Goings On | 9/18/2003

Franklin Furnace’s Goings On
September 18, 2003

CONTENTS:
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1. Brooke Singer, FF Future of the Present 2003-4 Artist, presents Wireless Park Lab Days, Sept. 19 and 20, City Hall Park, Manhattan.
2. Martha Wilson, FF Founding Director, to receive BAX Award, Nov. 6, 7:30 pm
3. Tom Trusky, FF Alumn, & Idaho Center for the Book, release Author Card Game
4. Frank Shifreen, FF Alumn, at The Dop Dop, through October 31, 2003
5. Tana Hargest, FF Future of the Present 2003-4 artist, opening at Momenta, Brooklyn, now on Sept. 19 from 6-9 pm
6. Matthew Geller, FF Alumn, Foggy Day, on Cortlandt Alley, Manhattan, Oct. 3-Nov. 14.
7. Ed Schmidt, The Last Supper, in his Chelsea apartment, Oct. 17-December 27.
8. Judith Sloan, FF Alumn, book launch, Sep 24, 7 pm, St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery.
9. Dick Higgins, FF Alumn, symposium and performance, Oct. 16, U.M, Baltimore.
10. Lynn Book, FF Alumn, open house, Saturday, Sept. 20, and more.
11. Jessica Hagedorn, FF Alumn, new book, Dream Jungle, plus author’s tour,
12. Donna Henes, FF Alumn, reading and Dark Moon Ritual, Sept. 24, 7:30 pm
13. Terri Dame, FF Alumn, performs at Brooklyn Heights Street festival,
14. John Fleck, FF Alumn, at Avantgardarama, Sep 27 and LaMama, Etc. Oct 2-Oct. 19.
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1.Brooke Singer, FF Future of the Present 2003 Artist, presents Wireless Park Lab Days, Sept. 19 and 20, City Hall Park, Manhattan

Please come out for the first Wireless Park Lab Days on Friday September 19th and Saturday 20th! Location: City Hall Park, Lower Manhattan. Time:12- 4 pm. See http://www.nycwireless.net/labdays for full details.
Cheers, Brooke Singer, FF FOTP 2003 artist

About Wireless Park Lab Days
On September 19 & 20, 2003, NYCwireless and the Downtown Alliance will co-sponsor Wireless Park Lab Days, a two-day event that announces the availability of open wireless (Wi-Fi) networks in Lower Manhattan and explores their implications for art, community, and shared space. Produced by Dana Spiegel of NYCwireless, and artists Brooke Singer and Yury Gitman, Wireless Park Lab Days will be held in City Hall Park, the most popular “hotspot” in the Lower Manhattan Wireless Network, each day from 12 noon to 4 pm.

The Lower Manhattan Wireless Network is the latest victory for the wireless community movement, a group of volunteers who work with local organizations to construct a network of computers to share Internet access over radio connections. Through these efforts, public spaces become equipped with community-owned and open wireless hotspots, deterring pay providers from staking claims. In addition to establishing open nodes in public spaces, the wireless community is interested in how a wireless network affects the physical space and how urban Wi-Fi users may influence the notions of cyberspace when it becomes grounded in a specific location.

This two-day event embraces this spirit of the wireless community movement by hosting an exhibition of new wireless art, a “new user” area designed to help people become acquainted with the technology, and an engaging round of NodeRunner, the critically acclaimed wireless scavenger hunt that was recently awarded an Arts Electronica Golden Nica. The wireless art exhibition will include a wide-range of projects and many of the producers will be at the event to discuss their work. The new user area will be staffed with experts in wireless computing from NYCwireless who will help visitors get online and better understand the technology. Wireless Park Lab Days will end on Saturday with a fun, group game of NodeRunner. Game starts at 1:00 pm on Saturday from City Hall Park, so bring your running shoes!

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2. Martha Wilson, FF Founding Director, to receive BAX Award, Nov. 6, 7:30 pm

BAX TEN AWARDS
Thursday November 6 at 7:30 p.m. (cocktail reception) 8:15 award presentation Prospect Park Picnic House
Tickets: $100/ priority $50 general seating $25 student/artist/low income
Sponsorship opportunities available. For more information call: 718-832-0018
info@bax.org

BAX10 ARTS AND ARTISTS IN PROGRESS AWARD. These awards, now in their third year, are designed to honor individuals in the arts who have revealed and transformed our creative world. By instigating and enduring change the have deepened the definition of their field and paved the way for others. The awards are being given in three categories: artist, teaching in the arts and arts management/administration/curation. Each awardee chooses an individual or an organization/project to receive their PASSING IT ON AWARD – a cash award to assist them in their work.

This year’s awards will honor Artists: Meredith Monk (presenter Andrea Goodman) for her lifetime work, changing the field of opera and performance work as we know it, developing more than a generation of artists who collaborated with her and keep her work going) & Jennifer Miller (presenter Sarah East Johnson) founder and Director of Circus Amok – challenging us to understand community performance through a different lens, and developing the field of circus/performance – challenging gender in performance, spawning a generation of circus artists- Arts Educators: David Pleasant (presenter Vanessa Paige) artist, performer, teacher, for pioneering the field of body percussion and extraordinary collaborations as a teaching artists throughout the NYC public school system and beyond) & Jackie Chang (presenter Frances Lucerna) Arts Resource Manager of El Puente, Visual Arts Educator , developing and directing arts programs for youth in NYC and Arts Managers: Nathan Elbogen (presenter Julia Mandle) for his ten year work developing and managing the Old American Can Factory, serving as a mentor to countless artists and being a force in the ingoing conversation regarding a private/public support partnership for the arts) & Martha Wilson (presenter Ellie Covan) founder of Franklin Furnace, proponent of the developing avant-garde performing artists, visionary behind the archival importance of her organization) An Honorary Award is being presented to Marie Artesi who recently retired as Director of the Community Arts development Fund of the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

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3. Tom Trusky, FF Alumn, & Idaho Center for the Book, release Author Card Game

Boise State’s Idaho Center For The Book Releases Author Card Game

What Idaho author once served as a Parma city councilman–before he wrote Tarzan? What Nobel Prize-winner had a cat named Boise? What filmmaker was also noted for her critically acclaimed novel?

The answers to these (Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ernest Hemingway and Nell Shipman) and other questions are found in a new version of the classic card game Authors, updated and customized for the Gem State. Idaho Authors was created by the Idaho Center for the Book, an affiliate of the Library of Congress housed at Boise State University. Cards sell for $9.95 a set and are available at the Boise State Bookstore, www.boisestatebooks.com (click on “general books”). For further images, see the ICB site, www.lili.org/icb.

Featuring 11 writers who were born or maintained residences in Idaho, the card game is played much like the original Authors. Interesting facts about authors are listed on sets of four cards, and players attempt to match up the most sets, or “books.” By reading the cards, players will discover that: Boisean Glenn Balch (1902-1989) was a prolific writer of adventure stories targeted primarily at teen-age boys. His book Indian Paint was made into a feature film starring Jay Silverheels (who played Tonto in The Lone Ranger) and Johnny Crawford (from the TV series Rifleman). Carol Ryrie Brink (1895-1981) based the heroine of her Newbery Medal-winning novel Caddie Woodlawn on her grandmother’s pioneer experiences. Brink was an Idaho native from Moscow. Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) worked on a ranch in Raft River Valley, operated a stationery store in Pocatello, was a gold dredge operator in the Stanley basin and was a city councilman in Parma before writing Tarzan of the Apes. Vardis Fisher (1895-1968), born in Annis in eastern Idaho, penned the novel that inspired the Robert Redford film Jeremiah Johnson. Fisher later lived in Hagerman and was a former teacher at the College of Idaho (now Albertson College) in Caldwell. Mary Hallock Foote (1847-1938) was as well known for her illustrations as for her writing, which focused on Coeur d’Alene. She is best known today as the central character in Wallace Stegner’s prize-winning novel, Angle of Repose. Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) wrote much of his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls in Sun Valley and had a cat named Boise. He and his wife Mary were living in Ketchum when he died. The wallpaper pattern from poet Ezra Pound’s (1895-1972) home in Hailey is used to back each card in the deck. Pound was one of the 20th century’s most controversial poets. Grace Jordan (1892-1985) felt parents should provide opportunities for hardships for their children, so she did. She wrote about many of her family’s adventures in Hell’s Canyon, near their home in Grangeville. She was married to Idaho Gov. Len Jordan. Nell Shipman (1892-1970) made several films from her wilderness film studio on the shores of North Idaho’s Priest Lake in the 1920s. She later published Abandoned Trails, a thinly fictionalized novel of her Idaho experiences. Edward Elmer Smith (1890-1965) helped create the science fiction genre of writing. His interest in extra-terrestrial activity began at the University of Idaho, where he received a chemical engineering degree in 1914. Steven Spielberg is said to have been inspired by Smith’s writing when scripting the film Star Wars. James Floyd Stevens (1892-1971), raised and educated in Weiser, not only penned Paul Bunyan, he’s also noted for the literary manifesto Status Rerum, co-authored with H.L. Davis. Boise State designer Kathy Robinson created the colored renderings of the artists used on the cards.

Contact Tom Trusky, English, 208 426-1999
Media Contact, Kathleen Craven, Boise State News Services, 208 426-3275
This news release is available online at http://news.boisestate.edu

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4. Frank Shifreen, FF Alumn, at The Dop Dop, through October 31, 2003

Hi!
I am in a show of wall sculptures that I did in Collaboration with Danny Scheffer at The Dop Dop A space at 170 Mercer St ( near Houston), First Floor, through October 31. 212-965-9540. Thanks and best wishes all , Frank Shifreen

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5. Tana Hargest, FF Future of the Present 2004 artist, opening at Momenta, Brooklyn, now on Sept. 19 from 6-9 pm

Momenta Art regrets that Tana Hargest’s “New Negrotopia” grand opening has been delayed due to unforseeable technical difficulties. We hope you will bear with us through this difficult period of adjustment and will join us on Friday, September 19, 6-9 pm to share in the magic.

Momenta Art
72 Berry St.
Brooklyn, NY, 11211
718.218.8058

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6. Matthew Geller, FF Alumn, Foggy Day, on Cortlandt Alley, Manhattan, Oct. 3-Nov. 14

Beginning Friday, October 3rd at 5:00 pm and running [Tuesday – Sunday] through November 14th, 2003, New York artist Matthew Geller presents a temporary, open-air installation work titled Foggy Day. At selected times of the day, a section of Cortlandt Alley between White and Walker Streets will be shrouded in fog, in a kind of urban earthwork enhancing various features of this picturesquely gritty downtown canyon. Running parallel to the sidewalk about eighteen feet above the street, a series of fine spray nozzles on a pipe bolted to a building will create a regular pea-souper that grows and dissipates as wind and weather conditions change. Cortlandt Alley, overlooked by Geller’s studio, is “a spot beloved by West Coast movie makers for its stark narrow height, fire escapes, abandoned loading docks, [and] shuttered iron doors,” as journalist Pete Hamill once noted. It has served as a location for countless film and photo shoots, including Law and Order, the Michael Douglas/Brittany Murphy suspenser Don’t Say a Word, a Harley Davidson advertising spread, and an AC/DC video. Unlike a film shoot, which strives for stark realism, Geller’s installation exaggerates and calls attention to selected aspects of the locale. Translucent rubber puddles on the sidewalk will mimic the puddles created by the dripping pipes that poke out from factory windows. A scattering of spindly but lush trees growing from building niches will augment the existing meager vegetation. The fog itself references the steam escaping from pipes that jut from garment factory windows above the Alley. The fog device, originally developed as an air cooling system, literally generates atmosphere without getting pedestrians wet. Yet paradoxically, by means of these same amplifying touches, Geller turns a normal walk through the city into a kind of temporary cinema. For those passing within the fog’s ephemeral canopy, taking a shortcut on a busy day suddenly becomes a romantic stroll in a park. As Geller says of the project (an earlier incarnation of which he constructed in Rotterdam): “It’s filmic, otherworldly, a temporary escape.” Yet at the same time, the work causes us to look more closely at a famous but under-examined fixture of the New York City landscape. The fog will be activated at lunch time (12-2 pm) and from 4:30 pm until twilight. Hours and days of operation may be subject to change; for the most current information please check the website: http://channel.creative-capital.org/project-foggyday/ During the six-week installation Geller will document the activity in the Alley with a time-lapse digital video recorder. One frame per second will be recorded for the duration of the six-week installation, and the results will serve as raw material for a short documentary or non-narrative film. The opening for the installation will be held Friday, October 3, 2003, 5:00-8:00 pm at Cortlandt Alley between White and Walker Streets (one block below Canal Street and one block east of Broadway). Foggy Day is a project of Creative Capital with fiscal sponsorship from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. The Greenwall Foundation and the Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation have provided additional funding. General Tool Manufacturing Company, LLC has provided special assistance. This project is made possible, in part, with public funds from the Manhattan Community Arts Fund and the Fund for Creative Communities/New York State Council on the Arts Decentralization Program administered by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Matthew Geller has received grants from the New York State Council for the Arts, Jerome Foundation, and the WGBH/WNET New Television series, among others. He is past recipient of an American Academy in Rome Prize, two National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, and a New York Foundation for the Arts Artists’ Fellowship. His work has been exhibited internationally and in the Whitney Biennial, the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Los Angeles Contemporary Museum of Art, The Kitchen, and on Public Television. For further information, please contact: Deborah Dewees (thru September 21) and Nolini Barretto (starting September 22) at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Tel. 212.219.9401

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7. Ed Schmidt, The Last Supper, in his Chelsea apartment, Oct. 17-December 27

Ed Schmidt’s “The Last Supper,” the dinner-and-a-show performed in the playwright’s kitchen and diningroom, is back! And it’s moving to Manhattan!

“The Last Supper” is a modern retelling of the Biblical last supper, set in the kitchen among the unholy women who prepare the fateful meal. The play ran for 13 sold-out months in Mr. Schmidt’s Brooklyn home and received glowing notices and prominent features in the New York Times, NBC’s Today Show, the New Yorker, WNYC’s Leonard Lopate Show, Time Out New York, the New York Post, the New York Observer, the Associated Press, the Christian Science Monitor, Backstage, and the Brooklyn Papers.

“The Last Supper” will be performed for an audience of 30 in Mr. Schmidt’s new apartment, on West 27th Street, in Chelsea. Performances begin at 7PM, every Friday and Saturday, from October 17 to December 27 (with a few exceptions).

Payment is voluntary. The suggested offering (cash or check) is $50-$75 per person, which includes the show and a four-course dinner (wine and beer included), which the Times called “delicious.” When “The Last Supper” closed last May, there was a waiting list of more than a thousand people. To reserve a seat at the table, act now. To check ticket availability, make reservations, or learn more about “The Last Supper,” please visit the show’s website www.thelastsupper.info and email us at info@thelastsupper.info.

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8. Judith Sloan, FF Alumn, book launch, Sep 24, 7 pm, St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery

Warren Lehrer & Judith Sloan, FF Alumn, will read/perform excerpts from their new book (and companion audio CD) Crossing the BLVD: strangers, neighbors, aliens in a new America (W.W. Norton) Lehrer & Sloan will be joined by musicians in the Crossing the BLVD project: Nigerian Gospel Singer Kingsley Ogunde, Romanian-American singer Christine Ghezzo, and members of the Gypsy-punk-cabaret band Gogol Bordello. Introduced by Brian Lehrer, from WNYC Radio’s the Brian Lehrer Show.

Wednesday September 24th, 7pm
St. Marks Church in-the-Bowery
131 East 10th Street between 10th and 11th Streets
(# 6 train to Astor Place)
Free and Open to the public

Husband and wife team and documentary artists Warren Lehrer and Judith Sloan trekked the world by traveling the streets of their home borough of Queens, NY, for three years in search of story, culture, and soul.The result is Crossing the BLVD: strangers, neighbors, aliens in a new America, a 400 page, four color book and audio CD that documents the stories, images, and sounds of new immigrants and refugees in the most ethnically diverse locality in the United States. Written by Warren Lehrer and Judith Sloan Photography and Design by Warren Lehrer

The book launch is an EarSay production with support from The Bronfman Center at NYU and Citylore. for more details: info@earsay.org or 718-791-4324

www.wwnorton.com
dedicated website
http://www.crossingtheblvd.org

to contact the authors directly:
info@earsay.org
718-791-4324

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9. Dick Higgins, FF Alumn, symposium and performance, Oct. 16, U.M, Baltimore

INTERMEDIA: The Dick Higgins Collections at UMBC
Symposium and Performance: October 16
Exhibition through December 13
Exhibition Catalog
University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore MD
Gallery Contact: Cynthia Wayne, cwayne@umbc.edu, 410-455-2270
Press Contact: Tom Moore, tmoore@umbc.edu, 410-455-3370

The Albin O. Kuhn Library Gallery presents Intermedia: The Dick Higgins Collection, on-going through December 13. The exhibition curated by Lisa Moren, presents a rich and conceptually challenging collection of art assembled by the late Fluxus artist Dick Higgins and Something Else Press, acquired by UMBC. The Higgins Collection of objects, printed matter, audio cassettes, silkscreens, and hand letter press prints represents such well known artists as Joseph Beuys, John Cage, Allan Kaprow, Alison Knowles, George Maciunas, Carolee Schneemann and Emmett Williams. Intermedia presents the first opportunity to view this remarkable collection. Complementing the exhibition will be an illustrated catalog.

On October 16th, a symposium will be held from 4 to 6 pm, featuring Hannah Higgins (University of Illinois at Chicago), Chris Thompson (Maine College of Art), Owen Smith (University of Maine), and co-moderators Kathy O’Dell and Lisa Moren. A reception will follow from 6 to 7 pm. At 7:30 pm, Fluxus artists Alison Knowles and Larry Miller will conduct a workshop and performance with UMBC students in the Fine Arts Recital Hall (to be followed immediately by a concert by the Hoffmann/Goldstein Duo, described below). Intermedia has been supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Maryland State Arts Council and the Friends of the Library & Gallery. The Gallery is open Monday through Friday, 12 noon to 4:30 pm, on Thursday until 8 pm, and Saturday 1 – 5 pm. Admission is free. For more information call 410-455-2270 or visit the online press release: http://www.umbc.edu/newsevents/releases/article.phtml?news_id=860

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10. Lynn Book, FF Alumn, open house, Saturday, Sept. 20, and more.

OPEN HOUSE IS HERE!
That is here, this Saturday and at my place on East 14th Street. Drop by and join us for a lift as we step into fall – a little drink, a little sweet treat and lots of repartee. Chats, questions, brainstorms, demos, door prizes, all are welcome…bring a friend & start building communities to shape a better vision for the world.
535 E. 14th St. between Avenue A & B
ring buzzer #137 for Apartment 4F
R S V P
212-529-8991

VOICELAB 1 IS RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER!

Next Wednesday, September 24, this ‘beginning’ lab picks up the pace with a rousing 6 weeks of exploration, foundation building and more. Open to anyone interested in breathing, singing, sighing, writing, shouting, speaking, composing, toning and beyond. This mixed (small) crowd is always incredibly diverse in orientations and intentions so if you want to have ‘deep fun’, this lab is for you.
Voicelab 1, September 24 – October 29
6 Wednesdays, 7 – 8:30 pm
Location TBA
Class Fee: $210 (50% by first class)
Early Bird special extended to Sep 20!!: $190 (50% by first class)

So give a call, take up the challenge…
plenty of reasons, plenty of applications and plenty of opportunities …
212-529-8991
for info on all the labs this fall, and a peek at next spring
go to www.voicelabnyc.com
sessions and labs page

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11. Jessica Hagedorn, FF Alumn, new book, Dream Jungle, plus author’s tour

Dream Jungle
by Jessica Hagedorn

“Barbed and alluring . . . [Hagedorn’s] storytelling is sensuous and vivid and her characters are cunningly imagined; she offers a telling glimpse of the imposing American presence, both physical and cultural, in the Philippines.” Publishers Weekly

Jessica Hagedorn burst onto the American literary scene in 1990 with the publication of Dogeaters, her lush, adventurous first novel, which was nominated for the National Book Award. Born and raised in the Philippines, Hagedorn is a novelist, poet, performance artist, and screenwriter who is widely acknowledged as one of our leading Asian- American voices.

With DREAM JUNGLE (Viking; September 29, 2003; 0-670-88458-8; 325 pages), Hagedorn delivers her first novel in seven years and richest novel yet. It is a story that reaches beyond the Filipino and Filipino-American experience to explore the universal themes of power, money, race and colonialism. Two real-life events that both took place in the Philippines-the discovery of the Tasaday, an ancient “lost tribe,” in a remote mountain area of the rain forest and the filming of the movie Apocalypse Now-are the inspiration for DREAM JUNGLE. The novel also tells the intertwined tales of four unforgettable characters:

Zamora de Lagazpi, a wealthy but disillusioned Filipino “mestizo” landowner who claims to have found and made contact with a “Paleolithic lost tribe” of the Philippines. Still, he cannot escape the ennui that is the fate of his privileged, yet corrupt, social class, which lives at the mercy of the Marcoses.

Rizalina, the resourceful, intelligent, young daughter of Zamora’s cook. She flees the de Lagazpi estate and avoids the sexual advances of Zamora only to fall into the seedy world of strip clubs catering to sex trade tourists. Too clever to remain a victim, her fortunes change when she meets Vincent, an attractive American actor.

Vincent Moody, a troubled and disillusioned actor, abandons his family and his rapidly fading star in Hollywood to find release in the exoticism of the Philippines. He falls deeply in love with Rizalina while filming a movie there about the Vietnam War.

Paz Marlowe, a young Filipino-American journalist, returns to the Philippines when her mother dies. She decides to stay in the country in order to research two stories –one about the elusive Zamora and the increasing suspicion surrounding his discovery and another about the filming of the American movie.

DREAM JUNGLE is the deeply evocative story of a country in crisis-the beauty, spirit, corruption, and desperation that was the tumultuous Philippines of the 1970’s. Taking readers from the lush beauty of its indigenous rain forests and the grand estates of its privileged class to the seedy underbelly of sexual tourism in Manila and the Hollywood manipulation of the natural landscape, Hagedorn offers a glimpse of a country whose purity is an illusion, replaced with a carefully woven web of power and exploitation more complicated, and more compelling, than the plot of any movie.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jessica Hagedorn is an acclaimed novelist and National Book Award nominee, as well as a poet, multimedia artist, and screenwriter. She was born and raised in the Philippines and moved to the United States in her teens. She currently resides in New York City.

DREAM JUNGLE
By Jessica Hagedorn
Viking; 0-670-88458-8
On-Sale Date: September 29, 2003
$23.95; 325 pages

Jessica Hagedorn will be making the following appearances for her book,
DREAM JUNGLE:
10/2/03 New York, NY Asian American Writers Workshop
10/7/03 New York, NY Barnes and Noble Chelsea
10/11/03 Philadelphia, PA Philadelphia Free Public Library
10/15/03 San Diego, CA UC San Diego and Mira Mesa Library
10/16-10/17/03 Los Angeles, CA UCLA and Skylight Books
10/19/-10/20/03 San Francisco, CA City Lights, SF State, and Bindlestiff
10/21/03 Seattle, WA Elliott Bay Book Company
10/22-10/23/03 Boston, MA Brookline Booksmith and MIT
11/01/03 Chicago, IL Chicago Humanities Festival
11//3/03 Minneapolis, MN The Loft
11/11/03 New York, NY Asia Society

For more information please contact:
Carolyn Coleburn, Director, Viking Publicity
212-366-2270; carolyn.coleburn@us.penguingroup.com

To request a review copy, please contact:
Jodie Hockensmith; 212-366-2224; jodie.hockensmith@us.penguingroup.com

Please visit our web site at www.penguin.com

Penguin Group (USA) Inc. is the U.S. member of the internationally renowned Penguin Group. Penguin Group (USA) is one of the leading adult and children’s publishers, owning a wide range of imprints and trademarks, including Berkley Books, Dutton, Frederick Warne, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, Grosset & Dunlap, New American Library, Penguin, Philomel, Riverhead Books, and Viking, among others. The Penguin Group is part of Pearson plc, the international media company.

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12. Donna Henes, FF Alumn, reading and Dark Moon Ritual, Sept. 24, 7:30 pm

AN EVENING OF LUNACY
With Donna Henes, Urban Shaman

Mama Donna will be reading from her popular book,
MOON WATCHER’S COMPANION
Followed by a Participatory Dark Moon Ritual

SEPTEMBER 24, WEDNESDAY 7:30PM

The New Hope Metaphysical Society
Pebble Hill Church, New Hope PA
Info: 215-348-3428
Donation $15.

Donna Henes, Urban Shaman, is a contemporary ceremonialist specializing in multi-cultural ritual celebration of the cycles of the seasons and the seasons of our lives. She the editor and publisher of the highly acclaimed quarterly, Always In Season: Living In Sync with the Cycles. She is also the author of Moon Watcher’s Companion, Celestially Auspicious Occasions: Seasons, Cycles and Celebrations and Dressing Our Wounds In Warm Clothes, as well as the CD, Reverence To Her: Mythology, The Matriarchy & Me.

In 1982, she composed the first (and to this date, the only) satellite peace message in space: “chants for peace * chance for peace.” Mama Donna, as she is affectionately known, has offered lectures, workshops, circles, and celebrations worldwide for 30 years. She is the director of Mama Donna’s Tea Garden & Healing Haven, a ceremonial center, ritual consultancy and spirit shop in Exotic Brooklyn, New York.

For further information, a list of services and publications, a calendar of upcoming events and a complimentary issue of Always in Season: Living in Sync with the Cycles. contact:
MAMA DONNA’S TEA GARDEN AND HEALING HAVEN
PO Box 380403
Exotic Brooklyn, NY 11238-0403
Phone/Fax 718-857-2247
Email: CityShaman@aol.com
www.DonnaHenes.net

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13. Terri Dame, FF Alumn, performs at Brooklyn Heights Street festival

Dear friends!
Paprika will be performing on the main stage located on Atlantic Avenue at Boerum Place, at 5pm on Sunday. The Atlantic Antic is a lively and varied street festival in Brooklyn Heights and we’ll be playing one high octane set of dance music from around the globe. It’ll be really fun. Come on down.
Peace,
Terry

Paprika is:
Robin Burdulis: percussion
Terry Dame: saxes
Viva Deconcini: guitar/vocals
Dawn Drake: percussion/vocals
Pamela Fleming: trumpet
Lisa Frisari: drums
Vanessa Roe: vocals
Michelle WilIiams: bass

www.paprikaspy.com
www.terrydame.com

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14. John Fleck, FF Alumn, at Avantgardarama, Sep 27 and LaMama, Etc. Oct 2-Oct. 19

John Fleck, FF Alumn, performs his solo extravagana,’Nothin Beats Pussy’ at LaMama,
etc, opening Thursday, Oct 2 – Oct 19th. Fleck is also performs in Avantgardarama at PS-122 on Saturday, Sept 27th.

Developed and workshopped along the way at Dixon Place, the Guggenheim Museum, NY, the Warhol Museum, Pittsburg and the Evidence Room, LA over the past year, ‘NOTHIN’ BEATS PUSSY’ has evolved into nothing less than a splashy, trashy road show– a song and dance spectacle about adolescent romance, obsession and the American Legion. Come check it out at LaMama, etc, 74A E. 4th St, – Box Office 212-475-7710 www.lamama.org.

Fleck also performs in the group spectacle, AVANTGARDARMA at PS-122 on
Saturday, Sept 27th – Box Office 212-477-5829

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~~end~~

Goings On are compiled weekly by Harley Spiller

Click http://www.franklinfurnace.org/goings_on.html
to visit ‘This Month’s World Wide Events’.
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