922. It features a combination of high fees and relatively conservative investments.

    Jones brokers earn a salary during their first four months when studying for exams and in training. After that, the base pay begins dropping and is eventually replaced entirely by commissions and bonuses. The average salesperson, including some women, earns $65,000 a year, according to the firm.

    video

    Selling Stocks Door to Door Rain or Shine

    2:00

    Jim Haston, a door-to-door financial advisor for Edward Jones Investments, hits the streets and attempts to get people warmed up to the idea of investing amid a very chilly economic landscape.

    Edward Jones has avoided some market meltdowns. It didn’t put its clients in technology stocks before the dot-com bubble burst early in this decade. And it didn’t sell auction-rate securities, a market that collapsed last year.

    This past fall, Edward Jones’s management asked the company’s brokers to personally call clients to apologize for losses in their portfolios. "Most people were really understanding," says Josh DeTar, 32, a new adviser in Joplin, Mo.

    The firm has gotten in some regulatory trouble for its sales practices. In 2004, Edward Jones paid $79 million to customers as part of a regulatory settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission in which it neither admitted nor denied wrongdoing. According to the allegations, Jones had failed to tell customers that mutual-fund companies were paying it to put customers in certain funds.

    Mr. DeTar checks in at least once a month with all of his clients. He reads obituaries in the local paper and sends condolence cards.

    Some of his contacts call to talk about their market stress. "Right now," he says, "It’s almost more like being a therapist."

    Most Edward Jones advisers don’t have sales backgrounds. Their ranks have included a rocket scientist, a sandwich-shop supervisor and a pro baseball player. Frank Finnegan traded his Yankees pinstripes for a business suit in 1951. He’s still with the firm.

    Extending a Fist

    During a recent training session near the St. Louis headquarters, 65 advisers gathered in classrooms and broke into groups of 12. Lessons learned: Friends knock; solicitors ring the bell. Dogs should be greeted by extending a fist for the dog to sniff rather than a flat hand.

    "A flat hand is an invitation to be bitten," trainer Amber Raney told the trainees, who wrote notes in thick, three-ring binders.

    "What about the talkers?" asked a trainee, referring to loquacious customers "Just keep slowly walking away," Ms. Raney responded. "Once you hit the sidewalk, you should be fine."

    It’s common wisdom at Edward Jones that streets lined with "big trees, fat squirrels and long cars" are often inhabited by older folks thinking about retirement, Ms. Raney said. Car seats and swing sets can mean a market for college savings plans.

    Advisers take notes on tablet PCs that they carry with them. Before they got the computers, they carried books and were sometimes mistaken for missionaries.

    Mr. Haston, an Air Force veteran, in his previous job worked in human resources for Tyson Foods Inc. During his first year at Edward Jones, Mr. Haston has rescued a dog from goldfish ponds as well as the boy in the tree. The owner of the dog became his first customer. He says he is "still working on closing the sale" with the mother of the boy.

    Sale a Day

    He tries to make a sale a day and to talk to at least 25 people, the minimum set by Edward Jones. It usually takes weeks to close a deal.

    Typically, he warms up by hitting some local businesses. "I just stopped putting into my 401(k)," Steve Skaggs, the owner of a small Bible store in downtown Monett, told Mr. Haston on a crisp fall morning. "It feels like throwing money into an open flame." Mr. Haston spent 20 minutes talking to Mr. Skaggs and handed him an investing brochure and jotted down his information to follow up.

    After the turndown, Mr. Haston hopped in his truck and headed out to Honeysuckle Street, a country lane with views of hay bales and tractors.

    He spent nearly 20 minutes talking to a women peeking out from behind a screen door. He asked her where she keeps her savings. She said that a family member manages the money, but she’s thinking of moving it.

    Mr. Haston tried to sell her on opening an Edward Jones account and putting the money in a municipal bond. "I got a tax-free I’m really liking right now," he told her.

    She accepted a pamphlet but wasn’t ready to take the plunge. She gave Mr. Haston her phone number and said he was welcome to call her again about the account.

    Over the next couple of months, Mr. Haston has phoned the woman twice but still hasn’t made a sale.

    Mr. Haston has continued to work on the religious-store owner, too, visiting Mr. Skaggs three times over the two months. Still no sale. Mr. Haston isn’t discouraged, saying it’s all part of "establishing trust" with customers.

    "That means I’m about halfway there," Mr. Haston says.

    Write to Mary Pilon at mary.pilon@wsj.com

    Categories: GENERAL · UPTOWN FLAVOR
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    The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc., AAJC/HBCU Student All-star Big Band in concert

    January 16, 2009 · Leave a Comment

    The African American Jazz Caucus, Inc., in partnership with the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture of the New York Public Library, will launch Black History month by presenting the AAJC/HBCU Student All-star Big Band in concert, Sunday, February 1, 2009 at 3:00pm, in the Schomburg Langston Hughes Auditorium, 135th Street and Malcolm X Boulevard, Harlem, New York. The big band is composed of the finest young talent from outstanding jazz programs at Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

     

    The establishment of the AAJC/HBCU Student All-star Big Band was conceived in 2001 by Dr. Larry Ridley, Executive Director of the African American Jazz Caucus, Inc. They have been performing since 2002 under the direction of the AAJC/HBCU Jazz Directors Committee to standing room only audiences in Long Beach, California; New York City; Toronto, Canada and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. They were also the featured band in 2006 and 2008 at the University of Notre Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival, the oldest collegiate jazz festival in the world. The Chairman of the Committee is Dr. Russell Thomas, Jackson State University.

     

    The Historically Black Colleges and Universities represented by the 2009 big band members are: Clark Atlanta University; Fayetteville State University; Florida A & M University; Huston – Tillotson University; Jackson State University; North Carolina Central University; Texas Southern University and the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. The big band will be conducted by Professor James Patterson, Clark Atlanta University; Professor James Holden, Virginia State University and Professor Robert Trowers, North Carolina Central University.

     

    Rev. Ronald V. Myers, Sr., M.D., Founder & Chairman of the National Juneteenth Holiday Campaign, will present the prestigious “National Juneteenth Leadership Award” to Ms. Patricia R. Deans, Founder & Director of the Brownsville Heritage House in Brooklyn, NY. Ms. Deans played a key role in the successful passage of the historic legislation in 2004 recognizing “Juneteenth Freedom Day” as an official New York State Holiday Observance. 

     

    Please come celebrate Black History Month in Harlem with us!

     

    For more information, please visit www.aajc.us or call (212) 979-0304.

    Tickets: members, $16; non members, $20.

    For ticket charge call the Schomburg Shop at (212) 491-2206.  

     

    Categories: GENERAL · JAZZ