Countdown to the Bronx International Film Festival: June 17-19

The Bronx News Network is co-sponsoring the Bronx International Film festival, which starts on Thursday, June 17 and runs through Saturday, June 19, at Lehman College. In the run-up to the festival, we’re going to post previews to some of the featured movies. Below is the trailer for “Defin” (or “The Burial”), a narrative short film from Turkey that will air on Saturday night. Here’s a short synopsis, provided by the festival operators: “The Burial Defin” is the story of two brothers who have a bond stronger than blood. The legend starts in the 50s, in a dark unknown place where two merciless gangsters (Tarik and Kenan) fall in love with the same girl.

Bronx News Roundup, June 14

It’s Monday! Time to get back to business and some BX news you may have missed. Enjoy!In-Tech Academy, in the South Bronx, is currently under investigation by city education officials on charges claiming that students were disciplined by being assigned janitorial duties, such as cleaning toilets.Jury selection on the case against the four men who allegedly plotted to bomb Riverdale synagogues is set to begin today.A 4-year-old boy died after tumbling over the railing of his terrace, and falling down 23 stories, in Co-op City. For a story on the father’s reaction click here.The Hutchinson Metro Center, in the Bronx, has agreed to shine the colors of Mother Teresa’s order on August 26, in honor of her 100th birthday, after Empire State Building officials said no.State Sen. Ruben Diaz Sr. has stuck to his guns, and refuses to vote on any more budget cuts, even with the threat of a state government shutdown. The Daily News has more.Some senate leaders are confident that a government shutdown will not be happening.

Yo! Magazine, The Official Magazine for the New Generation

[On the cover pictured here, are elementary school students from C.S. 50x in the Bronx, as well as T.V. personalities Terrance and Rocsi from BET’s 106 & Park.]Looking at the cover of this magazine, one may ask what is this? And how could we not know about it, being that it has such prominent people on the cover?First and foremost, this is Yo! Magazine, why don’t you know about it? Because you can’t find it on the stands! It is actually a publication created by students from schools throughout the Bronx.Yo” Magazine is an after school program that gives students the opportunity to not only take a look into the Journalism field, but to also be journalist at a young age.

The Yankees, Unobstructed — June 13

In the bottom of the fifth inning, when everyone around you is eating $6 hot dogs and savoring their $3 soda, that’s when you whip out your heaping $6.00 portion of curried goat.The smell alone will be enough to let fellow fans know that you planned your evening with the World Champions better than anyone.Yankee Stadium is notoriously expensive, and the food — with its hints of cardboard and soggy heat lamp-condensation textures — is rarely worth the asking price. Fortunately, good eating abounds in the surrounding Concourse Village area, and can be brought into the Stadium in a plastic bag.In fact, since the move to the new ballpark. It’s actually gotten easier to grab a quick bite before the game. Vendors in the area say that police shepherd fans from the subway towards the stadium, which means that at the restaurants nearby, there are shorter lines and better deals.From West Indian, to Subway sandwiches and pizza, the $9 most fans spend on a hot dog and soda can produce much better fare from just a block or two away.Here’s a map of the spots from this video. FEEL FREE TO SUGGEST OTHER NEAR-YANKEE STADIUM EATS BY LEAVING A COMMENT BELOW.In Yankee News:We’re back in first place!

Homelessness Strikes More NYC Children

The recession pushed an alarming number of New York City families, many of them with children, into homelessness in 2009, according to a new report by Citizen’s Committee for Children. The number of families applying to live in city homeless shelters increased about 27 percent to nearly 24,000 between 2008 and 2009, according to the annual report, Keeping Track of New York City’s Children .The trend mirrors the spike in adult street homelessness reported in March by the city’s Department of Homeless Services. Their annual one-night survey found a 25 percent year-over-year increase in the numbers of people living on the streets of New York, to about 3100 people.Keeping Track is a compendium of statistics describing the quality of life that New York City’s children enjoy. Many children enjoy little, the report notes.The number of children entering foster care declined almost every year between 1998 and 2008, the report shows, down more than half, to 16,200. And the city’s four-year high school graduation rate has steadily edged higher since 2005, increasing almost 10 percent.But several major problems persist, the report found:26 percent of all New York City children live in poverty.Children here are three times more likely to be hospitalized for preventable illnesses – such as asthma, pneumonia, and acute respiratory infections – than children in the rest of the state.The number of youth younger than 20 arrested on felony and misdemeanor charges was at a 12-year-high in 2008, with about 88,900 arrests.All indicators of child well-being in New York are worse among black and Latino children, the report found, with one of the greatest racial disparities being in the number of children born into poverty.

Churches On Front Lines Of Immigration Battle

Ruskin Piedra is the founder and director of the Juan Neumann Center, an organization tied to the Basilica of Our Lady of Perpetual Help church, which provides low-cost legal services to immigrants, many of whom are Latino and hail from the surrounding Sunset Park area. Piedra is a busy man. He manages about 3,000 cases, including undocumented immigrants seeking to adjust their status or who are facing deportation or seeking asylum.Piedra is not an attorney, but he has taken many courses in immigration law and procedure that qualify him to appear in immigration court. In New York, many nonprofits and charitable organizations employ representatives like Piedra who often charge less than an attorney.”These poor people have no clue and most of them don’t speak English,” Piedra said. “They have no other recourse but to come here.