EAST VILLAGER NEWS, APR. 25, 2013

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515 CANAL STREET • NYC 10013 • COPYRIGHT © 2013 NYC COMMUNITY MEDIA, LLC Volume 3, Number 14 FREE East and West Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Noho, Little Italy and Chinatown April 25 - May 8, 2013 EDITORIAL, LETTERS PAGE 10 SPIRIT IN THE WHEELS PAGE 11 BY SARAH FERGUSON Ten years ago, developer Gregg Singer stirred up a fury of opposition when he proposed razing the old P.S. 64 school building on E. Ninth St. to put up a 19-story dormitory tower. Now Singer is pitching a downscaled dorm plan to house up to 529 students in the existing turn-of-the century school building, which was landmarked in 2006, after community members mobilized to block him from tearing it down. Last time, the city refused to approve Singer’s dormitory tower because he did not have any actual leases with schools or universities to show proof of an “insti- tutional nexus” for the property, which is zoned for community facility use. The courts upheld the city’s decision, saying Singer could not build an “on- spec” dorm without any schools on board. This time, however, Singer says he’s confident his project “is going forward”— in large part because The Cooper Union has signed a 15-year lease to house up to 196 of its students on two of the build- ing’s five floors. “Cooper Union is our anchor tenant,” Singer said proudly of his revamped “state- of-the-art” dorm, dubbed “University House,” which he’s aiming to open in fall 2014. In an hour-long interview on Tuesday at the offices of The Villager, Singer pre- sented digital images of the new dorm scheme, showing students lounging in tree-shaded courtyards on the Ninth and 10th St. sides of the H-shaped school building, which for two decades housed the CHARAS/El Bohio community cen- ter. “Once completed, the dormitory will feature amenities unavailable in mod- ern apartment buildings,” a press release boasts. The new plans call for 95 suites housing four to seven students, at a cost of $1,550 per bed. Each suite would have its own kitchen, bathroom and dining room area with “large” flat-screen TV, Continued on page 14 Scaled-down dorm pitched for embattled CHARAS site Strength against bullying, p. 25 BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Should a redesigned Astor Place and Cooper Square have more skateboarding, new digi- tal “wayfinding” kiosks and ping-pong tables, plus movies with the audience all listening in via wireless headphones? Or, should most of the above uses be avoided so the revamped area doesn’t become a place where people come to hang out — only inevitably to “freak out”? And what will happen to the iconic Mudtruck? Will it morph into a mere “shell” of its former self? And could that actually be the best possible outcome? These questions and ideas and more were considered by about 70 people who turned out last Thursday for a “place- making” workshop for the city’s fast-approaching renova- tion of Astor Place and Cooper Square. Many were parents of Continued on page 2 Lots of new ideas pitched for Astor/ Cooper renovation BY JEFFERSON SIEGEL More than 100 people packed a town hall meeting Monday night to voice concern over the proposed relocation of the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office. The current E. 14th St. facility is scheduled to close in February 2014. Joseph Mulvey, facilities implementation specialist for the U.S. Postal Service, did lit- tle to quell the anger of locals demanding specifics. His opening statement, “We are proposing the relocation of the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office,” prompted calls of “Where?” from several in the audience. Mulvey continued to hedge, at one point admitting there was available space within a tenth of a mile in either direction of the current location. It would take more audience demands of “Where?” before he finally Continued on page 15 People going postal over 14th St. P.O. closure plan Renderings of the dorm plan for the old P.S. 64, showing students using the renovated front-entrance terrace on E. Ninth St.

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Transcript of EAST VILLAGER NEWS, APR. 25, 2013

515 CANAL STREET • NYC 10013 • COPYRIGHT © 2013 NYC COMMUNITY MEDIA, LLC

Volume 3, Number 14 FREE East and West Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Noho, Little Italy and Chinatown April 25 - May 8, 2013

EDITORIAL,LETTERS

PAGE 10

SPIRIT IN THE WHEELSPAGE 11

BY SARAH FERGUSON Ten years ago, developer Gregg Singer stirred up a fury of opposition when he proposed razing the old P.S. 64 school building on E. Ninth St. to put up a 19-story dormitory tower. Now Singer is pitching a downscaled dorm plan to house up to 529 students in the existing turn-of-the century school building, which was landmarked in 2006, after community members mobilized to block him from tearing it down. Last time, the city refused to approve Singer’s dormitory tower because he did not have any actual leases with schools or universities to show proof of an “insti-tutional nexus” for the property, which is

zoned for community facility use. The courts upheld the city’s decision, saying Singer could not build an “on-spec” dorm without any schools on board. This time, however, Singer says he’s confi dent his project “is going forward”— in large part because The Cooper Union has signed a 15-year lease to house up to 196 of its students on two of the build-ing’s fi ve fl oors. “Cooper Union is our anchor tenant,” Singer said proudly of his revamped “state-of-the-art” dorm, dubbed “University House,” which he’s aiming to open in fall 2014. In an hour-long interview on Tuesday at the offi ces of The Villager, Singer pre-

sented digital images of the new dorm scheme, showing students lounging in tree-shaded courtyards on the Ninth and 10th St. sides of the H-shaped school building, which for two decades housed the CHARAS/El Bohio community cen-ter. “Once completed, the dormitory will feature amenities unavailable in mod-ern apartment buildings,” a press release boasts. The new plans call for 95 suites housing four to seven students, at a cost of $1,550 per bed. Each suite would have its own kitchen, bathroom and dining room area with “large” fl at-screen TV,

Continued on page 14

Scaled-down dorm pitchedfor embattled CHARAS site

Strength against bullying,p. 25

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Should a redesigned Astor Place and Cooper Square have more skateboarding, new digi-tal “wayfi nding” kiosks and ping-pong tables, plus movies with the audience all listening in via wireless headphones? Or, should most of the above uses be avoided so the revamped area doesn’t become a place where people come to hang out — only inevitably to “freak out”? And what will happen to

the iconic Mudtruck? Will it morph into a mere “shell” of its former self? And could that actually be the best possible outcome? These questions and ideas and more were considered by about 70 people who turned out last Thursday for a “place-making” workshop for the city’s fast-approaching renova-tion of Astor Place and Cooper Square. Many were parents of

Continued on page 2

Lots of new ideaspitched for Astor/Cooper renovation

BY JEFFERSON SIEGEL More than 100 people packed a town hall meeting Monday night to voice concern over the proposed relocation of the Peter Stuyvesant Post Offi ce. The current E. 14th St. facility is scheduled to close in February 2014. Joseph Mulvey, facilities implementation specialist for the U.S. Postal Service, did lit-tle to quell the anger of locals demanding specifics. His

opening statement, “We are proposing the relocation of the Peter Stuyvesant Post Offi ce,” prompted calls of “Where?” from several in the audience. Mulvey continued to hedge, at one point admitting there was available space within a tenth of a mile in either direction of the current location. It would take more audience demands of “Where?” before he fi nally

Continued on page 15

People going postal over 14th St. P.O. closure plan

Renderings of the dorm plan for the old P.S. 64, showing students using the renovated front-entrance terrace on E. Ninth St.

2 April 25 - May 8, 2013

students at the Grace Church School, which this year opened a new high school division on Cooper Square. The workshop was led by representatives of Project for Public Spaces, who were brought in by the Village Alliance business improvement district. P.P.S. will collect and distill the informa-tion from the workshop and present it to the BID as part of the ongoing planning for programming the new spaces. The participants broke up into eight smaller groups, then went out and surveyed specific areas of the landscape, then came back and drew up lists of recommendations. The renovation job will stretch from Eighth St. to Fifth St.

along Cooper Square. The one-block length of Astor Place between Cooper Square and Lafayette St. will be closed to car traffic under the city’s plan, so that “The Alamo” sculpture, i.e. “The Cube,” will no longer be on its own island, but will be attached to the block with the new Gwathmey Siegel-designed, luxury, glass tower. The workshop groups each focused on one of the four major areas of the renovation: the Astor Place subway plaza; “The Alamo” plaza; the “Cooper Triangle,” or Cooper Park; and the “Village Plaza,” a new plaza area to be created south of Cooper Park. Basically, in addition to closing Astor Place and creating the new “Village Plaza,” sidewalks will be widened by about 15 feet around the subway island and on the western side of Cooper Union’s Foundation Building and Cooper Park. The thinking was that the new “Alamo Plaza” would be a

place where performances and music events would be held. Participants said the southern end, Fifth St., is crying out for some kind of “anchor,” such as an interactive sculpture. One woman, a Cooper Union student, suggested making the “Village Plaza,” near the Grace Church School, a cool skateboarding park, but — when this was shared later during the recap with all the participants — it was met by loud boos from many in the crowd. Someone else suggested a “mini soccer field.” Joyce Kuh, director of development for Grace Church School, said not to worry — the “Village Plaza” surface will specifically be designed to prevent skateboarding. Grace Church will maintain this new plaza, including four planters that its students will cul-tivate, and daily will put out and remove seats and tables for the plaza, she said. Grace Church School has already signed a contract with the city for this, she said. According to William Kelley, the Village Alliance’s executive director, the BID will be the “mainte-nance partner” for the subway island and the “Alamo Plaza.” It remains to be seen if Cooper Union will have a role in maintaining the new plaza area to the west of it. Noho activist Zella Jones warned that the new plazas would be deluged with food carts and food trucks unless regulations are put in place limiting them. However, there was wide support for some kind of public artwork. Another popular idea was for a “night market” that would stay open until 8 p.m. Other recommended uses were WiFi, theater, bike-share docks, moveable lounge chairs on tracks à la the High Line and “the piano guy.” A member of the group Bowery Moms advocated for play-ground space, noting, “Playgrounds in Union Square and Tompkins Square are so crowded, children are now waiting in line for swings.” However, one Fifth St. resident warned of the new, welcoming plazas, “Do we want to draw more people? We’ll have a really nice space for people to freak out in. You have to be realistic — this will happen. We want a nice space for people who are here.” The operators of the Mudtruck, the popular Astor Place cof-fee vendor, are concerned, because the expanded subway plaza means they won’t be able to park there. “Hopefully, it would be good if we could have a kiosk, and could even use the shell of the Mudtruck,” said Maria Cocchiara-Klein, the truck’s cater-ing manager. “People look for us at the spot. People going to work, coming from east and west, get their coffee with us before going into the subway. A tourist DVD called the Mudtruck the ‘Gateway to the East Village.’ ” The Department of Transportation is set to start construction on the renovation project very soon, with the work slated to take 18 months.

Continued from page 1

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Lots of new ideas pitched for Astor/Cooper renovation

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Elena Madison, vice president of Project for Public Spaces, jotted down ideas from workshop participants in her group, which specifically focused on uses for the new “Village Plaza” area, which will project out from the exist-ing sidewalk near Grace Church School.

April 25 - May 8, 2013 3

CONSERVANCY’S COMING: As you can read in this week’s issue, in an exclusive talking point from Bill Castro, the Parks Department Manhattan borough com-missioner, plans are moving rapidly ahead to create a conservancy for Washington Square Park. The issue will be on the agenda of the Community Board 2 Parks and Waterfront Committee meeting on Wed., May 1, place and time to be assigned. Rich Caccappolo, the commit-tee’s chairperson, tells us he recently reached out to Steve Simon, Parks chief of staff, for clarification after the issue was broached a bit cryptically at a meeting earlier this month, and Simon informed him the conservancy “is in formation.” Sarah Neilson, who has been tapped to be both the park’s new administrator and the conservancy’s director, will attend the May 1 meeting. Caccappolo told us: “We have asked Sarah to introduce herself and to be prepared to discuss her role (she will explain that similar roles exist in other parks) along with other topics that may come up, such as PEP officers, N.Y.U.’s support, other existing Washington Square Park organizations, the status of the park’s Phase 3 renovations, the recent pillow fight, crusties, etc., and the new “expressive matter” park performer rules — which I anticipate will be a significant discussion itself.” Caccappolo, who was not on C.B. 2 when talk of a conservancy last percolated, about seven years ago, said he’s quickly working to “get up to speed” on the issue and to understand why there was such intense opposition before. “We hope to create a common basis for understanding for all who participate — including Ms. Nielson, so she can be most effective moving forward,” he said. “I don’t expect that we will create a resolution coming out of the meeting; I think we may need iterations of thought and discussion on the topic. This news may seem to have come out of the blue, but it is actually very timely, because the park’s renovations are expected to be completed this summer,” he noted. “If the conservancy is going to help with maintenance, security, beautification and so forth, than it might be helpful to start soon after renovations are complete, or as close to that time as pos-sible, though I am not aware of potential timeframes for its formation. So, I hope all interested members of our community come to the meeting, though the location has not yet been finalized.” Cacappolo quipped: “Tell them to bring sleeping bags and rations because I fear the meeting may go on for a long time...just kidding.” Susanna Aaron, the Parks and Waterfront Committee’s vice chairperson, added, “We will be looking for clarity on terms and conditions: Is there a distinction between the terms ‘con-

servancy’ and ‘friends group’? I’ve heard that distinction made, but it seems just a point of nomenclature. How will the model of this soon-to-be-formed conservancy differ from longtime community groups active in Washington Square Park, or from other parks, like Central Park or Madison Square? Sarah Neilson will be able to address whether the formation of a conservancy diminishes the money the Parks Department will continue to budget for Washington Square Park,” Aaron noted. “The role of the Washington Square Park Conservancy will be defined by the license agreement it signs with Parks, so I think neigh-bors will want to know what the terms of that agreement will be. One person mentioned he wants Washington Square Park to continue to be operated by Parks, so as to remain a community park; so there are questions about

how one defines ‘community park,’ and questions about accountability, community input, limiting vendors and special events, among other things.” Aaron said she had gathered that a big part of the pushback against a conser-vancy a few years ago was the fear that big donors would have undue influence over the park’s renovation project. “I wonder, with that capital project mostly behind us,” Aaron said, “what concerns remain today.” Aaron noted it’s her understanding that the conservancy hasn’t com-pleted selection of its board of directors and that the new organization hasn’t been incorporated yet — nor even signed an agreement with the Parks Department. … Hmm, what’s next, a conservancy for Tompkins Square?!

RIDE ON! We were walking down E. Ninth St. past the old P.S. 64 Sunday afternoon when J.K. Canepa came zipping along on her bicycle. The East Village environ-mentalist had just come from Union Square — with a detour at the Tompkins Square rhumba circle — after tabling against T.P.P., a.k.a. the Trans-Pacific Partnership. She explained to us that this trade agreement, between the U.S. and 10 other nations, will give foreign corpora-tions the right to sue our government when the U.S. laws block their environmentally destructive projects and toxic exports — and that the multinationals would even be able to sue for millions of dollars in future profits they claim they’ve been denied. “T.P.P. is a time bomb ticking down to the finish line in October,” Canepa warned. “It would be the last trade agreement that would ever need negotia-tions. The president is just trying to fast-track this through Congress, which has not been privy to the language.”

RAY’S LEASE RENEWAL CRISIS: Ray of Ray’s Candy Store, at Avenue A and Seventh St., who just turned 80, tells us his lease is up for renewal July 15, and that it’s likely his rent — now $4,100 — will double. But he can’t afford to pay that without doubling his prices, and is now wondering if, after 40 years, he’ll have to “give up the business.” While some European countries have commer-cial rent control, he noted, New York never will. Three years ago, the community pulled together to help Ray pay his rent through the winter, until he finally could make it through to his peak summer season, and also finally get his long-delayed Social Security, which had been snagged in bureaucratic red tape. But this lease renewal is a seri-ous new challenge. While Jerry Leshko, the store’s former landlord, had wanted to give Ray a 99-year lease, he died about 15 or 20 years ago before he could follow through on the pledge. … Meanwhile, on the bright side, Ray’s new specialty, fried Oreos, is selling like hotcakes, and they are, mmm-mmm good!!! For a video of Ray talking about his lease, his love (Kathy D., 71 — unfortunately, unrequited, because she feels Ray is too old to marry her) and other issues, visit www.thevillager.com .

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J.K. says “No way!” to T.P.P.

4 April 25 - May 8, 2013

Katherine Thurston appeared at her arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court on Sun., April 14, right, after having been arrested earlier that day for accosting actor Hugh Jackman while he was working out at a West Village gym. She was charged with stalking. She had been waiting outside the place when the Aussie hunk arrived at 8 a.m. She told Jackman, “We’re going to get married, right?” according to police, before following him inside. Once inside she charged “The Wolverine” star and threw an electric razor — reportedly filled with her public hair — at him before his personal trainer intercepted her. On Sat., April 20, she was indicted on felony charges. Thurston, 46, from California, remains in jail. She is being evaluated to determine if she is men-tally fit before her next court date sometime this month.

Jackman and the razor’s edge

Molester gets 8 years

The man convicted of groping a 10-year-old girl near Gramercy Park last May has been sentenced to eight years in prison, Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance announced on April 22. Timothy Gillette, 63, was convicted of first-degree sexual abuse by a New York State Supreme Court jury on March 13. According to court documents, on May 25, 2012, Gillette approached the girl — whose mother was nearby — near the corner of E. 20th St. and Third Ave., and forcibly touched the girl’s genital area before running away. The victim’s mother was able to take a photograph of Gillette on her cell phone before walking to the 13th Precinct to report the incident, the D.A. said, which aided police in identify-ing the molester. In addition to his prison sentence, Gillette will face 10 years of post-release supervision.

Meatpack boutique bust

Police arrested a group of five suspects early on Fri., April 19, after they allegedly burglarized a trendy clothing boutique in

the Meatpacking District. A witness told police he was walking down Little West 12th St. around 4:30 a.m. when he saw a man (later identified as Trent Patterson, 47) approach another man (later identified as Bilal Abdelkrim, 27) and say to him that the front door of the nearby Ted Baker outlet was unlocked, and he should “go inside and get some stuff.” The witness then saw Abdelkrim enter the store, at 34 Little West 12th St., remove an armful of clothing, and come back outside to hand it to Patterson, who was standing watch with the other perpetrators. Abdelkrim reportedly then entered the store one more time, gather-ing another heap of clothing and handing it this time to Aude Boukli, 25, another suspect standing outside. Minutes after the witness reported the crime, cops swarmed the location and were able to catch Abdelkrim, Patterson and Boukli red-handed, along with two other suspects whose names police did not dis-close. All five were charged with burglary.

Ate J — but had baggies This guy ate his joint when he saw a cop coming to bust him — but it was a bitter pill to swallow.

The officer said he saw Daniel Aviles, 25, smoking the marijuana cigarette near the corner of Bank St. and Greenwich Ave. around 11 a.m. on Thurs., April 18, and then witnessed Aviles swallowing the joint once the two men made eye contact. But Aviles had a lot more to hide than a simple reefer — and that became clear when the officer searched the stoner’s pockets and found three plastic bags stuffed with weed, which all tested posi-tive back at the precinct. Aviles was charged with criminal pos-session of marijuana and tampering with physical evidence.

Hit her with a 40

Police arrested a man who allegedly stole $100 from a woman in the Village and then smashed a large beer bottle over her head when she tried to take it back. The victim and witnesses told cops that, while she was walking past the corner of Commerce and Bedford Sts. around 10:30 p.m. on Tues., April 16, the perp — later identified as Shaun Handy, 45 — snatched the cash right out of her pants pocket and then turned to run away. The woman said she attempted to rip the money out of the thief’s hands, but he responded by hitting her with a 40-ounce beer bottle, which left a cut on her forehead and a bruise around her left eye, before he fled scene. The victim was later treated at Beth Israel Hospital for minor injuries. But Handy didn’t get far. He was caught less than two hours later during a police canvass of the area. He was charged with robbery.

Camera grabs camera culprit A Village restaurant employee was arrested at work on April 21 after, according to police, he stole the camera of a customer who was busy enjoying a meal. Police said they identified William Threherne, 47, as the likely culprit after viewing surveil-lance video from inside Grano Trattoria, at 21 Greenwich Ave. Threherne is believed to have swiped a bag containing the digital camera and an extra lens — with a total value exceeding $1,100 — around 5 p.m., while he was on the job. Police arrived at the restaurant several hours later to cuff him. Threherne was charged with grand larceny.

Purse snatcher caught

This gal made cops’ jobs easier by skill-fully spotting, following and identifying the thug who allegedly stole her purse inside a Meatpacking District bar on Sun., April 21. The woman told police that she left the purse unattended momentarily while getting a drink at the Brass Monkey, at 55 Little West 12th St., around 4 a.m., and soon realized that someone had walked off with it. She said that, immediately after that, she noticed a man — later identified as Nicholas Tuths, 28 — walking quickly away from the bar’s seating area, toward the exit, and followed him until he’d left the premises, when she then called police to report the crime. Aided by her description, police were able to nail the suspect about an hour later during a canvass of the area. Tuths was charged with grand larceny.

Sam Spokony

police blotteR

Photo by Jefferson Siegel

The Village Independent Democrats

Calendar of Events:

April 29, 2013- 7:00 PM- Mayoral Forum- LGBT Center-208 West 13

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Street Co-sponsored by VRDC. DID, GLID, MYD, LMD

May 2nd

- 6:30 PM-9:30 PM- VID Awards Dinner, Spring Forward-

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Honorees- Congressman Jerrold Nadler; State Senator Brad Hoylman; Clare

Donohue-Sane Energy Project Founder; Roberta Kaplan- Attorney for Edith

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May 7, 2013- 7:00 PM- Borough President & Public Advocate Forum-

LGBT Center-208 West 13th

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May 9, 2013- 6:30 PM- VID Endorsement Mtg.- Mayor, BP, PA, Civil Court

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April 25 - May 8, 2013 5

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON In a very competitive endorsement vote for the upcoming City Council District 3 (Greenwich Village/Chelsea) primary election, the storied Village Independent Democrats club gave their nod to Corey Johnson over Yetta Kurland on April 11. In the fi rst round of voting, Johnson got 26 votes to Kurland’s 22; a third candidate who recently entered the race, Alexander Meadows, got 7 votes, and there were also 3 “no endorse-ment.” Under the progressive club’s rules, because Johnson didn’t win a simple majority (50 per-cent plus 1), a runoff was then held. Ultimately, Johnson picked up signifi cantly more voters than Kurland in the runoff — 5 versus 1 — going on to win by 31 to 23, with 1 “no endorsement.” One club member later said the runoff showed that, although Kurland has a very loyal core fol-lowing, she may not be able to expand her base as well as Johnson can. In somewhat of an upset, in V.I.D.’s Council District 1 (Lower Manhattan) endorsement vote, District Leader Jenifer Rajkumar beat incumbent Councilmember Margaret Chin by 29 to 20, with 6 votes for “no endorsement.” In the endorsement for Council District 2 (East Village), sitting Councilmember Rosie Mendez easily won the club’s support for a third term over opponent Richard Del Rio, by 50 votes to 2, with 3 “no endorsement.” The candidates were each given six minutes to address the club, after which there were six minutes for questions and answers. Kurland was asked about whether she owned a handgun, and said no. Jim Fouratt — a former ally of Kurland’s on the St. Vincent’s Hospital issue who subsequently fell out with her — didn’t feel she had addressed the question suffi ciently. “Answer the question!” Fouratt demanded, drawing a sharp rebuke from club president Tony Hoffmann. Kurland is a civil rights attorney who for-merly also owned an English language school. She has, in the past, variously said she needed the fi rearm as a “court offi cer” and also because she was designated to have it by her Hello World Language Center as part of its post-9/11 security protocol. At the same time, Kurland has led gun-control vigils — after the Tucson shooting that left Congressmember Gabby Giffords critically injured and also after the more recent Newtown school mass shooting. Meanwhile, two years ago, The New York Times, in an exposé on high-profi le New Yorkers with gun permits, had “outed” Kurland as being a gun owner. After the Newtown shooting, The Villager queried Kurland again about her gun, and she told the newspaper that she no longer had the weapon because she had left the school. Kurland basically reiterated this statement to V.I.D., saying that while she had been the “gun custodian” for her language school, she no longer has a gun. Being designated the gun custodian was a responsibility she took “very responsibly,” she noted, though added, “It was not a position that I at all was interested in or took delight in.” However, she added, “The welfare of hun-

dreds of students who came into this country and were under our auspices is something that’s very serious.” “It is unfortunate,” Kurland said, “that this issue has been used to try to undermine my can-didacy and my work.” She said the real issues include, among oth-ers, banning assault weapons, ensuring there are background checks for gun buyers and making sure weapons are kept out of the hands of the mentally ill. Speaking after the vote, John Geballe, the club’s immediate past president, said Kurland “gave a good answer” on why she had had a gun. “She said, ‘Yes, I had a gun, but I stood with the people that were for gun control.’ ” As for Johnson, Geballe said, “Corey was very solid in saying that there was going to be a sea change in government. There’s going to be a lot of new city councilmembers, a new mayor, a new comptroller. There will be 10 or 11 new councilmembers in Manhattan, plus fi ve others.” Before the vote, Frieda Bradlow, Ellen Peterson-Lewis and Eli Hausknecht spoke from the fl oor in support of Johnson; and Ron Illardo and Stacy Lentz spoke in support of Kurland. One observer said, in his opinion, it was an “upset” that Johnson had beaten Kurland for the club’s support. “I mean, she’s a woman, a civil rights attor-ney…,” he said, requesting anonymity. But others said both Kurland and Johnson had come to the endorsement vote fully expect-ing to win. In their comments before the club, both Chin and Rajkumar started out by referring to their immigrant roots. In Chin’s case, she said she recently marked her 50th anniversary of having landed in New York City without winter boots on a snowy day. She said she had looked up at the City Council Chambers ceiling on that anniversary and, realizing how far she has come, said to herself, “This is what the American Dream is all about.” Rajkumar noted her parents landed here with “$300, a suitcase and dreams.” Chin said she has overseen four ULURP (uni-form land-use review procedure) applications in the past year alone, with three of them being for major rezonings and development projects.

Though noting “not everybody was happy with what happened” on the ULURP for the Seward Park Urban Renewal Area, or SPURA, she said she felt the right “delicate balance” had been achieved. “It wasn’t 100 percent affordable housing, but we got 50/50,” she said. “On top of that, we got a school.” She notably didn’t mention the ULURP for New York University’s 2031 expansion plan in the South Village. Tom Connor, a member of the Greenwich

House Senior Center, said, “Margaret has been there” for local seniors, assuring that their pro-grams aren’t cut. Surprisingly, there were no questions for Chin — something Hoffmann later chalked up to it having been late in the meeting, so “people were tired.” In her remarks, Rajkumar, who recently announced her campaign against Chin, said, “I’m here to stand up for my community.” As for why she decided to run, she said, “What I saw was there was a representative not listening to the people.” She said the N.Y.U. 2031 plan approved by Chin and the City Council was a threat to “our homes — to Greenwich Village” that would make the area look like “Midtown Manhattan.” Rajkumar lives in Battery Park City. “And on the Seaport,” Rajkumar added, “the Council hid part of the development.” She said one of her favorite sayings was by a law professor of hers who told her, “Courage is a muscle and needs to be used… . I’m going to be a person who has courage,” she said. “I took a leap of faith,” Rajkumar said, of her decision to run. “And I ask you to take a leap of faith, too,” she told the club members. “Because I know we can do so much better.” Dodge Landesman spoke for Rajkumar, say-ing she had “risked arrest” when she and scores of other local residents were tossed out of the

V.I.D. backs Johnson over Kurland; Rajkumar over Chin

Corey Johnson, left, won V.I.D.’s endorsement over Yetta Kurland, right.

Continued on page 25

6 April 25 - May 8, 2013

BY JEffERSON SIEGELA massive drug ring was busted on April

11, when police raided apartments in several area housing projects.

Forty-one people were arrested and charged with running a cocaine delivery service. Thirty-three members of the Blocc Boyz gang from the Baruch Houses in the Lower East Side were charged with using car services to deliver cocaine orders. Another eight members of the Money Boyz gang from Campos Plaza in the East Village were charged with traffi cking crack cocaine.

Charges ranged from conspiracy to crimi-nal sale and possession of a controlled sub-stance.

The dealers had posted photos of them-selves on social media sites cavorting at a Queens strip club, where one of those arrest-ed, Krista Zuniga, was a dancer. Other online photos depicted them holding wads of cash. At a news conference announcing the busts, prosecutors had printed out pages of photos and video stills from the Web, along with a pile of indictments the size of a small-town phone book.

Listed were 165 counts and 161 “overt acts” of sales and conspiracy.

Undercover offi cers made dozens of drug buys in 2011 and 2012 as they monitored the gangs’ activities on wiretaps. One damning e-mail blast the gang sent after Superstorm Sandy reassured their customers that they

were still in business.Friday morning, April 12, the fi rst batch

of defendants were brought to court for their arraignments. Security was so tight that, after family and friends had passed through mag-netometers to enter the court building, they encountered a second level of court offi cers screening people as they entered the 11th-

fl oor courtroom.One by one the accused appeared before

Judge Laura Ward, who listened as public defenders made their cases. Only one young man from the Baruch Houses was released on his own recognizance; the rest had various levels of bail set and were remanded back into custody.

Four of the arrestees from the Baruch Houses gang were also charged under a “Drug Kingpin” statute — operating as a major traffi cker — a class A-1 felony.

Many of those arrested also worked in the area. One young woman was a cashier at an Avenue B pharmacy while another man worked at a copy and fax center on Avenue C.

Michael Austin Rodriguez, a.k.a. “Woodstock,” one of the four alleged ringleaders, is a student at Borough of Manhattan Community College. Assistant District Attorney Michelle Warren noted that Rodriguez drove a Mercedes sedan. But his court-appointed lawyer countered that it was a low-end Mercedes “C” model and that Rodriguez had put $3,500 down on eventu-ally buying the car.

Rodriguez’s attorney asked for reasonable bail, noting it had been fi ve years since his cli-ent’s last encounter with the criminal-justice system. At that, Judge Ward paused, looking closer at Rodriguez before saying, “I remem-ber you.” She then recounted Rodriguez’s arrest on a drug charge fi ve years earlier and how she had sent him to Daytop Village for drug-abuse treatment.

As the fi rst of the arraignments were being held in court, just blocks away at Police Headquarters, Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance Jr. and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly announced details of the takedown.

“Residents of Manhattan today can get nearly everything delivered to their door-step, from dinner to dry cleaning and even cocaine,” Vance told a roomful of reporters. “They [the arrestees] made hundreds of thou-sands of dollars a year from this service at the same time they were living in city-subsidized housing as NYCHA residents.”

As the arraignments continued into Monday, Judge Edward McLaughlin paused the proceedings at one point to compliment A.D.A. Warren on the thoroughness of detail-ing the offenses.

“Parenthetically, the list of overt acts at the back of the indictment is particularly help-ful,” he told the prosecutor. “It’s something I’ve never seen before.”

41 arrested in Baruch and Campos coke-delivery ring

Photos by Jefferson Siegel

Alleged drug-delivery ringleader Michael Austin Rodriguez, a.k.a. “Woodstock,” at his arraignment.

Krista Zuniga, fi ancée of another of the alleged ringleaders, was a dancer at a Queens strip club. At left is her court-appointed lawyer, Meghan Maurus. Maurus defended many of the activists arrested during Occupy Wall Street.

Assemblyman Shelly SilverIf you need assistance, please contact my office at (212) 312-1420 or email silver@�assembly.state.ny.us.

Fighting to make Lower Manhattan the greatest place to live, work, and raise a family.

April 25 - May 8, 2013 7

Bike Share: In Action There/Launching Here

A Film Screening and Discussion on NYC’s Bike Share Program

Community Board No. 2, Manhattan, and the New York University Office of Government & Community Affairs present an exploration of New York City’s new bike share system. Join us for a presentation about the bike share, a discussion with leaders from the Department of Transportation, and a screening of several Streetfilms shorts.

Thursday, May 2, 20136:00 - 8:00 pm Casa Italiano Zerilli-Marimò24 West 12th Street

Enjoy opening remarks from New York State Senator Brad Hoylman; a presentation and discussion with Kate Fillin-Yeh, Director, and Stephanie Levinsky, Planner, of the Department of Transportation’s bike share program; a screening of Streetfilms; and a Q&A.

Please register online at www.nyu.edu/ogca or by contacting OGCA at 212-998-2400. Space is limited. This event is free and open to the public.

Image courtesy of the New York City Department of Transportation

BY REY MAShAYEkhIThe city’s Landmarks Preservation

Commission approved a plan last week enabling the redevelopment of a historic East Village synagogue into residential apartments, contingent on the project’s developers meeting a set of modifications meant to preserve the integrity of the building’s 102-year-old facade.

The commission unanimously voted 6-0 in favor of the plan, which will transform Congregation Adas Le Israel Anshei Meseritz’s synagogue, at 415 E. Sixth St., into three apart-ments and construct a penthouse addition on the building’s roof. Upon review, however, the commission requested that the project’s architect, Joseph Pell Lombardi, and its devel-opers, East River Partners, reduce the height of the penthouse addition and build its exterior with darker construction materials, in order to decrease the addition’s public visibility.

The changes to the proposal followed recommendations made by representatives of both the Historic Districts Council and the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, who spoke at the commission’s meeting on April 9. The Historic Districts Council asked that “steps be taken to mini-mize” the visibility of the project’s rooftop addition, citing how “a darker [construction] material that would blend with the wall of the neighboring building” would better comple-ment the building’s facade, as opposed to the addition’s proposed beige stucco exterior.

Andrew Berman, executive director of G.V.S.H.P., told The Villager that the change would ensure that “even from a distance, [the rooftop addition] does not obscure the distinc-tive historic rooftop details of the synagogue.” The house of worship is located within the East Village/Lower East Side Historic District, which was created by L.P.C. last October.

Lombardi, the project’s architect, told The Villager this week that developers have already submitted the proposed revisions to both the color of the rooftop addition, as well as its height, which was contested by several com-missioners. Lombardi said he expects the project to receive a certificate of appropriate-ness from the commission within the next month. According to Landmarks spokesper-son Elisabeth de Bourbon, the project will be able to obtain a building permit and com-mence upon the commission’s approval.

The plan for the synagogue’s redevelop-ment has proven contentious among members of the Meseritz congregation and its surround-ing community, since it would gut the shul’s existing sanctuary and move the congregation to the building’s basement floor. However, the project would also preserve and restore the structure’s century-old, neoclassical facade, which many have acknowledged is in need of repair.

The proposal passed through Community Board 3 last month, after meetings held by C.B. 3’s Parks, Recreation, Cultural Affairs, Landmarks & Waterfront Committee and the Landmarks Subcommittee, as well as the full community board. Carolyn Ratcliffe, chair-person of the Landmarks Subcommittee, was

in attendance at L.P.C.’s April 9 meeting, and read a statement on behalf of C.B. 3 Chairperson Gigi Li expressing support for the board’s resolution on the project. The state-ment added, however, that “it is with sorrow that the interior of the synagogue won’t be preserved” by the project.

Robert Rand, the congregation’s acting president, also spoke at the commission’s meeting and said that Meseritz congregants “overwhelmingly support the plan.” That has been contested by other congregation mem-bers, however, many of whom, during the course of last month’s C.B. 3 meetings, voiced displeasure with the residential conversion and its handling by the congregation’s board of directors.

Matt Malina, a lifelong East Village resi-dent who spoke at the commission meeting in opposition to the plan, told The Villager that he took issue with the manner in which the congregation’s board negotiated the redevel-opment.

“It was done by a few people behind closed doors,” Malina said. “It’s not kosher.”

Landmarks O.K.’s Meseritz plan, but with some revisions

Photo by Tequila Minsky

Now that’s really springing into springA little girl in Washington Square Park last weekend broke out a pogo stick and boinged around to her heart’s content. Although spring weather isn’t coming fast enough, thanks to her spring-powered stick, the girl was hav-ing a lot of fun.

8 April 25 - May 8, 2013

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BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Ending its cherished, 150-year-old tradition of free education for all, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art this week announced it will slash its full-tuition scholar-ships to 50 percent for all undergraduates, beginning with the class entering fall 2014. Tuesday, at a meeting at the Great Hall, a statement by the school’s board of trustees was presented by Mark Epstein, the board’s chair-person, to the student body, faculty and staff. “After 18 months of intense analysis and vig-orous debate about the future of Cooper Union, the time has come for us to set our institution on a path that will enable it to survive and thrive well into the future,” the statement said. “Under the new policy, The Cooper Union will continue to adhere to the vision of Peter Cooper, who founded the institution specifically to provide a quality education to those who might otherwise not be able to afford it. Consequently, we will provide additional scholarship funding for those with need, including full-tuition scholarships to all Pell Grant-eligible students. We intend to keep admissions need-blind.” Current undergraduates, plus those entering in fall 2013, will receive full-tuition scholar-ships for their entire undergraduate education. “Our priorities have been and will continue to be quality and access,” Epstein continued, reading from the statement, “so that we will remain a true meritocracy of outstanding stu-dents from all socio-economic backgrounds. “Being mostly alumni ourselves, we share

your sense of the loss of this extraordinary tradition,” the trustees said of the school’s trademark, free-tuition tradition. “However, we found no viable solutions that would enable us to maintain the excellence of our programs without an alteration of our scholarship policy.” The trustees noted the school can’t rely on the rent from the Chrysler Building to solve its long-term problems. “Even though our rent income from the Chrysler lease is scheduled to increase dramati-cally in 2018-19, deficits are forecast to grow forever thereafter,” they said. “The board also considered the possibility of downsizing the institution while maintaining our current scholarship policy. We concluded that there are no viable downsizing options that would not involve closing one or more of our three schools. … Neither can the projected $12 million annual deficit be closed through budget-cutting.” The trustees noted that new programs pro-posed by the faculty are “innovative,” but will only cut about one-third of the school’s deficit. The board said the highly selective, elite school, despite having to operate more effi-ciently, won’t cut the quality of its education. The tuition debate has gripped the school for the past two years under its new president, Jamshed Bharucha, and even saw student pro-testers occupy the Foundation Building’s clock tower at the end of last year. After Tuesday’s announcement, about 200 students and faculty gathered outside the Foundation Building, and then, linking hands, gave it a symbolic hug.

Cooper Union won’t be free

April 25 - May 8, 2013 9

BY ALBERT AMATEAUMargaret Rock, who came to New York

from Poland in 1958, died peacefully on Sat., April 13, in her second-floor walk-up on E. Sixth St. She was 109 years old.

“She was fiercely independent,” said Irene D’Alessio, a social worker at the Selfreliance Association of American-Ukrainians who had visited Margaret reg-ularly for the past 14 years.

“A few years ago, Margaret had a hip operation and I was able to get her into a nursing home in Queens,” D’Alessio said. She continued, “She got antsy after about a year and wanted to come home. We had kept paying her rent and were able to get her 24-hour home care, so she came back to her apartment.”

For the past five years, Margaret’s three city home care attendants took turns being with her round the clock.

“They took care of her as if she was part of their own family,” D’Alessio said. “The Department of Social Services was going to stop the home care; I had to go to a department fair hearing last year and they decided to keep it,” D’Alessio added.

In recent years, Margaret spoke less and less English and conversed mostly in Polish. But D’Alessio speaks Ukrainian (her maiden name is Repezuk), so the language barrier was not very high.

Margaret told friends a few years ago that she was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, on July, 13, 1903, to a family that later returned to their native Poland. She was married in 1923 in Vilno, Poland, to Anton Biesickierski, who died in 1929 leaving her with two daughters.

What she and her children endured during World War II is not known at this point.

She came to the U.S. alone 30 years later, made a home on E. Sixth St. and became an American citizen in 1964.

The day after she was naturalized, she changed her name from Malgorzata

Gratulewicz (her maiden name) to Margaret Rock, possibly as an assessment of her own character.

Two years later she brought her two daughters and five of her six grandsons from Poland to New York. One of the grandsons remained in Poland.

A seamstress in Poland, Margaret worked as a cook and housekeeper for a wealthy family on Central Park West. Her two daughters and their sons lived in the same E. Sixth St. building that she did. One of her daughters died and the other moved in 1979 with two of her sons to Hyannis, Mass.

“I think a secret of her long life was simplicity and strength of character,” D’Alessio said.

A memorial service will be held at St. Stanislaus Roman Catholic Church, 106 E. Seventh St., at a date to be announced.

o b i t U a R y

Margaret Rock; Polish immigrant lived to age 109

Margaret Rock in a recent photo.

10 April 25 - May 8, 2013

Perhaps after years of digging in their heels amidst mounting P.R. problems, the Boy Scouts of America thought they could garner some favorable press with the announcement last week that gay members would no lon-ger be barred from their ranks. Late next month, the 1,400 members of Scouting’s National Council will vote on a motion put forward by the group’s leadership stating, “No youth may be denied membership in the Boy Scouts of America on the basis of sexual orientation or preference alone.” Some frenzied critics, noting that a sizeable chunk of Scouting groups are sponsored by Catholic and Mormon con-gregations, warned of a catastrophe awaiting the organization. But whether or not a troop here or there loses its sponsor, it’s doubtful that a large number of Americans are troubled by the idea that gay kids will no longer be ostracized by the Scouts. However, the larger issue regarding gays and the B.S.A. remains unresolved. And the message there may be more damaging to the psyches of gay youth than the policy being swept away. Openly gay men will continue to be barred from leadership positions in the Scouts. The implication couldn’t be clearer or uglier. The B.S.A. is telling the parents of Scouts, “Your sons will be all right if there are gay fellow Scouts among them. But don’t worry, we’ll protect them from gay adults.” And that is exactly what they are saying as well to every gay boy who wants to join the Scouts. B.S.A. officials, in fact, are making little effort to hide that motivation. Deron Smith, the group’s spokesperson, said the question of the role of gays in the Scouts is “among the most complex and challenging issues facing the B.S.A. and society today.” Other Scouting officials around the country, how-ever, pointed to surveys the B.S.A. has conducted showing widespread unease about opening up the leadership ranks to gay men, suggesting the decision to continue the current policy on that question was an easy one. In explaining the “softened” position on gay youth join-ing the Scouts, the proposed May motion reads: “Youth are still developing, learning about themselves and who they are, developing their sense of right and wrong, and understanding their duty to God to live a moral life.” What’s more disturbing is the lead-up to the motion’s restatement that the B.S.A. bars adult leaders “who are open or avowed homosexuals or who engage in behavior that would become a distraction to the mission of the B.S.A.” A critical role played by Scout leaders, the motion explains, is in “teaching young people to make better choices over their lifetimes.” It’s all there in the motion that supposedly reflects prog-ress in B.S.A. thinking on gays. The “better choice” for youth is heterosexuality. The utter banality of the B.S.A.’s position, however, becomes crystal clear when considering the example of Lucien and Pascal Tessier of Maryland, brothers who are both Scouts and gay. Before the B.S.A. made its announce-ment last week, Lucien, 20, an Eagle Scout, was fighting to change Scouting’s policy after being told that Pascal, 16, his brother, would not be allowed to become an Eagle Scout if he said publicly that he, too, is gay. “I’m thrilled that under the proposed resolution, after years of service and dedication to the Boy Scouts, my brother would be eligible to earn his Eagle award,” said Lucien, whose initial effort to reform Scouting involved a petition drive on Change.org. “But what I cannot understand is why the Boy Scouts of America believes that I’m not fit to lead my brother’s troop, even though I received the Boy Scouts’ highest honor just a few years ago. If a Scout has what it takes to earn his Eagle award, surely he has what it takes to serve as an adult leader.”

A longer version of this editorial first ran in Gay City News, The Villager’s sister paper.

Scouts’ badge of shame G.O.P. club prez on CHARAS

To The Editor:Gregg Singer has gotten approval from Community

Board 3 for his plan to convert the old P.S. 64 — a 157,000-square-foot building between Avenues B and C on Ninth St. — into private college dormitories. It is an exceptional building of great architectural significance, 106 years old. It has been vacant for 12 years since Mr. Singer bought it in a city auction for $3.2 million. Gregg later ripped the window treatments off to try to stymie landmarking efforts.

The community was blocking his efforts to convert the building into a college dormitory for N.Y.U. and Baruch. The community wanted to extract amenities from the developer, like community space to replace the CHARAS/El Bohio Cultural and Community Center that he evicted from the building in 1999.

I moved onto E. Ninth St. a few years ago and have followed this issue very closely, and have tried to help resolve it.

Will the community end up with some semblance of a restoration of this space and these services? Losing them left a big wound that has yet to heal. There are still a lot of angry people. It would be a real shame if our community, spearheaded by our city councilwoman, failed in our effort to rectify the mistake that was made by Giuliani when he allowed this building to be sold to a private interest.

The building sat unused for 12 years, with many demonstrations in between. I sincerely hope that we get something for all that effort. It reflects very poorly on our incumbent political leadership if we don’t.

Steve SinclairSinclair is president, Progress Republican Club

So fed up with crusties

To The Editor: Re “A crusty proposal: Crack down on ‘voluntary homeless’” (talking point, by Chad Marlow, March 28):

I found Chad Marlow’s talking point about a crusty proposal to be articulate and concise but, unfortunately, a form of magical thinking. Even if we can get the pres-ent laws enforced and new ones passed, sadly, the Police Department is already stretched to the limit. The justice system has morphed into an infinite revolving door; the crusties come in and they just go out. They’ve nothing to

lose, only much to gain. While in custody, they have heat, food and medical care…all on our dime. Then they are back on the street to beg, fight and steal for their heroin.

And what, Mr. Marlow, should we do with their dogs? You just can’t take them from their people, for they don’t go peacefully, even though these pit bulls are on the street in 20 degrees, 24/7. That in itself is a law breaker. What do you think happens when these innocent and loyal dogs go to the pound? If a no-kill shelter doesn’t rescue them, many are euthanized, only to be replaced with a new dog by the crusty “owner,” and the merry-go-round starts again.

Insidiously, this crusty culture is just another form of misanthropic nihilism. The insouciance of this culture of “voluntary homeless” has even stretched Berkeley, California, to its liberal limits. In last November’s elec-tions, Berkeley tried to pass an amendment making it illegal for people to lie around on its commercial streets between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Even Berkeley, the bastion of tolerance, has had enough!

I would like to commend The Villager and Mr. Marlow for bringing this dilemma to light — for knowledge really is power — and maybe we can take these neighborhoods back for their citizens to enjoy, and not be shamed when tourists think that we ignore our “poor, young and home-less,” and reveal them for the selfish and solipsistic, drug-addled urchins they are.

Deborah Spicciatie

E-mail letters, not longer than 250 words in length, to [email protected] or fax to 212-229-2790 or mail to The East Villager, Letters to the Editor, 515 Canal St., Suite 1C, NY, NY 10013. Please include phone number for confirmation purposes. The East Villager reserves the right to edit letters for space, grammar, clarity and libel. The East Villager does not publish anonymous letters.

letteRS to the editoReditoRial

eVan FoRSch

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April 25 - May 8, 2013 11

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BY DUNCAN OSBORNE

T he 2004 federalbudget proposed bythe Bush adminis-

tration on February 3 is draw-ing both praise and criticismfrom gay and AIDS groups.

“Generally, we have a mixedreaction to it,” said WinnieStachelberg, political director atthe Human Rights Campaign(HRC), even as some leadingAIDS groups, including the GayMen’s Health Crisis (GMHC),were more critical.

The proposal includes a $100million increase for the AIDSDrug Assistance Program(ADAP), a $5 million dollarincrease in the Housing Oppor-tunities for People With AIDS

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� LOU HARRISON DIES AT 85

Contemporary composer,Eastern music pioneer

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� BOOKSHOP SHUFFLE

Oscar Wilde up,Bluestockings down

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There’s a place for us

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� CATEGORY

headheadhead

BY DUNCAN OSBORNE

T he 2004 federalbudget proposed bythe Bush adminis-

tration on February 3 is draw-ing both praise and criticismfrom gay and AIDS groups.

“Generally, we have a mixedreaction to it,” said WinnieStachelberg, political director atthe Human Rights Campaign(HRC), even as some leadingAIDS groups, including the GayMen’s Health Crisis (GMHC),were more critical.

The proposal includes a $100million increase for the AIDSDrug Assistance Program(ADAP), a $5 million dollarincrease in the Housing Oppor-tunities for People With AIDS

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P. 10

nowCh le seawww.chelseanow.com

The Villager (USPS 578930) ISSN 0042-6202 is published every week by NYC Community Media LLC, 515 Canal Street, Unit 1C, New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 229-1890. Periodicals Postage paid at New York, N.Y. Annual subscription by mail in Manhattan and Brooklyn $29 ($35 elsewhere). Single copy price at office and newsstands is $1. The entire contents of newspaper, including advertising, are copyrighted and no part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher - © 2013 NYC Community Media LLC.

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sr. V.P. of sAles And mArketing

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retAil AdVertising mAnAger

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Jerry Tallmer

BY JEffERSON SIEGEL Last Saturday, several dozen cyclists rolled their bikes to the front of St. Mark’s Church in-the-Bowery for its first annual Blessing of the Bicycles. “It’s a riding neighborhood,” Reverend Winnie Varghese, the E. 10th St. church’s pastor, said as the cyclists gathered round with their three- and 10-speeds. “As a church, we value preservation of the environment,” she continued. “It reminds us of the agency we have here, to be part of an alternative economy.” Varghese wasn’t referring to socialism or even bitcoins. “Once you have a bike, it doesn’t take much to maintain it,” she added. “Regular life can

feel out of our control. With a bike, the city is ours.” The informal ceremony started with a gentle call to services; the tinkling of bells attached to handlebars. Varghese then read a passage from the prophet Ezekiel: “When the living creatures moved, the wheels moved beside them. And when the liv-ing creatures rose from the earth, the wheels rose. The spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels.” More bikes on the streets may lessen, but not completely remove, the hazards of riding alongside cars. The reverend offered several prayers of safety. “In a world groaning under the excesses of

consumption, we acknowledge the inherent goodness of non-motorized, human-powered transportation,” she said. With the city’s new bike-share program set to begin as soon as later this month, bike docks have started springing up in many neighbor-hoods. On the program’s first day of online registration, more than 2,500 people signed up for an annual $95 membership. That entitles members to use a bike for up to 45 minutes at a time. Eventually, the program is expected to offer 10,000 bikes and 600 docking stations around town. As the cyclists bowed their helmeted heads, prayers for victims of road rage and those injured while cycling were offered. Varghese

asked those who drive buses, cars and trucks to display wisdom and caution in operating their vehicles. The congregation then observed a moment of silence for those who have died while cycling before Varghese conferred the final blessing: “May the road rise to meet you, may all your journeying be joyous.” “It’s a symbolic way to start the bicycling sea-son,” offered East Villager Rob Schoenbohm, an architectural lighting consultant. “Thinking about safety, thinking about the environmental advantages to cycling, thinking about how we can reconsider transportation in our city.” No word yet on if you can chain your bike to the pearly gates.

Photo by Jefferson Siegel

Reverend Winnie Varghese sprinkled holy water on cyclists’ rides at the first Blessing of the Bicycles.

Church service blesses ‘the spirit in the wheels’

12 April 25 - May 8, 2013

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Woodstock icon Havens dies at 72Folk singer Richie Havens died Mon., April 22, of a heart attack at his home in Jersey City. He was 72. A fi xture on the Greenwich Village folk circuit in the 1960s, he is best known for his legendary opening performance at the Woodstock festival in August 1969. The photo above is of Havens performing at Madison Square Garden on Aug. 15, 1968, for a crowd of supporters of Eugene McCarthy, the anti-Vietnam-war presidential candidate, two weeks before the infamous Democratic National Convention. Havens, who grew up in Brooklyn, used to have an apartment on Jane St. in the Village.

Earth Day: Fracking go away!In celebration of Earth Day, District Leader Jonathan Geballe — with Celia Wu in photo above — on Saturday led a contingent of Village Independent Democrat club members in a demonstration against the Spectra gas pipeline and hydrofracking. The demon-stration, from noon to 2 p.m., was held in front of the Bleecker St. Playground to symbolize that the planet must be saved for today’s children and future generations. Many V.I.D.’ers, community activists, state Senator Brad Hoylman and a number of candidates for local offi ce joined the rally. Signatures were collected for a letter to Governor Cuomo to urge him to ban fracking in New York State.

14 April 25 - May 8, 2013

and bedrooms furnished with bunk beds, desks and personal safes for the students to store their valuables. Some of the units show spiral stair-cases leading up to loft spaces, taking advantage of the 14-foot ceiling height on all fl oors. Many of the upper fl oor suites have views of the Empire State Building. The basement — formerly home to a 400-seat auditorium where F.D.R. once riled the masses, and where the Fringe Festival was staged — would now house a bike room, fi tness center, TV lounge and game rooms outfi tted with pool, ping-pong and foosball tables, along with Xbox and PlayStation consoles. “This is the most advanced dorm in Manhattan as far as technology goes,” Singer claimed. In addition to wireless service through-out the dorm, each student would have their own Cat 6 cable to connect them to their school’s computer system, Singer said.

Singer said the pricing was comparable to what New York University and the New School charge for dorm space. An in-house health cen-ter run by Beth Israel and staffed by a full-time physician’s assistant would offer free healthcare to residents. There would also be a cafe, study rooms and soundproof music rooms on four of the fi ve fl oors — so students can jam on site. “We think we will have some music schools leasing from us,” Singer predicted. While the building would continue to be owned by Singer and his partners in 9th and 10th Street LLC, the dorm would be run by a management company that specializes in stu-dent properties across the country. There would also be 24-hour security and “lots of cameras throughout the building, so parents know it’s safe,” Singer assured. A brochure for University Houses notes the building’s “exceptional location next to the wireless Tompkins Square Park, farmers mar-ket, music and art festivals, summer fi lm nights, basketball and handball courts, and open grass areas for lounging.” Students, it notes, will be able to take advantage of the M8 bus that stops on 10th St., along with Alphabet City’s “many affordable restaurants, cafes and nightlife ven-ues.” All of which is sure to elicit outrage from area residents who have long feared a dorm would overwhelm the character of the neigh-borhood. On Tuesday, the East Village Community Coalition, which was founded to stop Singer’s previous dormitory tower, began circulating an online petition demanding that Cooper Union not house its students there.

“Respect our community. Respect this com-munity treasure,” the petition says of the old P.S. 64. “Dormitory use does not serve our community.” E.V.C.C. Director Sara Romanowski said that while the new University House plan is smaller than Singer’s previous tower scheme, “It’s still 500 students. It’s a large concentration, and not under the supervision of any one insti-tution, which is even more nerve-wracking.” Singer shrugs off such complaints. “Manhattan has almost 2 million people. These kids are already coming to the East Village,” he said. “They are putting three to four students in studios around here,” he noted. “This is a safe and managed environment. Isn’t that better than cramming them in all these brownstones?” He points to a study he commissioned by Greenwich Realty Advisors that determined that Manhattan faces a shortfall of 57,000 dor-mitory beds.

While N.Y.U. and the New School have already said they aren’t interested, Singer pre-dicts he will have plenty of interest from small and midsize schools that can’t afford to build their own dorms. That’s certainly the case of the beleaguered Cooper Union, which this week announced it would be forced to charge undergraduate tuition starting in fall 2014 in order to sustain itself. Currently, Cooper has just one dorm on Third Ave., housing 178 of its freshmen, out of a total student body of roughly 1,000. “Some of our students have had to move further and further away to fi nd housing,” said Claire McCarthy, the school’s director of public relations. “Our students tend to work late into the night in their studios, so we were looking to fi nd housing for them closer to our campus,” which is located at Astor Place and Cooper Square. McCarthy seemed unaware of the animosity

that Singer has engendered since he bought the building out from under the old CHARAS community center at auction for a scant $3.15 million. Nor apparently did she or other Cooper offi cials fully realize the role they might now play in legitimizing Singer’s latest dorm scheme. “It’s not something that really was on our radar,” McCarthy said of the 16-year contro-versy over this property. “We’ve been focused in the last 10 years on getting our new buildings built, and now dealing with our fi nancial chal-lenges. We only recently looked at this opportu-nity.” On April 1, the Department of Buildings rejected Singer’s plans for the dorm conversion. But Singer said that was because the plans had yet to receive approval from the Landmarks Preservation Commission, which is required because the building is landmarked. Singer has already met with L.P.C. staff

Scaled-down dorm pitched for old P.S. 64 building

Continued on page 24

Continued from page 1

Renderings of the dorm plan for the old P.S. 64, showing students using the renovated front-entrance terrace on E. Ninth St.

‘These kids are already coming to the East Village.’ Gregg Singer

April 25 - May 8, 2013 15

divulged, “333 E. 14th St. seems to be available.” That address, a block west of the current post office, is a former Duane Reade drugstore across the street from the Fire Department’s Ladder 5 stationhouse. Mulvey's own question, “Is that an acceptable location to the community?” was met with a resounding “No!” The audience’s mood escalated from agitation to anger as plans for postal services were grudgingly revealed. As Julius Caesar divided Gaul into three parts, the Postal Service proposal would send current services at the Stuyvesant P.O. to three other locations. The storefront at 333 E. 14th St. would offer retail services, such as stamp sales and P.O. boxes. The carriers who sort and deliver mail to homes and businesses would be moved to the Madison Square Station, on E. 23rd Street near Third Ave. Large parcel services would operate out of the F.D.R. Station at 54th St. and Third Ave. Georgina Christ, an East Villager for 42 years, suggested, “Are they going to walk their carts down here [from 23rd St.], because that doesn’t seem to be very cost-effective. That's just ludicrous.” “This is devastating to this community,” City Councilmember Rosie Mendez said, voicing alarm at the proposal. “As it is there are long lines — it’s a well-utilized post office in the area.” Mendez was especially concerned for the neighborhood’s many seniors who get medications in the mail and would have to travel

to pick up packages that don’t fit into their building’s mailboxes. “Either way, you’re talking about having to take a bus,” she said. “Either way it entails traveling.” Councilmember Dan Garodnick, a Peter Cooper Village resi-dent, echoed her concerns. “This post office is providing a vital service to the residents of Stuyvesant Town all the way down to the East Village and Lower East Side,” he said. “If they need to move one door or a couple of doors over, we’re open to that, but the services must continue.” The situation of Eve Cusson, who has lived on Avenue C for 43 years, typifies the problem facing the community. “I have a grandson in the Army in Kuwait and I’m constantly sending him packages,” she said. “Where else am I going to send them from?” Valerie Heinonen, who has lived on Avenue C since 1977, was outraged, saying post offices mirror our society. “Post offices are a sign of a democracy,” she declared, “as are libraries, public housing and public schools, all of which are being sold out from under us.” Joseph Hernandez, who grew up in the area, leaning on his cane, looked at Mulvey and warned, “We always find out the truth on the Lower East Side.” Hernandez was right, although it took almost two hours for Mulvey to finally reveal, in detail, how the current situation evolved. The building’s landlord, whom Mulvey would not iden-tify, told the Postal Service he had other plans for the two-story structure. The current lease, set to expire in February 2013 was extended one year, to February 2014.

The parties could not reach an agreement for the current loca-tion. Despite the audience’s demands, Mulvey refused to reveal the current rent. After a 15-day comment period from the public on the proposed relocation, a postal headquarters facility manager in Washington, D.C., will review all the comments. Next comes a window for appeal of any decision. “What month were you going to notify the community of the impact?” demanded Jonathan Smith, president of the New York Metro Postal Union. “Where are you going to find better prop-erty than the best you already have?” As he did for most of the town hall, Mulvey sat patiently listening. Gigi Li, chairperson of Community Board 3, who mod-erated the meeting with Sandro Sherrod, chairperson of C.B. 6, and Councilmember Mendez, said community members have till May 7 to submit their comments to U.S.P.S. In order to deal with its soaring debt, the Postal Service plans post office closings nationwide. In New York City it has proposed closing five branches; one in the Bronx and four in Manhattan, including the Stuyvesant branch and the Old Chelsea branch, on W. 18th St. Built in 1951, the 56,900-square-foot building on E. 14th St., between First Ave. and Avenue A, and the land underneath it have a reported market value of $8.1 million. Comments, which must include the name Peter Stuyvesant Post Office, can be sent to: Joseph J. Mulvey, Facilities Implementation, U.S. Postal Service, 2 Congress St., Room 8, Milford, MA 01757-9998.

People going postal over 14th St. P.O. closure plan

Photo by Jefferson Siegel

The Peter Stuyvesant post office on E. 14th St. is scheduled to close next February.

Continued from page 1

16 April 25 - May 8, 2013

BY ChAD MARLOW It was the story that broke the hearts of all New Yorkers. Just a few short weeks ago, Nathan and Raizy Glauber, both just 21 years old, were in a livery cab rid-ing to the hospital where, perhaps, they would deliver their fi rst child. They never made it. A BMW driving at excessive speed crashed into their car killing both young parents. The baby was born within hours and died the next day. Speed kills. Indeed. Elected and appointed offi cials from across the city, seeking a constructive way to respond to such a senseless tragedy, rallied behind a proposal to install speed cameras in select locations throughout the city, especially near schools. Unfortunately, because New York City cannot blow its nose without permission from the Legislature in Albany, we lacked authority to enact this safety measure unilaterally. And guess what happened? Our request was denied because certain infl uential Upstate legislators did not want to risk creating a precedent that could bring speed cameras to their own districts (where they might get caught speeding), and two Brooklyn state Senators cared more about currying favor with the police union than saving lives. Fortunately, notwithstanding Albany’s obstructionism, New York City’s progressive Department of Transportation has implemented numerous programs that do not require

Albany’s sign-off to protect pedestrians, cyclists and other motor vehicles from those traveling at excessive speeds. One such program allows for the implementation of “slow zones” in select neighborhoods. The slow zone program, in short, takes a well-defi ned, relatively compact area, and reduces its speed limit from 30 miles per hour to 20 miles per hour, with further reductions to 15 miles per hour near schools. These newly reduced speed limits are then promoted and enforced through the use of traffi c calming measures, such as specialized signage at zone entry points, painted speed limit information on streets and the selective use of speed humps (relatively fl at, elongated speed bumps that are designed to be traversed at 15 to 20 miles per hour). It is hard to overstate the value of a slow zone’s speed reduction: A pedestrian who is struck by a car going 30 miles per hour has a 45 percent chance of being seriously injured or killed, but if the car’s speed is 20 miles per hour, the chance of serious injury or death drops to just 5 percent. Additionally, such a speed reduction reduces the risk of child pedestrian/cyclist accidents by 67 percent. It is, therefore, not surprising that similar programs have produced dramatic results. In London, a 9-mile-per-hour reduction in average slow zone traffi c speeds resulted in a 46 percent reduction in fatal and severe injury crashes compared to non-slow zones. In the Netherlands, slow zones resulted in a 25 percent average decrease in inju-ries. In Barcelona, crash rates in newly created slow zones dropped by 27 percent. The success of these programs led other cities to imple-ment similar programs, including Berlin, Zurich, Dublin, Stockholm, Helsinki and New York. Beyond their positive effect on health and safety, slow zones also bring numer-ous quality-of-life improvements, such as reducing traffi c noise, reducing cut-through traffi c volume (and its related

air pollution) and creating more social streets. Because D.O.T. will not implement a slow zone where its benefi ts are offset by negative externalities, such as increasing traffi c congestion or restricting the fl ow of emergency services, many areas are not well-suited to receive the gift of a slow zone. Fortunately, one area within the district I represent as a member of Community Board 3 — and in which I have a special interest as found-er of the Tompkins Square Park & Playground Parents’ Association (TSP3A) — meets or exceeds all of D.O.T.’s

standards for the implementation of a new slow zone. In fact, if established, it would be the new gold standard for New York City slow zones. To that end, I am pleased to announce TSP3A will soon be submitting an application to D.O.T. for what we are calling the “Tompkins Square/Alphabet City Slow Zone” (TSACSZ). The proposed borders of the zone (which them-selves are not part of the zone) are as follows: the western

Alphabet City slow zone would rapidly increase safety

Continued on page 17

Protecting pedestrians from danger-ously operated vehicles is very impor-tant and personal for me.

Courtesy TSP3A / Transportation Alternatives

An analysis by Transportation Alternatives, culled from New York State Department of Motor Vehicles data.

talkinG point

April 25 - May 8, 2013 17

Town & Gown Evenings presents

A Community Screening of the First Run Film Festival’s Winning Films

In collaboration with the Kanbar Institute of Film and Television, NYU’s Office of Government & Community Affairs invites you to a special community viewing of the First Run Film Festival’s winning films of 2013.

Monday, April 29, 20136:30-8:00 PM. Doors open at 6:00. Cantor Film Center, 36 East 8th Street

The annual First Run Film Festival showcases innovative works by students at the Kanbar Institute of Film & Television. Winners are selected from over 120 submissions. Past winners have included Spike Lee, Ang Lee, and Nancy Savoca.

Register at www.nyu.edu/ogca, or contact us at [email protected] / 212-998-2400. This event is free and open to the public with RSVP.

Please be advised, no food or drink is allowed in the Cantor Film Center.

All images copyright NYU Tisch School of the Arts

border is First Ave.; the eastern border is the F.D.R. Drive; the northern border is 14th St.; and the southern border — which, following D.O.T. rules, is drawn to avoid having a firehouse in the zone — is Second St. to the west of where it meets Houston Street, and Houston Street to the east of where it meets Second St. TSP3A believes the proposed TSACSZ will benefit our neighborhood’s residents, visitors and businesses. With respect to our residents and visitors, the zone will create a safer, cleaner neighborhood with less traffic noise. The improvements will be of particular benefit to children, senior citizens and certain physically challenged persons for whom speeding traffic pres-ents the greatest danger. Local businesses will benefit in two ways. First, when motor vehicles pass through a neighborhood more slowly, their passengers are more likely to notice and patronize its local businesses. Second, reduced traffic speeds offer increased pro-tection to the patrons of local businesses. Despite what we may think of the noisy, drunken masses that teem out of our local bars late at night, no one wants to see an intoxicated person stumble into a street and get hit by a speeding car. For bars — which can be subject to “dram shop law” civil liability in such cases — the extra safety that slow zones provide should be enthusiastically welcomed. As noted, the TSACSZ abundantly sat-isfies all of D.O.T.’s major slow zone approval requirements. For example, D.O.T. requires that slow zones have strong borders. The proposed TSACSZ has a major avenue, highway and crosstown thoroughfare as three of its borders, and a major crosstown thoroughfare as part of its fourth. One significant benefit D.O.T. looks for in a slow zone is that it protects school children. The proposed TSACSZ is home to 12 schools located within seven school buildings, so its beneficial impact in this area would be significant. In fact, the high-est concentration of schools in an existing zone — the New Brighton/St. George Slow Zone — is five schools. Likewise, D.O.T. favors slow zones that help protect kids in preschools and day-care centers. TSACSZ has 22 combined preschools and daycare centers, which is more than double that of the Corona Slow Zone, the existing zone with the highest preschool/daycare center concentration. The proposed TSACSZ is also home to three senior centers and 38 parks, which attract sizable populations that would greatly benefit from a slow zone’s traffic calming measures. Moreover, TSACSZ avoids virtually all of the negative factors that count against slow zone applications, insofar as it has no firehouses, hospitals, truck routes or major thoroughfares within its borders. Finally, the proposed TSACSZ encom-passes 0.38 square miles, just 0.08 square miles more than the Elmhurst Slow Zone, whose size D.O.T. calls “ideal.” Perhaps the strongest factor weighing

in favor of the TSACSZ is that the area is particularly dangerous. According to Transportation Alternatives, from 2005 to 2009 (the five most recent years for which State Department of Motor Vehicles data is available), there were 143 pedestrian injuries and 70 cyclist injuries in the proposed TSACSZ. There were also two pedestrian fatalities. That means the pro-posed TSACSZ averages 42.6 injuries and 0.4 deaths annually. By way of comparison, only one existing slow zone — Elmhurst, with an average of 44.6 annual injuries — is even in the same ballpark as the pro-posed TSACSZ. The next highest injury total for an existing slow zone is Boerum Hill, which has 28.2 annually. In fact, one existing slow zone, Dongan Hills, was approved by D.O.T. despite having just 4.6 annual injuries — 89.2 percent less than the proposed TSACSZ. Although, as the above data demon-strate, the proposed TSACSZ is ideally suited for D.O.T. approval, no slow zone application can be successful without demonstrated support from the local com-munity and its elected officials. Although I will personally reach out to key stake-holders in our community to encourage their support, any person, business or organization that wishes to lend a hand to this health and lifesaving effort should contact me by e-mail at [email protected]. Time is of the essence with respect to this application: The deadline for submis-sions is May 31, and with a new mayoral administration coming this January, there are no guarantees a slow zone program will exist in 2014. In the interest of full disclosure, I feel it is important to conclude by explaining why protecting pedestrians from danger-ously operated vehicles is so important and personal for me. When I was 23 years old, my father was struck and nearly killed by a speeding drunk driver. The accident left him bedridden, with quadriplegia and a severe brain injury, until he passed away 13 years later, just 16 days after my first child was born. The events of that terrible day — December 5, 1995 — completely devastated my family and me, and the relentless physical and emotional suffering and financial struggles that followed took an enormous toll on us for years to follow. Having endured such an agonizing expe-rience, I would do anything to help other families avoid a similar tragedy, but I can-not do it alone. This effort cannot succeed without strong, public support from the residential and business communities of the East Village and Community Board 3. So I am asking the readers of this talk-ing point to please join me and TSP3A in our effort to protect the health and lives of our families, friends and neigh-bors through the implementation of the Tompkins Square/Alphabet City Slow Zone. Every voice counts. I hope we can count on yours.

Marlow is founder of Tompkins Square Park & Playgrounds Parents’ Association and a member of Community Board 3, where he serves on the Transportation and Public Safety Committee

Continued from page 16

18 April 25 - May 8, 2013

BY BOB kRASNERIn the fashion world the next thing is always the best thing,

unless it’s so retro that it’s cool. Mariann Marlowe, proprietor of the East Village clothing shop Enz’s, has been at both ends of the spectrum.

She started out selling Vivienne Westwood’s punk designs in the West Village when that was the cutting edge in 1974. Today, she is currently selling a mix of her own rockabilly- and bur-lesque-inspired fashions, as well as others, in her Second Ave. location, having made stops in between on St. Mark’s Place, the Hamptons and a brief detour into the world of body piercing.

Her original shop, at 49 Grove St., was “the fi rst punk rock store in New York City,” she said in a recent interview. Shopping trips to London kept the store stocked with the

threads that New York punk rockers couldn’t get anywhere else. Those were the days when Debbie Harry, Lou Reed, Joey Ramone and Andy Warhol would drop by. The Internet didn’t exist, so there was no way to do a Google search for “punk rock clothing.” Sid and Nancy were alive (if not exactly well) and the East Village looked like a war zone. Marlowe sur-vived, where many did not, in part because she kept her focus.

“I was a wild child,” she said, “but I was responsible. And

I didn’t do drugs.”The city has since changed and just being a survivor of

the ’70s is a badge of honor; the fact that Marlowe still has a store is a minor miracle. It was a “mom and pop” store back then, but the husband that Marlowe started the business with is an ex and N.Y.U. has done its best to populate the neigh-borhood with squeaky-clean college kids. The racks that once sported ripped up T-shirts held together by safety pins now hold ’50s-inspired cocktail dresses, polka-dot swimsuits and leopard skin gloves.

Helen Mirren and Norah Jones have stepped in as the celebrity clientele, and the chaotic soundtrack of punk — The Clash, the Ramones, the New York Dolls — has been replaced by the upbeat rockabilly of Big Sandy and His Fly-Rite Boys. But Marlowe is one of the reasons that the East Village still has character. She runs the store from her heart — corporate entities like the nearby Bettie Page store just don’t have the soul that fi lls her tiny shop.

She continues to look to the future, with an eye on possibly opening a new store in Williamsburg. Inspiration continues as well: A vision of cherries and skulls that came to her in her kitchen is on its way to becoming an original outfi t that’s been made by hand in America, rather than the outsourced norm. If you’re looking for copies of Marlowe’s style you might just see them around: People regularly sneak photos in the shop (not allowed, of course) in an effort to duplicate her template.

While the imitators may manage to replicate a design or two, there’s one thing that can’t be copied.

“People always ask me what my formula is,” Marlowe said. “I have no formula. My life is my formula.”

Enz’s is located at 125 Second Ave., between St. Mark’s Place and E. Seventh St., and online at http://www.enzs-nyc.com/ .

Original punk shop rocks on, but in a retro cool way

an Episcopal parish in the city of New York

trinitywallstreet.org

All Are WelcomeAll events are free, unless noted.

212.602.0800

worshipsUNDAY, 8am & 10amSt. Paul’s Chapel · Holy Eucharist

sUNDAY, 8pmSt. Paul’s Chapel · Compline – Music & Prayers

sUNDAY, 9am & 11:15am

Trinity Church · Preaching, music, and Eucharist · Sunday school and child care available

MONDAY – FRIDAY, 12:05pm

Trinity Church · Holy Eucharist

MONDAY – FRIDAY, 5:15pmAll Saints’ Chapel, in Trinity ChurchEvening Prayer, Evensong (Thurs.)

Watch online webcast

musicThURsDAY, ApRIl 25 & MAY 2, 1pMConcerts at OneApril 25: American Pianists Association Finalists; May 2: Ensemble ACJW.Trinity Church

MONDAY, ApRIl 29 & MAY 6, 1pMBach at OneApril 11: Minetti Quartett April 18: Flûte AlorsTrinity Church

WeDNesDAY, MAY 1 & 8, 1pMPipes at OneMay 1: Gwendolyn Toth, Music Director, Immanuel Lutheran Church, NYC. May 8: Julian Wachner, Director of Music and the Arts, Trinity Wall StreetSt. Paul’s Chapel

TRINITY ChURChBroadway at Wall Street

74 TRINITY plACe is located in the office building behind Trinity Church

sT. pAUl’s ChApel Broadway and Fulton Street

ChARlOTTe’s plACe107 Greenwich Street btwn Rector & Carlisle Streets

The Rev. Dr. James H. Cooper, Rector The Rev. Canon Anne Mallonee, Vicar

let’s dosomethingtogetherat trinity wall street

educationsUNDAY, ApRIl 28 & MAY 5, 10AMDiscovery: Instruments of GraceExplore the history and practice of the sacraments. April 28: Holy Orders (Ordination); May 5: Holy Matrimony.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parish Hall

TUesDAY, ApRIl 30, 6pMDiscovery: Lord, You Have Searched Me OutThe Rev. Fletcher Harper, Executive Director, GreenFaith.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parish Hall

communitysATURDAY, ApRIl 27 & MAY 4, 10AM-1pMMosaic Art Project: WorkshopHelp design a large-scale mosaic for Charlotte’s Place. Facilitated by public artist Jackie Chang.Charlotte’s Place

sUNDAY, ApRIl 28, 5pMThe Family TableConnect with your neighbors, dine on locally-sourced food, and touch on the spiritual at the Family Table dinner event. $25 minimum suggested donation per family. Reservations by email at [email protected]. 74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parish Hall

Leah Reddy

ApRIl 26-28

Stravinsky FestivalA festival celebrating the complete sacred works of Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971). Days 1 and 3 are free. Day 2 tickets are $50 general admission and $20 students/seniors. Complete schedule and tickets at stravinskyfestival.com.Trinity Church

www.reddenfuneralhome.net

325 W. 14th St.New York, NY 10014

(212) 242-1456

NY State law mandates that funeral trust funds for Medicaid recipientspay for funeral and burial only. The contracts are irrevocable.

Photo by Bob Krasner

Mariann Marlowe in Enz’s, her boutique at 125 Second Ave.

April 25 - May 8, 2013 19

eaSt villageraRtS&enteRtainmentBuhmann on ArtSpring gallery offerings speak to Space Race, celebrity, machinery, weaponryBY STEPhANIE BUhMANN

EXHIBITION SPACE

Organized by Greg Allen, this exhibi-tion features multiple images and objects from the Palomar Observatory Sky Survey and Project Echo. Both were prominent projects from the early days of the Space Race. Including one object and two seem-ingly unrelated series of photographs, the show reveals the sudden transition in mankind’s perception of outer space. As the launch of Sputnik heightened the Cold War’s contentious dynamic, the U.S.’s aggressive and highly visual response transformed space into a site of military, political and cultural activity.

Through May 8, at apexart (291 Church St., btw. Walker & White Sts.). Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm. Call 212-431-5270 or visit apexart.org.

DAVID J. MERRITT

For his first solo exhibition with the gallery, Merritt presents new work from

his “Templates for a Machine Made From Earth” series. In addition to the featured gypsum cement tablets and objects made of wax, aluminum and magnesium, Merritt also works with sound and video. One of his site-specific projects involved the collabora-tion with a city utility locator. Demarcating various lines of flow throughout the gallery space, the work reflects the Brooklyn-based artist’s thesis that, “We are abstractions swimming through a concrete haze; con-stantly excavating, constantly sifting.”

Through May 12, at KANSAS (59 Franklin St., btw. Lafayette & Broadway). Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm. Call 646-559-1423 or visit kansasgallery.com.

ELIZABETH PEYTON

Since the mid-1990s, when Peyton reached critical acclaim, she has been one of the most influential figurative painters of our time. Her subjects range from close friends and boyfriends to European monarchy and celebrities. Many of her stylized portraits of rock stars such as David Bowie and Kurt Cobain have become well-known and fre-quently publicized images in the media landscape. Small-scale, these works are usually executed in oil paint, applied with washy glazes, watercolor, pencil, and etching. This show features new works by the artist, who splits her time between Long Island and Berlin.

Through May 13, at Gavin Brown’s enter-prise (620 Greenwich St., at Morton St.). Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm. Call 212-627-5258 or visit gavinbrown.biz.

ENGINES OF WAR

In this exhibition, curators Charles Dee Mitchell and Cynthia Mulcahy explore how the United States of America conducts war in the 21st century. Though images of drones and other material military equip-ment make up much of the content, Mitchell and Mulcahy’s show stresses that it is still the men and women who serve in the armed forces that remain the primary, highly trained yet fragile weapons of the United States mili-tary. Contributing artists to the exhibition employ a wide range of approaches.

Through May 4, at Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert, Inc. (524 W. 19th St., btw. 10th & 11th Aves.). Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm. Call 646-944-6197 or visit gassergrunert.net.

NABIL NAHASNahas’ new paintings employ thick

layers of acrylic paint and pumice to create colorful, spatially complex paint-

ings with a distinctive tactile quality. Gestural motifs rendered in saturated colors and geometric shapes cover these three-dimensional surfaces. Nahas’ highly textured lines and curves seem to extend beyond the edges of the canvas, draw-ing a metaphor to the contrast between macrocosms and microcosms. However,

according to the artist, his main concerns are the notions of process and perception as well as materiality in painting.

Through May 4, at Sperone Westwater (257 Bowery, btw. Houston & Stanton Sts). Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm. Call 212-999-7337 or visit speronewestwater.com.

Image courtesy of artist and Gasser Grunert Gallery

From “Engines of War,” Benjamin Lowy’s “Iraq | Perspectives I” (taken from 2003-2008; Digital C-Print; 20 x 24 in., edition of 10 + 2 AP).

Image courtesy of KANSAS, New York

David J. Merritt’s “Instrument” (2013, single-channel video generated by a custom software algorithm, sound of art-ist breathing digitally and floor monitor speaker; an eight-hour timed sequence that auto-plays).

Image courtesy of the artist and apexart

Beacon satellites on display in the US Pavilion at Expo67, Montreal. See “Exhibition Space.”

20 April 25 - May 8, 2013

Family Festival keeps it freshShort films, sports, Smurfs, bubbles and moreBY kAITLYN MEADE

Every year, the Tribeca Film Festival's free annual street fair attracts families from all over the city to its wide array of programs. This year, there are several exciting additions for young filmmakers and movie lovers. The fair takes place Saturday, April 27, 10am to 6pm, on Greenwich Street between Chambers and Hubert Streets, and at venues throughout Tribeca.

“This year we are introducing special sub-ject areas, like the Tribeca Back Lot and the Food Feast,” said Downing, as well as bringing back popular elements from previous years.

The Tribeca Studios Backlot will bring ele-ments of a real movie set to one Downtown street. Families will learn how to pitch an origi-nal movie, use a green screen, animate their sto-ries and take workshops on stunts, makeup and editing. Demonstrations of high-tech filming and special effects will be given by Chicago’s Tribeca Flashpoint Academy and the Tribeca Film Institute will be holding movie hacking sessions where you can flip the script and take the lead role in a familiar movie.

Also new this year, the Tribeca Food Feast will be a delectable section of the fair featuring city chefs who will provide entertainment, culi-nary secrets and, of course, tastings from food vendors from select local restaurants and food trucks from around NYC. Hands-on activities will be cake-icing, meatball-baking and taste-testing.

Broadway will also be jazz-stepping its way Downtown this year with performances from the casts of “Annie,” “Wicked,” “Cinderella,” “Kinky Boots,” “Motown: The Musical” and “Hands On A Hardbody.”

An exclusive sneak preview of “The Smurfs 2” (along with a free screening of “The Smurfs”) will be taking place at 11am at Borough of Manhattan Community College’s Tribeca Performing Arts Center, at 199 Chambers Street (between Greenwich and West Streets). There may also be a special appearance by cast member Christina Ricci. Hosted by Time Out Kids, admission is free on a first-come, first-served basis. The line will form thirty minutes prior to showtime.

A number of booths offer unique arts and crafts for kids of all ages. Kids can make a “VIP Pass” which will then be stamped at each area of the festival they visit, with prizes awarded for filling up a pass completely. Learn about recycling by creating creatures from recycled materials at the ScrapKins booth, along with chalk art and face painting.

Masters of the art of kiting will be at The Kite Place to teach kids how to make and fly their own kite designs. The Gazillion Bubble Garden, similarly, is a haven for bubbles (with wands of all shapes and sizes).

Puppet shows and workshops will be offered by Puppetworks, Inc. and Noel MacNeal, whose book “10 Minute Puppets” teaches parents and kids how to make to make entertaining puppet partners anywhere, in ten minutes or less, using everyday materials.

Other participants include CHESS NYC, the Young Storytellers Foundation, Victorian Gardens at Wollman Rink in Central Park and the New York Philharmonic’s Credit Suisse Very Young Composers.

OUT OF THE CINEMA, IN THE BALL GAME

Also on April 27, from 10am to 6pm, the Tribeca/ESPN Sports Day will return to Tribeca for its seventh year. The beloved Downtown event has brought in sports heroes from across the city and encouraged kids and parents alike to get up, get out and play ball. This year, it will take place on North Moore Street, between Greenwich and West Streets.

ESPN will give fans the chance to take home memorabilia and get their picture taken behind the ESPN New York desk. The NFL’s PLAY 60 campaign, designed to encourage kids to lead an active lifestyle, will be run-ning football agility drills and doing periodic giveaways. Life-size cutouts of well-known professional athletes will be walking (well, standing) on the Tribeca/ESPN Sports Film Festival red carpet for fans to pose with.

Highlights include contests, interac-tive games and giveaways by the New York Rangers and New York Mets. It’s also an

invaluable opportunity for kids to try out new activities. There is something for everyone, from inflatable lacrosse or Ultimate Frisbee to skateboarding or Double Dutch jump roping. Activities will be provided by the Downtown Giants Youth Football and New York Women’s Baseball. Olympians and elite athletes will teach kids the basics of safe fenc-ing at the Fencing Club. The Staten Island Yankees mascot Scooter the Holy Cow will be around and most likely invite you to try your luck on the Baby Bombers skeeball inflatable. The up-and-coming Tribeca Sailing NYC, soon to launch from Pier 25, will have sailing games, knot-tying and prizes.

There also will be demonstrations of cricket, newly reintroduced to TFF, and the award-winning Myachi Original Hand Sack.

SHORT FILMS ON LARGE SILVER SCREENS

The TFF program “Downtown Youth Behind The Camera” is putting filmmaking tools in the hands of elementary and middle school students for its tenth consecutive year. These young Downtown filmmakers produce their very own short films, which will be shown at a special screening at noon on Sunday, April 21 at the SVA Theatre (333 West 23rd Street, between Eighth and Ninth Avenues). The Film Fellows with Tribeca Film Institute is also screening a series of short films created by Downtown student filmmakers (ages 16-18). The program, recommended for those ages 12 and up, plays Saturday, April 27 at 11am at the Tribeca Film Center (375 Greenwich Street, at Franklin Street).

Image courtesy of the Tribeca Film Festival

The Family Festival is back again this year, with some fresh new activities.

Image courtesy of the Tribeca Film Festival

Play ball — on April 27, at ESPN Sports Day.

April 25 - May 8, 2013 21

Silent tale ‘demonstrates the humanizing power of fi lm’Charles Lane’s low-budget ’80s comedy deserves to be rediscovered

BY TRAV S.D.One of the highlights of this year’s

Tribeca Film Festival will have to be the long-awaited re-release of Charles Lane’s 1989 “Sidewalk Stories.” Lane’s fi lm, a silent black and white comedy with an African-American cast, won the Prix du Publique award at Cannes that year. Unfortunately, it has gone long unseen and has never been released on DVD. The fi lm was recently restored by Carlotta Films and will be shown for the fi rst time in many years on April 27.

“Sidewalk Stories” is strongly infl uenced by Charlie Chaplin’s fi lms “The Kid,” “A Dog’s Life” and “The Vagabond.” It stars Lane himself as a sidewalk caricature artist who lives in a squat and is forced to care for a two-year-old girl, after he sees her father murdered in a back alley mugging. Unable to go to police (his prints are on the knife), he is forced to play father to the little girl until he can locate the mother. Along the

way he meets and falls in love with a nice lady of some means, who helps him out.

The fi lm is full of the grittiness of its time, when the homeless fi lled New York City streets in record numbers, and the clean-up that began in the mid-90s had not yet begun. Much is fi lmed around Waverly Place, although it is re-envisioned as a Shangri La for busking performers. The cast of unknowns is terrifi c, especially the diminutive, Chaplinesque Lane (who proves a gifted mime) and the child, who is played by Lane’s actual daughter.

Beautifully shot and edited and frequent-ly quite funny, its memorable set pieces include a scene where Lane must pursue a couple of low-lifes who’ve snatched the girl. In order to do, he swipes a horse-drawn carriage while the driver takes a leak. The couple in the back seat never stop making out throughout the entire chase.

Above all, Lane demonstrates the humanizing power of fi lm, awakening our compassion for the sorts of people who are routinely demonized in the mainstream

press. One hopes that a DVD release will soon follow the restoration of this inspira-tional fi lm — a work that should never be out of circulation.

Photos by Bill Dill

Charles Lane and Sandye Wilson.

Photos by Bill Dill

Charles Lane, as the artist and Nicole Lane as the child.

FILMSIDEWALK STORIES

Written & Directed by Charles Lane

Runtime: 97 minutes

Screening at the Tribeca Film Festival

Sat., April 27, 2:30pm

At SVA Theatre

333 W. 23rd St., btw. 8th & 9th Aves.

For tickets & info, call 646-502-5296

or visit tribecafi lm.com/fi lmguide

Also visit carlottafi lms.com

ECONOMY BEST VISION & HEARINGWe Want You To See Clearly Now!

serving the community since 1958

Wednesdays from 11 -6 pm Please Call for an Appointment

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212-243-4884www.visionandhearing.net

Includes full comprehensive eye exam & fittings for contact lenses

223 West 14th (between 7th and 8th Aves.) New York, NY 10011

22 April 25 - May 8, 2013

‘Bending Steel’ an unexpectedly moving documentaryWould-be strongman dreams of Coney Island glory

BY TRAV S.D.“Bending Steel” is an unexpectedly mov-

ing documentary by director Dave Carroll about a guy with the quixotic dream of becoming an old-time circus strong man.

Chris Schoeck, the fi lm’s subject, is a 43-year-old physical therapist and self-professed loner who literally spends all of his spare time in a storage room straining to bend pieces of metal. To be more precise, he actually accom-plishes this seemingly impossible feat routinely.

Before the camera, we watch him twist horseshoes straight like taffy, bend a pipe wrench over double and transform a thick steel bar into a “U” shape. When he says “That’s a good kind of nail to work on,” he’s not talking about carpentry — it’s either for bending in half or driving into a board using only his fi st. And when he gets tired of metal, Schoeck tears phone books and decks of playing cards in half with his bare hands. Schoeck, by the way, only weighs about 150 pounds.

It turns out that accomplishing such feats of strength is not only a matter of brute force, but of willpower. To help him realize his dream, Schoeck hires a Pennsylvania-based consultant, Chris “Haircules” Rider — so named because of his long, fl owing mane, and the fact that he is able to pick up heavy weights that have been tied to it using his mighty scalp-strength. It’s Rider’s job to help Schoeck build his confi dence by teaching him about perfor-mance, inspiring him and psyching him up.

The fi lm follows the two as they make a

pilgrimage to the home of a legend in their fi eld, Slim the Hammer Man (whose specialty is lifting sledgehammers). Slim’s garage, in turn, is a shrine to the memory of sideshow

star The Mighty Atom (Joseph L. Greenstein). At a gathering of a club called the Steel Nuts, Schoeck is encouraged by one of the members to attempt to bend a quarter on his teeth — and he does, chipping one in the process.

This is a group of friends founded on machismo, yet Schoeck is able to fi nd more sensitivity, acceptance and understanding with them than he does from his own parents (whom ironically, are the only thing holding him back). Dismissive, truly horrible people, they can’t be bothered to support him or even pretend to take an interest in what he does, gazing unimpressed when he bends a steel bar an inch and a half thick in front of them in their back yard. (The father suggests that it might be a trick bar, and then points out that the son is out of breath).

The climax of the fi lm is Schoeck’s debut at the Coney Island Olde Time Strongman Spectacular, where he hopes to surprise everyone by bending a steel bar that is two inches thick. Even the experts tell him he won’t be able to pull it off. In the front row are two empty seats reserved for his parents.

You won’t get any spoilers here but I will reveal that the outcome affected me greatly on an emotional level. Far from a silly topic, this is one man’s existential journey, and it packs a punch — right to the solar plexus.

BY SAM SPOkONYNow this is romance. The

knowing glances, the swells and falls, the awkward moments, the utter silence. It’s always nice to experience a piece of fi ction in which the depth of emotion is really shown rather than told, and “Just a Sigh” follows that old mantra of narrative in all the right ways. Jérôme Bonnell puts it all out there, displaying — with supreme confi dence — an invigorating ability to navigate the folds of both tense social interaction and quiet introspec-tion, while never losing his sense of humor and sheer imaginative spark.

During a break from a the-atre performance in Calais, 43-year-old French actress Alix (played by Emmanuelle Devos) is on her way back to her home in Paris to relax and spend some time with her boyfriend. But while riding the train into the city, a somewhat older British man (Gabriel Byrne) sitting in a nearby seat catches her eye. She catches his eye. It’s cute. And so

on. They speak briefl y, but there’s an interrup-tion, and the connection is lost…for the moment.

From this point, it could have devolved into pure cheese, but it didn’t. Instead, it’s where (all innuendo aside) Bonnell really gets it in.

It turns out that this handsome, nameless man is on his way to a church. But when Alix suddenly has an impulse to follow him, she soon realizes that Mr. Mysterious isn’t there for fun. He’s there for the funeral of a dear colleague (he’s a literature professor), and one for whom he had strong (yet unconsummated) romantic feelings.

This is where it gets interesting. As Alix realizes that her own boyfriend is nowhere to be found (and, better yet, that she might even be subconsciously avoiding the guy, for reasons we fi nd out later), these two characters just sink into each other — heaping upon each other the unbridled passion they’ve apparently both been bottling up. And it’s gripping stuff.

As the fi lm goes on, it’s one joy and folly after another, as Alix sorts out her demons — familial, professional, and otherwise — on the streets of Paris, while never losing the thought of this one strangely awesome guy who’s been thrust into her life.

Meanwhile, Bonnell sprinkles the whole thing with generous helpings of vibrant color, classical music, absurdly funny coincidences and mistakes (and a strong narrative line that never lets us forget why we walked in the door). Devos and

Byrne are both wonderful. They’re constantly outdoing one another with moments of intensity, longing and loss — but at the same time, they’re a perfect complement.

If you’re looking to get hit right in the feel-ings, folks, then check this one out. In the end, it really is just a sigh, nothing more — but that’s why it’s good.

Photo by Despina Spyrou

Third time’s charming: Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) reunite, among the Cypress groves of the south-ern Peloponnese.

FILMBENDING STEEL

Directed by Dave Carroll

Runtime: 93 minutes

Documentary

Screening at the Tribeca Film Festival

4/27 at 10:30pm, at Clearview

Cinemas Chelsea (260 W. 23rd St.,

btw. 7th & 8th Aves.)

For tickets & info, call 646-502-5296

or visit tribecafi lm.com/fi lmguide

‘Just a Sigh’ is romance done rightSubtitled French fl ick equal parts joy and folly

FILMJUST A SIGH

Directed by Jérôme Bonnell

Runtime: 104 minutes

English, French with subtitles

Screening at the Tribeca Film Festival

4/28, 2:30pm, at AMC Loews Village 7

(66 Third Ave., at 11th St.)

For tickets & info, call 646-502-5296

or visit tribecafi lm.com/fi lmguide

www.TheVillager.com

April 25 - May 8, 2013 23

BY MAEVE GATELYAn ensemble-driven company dedicated

to the belief that “long-term collabora-tion and rigorous creative development can unite artists and audiences,” Flux Theatre Ensemble has presented 14 productions since its 2006 debut. During that time, it has received recognition from the NYC Fringe Festival and the NY Innovative Theater Awards, and was a 2011 Caffé Cino Fellowship Award winner, for "consistently producing outstanding work."

This spring, Flux is presenting two plays in rep: August Schulenburg’s “Honey Fist” and Johnna Adams’ “Sans Merci.” Absurdity, dark comedy and a quiet des-

peration pervade these two works, each of which deal with friendship, loss and the redemptive power of remembrance in their own unique ways.

“Honey Fist” follows a group of high school friends who gather once a year to drink, smoke weed and reminisce about Justin — a former member of the group who died in an incident no one cares to recall. When old high school rival turned Hollywood producer Joe shows up with his movie star girlfriend, what begins as a drunken commemoration evolves into an ill-conceived kidnapping that unearths a decades-old secret.

In “Sans Merci,” social activist Kelly receives a visit from the mother of her col-lege sweetheart, Tracy, several years after her death. As the two debate and dance around the story of Tracy and Kelly’s romance (Elizabeth, Tracy’s conservative mother, is hesitant to believe her daughter was gay), flashbacks to Kelly’s college days show the two falling in love and deciding to go to Colombia on an advocacy mission. The final revelation of what that mission became, and the circumstances surrounding Tracy’s terrible end, brings the Kelly and Elizabeth together in their shared grief — forcing the audience to question how, in the face of such horror, we carry on.

In describing how the ensemble chose these two works, “Honey Fist” playwright and Flux creative director August Schulenburg emphasized that, “The process by which we make the work is almost as important as the work itself. And this voting process is really the heart of it.”

Before agreeing to produce a play, the ensemble meets over several months in an intense, collaborative process during which members present the plays and debate which ones should be selected. This process takes into account whether the plays fit into Flux’s aesthetic, if there are roles that fit the members of the core ensemble and whether Flux has pre-viously produced the playwright’s work.

Schulenburg’s plays have been produced by the group before, but putting on a work of Johnna Adams has, he says, always been a dream of his. Both have written roles for one another, and Schulenburg cites her influence in a great deal of his work (though not “Honey Fist”). He recalled how the ensemble was “outraged” that “Sans Merci” had not been produced in New York before, noting that, despite the limitations of this particular play (there are not enough women

in the core ensemble to play the roles in this female-only work), Flux eventually chose to put it on.

Speaking about the content of the plays themselves, Schulenberg observed how they have a very different sound to them. “Honey Fist” is “a very rowdy play. There is a lot of singing and fighting and drinking and pot-smoking,” whereas “Sans Merci,” by contrast, “operates on a very tight bandwidth, almost a hush.” One ends on a more cathartic note, while the other lacks that sentimental sense of closure. “Sans Merci” has a “circular, almost claustrophobic feel,” while “Honey Fist” has an expansive, breaking-out feel.”

Audiences will notice a very female flavor to “Sans Merci,” which does not have a single male actor on stage, and, by contrast, a very “stereotypically male”

charge to “Honey Fist.” Schulenburg asserts that the two plays are about “who owns the stories of the dead,” and admit-ted that “Honey Fist” was partly inspired by his own experiences. He had a friend named Justin who died in high school, and part of the writing of this play was an effort to give words to an experience for which there were none — to voice, as Schulenburg described it, “what I would have been able to say to Justin if I had been able to say something.”

Instead, Schulenburg used his vision, and his own experiences, to “write a play reaching towards something I don’t under-stand, [something] I don’t have words for.” And that sense of wordless fulfillment is ultimately what the audience will walk away with as well.

Flux ensemble examines friendship, lossTwo plays, in rep, give voice to grief

FLUX THEATRE ENSEMBLE PRESENTS TWO PLAYS IN REP

HONEY FIST Written by August Schulenburg

Directed by Kelly O’Donnell

In previews April 30 & May 1,

then May 2-18

SANS MERCI Written by Johnna Adams

Directed by Heather Cohn

In previews April 26 & 27,

then April 28-May 17

At the 4th Street Theatre (83 East 4th

St. btw. 2nd Ave. & Bowery)

Tickets: $15 for all preview perfor-

mances, then $18 ($15 for Students)

For schedule & reservations, call 866-

811-4111 or visit fluxtheatre.org

Photo by Isaiah Tanenbaum

In “Sans Merci,” Kelly mourns the death of her college girlfriend.

24 April 25 - May 8, 2013

to go over proposed exterior alterations, such as adding bulkheads to the rooftop, reducing the 10th St. raised plaza area to create an airy ground-fl oor courtyard, and replacing the big wheelchair ramp on the Ninth St. side with two smaller ramps that go directly into the basement. On May 7, Landmarks is holding a public hearing, where people can testify for or against the project. L.P.C. must indeed issue a permit for the exterior alterations before any work can com-mence. However, L.P.C. spokesperson Elisabeth DeBourbon explained, “We have no jurisdiction over how the building is used, or over any inte-rior alterations that don’t affect the exterior.” But the big question remains, is the lease that Cooper signed enough of a commitment to meet the standard for a legal dorm? In 2008, to stop developers from taking advantage of the so-called “community facil-ity use bonus” to bulk up residential projects, the Buildings Department passed Rule 51-01, which requires developers to show proof of an “institutional nexus” in order to build a dorm. To meet the criteria, a developer must either show a long-term lease (minimum 10 years) with an accredited school for all or “part” of the building, or the establishment of a nonprofi t entity to run the dorm, whose board members are all representatives of participating schools. In addition, there must be a “restrictive declara-tion” ensuring all of the property is used as a dorm. In this case, it’s unclear whether the “fi rst priority lease” that Cooper signed meets that standard. According to Singer, Cooper agreed to lease two fl oors for 15 years. “Cooper is paying the lease, and the stu-dents pay the school,” he explained. “If their students don’t want to take the beds, then [Cooper] has the option to sublease those spaces to another school. It’s no different from the kind of leases used by most big institu-tions,” Singer added. But Cooper plays it differently. “We have reserved the right for students to have an option to rent there,” explained McCarthy. “We have a lease to reserve approxi-mately 196 beds and have fi rst rights for our students. It’s up to the students to decide if they want to rent there or elsewhere.” McCarthy said she believed Cooper students would pay rent directly to Singer or his manage-ment fi rm. “We have nothing to do with running the building or the rates charged, which would be determined by the owner,” McCarthy explained. Both Cooper Union and Singer declined to provide The Villager with a copy of the lease, citing a confi dentiality clause that Singer inserted. At press time, the Buildings Department did not respond to repeated queries as to wheth-er the leasing agreement with Cooper Union would qualify this project as a legal dorm. “We’re still looking into it,” said D.O.B. spokesperson Gloria Chin. But Councilmember Rosie Mendez says she’s not buying it. “I’ve already placed a call to the Buildings

Department, because it seems to me they don’t have a viable lease under the rules dictated by D.O.B.,” Mendez said. “I will be fi ling a complaint based on what I’ve been told,” Mendez added. “Either some-one here is not telling the truth, or these two parties have very different ideas of what they have contracted — all of which is problematic to me.” Beyond that, Mendez said, “having a lease for 200 out of 500 beds is not a majority share, so I don’t know how you can be the anchor ten-ant with less than 50 percent of the property. “Show us the lease, let’s see what Cooper actually signed on for,” Mendez challenged, adding, “I truly believe that [Cooper Union] President Jamshed Bharucha was not given a complete history of the building when he signed on to this. Cooper is now in an untenable situa-tion with the community, because they were not given all the facts.” So far, L.P.C. has issued permits to replace the broken and cracked wooden windows with aluminum-frame windows, and is in the process of issuing a permit for Singer to perform neces-sary repointing and patching work. Singer said he also plans to replace terracotta facade work that he previously hacked off the building with new fi berglass versions. For his part, Singer insists the new dorm scheme will ultimately be welcomed by the community. “What I am giving them is a renovated build-ing that adds vitality and life to the community,” he noted of the dorm plan, which is projected to cost $40 million. He pointed to his own petition, circulated in 2008, showing support for a “student dormi-tory” from some 700 local business “owners,” including longtime East Village institutions like Guerra Paint & Pigment on E. 13th St. and Bella Tile. “Unused as an elementary school since 1977, the century-old structure sat empty for the past 11 years,” reads an April 18 press release on the University House dorm. “The building occupies much of the city block, where its vacancy has inhibited local develop-ment and the growth of small businesses in the neighborhood.” Conspicuously left out is any mention of CHARAS and the lingering resentment over the community space that was lost. Asked whether he could provide any space in the building for a community center, Singer said he has to be realistic and that he won’t get any loans approved unless it’s a fi nancially viable project. Neighborhood agitator John Penley said both Singer and Cooper Union should brace for more protest. While he fi rmly disassociates himself from whoever torched three cars out-side the school on Sat., April 6, following an aborted sidewalk campout to protest the new dorm plan, Penley said Cooper should consider that a warning. “It’s just a magnet for trouble,” he said. Mendez said she met with Cooper President Bharucha to voice her displeasure. “I told him I’m not happy with this dorm plan, the community is not happy,” she said. “There will be protests, and I will be joining in when that happens.”

Councilmember Mendez vows to battle new dorm planContinued from page 14

Renderings of the dorm plan for the old P.S. 64, showing new dorm rooms.

April 25 - May 8, 2013 25

BY MAEVE GATELY Sensei John Mirrione, founder of the Harmony Power Foundation, recently addressed 450 middle school students gathered in the auditorium of NEST+m, speaking on how to empower themselves and bring an end to bully-ing in and outside the classroom. NEST+m, which stands for New Explorations Into Science, Technology and Math, is a public K-to-12 school for Gifted and Talented stu-dents. The school hosted Mirrione as part of his national “Stop Bullying Campaign,” a trip he began after Tyler Cliementi’s suicide in 2010, and one Mirrione calls his “personal crusade.” The sensei, who grew up in Brooklyn and was bullied as a boy, uses martial arts and meditation principles to empower students to protect themselves from bullies, and end the vicious cycle of abuse rooted in students’ lack of self-esteem. Mirrione began the assembly by telling his own story. Starting at age 8, when a fellow student slammed his head into a curb, he was bullied for being short, and turned to martial arts as a solution. “You gotta survive,” he joked to the assem-bled teenagers, “it’s Brooklyn!” The students laughed. Today, he continued, youth go on the Internet to hurt one another, but the sentiments remain the same. He cited Alicia Gingerella, a 12-year-old from Providence, who tried to end her life after supposed friends of hers beat her and then posted the video of their attacks on the Internet. Once you commit such an action, be it via video, text, or in person, the sensei warned, “once you write that message, you can’t take it back.” The primary reason for youth and adolescent bullying is students not believing in themselves, he declared, and then asked two students to come on stage and demonstrate his “Stop” maneuver. One student pretended to shove the other, while the victim raised her hand and shouted, “Stop!” at him, a move intended to halt her aggressor and “awaken” onlookers to the violence. Simple actions like this, the sensei

explained, prevent the aggression from continu-ing. “When you use your words,” he said, “you don’t have to use your hands.” One student came up on stage and explained what he thought the sensei’s message was. “When you bully someone, they start hurt-ing themselves…because they start feeling bad about themselves.” Mirrione agreed, calling cyber-bullying a “failed situation,” and warning that “violence is a dead end.”

Sensei sends a message — ‘Stop!’ — about bullying

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Sensei John Mirrione at NEST+m performing a one-armed, one-legged pushup using a piece of stone.

V.I.D. backs Johnson , Rajkumar

City Council by Speaker Christine Quinn before last year’s vote on N.Y.U. 2031. Afterward, asked about the club’s endorse-ment of the upstart Rajkumar over Chin, V.I.D. President Hoffmann simply comment-ed, “It was N.Y.U.” During her Q&A with club members, Mendez, when asked about the New York City Housing Authority’s infill development plan, said, “Personally, I don’t like the idea. There is a federal process that has to be put in place, and NYCHA is just steamrolling this along.” Queried by Fouratt about what can be done to keep the Village from losing its super-markets, Mendez said that Councilmember Robert Jackson has a bill pending that would implement some form of commercial rent

control, but that it has “sat in the City Council for the past year.” Speaking in support of endorsing Mendez were Assemblymember Deborah Glick and state Senator Brad Hoylman. Glick said Mendez is a politician who has never lost “the connection” to her community. Said Hoylman, “Rosie is an elected official who leads from the heart — and that is so valuable in this job.” Del Rio is pastor of Abounding Grace Ministries, which has held worship services in P.S. / M.S. 34 on the Lower East Side for the past four years. Although the Department of Education wanted to put an end last year to religious groups using its school spaces for worship services, a district judge’s injunction is allowing the churches to continue the practice. V.I.D. also endorsed Scott Stringer for comptroller and Cy Vance for re-election as Manhattan district attorney.

Continued from page 5

26 April 25 - May 8, 2013

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BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Annie Wilson, a longtime East Villager, just loves her pigeon, Lovi Dovi. She inherited the bird from a good friend in her building who passed away. She lets Lovi Dovi (pronounced “lovey dovey”) fl y freely all around the apartment. The pigeon is actually very clean, she said, not doing any “aerial bombings.” Wilson also has two large potted trees in her place that are “Lovi Dovi’s trees.” Lovi Dovi has a routine: Every couple of weeks she lays two eggs, and then sits on them in her nest. But since the eggs are never fertil-ized, Wilson just lets the bird have them for a while, and then takes them away and puts them in her refrigerator freezer. Lovi Dovi seems O.K. with this, Wilson said — and just goes right ahead and lays more eggs. Wilson also leaves her windows open for Lovi Dovi, in case she wants to really stretch her wings a bit. Usually, she takes a spin

around the neighborhood, and then fl ies right back home. But one time, she didn’t. Wilson plastered the hood with missing posters. Eleven days after Lovi Dovi fl ew the coop, an East Village woman who works at Bellevue Hospital saw one of the posters while walking down E. Ninth St. She then later recognized Lovi Dovi hanging out at the fountain on the Bellevue grounds. Wilson raced right up and found her — hanging out with a bunch of winos! Apparently, Lovi Dovi was having quite the party. She threw down some bird seed and scooped her right up. “She had wine stains all over her beak and on her body!” Wilson recalled. “I don’t know what she was doing up there!” When she’s not boozing it up at Bellevue, Lovi Dovi is into fi tness. Wilson has created a little silk harness for her feathered friend and takes her for walks with it.

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Annie Wilson with Lovi Dovi and her regular output of two eggs.

28 April 25 - May 8, 2013