ccx.layout 06/02.hh - San Francisco Study Center
Transcription
ccx.layout 06/02.hh - San Francisco Study Center
with Mal Karman WAITAMINUTE DEPT.: This year the 5th of July comes six days late. If you don’t believe me, hustle over to Koret Auditorium at the Main Libe and you’ll see on screen Lanford Wilson’s play about a disabled gay Vietnam vet (“The Fifth of July”) on the 11th of July. The film, originally for public television, features Richard Thomas, Jeff Daniels and Swoosie Kurtz, who won a Tony for her performance on Broadway. More ‘n likely, I’ll be there on the 5th looking for a film called “The Eleventh of August,” but I trust you to get it right. A freebie. Noon. 100 Larkin St. at Grove. 557-4277. BETTER THAN BORDERS: At the aforementioned mother of all book stacks, hundreds — make that thousands — of volumes will be sold to the first dude or damsel to plunk down a George Washington from wallet or purse. It’s the Friends & Foundation of the San Francisco Public Library’s $1 or Less Book Sale. These aren’t dog-eared, torn up, coffee-stained, tattered library discards. They’re dog-eared, torn up, coffee-stained, tattered donations. No, no — just kiddin’ folks. Most are in great shape and in need of a new home. That’s right, they’re homeless. So take at least one of ‘em home and feed it a good meal. July 12th. 11 a.m.2 p.m. 100 Larkin St. at Grove. 437-4857. Baldwin House Hotel survivors get vouchers for 4 more weeks Tom Carter ome 200 low-income resiS dents of the Baldwin House Hotel on Sixth Street who were accommodated in 32 other residence hotels after fleeing the Baldwin’s June 2 fire received additional vouchers in July for up to 28 more days after dozens of survivors at a press conference pleaded with the city for the extension. The Department of Human Services said the vouchers issued after the fire, due to expire during the first few days of July, would be extended 14 days, and 14 additional days, if necessary. Meanwhile, contractors rent. The 188 rooms were full. There were no fatalities, but three people were treated for smoke inhalation. The Fire Department fought the blaze with water for two hours. Luckily there was no structural damage and the fire missed support beams. Ironically, the hotel residents had attended a fire prevention and survival workshop in the lobby the month before. The workshop was arranged by the year-old Central City SRO Collaborative, an advocacy group to improve living conditions and code enforcement of Tenderloin and South of Market residential hotels. The PHOTOS: CARL ANGEL NO CHOCOLATE BARS ON CELL WINDOWS HERE: The San Francisco Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Community Center (even the acronym is a mouthful) hosts an evening rap on prison conditions, prison abuses and prison activism with lesbian political prisoner Linda Evans, transgender rights activist Veronika Cauley, prisoner advocate Judy Greenspan and HIV-positive activist and former prisoner Antoine Mayhan. It’s called, appropriately enough, “Locked Out.” So untie your mate and get there by 7 p.m. Donations suggested. July 17th, 7-9 p.m. 1800 Market St. at Octavia. (510) 665-1935. Ocken, a three-time survivor of SRO fires, said at the press conference that the fire might not have been so bad if every room had sprinklers. The new law requiring that, passed after a three-year fight, only became effective July 1. “I see that (change) as a paradigm shift by the city in dealing with these fires,” Sam Dodge of the SRO Collaborative said in an interview. “Fires are a major cause of homelessness. It is our No. 1 issue. With huge fires, it’s mass homelessness. And every fire is different.” One cause of fires is hot plates. It is okay to own them but illegal to cook on them in hotel rooms. Economics nonetheless precludes low-income residents from eating out all the time. After the Baldwin fire, the survivors were soon located in 32 hotels with the Red Cross and the city splitting the cost of housing. Tenants praised the response. SRO vacancy rates are extremely low and rents are PHOTO: SRO COLLABORATIVE DON’T BUG ME: Oh what a tangled web we weave with Spider-Man and it costs a hefty nine bucks to hang there, dangling from the theater ceiling in the dark, just to watch him. But at the Cartoon Art Museum, my fellow arachnid, you can scuttle across 40 years of SpiderMan art with all eight of your legs. Catch out the animated TV shows, the commercial merchandising, the comic strips, the comic books. Think of the reaction you’ll get when you reveal you’re a tarantula. $5; $3 students and seniors; $2 children 612; free children 5 and under. Through July 21st. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Monday. 655 Mission St. 227-8666. IT’S A FAR CRY FROM RAP: It’s even a far cry from rock. But some of the shmaltzy love songs that Richard Rodgers wrote in the 20th century (in what century???) may bring lumps to the throat and cinders to the eye. The dude wrote the sharps and flats for Oklahoma, Carousel, South Pacific, The King and I and The Sound of Music. His tunes will take you back a whole lotta years, maybe even stir some kindergarten memories (Oh gawd, bring me a handkerchief!) and if you check out the three-night program offered by the San Francisco Performing Arts Library and Museum, you’ll see a 1957 version of Julie Andrews in Cinderella, a 1963 broadcast of The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson interviewing Rodgers, and a 1954 broadcast of a salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein with Mary Martin, Ezio Pinza and John Raitt. How about forcing Mike Tyson to dance to some of this? $8 individual shows, children under 12 $4; $20 for threenight program, children under 12 $10. July 8, 15, 22. 8 p.m. 401 Van Ness Ave. 255-4800. WILL FILL OUT FORMS FOR FOOD: You too can stick your hand in the till of corporate America — maybe even into the velcro wallet of Uncle Sam. How dat? Smile nicely, fill out a bunch of forms, rent a truck to carry home the megabucks. OK, maybe not that easy, but the Foundation Center of San Francisco will teach you how to get slick with a grant application. Wanna make a movie? Wanna go to grad school? Wanna trek to Tibet and tell the People’s Republic to take a chopstick up the CENTRAL CITY extra Renovation of the Baldwin House is under way. Tenants need work to be finished by the end of July. worked to make the Baldwin habitable, a job estimated to take just one month. The Baldwin at 74 Sixth became the third Sixth Street hotel to be taken out of commission by fire in 18 months. The Minna Lee, at 149 Sixth, went out in January 2001, and the Raymond, at Sixth and Howard, went out on tax day 2001. Those hotels, with a combined 108 units, remain closed. The Baldwin fire broke out on the fourth and fifth floors in early morning, just after most of the 206 residents had paid their Sam Dodge speaks to the tenants of the Baldwin on June 27. group also conducted the press conference at the Seneca Hotel calling for the voucher extension. Baldwin resident Mark not cheap. Now, the survivors pay what they normally would at the Baldwin, with the city making up any difference. ■ or the trees and F for the ease. To avoid waits and Street was restriped to allow more space for bicyclists on this key north/south bike route — including partial bike lanes — as well as safer conditions for pedestrians. The Polk Street bike lanes increased bike ridership by more than 40%. That means less traffic congestion and more available parking in the area. As for riding in the Tenderloin, in particular, Zebker agrees that the area has advantages and drawbacks for commuters on two wheels. “One of the things I like best about the Tenderloin is that it’s pretty flat,” says Zebker, who walks most places now. “The speed of the traffic is the problem. The people who drive in the Tenderloin don’t think of it as a residential neighborhood, and they tend to drive too fast and with not enough awareness of pedestrians and bicycles.” The area’s common one-way streets that are daunting to Zebker as a bicyclist, are actually advantageous to Bill Grgurich. “The one-way streets help,” Grgurich says. “They help in terms of flow of traffic. You’ve got two or three lanes of traffic and enough separation that you can usually ride.” For Grgurich, bicycling is one way to give back to the neighborhood. “The trees in the Tenderloin get busted and torn apart,” says Grgurich, who volunteers with the Friends of the Urban Forest in the neighborhood. “There’s this whole pollution thing. It’s a serious problem. We really need trees in the neighborhood. It [biking rather than driving] would help cool things down in this neighborhood.” ■ TW TW WHEELING WHEELING take off some weight. These are some of the reasons people choose a bicycle for transportation in the Tenderloin. Leah Shahum Getting around the city seems to Supervisor Chris Daly, who be getting more difficult and frustrating. But more people are trad- represents the Tenderloin as part ing in four wheels for two, and of Supervisorial District 6, is Fast Passes for U-locks, and one of the growing number of in in the the TENDERL TENDERL PHOTO: SF BICYCLE COALITION On a bike, life’s good, riding down McAllister Street. increasingly enjoying their commutes. “It’s cheaper and faster,” says Dave Chelsea-Seifert, 30, who rides daily from his Sunset home to his job as a tenant organizer in the Tenderloin. “It gives me exercise, so I don’t have to work exercise into my schedule.” “The congestion can make it so hard to get around S.F.,” says Bill Grgurich, a 56-year-old house painter who has lived in the Tenderloin for five years. “But I can get around anytime by bicycle. It also gives me a sense of control of my own destiny, in a way.” It was that sense of control that spurred David Zebker to bike from his Tenderloin home to classes at City College regularly 20 years ago. “I don’t like waiting for the bus,” the 46year-old CPA says. Even with a one-speed bike, Zebker could ride across town in less than an hour. bike commuters in the area. He rides an average of four days a week to his City Hall office and to meetings all over the city. “I think the bicycle is the most convenient way to get around the central city for someone like me who is relatively able-bodied,” Daly explains. “And biking has all those perks of helping to keep me in shape, and the advantages of being ecological and better for pedestrian safety than driving a car and better for the environment, and biking helps to keep the congestion on the streets down. “You can get around really quickly in the Tenderloin because it’s not too far up the hill,” Daly says. “But the streets are intense.” Especially the fast one-way streets that can feel more like freeways than neighborhood streets. The number of good bike streets in the city is on the increase. Two years ago Polk IN IN Leah Shahum is program director of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, a 3,300member nonprofit working to promote bicycling for everyday transportation. Check out www.sfbike. org or call 431-BIKE for more info. We’ve seen this played over and over at City Hall — Mayor Willie and a crowd with placards. This is Central City Extra’s first cartoon contest. Artist Carl Angel has supplied the drawing; you write the caption. We’ll pick the best caption and print it in the September issue. The winner gets a meal for two at Café do Brasil plus a framed reproduction of the cartoon and caption. Send in your caption, along with your name and how to contact you. Mail or bring to Central City Extra Cartoon Contest, 1095 Market St. Suite 602, S.F. 94103, e-mail (centralcityextra@studycenter.org) or fax (626-7276). Contest ends August 16. Your caption: JULY 2002 BRINGING THE WAR TOO CLOSE TO HOME: On the untested theory that things can’t possibly get any worse in Kashmir, The Commonwealth Club has invited India’s Kayatyani Shankar Bajpai, a former ambassador to the U.S., and Pakistan’s Ahmad Faruqui, a Lahore Daily Times columnist, to slug it out (verbally, we hope) as they try to respond to our verbalized nightmares about the risk of nuclear conflict and what the future holds for these perennial saber rattlers. Free. July 22nd. 11:45 a.m. 595 Market St. 597-6706. BASS TEAL & VIVE LA FRANCE: Alors mes amis — you know zat zee 14th of July, eet eez Bastille Day, n’est-ce pas?? You know vat zis means, of course. Vee go into zee streets and vee dance off our asses like crazee chats unteel zee early dawn (yawn). You can sleep some uh-zhere time, you know? You cannot mees thees, you would nevair leev it down! Ah, zhere eez zo much to choose fram. Sacre bleu! On July 12th, Left Bank Restaurants and the French-American Chamber of Commerce set up a French country pique-nique at the pier and, while French tunes warble in the air, you can pig out with roasted chicken or chicken out with roasted pig or stuff pan bagnat sandwiches into your coat lining or gobble down all the mussels, cheeses and French desserts that your stomach lining will permit. Pouring French and American beers, aperitifs and 20 varieties of French wine and, wow, mon ami, are you go-eeng to be a mess, especially after sneaking in to avoid ze outragous (mon Dieu!) seexty-dollar ducat. Bon courage – you can do it without an inner tube. If that’s not enough to finish you off, on July 13th vous marchez to Alliance Francaise for more cuisine, drinks, musique and footshaking. $10. 7 p.m. 1345 Bush St. (408) 655-6050. Bring your tricolor! On July 14th, the vraiment Bastille Day, just off Bush Street in downtown city, Café Bastille on Beldon Place and Café Claude on Claude Lane throw annual block parties with wine, music and food. Because Bastille is a Sunday this year, there was talk at press time of moving the celebration to the afternoon. Check with the cafes. And zank you zo much!! THE RUDE AWAKENING: Crawling out of bed after all that partying can be the hardest part of partying. If you never felt more like singing the blues — and, oh, that head hurts — 30 years of memorabilia from the San Francisco Blues Festival might turn your indigo to a whiter shade of pale . This SoMarts Gallery exhibit features a collection of rare posters, photographs, publications, recordings, handbills and related blues ephemera. Check out photos and posters from the 1973 show and, man, please don’t say “It seems like only yesterday.” We know. Free. July 927. Noon-6 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday. 934 Brannan St. 863-1414. NAME THAT ’TOON 4 giggy? Hey, somebody up there will give you the money — they need the damn tax writeoff — if you learn to play the game and say what they want to hear. Classes all through July will tutor how to tickle the throat of the sleeping lion. What’s more, it’s free. That’s right — they’re gonna teach you how to lift money — for free. Can you believe it?? Believe it! Call them!! 312 Sutter St., Suite 606. 397-0902. JUNE 2002 5 CENTRAL CITY extra