Streettalk 3-27-02

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HEARD OR SEEN: AddAWAW — Omphalos: Anat., the navel; also, A central part, center, hub, as of the earth, or figuratively, of a literary work. ... Next Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Griffin Hall, the public is invited to a presentation of Williams College’s proposal to erect a Center for Theater and Dance, an estimated $50 million project initiated by a donation from Herb Allen Jr. (Wms. ’62). ... Good luck to Boston restaurateur Jae Chung, owner of Miss Adams Diner in Adams and Williamstown's Colonial Plaza; he plans to open an 11-room, $1.4 million inn, with a 45-seat restaurant, on Curran Highway North Adams. ... The Williamstown Savings Bank has added Diana D. Brooks, owner and president of Diana Brooks Associates Consulting & Training, as a trustee. ... I’ve heard only praise for last month’s Bennington Museum concert by pianist Arthur Dequasie and violinist Cathy Metz; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dequasie, live in Pownal, Vt. ... Great to hear that the Eight Ball Auto Repair on River Street, North Adams, may be acquired "within 30 days," to extend the River Street Park, thereby improving the ambiance of the adjacent MASS MoCA and The Porches. Still to be negotiated are the Best Way Car Wash and the Ransford Property, to nearly double the current 1.3-acre park. ... While spring cleaning, remember the Milne Public Library is accepting books and tapes for its annual sale April 19-20. ... Did you know that The Images offers hearing aids? ... Note: the Fourth Annual Jazz Festival runs April 2-7; details, 597-4049. PURPLE POP: Art works by the late H. Lee Hirsche, longtime member of the Williams faculty, embraced more than his famous "Hershey Bars." Available through Aug. 4 at the Williams College Museum of Art are painted portraits from the late 1960s and early ’70s. Lee added eye-popping patterns and psychedelic shading to a realist style made popular by Don Eddy, Richard Estes and Audrey Flack. The works are "wonderful likenesses of the sitters, but their real achievement is a portrayal of this turbulent time in America when ideas about gender roles, sexuality and race relations shifted dramatically," pointed out by Michael Glier, assistant professor of art, who organized the exhibition. ONE MO’ TIME: Disappointed that One Mo’ Time, the Williamstown Theatre Festival’s opener last year, closed last week after only 21 performances on Broadway; mixed reviews resulted in tepid business. But John Simon, one of Broadway’s severest critics, writing in the March 18 New York magazine, said of the cast: "They all delight. ... Simply put, this is the most engaging new-old musical on Broadway. Its ecstatic audience participation can be matched only by Mamma Mia!" Too bad the backers didn’t hang on longer: Last year’s opening week in Williamstown was slow, but word of mouth resulted in a sell-out the remaining week. MEET MS SPIDER: A POB to Kleiser-Walczak, special effects firm at MASS MoCA, for Little Miss Spider: Lost and Found, a computer-animated, five-minute short directed by Jeff Kleiser and Diana Walczak: It won the "Audience Award" from 3-to-6-year-old youngsters during the recent New York International Children’s Film Festival. More than 800 children’s films were screened before 33 were selected to be shown at the festival. Miss Spider, based on a book by David Kirk, was one of only six films which won awards. A producer is interested in making it into a series. Actress Susan Sarandon narrated the film while Marichal MacDonald, 11, of Williamstown, provided Ms. Spider’s voice. Ms. Spider was shown at MASS MoCA last weekend along with an untitled film by David Librizzi of North Adams, featuring drawings of nearly 100 elementary schoolchildren in Stamford, Vt. BUSH BUMBLINGS: Baby nuclear bombs, threatening Iraq, et al, tariffs on imported steel, are among the latest bombastic bumblings to burst from President Bush’s brow. Hubris! We preach the dangers of nuclear annihilation. Our peerless leader suggests itty-bitty bombs to penetrate the earth’s core, destroying enemy men and ammunition. As for "the evil axis," why not finish the job in Afghanistan before threatening those evildoers? After all, eliminating Iraq’s world would alienate many of our allies, crippling us — e.g., Jordanian King Abdullah II publicly warned Vice-President Dick Cheney that expanding the terrorism war to Iraq could destabilize the region and undermine gains in Afghanistan. Why not insist that steel clean house and become competitive? Be thankful that Secretary of State Colin Powell stepped in to say we would stand by our 24-year pledge not to use our nuclear arsenal against non-nuclear nations; and that Treasury Secretary Paul H. O’Neill said imposing tariffs on imported steel would be a losing position in jobs; one estimate is a loss of seven to 14 jobs for every job that tariffs would save.
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North Adams Housing Trust Building Foundation for Future

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The newly established Affordable Housing Trust has spent its first meetings determining its mission, objectives and resources. 
 
What it has to decide is the chicken or the egg — set goals with the purpose of finding funds or getting the funds first and determining the best way to use them. 
 
"I think that funding actually would dictate the projects that we do, rather than come up with we what we want to do, and then find a way to fund it," said Trustee Ross Jacobs last Thursday. "There may be sources we explore that will be successful. Some may not. ...
 
"If we start exploring funding options and get some of these wheels rolling, then we'll have a better idea within six months where some of these are going, and then what we can do."
 
Trustee Nancy Bullett said it may be more of doing both at the same time. 
 
"It's almost simultaneous looking at the projects that are incorporating funding, because your funding is specific to whatever it is that you're doing," she said. "So how do you identify the projects that you want to work on, which then dictates the funding."
 
This will tie into the trust's objectives which could include home rehabilitation, property tax relief, emergency rent or mortgage, or support of projects undertaken by private or public developers like Habitat for Humanity. 
 
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