January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

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do w nto w n express ® VOLUME 24, NUMBER 36 THE NEWSPAPER OF LOWER MANHATTAN JANUARY 25-31, 2012 BY ZACH WILLIAMS If state legislators and other elected officials representing Lower Manhattan have their way, Chinese New Year will be a public school holiday next year. In a Jan. 20 letter, NYS Assembly- member Grace Meng and NYS Senator Daniel Squadron urged Mayor Michael Bloomberg to establish the holiday in order to recognize the growing role of the Asian-American community in the city. Local school officials expressed support by saying such recognition is due considering the historically low attendance levels on the holiday and the impact that has on state funding to Downtown Express photo by Milo Hess Monday was the beginning of the Chinese Lunar New Year. 2012 is the Year of the Dragon. BY ALINE REYNOLDS Community advocates and family members of U.S. Army Private Danny Chen are railing against a prelimi- nary suggestion by the Army that Specialist Ryan Offutt’s manslaughter charge be dis- missed. The Article 32 military hearing of Offutt, one of eight American soldiers who face criminal charges tied to Chen’s Oct. 3 death in Afghanistan, concluded on Monday, Jan. 23. The Army’s investigating officer proceeded to recommend forwarding all of Offutt’s charges, which range from negligent homicide to reck- less endangerment to der- eliction of duty, to a court- martial, with one exception. “In this case, the inves- tigating officer recom- mends that the involun- tary manslaughter charge be dropped,” according to Amy Spokesperson George Wright. The recommendation, however, does not guarantee the dismissal of the charge, Wright said. “Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice,” he explained, “a superior command could still send the charge to trial but could also follow the recommendation and dis- miss the charge.” The multi- step, multi-player procedure, Wright noted, is designed to protect the rights of the accused. This explanation was of little consolation to Chen’s family, friends, and OCA’s (Organization for Chinese Americans) New York chap- ter, a leading advocate in the Chen case. “It is not enough,” said Chen’s cousin, Banny Chen, on behalf of the soldier’s family. “Offutt and all the suspects should be tried on the maximum charges pos- sible because of what they did to Danny. Elizabeth R. OuYang, president of OCA-NY, said the community is “extreme- ly” disappointed that Offutt might not be tried for man- slaughter, and continues to urge the Army to prosecute the suspects to the greatest extent possible. “There is a big difference between a three-year and a ten-year maximum prison sentence,” said OuYang. Angst over possible dismissal in Chen case Pols push to make Lunar New Year official school holiday Continued on page 17 Continued on page 16 DOWNTOWN’S HISTORY IN ART, PG. 12

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Downtown Express

Transcript of January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

Page 1: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express®

VOLUME 24, NUMBER 36 THE NEWSPAPER OF LOWER MANHATTAN JANUARY 25-31, 2012

BY ZACH WILLIAMS If state legislators and other elected

offi cials representing Lower Manhattan have their way, Chinese New Year will be a public school holiday next year.

In a Jan. 20 letter, NYS Assembly-

member Grace Meng and NYS Senator Daniel Squadron urged Mayor Michael Bloomberg to establish the holiday in order to recognize the growing role of the Asian-American community in the city. Local school offi cials expressed

support by saying such recognition is due considering the historically low attendance levels on the holiday and the impact that has on state funding to

Downtown Express photo by Milo Hess

Monday was the beginning of the Chinese Lunar New Year. 2012 is the Year of the Dragon.

BY ALINE REYNOLDSCommunity advocates

and family members of U.S. Army Private Danny Chen are railing against a prelimi-nary suggestion by the Army that Specialist Ryan Offutt’s manslaughter charge be dis-missed.

The Article 32 military hearing of Offutt, one of eight American soldiers who face criminal charges tied to Chen’s Oct. 3 death in Afghanistan, concluded on Monday, Jan. 23. The Army’s investigating offi cer proceeded to recommend forwarding all of Offutt’s charges, which range from negligent homicide to reck-less endangerment to der-eliction of duty, to a court-martial, with one exception.

“In this case, the inves-tigating officer recom-mends that the involun-tary manslaughter charge be dropped,” according to Amy Spokesperson George Wright.

The recommendation, however, does not guarantee the dismissal of the charge, Wright said. “Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice,” he explained, “a

superior command could still send the charge to trial but could also follow the recommendation and dis-miss the charge.” The multi-step, multi-player procedure, Wright noted, is designed to protect the rights of the accused.

This explanation was of little consolation to Chen’s family, friends, and OCA’s (Organization for Chinese Americans) New York chap-ter, a leading advocate in the Chen case.

“It is not enough,” said Chen’s cousin, Banny Chen, on behalf of the soldier’s family. “Offutt and all the suspects should be tried on the maximum charges pos-sible because of what they did to Danny.

Elizabeth R. OuYang, president of OCA-NY, said the community is “extreme-ly” disappointed that Offutt might not be tried for man-slaughter, and continues to urge the Army to prosecute the suspects to the greatest extent possible.

“There is a big difference between a three-year and a ten-year maximum prison sentence,” said OuYang.

Angst over possible dismissal in Chen case

Pols push to make Lunar New Year offi cial school holiday

Continued on page 17Continued on page 16

DOWNTOWN’S HISTORY IN ART, PG. 12

Page 2: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

2 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012January 25 - 31, 2012

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Media reports published in the last week concerning the building of 3 World Trade Center are partially inaccurate and are other-wise relaying old news, according to Silverstein Properties spokesperson Dara McQuillan.

On Sunday, Crain’s New York fi rst came out with a story highlighting developer Larry Silverstein’s troubles in securing a 400,000-square-foot offi ce tenant in order to complete the tower. Citing “sources close to the company,” the article reported that Silverstein was planning to halt construction by the year’s end if the developer was unable to secure a “major offi ce tenant” by then.

The latter statement is not true, McQuillan said. According to a pre-leasing agreement made in 2010 between Silverstein and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the developer would build a temporary roof atop a seven-story retail and mechanical podium at 3 W.T.C. — and thereby halt con-struction of the upper fl oor offi ce space — if he doesn’t fi nd a 400,000-square-foot tenant by the end of 2013 and not by the end of 2012. Silverstein is also required to secure a $300,000 equity loan by that time.

“There’s nothing new here,” said McQuillan. “This is exactly what was called for in the 2010 agreement with the Port Authority, the city, and the state. Keep in mind that, with 7 W.T.C., we didn’t sign any leases until we opened the building in 2006. Obviously, this is a different situation with a pre-lease requirement, but it’s still early.”

Responding to the media reports, Silverstein

himself issued a written statement insisting that the fi rm is 100 percent committed to com-plete 3 W.T.C. “as quickly as possible.”

“We are currently speaking with a number of potential tenants and remain fully optimis-tic that we will sign a lease in time to com-plete the tower as scheduled in 2015,” said Silverstein. “That agreement, which antici-pated the completion of the podium in 2013, in no way prevents us from moving full steam ahead as soon as we secure a tenant.”

— Aline Reynolds

Tower 3 tenant issue is ‘old news’

Page 3: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 3January 25 - 31, 2012

P.S. 89 students overcome hearing loss in the classroomBY ALINE REYNOLDS

Ten-year-old Owen Gallagher, who attends P.S. 89, lives the life of a typical fi fth grader: He goes to class and, afterwards, plays sports and hangs out with his friends.

Owen, however, can’t hear on his own. In third grade, he was diagnosed with mod-erately-severe sensorineural hearing loss and has relied on a pair of hearing aids to make out sounds ever since, according to his mother, Leslie Gallagher. The impairment appears to be genetic, since Owen’s older brother, Niall Gallagher, was diagnosed with the same condition at age two.

At the time, the diagnosis was emotion-ally diffi cult for Owen to swallow, accord-ing to his mother. “I suppose in his eyes, it diminished who he was, since he’s never not been in mainstream [schooling] and he was old enough to recognize and identify it as a stigma,” said Gallagher.

By promoting hearing loss awareness in schools such as P.S. 89, the Center for Hearing and Communication in Bowling Green is try-ing to diminish that stigma. Audiologists at the center provide speech-language therapy to Owen and more than 50 other children Downtown and citywide, which helps them assimilate into everyday life.

“We want to make sure [the children] have the language, the speech and the listening abilities to be able to function in a mainstream setting,” said Lois Heymann, director of the Shelley and Steven Einhorn Communication

Center at the C.H.C. “Our goal is to get the information to them. Once they get it, they should be able to handle it,” she noted, since hearing loss does not adversely affect the chil-dren’s cognitive functions.

The C.H.C. also recommends schools like P.S. 89 with hearing impaired children to use FM systems, which transmit vocal sounds from a teacher’s clip-on microphone to the

children’s hearing aids. Bolstered by this technology and some

side coaching, Owen has learned how to suc-ceed in many class activities. On Friday, Jan. 20, he scored a 39 out of 40 on a math divi-sion quiz and partnered with a friend during history class to illustrate a hideout house for American soldiers upon the homeroom teacher’s verbal instructions.

“We have to draw a battle scene, and we’re doing it from what a soldier would see,” explained Owen.

What Owen does have diffi culty with, however, is following group conversations and understanding idiomatic expressions.

“I do think he misses some subtle aspects of the collaborative work,” said Owen’s teacher. “If he doesn’t respond, others might perceive it as not being polite, not realizing that he didn’t hear.”

These diffi culties manifest themselves out-side the classroom as well, according to Owen’s mother. “A lot of the boys will meet after school and will be talking at the same time, which is sometimes hard for Owen to follow,” she said.

Last Friday, Owen was dismissed from class to get extra help in hearing with P.S. 89 kindergartener Henry Babowal, who lost much of his sensorineural hearing as a tod-dler for reasons unknown. Together for the fi rst time, Owen and Henry played listening and speech games and perused a three-dimensional shark book.

“They were great together. It makes both of them feel good that there’s another person in the school with hearing loss,” said hearing education services provider Jasmine Stobbe, who teaches speech recognition, lip reading and sign language to Owen, Henry and three other hard-of-hearing students at P.S. 89.

While Owen and Henry are generally

January 25 - 31, 2012

Downtown Express photo by Aline Reynolds

Henry Babowal, a kindergartener at P.S. 89, with his teacher, Matt Halem, working on an assignment in class last Friday.

Continued on page 18

PACE UNIVERSITY NAMES NEW CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Pace University has appointed its treasurer and fi nance executive, Toby R. Winer, as the institution’s new executive vice president and chief fi nancial offi cer. Winer will be the fi rst woman in Pace’s history to hold these positions, accord-ing to the University’s president, Stephen Friedman.

Prior to joining Pace in 2006, Winer spent 20 years in senior administrative roles at various institutions including Baruch College, City University of New York, University of California, and Vanderbilt College.

Winer is a certifi ed public accountant. She holds a master’s degree in business administration from Columbia University and a bachelor’s degree with a concentration in mathematics from Carnegie Mellon University. Winer suc-ceeds Robert C. Almon who served as Pace’s executive V.P. and C.F.O. for an 18-month bridge period following the 2010 departure of the University’s prior C.F.O.

O.W.S. DROPS LAWSUIT The major legal battle Occupy Wall Street took on against the

city and Brookfi eld Properties seems to be over, at least for now. On Friday, Jan. 20, the protestor’s group abandoned their

lawsuit disputing the occupancy rules governing Zuccotti Park that were enforced by Brookfi eld Properties the day of the Nov. 15 raid. The decision was made following the lifting of security barricades two weeks prior, according to O.W.S. lawyer Alan Levine.

The police fencing surrounding the park was removed on Jan.

10 after attorneys representing the protestors wrote a letter to the city Department of Buildings contending the security measure was breaching zoning laws that mandate unfettered access to the park. The protesters also deemed Brookfi eld’s ban on tents in the park a violation of their fi rst amendment rights.

“Once the barricades came down and the searches stopped and the protestors had unimpeded access to the park, there seemed to be no reason to continue that litiga-tion,” Levine told the New York Times. “If that changes, we will be back in court.”

An attorney representing city’s law department approved of the protesters’ withdrawal of the suit, alleging that it “has no merit.” Brookfi eld Properties wasn’t immediately avail-able for comment.

L.M.C.C.C. ANNOUNCES NEW DOWNTOWN HOTELS A new, 30-story hotel is coming to 30 Fletcher St. in the

South Street Seaport. Construction of the foundations of the Fairfi eld Marriott

Hotel have already begun, and the building’s superstructure will be completed toward the end of the year, according to the Lower Manhattan Construction Command Center, who announced the news at Community Board 1’s Jan. 19 Quality of Life committee meeting. The hotel is scheduled for completion in late 2013.

Meanwhile, a six-story offi ce building at 24 John St. is being converted into a new, 21-story hotel to be dubbed the “L.” “The building will have new steel added to raise its total height,” according to a description of the project on

L.M.C.C.C.’s website. The building’s foundation was com-pleted in 2010, and construction has commenced this month. The project is expected to be fi nished in fi rst quarter 2013.

FORMER O.E.M. CHIEF DIES

Richard Sheirer, former director of the city’s Offi ce of Emergency Management, died last Thursday, Jan. 19 at the age of 65 from lung complications.

Sheirer took the helm at O.E.M. in 2000 and was applauded for his leadership of the city’s rescue and recovery mission on 9/11 and in the weeks thereafter. Sheirer was known for having formed a temporary command center at the Police Academy at 20th St. and 3rd Ave. that day.

DOWNTOWN DIGEST

NEWS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-9, 12-21

EDITORIAL PAGES . . . . . . . . . . 10-11

YOUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

ARTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 - 27

CLASSIFIEDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

C.B. 1MEETINGSA schedule of February’s Community Board 1 com-

mittee meetings will be available on the C.B. 1 website in the next week. Visit www.nyc.gov/html/mancb1/html/home/home.shtml for a complete listing of meet-ings and agendas.

Continued on page 4

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4 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

Canal St. accidentA heavy-duty truck east bound on Canal St. struck and injured

a 71-year-old man at 2:14 p.m. Fri., Jan. 20 as he was crossing from north to south midblock on Canal St. near Mulberry St., police said. The victim, who was unconscious when police arrived at the scene, was taken to Bellevue Hospital in stable condition. The truck driver, 47, remained at the scene and was not arrested. Police said this week that there was no criminality suspected but the incident was still under investigation.

Clinton St. BurglarySeventh Precinct police are looking for a burglary suspect

who entered an apartment at 43 Clinton St. between Rivington and Stanton Sts. through a fi re escape window while the resi-dents were out between 9:35 p.m. Fri., Jan. 13 and 3:40 a.m. the next morning. Police did not say what was stolen.

Jewelry store snatchPolice arrested Tevin Bisseau, 17, on Fri., Jan. 13 and

charged him with stealing a gold neck chain from a jewelry store on Canal St. near Lafayette St. 10 days earlier. Tevin fl ed from the Popular Jewelry Corp, with an accomplice, but on Jan. 12, he turned up at another Canal St. jewelry shop nearby with two accomplices and tried to grab a chain from an employee’s hand, according to the compliant fi led with the Manhattan District Attorney’s offi ce. The employee, however, held onto the chain and Bisseau was arrested the following day.

Shoplifts in SohoA man walked into Kirna Zabete, a clothing boutique

at 96 Greene St. near Spring, around 3 p.m. Fri., Jan. 20, took a monk jacket valued at $4,295 from a rack and fl ed without paying for it, police said.

A man carrying a red bag walked into the True Religion clothing boutique at 132 Prince St. near Wooster St., around 12:35 p.m. Wed., Jan. 18, took 10 pairs of jeans with a total value of $3,190 from a shelf, stuffed them into the bag and walked out without paying, police said. A surveillance camera taped the theft but the suspect was not apprehended.

Stools are for sittingA patron of The Irish Punt, a bar at 40 Exchange Pl., told

police he was in the place with a friend around 12:35 a.m. Fri., Jan. 13 when an unknown suspect hit him in the face with a bar stool and fl ed. The victim, 26, a Brooklyn resident told police the suspect made off with another man in a dark Mercedes Benz.

Cell phone snatchA woman, 26, who got on a Downtown express train at

Union Sq. around 3:30 p.m. Thurs., Jan. 19 was using her cell phone when a stranger grabbed it from her hand and fl ed from the train when it pulled into the station at Broadway and Fulton St.

Greenhouse assaultA woman, 24, told police she was with a friend in

the second floor lounge of Greenhouse, the club at 150 Varick St. at Vandam, around 3 a.m. Wed., Jan.18 when she got into an argument with a woman who bumped her and hit her in the face with a glass. The victim said she thought her assailant was a waitress at the club, but police said no suspect turned up in a canvass of the place.

Bags goneA woman who was trying on shoes at 9 West, 577

Broadway near Prince St. around 1 p.m. Tues., Jan. 17 put her bag down and discovered a half hour later that someone had stolen it. The bag contained her wallet, credit cards, cell phone and driver’s licenses as well as a pair of Tiffany earrings valued at $200.

A Brooklyn woman, 22, who hung her bag on the back of her chair at Anchor Bar, 310 Spring St. around 8 a.m. Fri., Jan. 20, discovered it had been stolen when she went to pay her tab.

A woman patron of Manhattan Bistro, 129 Spring St. near Greene St. was with friends in the bar around 9:30p.m. Thurs., Jan. 19 and discovered two hours later that her bag, which she had hung on the back of her chair, had been stolen.

A Brooklyn woman who hung her bag on the back of her chair at 4:30 p.m. Thurs., Jan. 19 discovered a half hour later that it had been stolen. The victim, 63, lost her wallet, two cell phones and credit cards. One card later proved to have an unauthorized charge of $100, police said.

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POLICE BLOTTER

Sheirer was born in a working class family in 1946 in Brooklyn, N.Y. and graduated from St. Francis College. Prior to his post at O.E.M., he worked for the FDNY for approxi-mately three decades.

STOP ‘N’ SWAP MEET UP ON JANUARY 28TH If you are looking to get rid of some unwanted items

or hoping to fi nd some long lost New York treasures, GrowNYC has a solution for you. On Saturday, Jan. 28, GrowNYC will be hosting Stop ‘N’ Swap, a seasonal community swap meet. The public is encouraged to bring clean, portable, reusable items to share, including but not

limited to books, toys, fashionable clothing, houseware and electronics. No one is required to bring an item; par-ticipants are allowed to show up with just a bag to bring home something valuable.

GrowNYC has been hosting swap meets since 2007. “In this economy, they’re a great way for residents to find things they need without having to pay, and they are reducing the amount of garbage that the city gener-ates,” said GrowNYC Executive Director Marcel Van Ooyen. “Don’t forget, one person’s trash is another’s treasure.”

Stop ‘N’ Swap will be held on Saturday, Jan. 28 from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. at P.S. 126, located at 80 Catherine St. at Cherry St. For more information visit GrowNYC.org/swap.

Downtown DigestContinued from page 3

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downtown express 5January 25 - 31, 2012

Trinity cuts back on ‘ambitious’ music programBY TERESE LOEB KREUZER

The catalog for Trinity Wall Street’s 2011-2012 season of music and arts programming, published in the fall of 2011, was 40 pages long. But on Jan. 6, 2012, the Rev. Canon Anne Mallonee announced during a Bach at One performance at St. Paul’s Chapel that much of the scheduled programming wouldn’t be happening.

After calling the fi rst year of program-ming under the direction of Julian Wachner, “ambitious and wonderful,” Mallonee went on to say, “Bach at One [a series of free concerts on Mondays at St. Paul’s Chapel] will be on a short hiatus as we begin assess-ing the best ways to sustain music and arts programming at this level of excellence to which Trinity is committed.”

Bach at One was not the only Trinity Wall Street music program to get the axe. The New Music Festival announced for May 24-June 3 has also been cancelled.

Linda Hanick, a spokesperson for Trinity Wall Street, said, “We are still exploring whether we will proceed with [Bach’s] St. John’s Passion,” which had been scheduled for performances on March 31, April 1 and April 2. Candlelit Compline services of new music on Sunday evenings at St. Paul’s Chapel were cancelled. Choral music at Trinity’s 9 a.m. Sunday services was also cancelled, but retained for the 11:15 a.m. services.

The problem appears to be funding. “We’re not doing drastic budget cuts,”

Hanick said. ”We’re still funding the [music] program at the level we’ve always funded it but it’s become more expensive.”

Bach at One will get a temporary reprieve starting on Monday, March 5 and running for fi ve consecutive Mondays at St. Paul’s Chapel when the Trinity Choir and Trinity Baroque Orchestra will perform a series of concerts for Lent. These concerts were underwritten with earmarked donations from private donors.

Holy Week observances will also take place, beginning with a procession from St Paul’s Chapel to Trinity Church on April 1, Palm Sunday and ending with Easter ser-vices at Trinity on Sunday, April 8.

Trinity’s Family Choir, Youth Orchestra and Youth Choir along with other congre-gational music and arts programming will continue as will Concerts at One of emerging artists on Thursdays at Trinity Church. For the winter of 2012, three performances of Handel’s “Messiah” have been scheduled — always a sell out.

Should this be the sum total of Trinity Wall Street’s music programming, it will be more or less what it was before Julian Wachner was hired as Director of Music and the Arts in July 2010 after a two-and-a-half year period in

Downtown Express photo by Terese Loeb Kreuzer

Julian Wachner conducting Part 1 of Johann Sebastian Bach’s Christmas Oratorio on Dec. 26, 2011 at St. Paul’s Chapel as part of the Bach at One series.

Continued on page 21

BY ALINE REYNOLDS Federally subsidized cancer treatment

is still the number one topic of discussion within the 9/11 health community.

Thanks to the push of advocates and politicians, it has also become a major talking point of the recently formed World Trade Center Health Program Scientifi c and Technical Advisoary Committee, which scheduled a teleconference for Tuesday, Jan. 24 with 9/11 responders and volunteers, Downtown residents and physicians, and anyone else that wished to call in. Participants planned to discuss the possible addition of cancer to the James L. Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act and health treatment eligibility criteria for fi rst responders that assisted in the Sept. 11 plane crashes at the Pentagon and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, among other topics.

Minutes before the teleconference was slated to begin that afternoon, however, the virtual meeting was unexpectedly aborted because of a glitch in the government’s phone system.

“Due to technical diffi culties, we were unable to use the call-in phone number, and it unfortunately caused us to cancel the meet-ing at the last minute,” said Christina Spring, a spokesperson for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, which was charged with coordinating the logistics of the meeting since it oversees the health por-tion of the Zadroga bill.

Rescheduling the teleconference doesn’t appear to be feasible, according to S.T.A.C. Chair Elizabeth Ward.

“There was obviously a serious technical problem. It’s just really unfortunate,” said Ward. “I’m optimistic that if we can’t have a teleconference, we’ll be able to catch up and accomplish what we need to in the S.T.A.C. meeting,” which she noted is scheduled for mid-February and will have teleconference capabilities.

This was hardly reassuring, however, to 9/11 health advocate John Feal, who had corralled 50 fi rst responders and recovery workers to the NYC Police Museum in order to partake in Tuesday’s teleconference.

“It was unprofessional,” said Feal of the mishap. “They should have had a ‘Plan B’ or done a test the day before to ensure the phones were working properly. This is a serious issue to us and we fi nd it to be disrespectful that they couldn’t fi nd a way to communicate with us.”

The primary goal of the conference was to shed greater light on possible ties between certain forms of cancer and the aftermath of Sept. 11, according to S.T.A.C. member and Chair of Community Board 1’s W.T.C. Redevelopment Committee Catherine McVay Hughes. “We’re hoping to create a dialogue of the association between W.T.C. exposure and cancer, and to create the framework for the government’s second periodic review of cancer studies,” she said. On behalf of

Community Board 1, Hughes introduced a resolution this week that cites multiple cancer studies dating back to 2008 and that urges the committee to “strongly” consider the emerging medical evidence of cancer

among 9/11 responders and survivors. The debate on whether to add cancer

to the bill percolated last summer when N.I.O.S.H. director Dr. John Howard vetoed the addition of the disease to the list of eligible illnesses covered by the law, claim-ing there was insuffi cient evidence to do so. Howard’s decision sparked a wave of fi erce pushback that included a September 7 peti-tion from the New York State delegation.

Howard promised at the time that N.I.O.S.H. would release a second review

based on scientifi c studies published since last summer in early-to-mid 2012, though he hasn’t since disclosed exactly when the review will come out. In the meantime, he is soliciting a formal recommendation from the S.T.A.C. to review the available scientifi c data and make its own assessment about the prospect of granting federally subsidized care to 9/11 victims with certain forms of cancer.

The S.T.A.C. is expected to vote on the issue at the February meeting and is required by N.I.O.S.H. to submit the recom-mendation by March 2. “We’re not necessar-ily required to say ‘yes’ or ‘no,’” explained Ward. “We can respond with the best advice we think we can give at that time.”

Ward continued, “The issues related to the long-term health effects of exposures that occurred in and around at the W.T.C. are scientifi cally complex and evolving, par-ticularly as new studies and information becomes available. One of the roles of the advisory committee is to respond to issues as they arise, bring our various perspectives to the evidence, and draw conclusions based on the data that we have.” Ultimately, however, all decisions pertaining to the Zadroga bill rest in the hands of of Dr. Howard.

Feal and other 9/11 victims and health advocates are closely watching from the sidelines and continue to press for defi ni-

Zadroga advocates dismayed by cancelled conference call

Continued on page 17

“They should have had a ‘Plan B’ or done a test the day before to ensure the phones were working prop-erly.”

— John Feal

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6 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

School rezoning continues to vex Downtown familiesBY ALINE REYNOLDS

Four-year-old Max Roodman might not be able to attend the school a stone’s throw away from his home next year due to the imminent rezoning of Lower Manhattan’s public schools.

Roodman’s parents, Joel Roodman and Jill Tafrate, are dismayed by the prospect of sending their child to P.S. 234 in Tribeca, where their fourth grade daughter Sophia goes to school. Max, who lives at 85 John St., is one of more than 50 P.S. 234 siblings that will be automatically offered a seat there due to the city Department of Education’s preference-granting to younger siblings of current elementary school students.

It is as much out of principal as it is con-venience that Max deserves to attend P.S. 397, where he is enrolled in pre-kindergar-ten this year, according to his parents.

“He’ll continue to walk by the school every day, see his friends, and not be with them anymore,” said Tafrate. “We watched Spruce be built for the last fi ve years from our own window, and now we’re having it pulled out from underneath us.”

“We probably would have left Max in private day care this year, which takes up a full day, had we known that he couldn’t go to Spruce next year,” chimed in Roodman.

Now, the father explained, he or Tafrate have to baby-sit their son in the afternoons,

since P.S. 397’s pre-K class lets out before noon.

“We feel like we’ve been excised from a community we’ve been in for so many years and supported [through] our taxes,” said Roodman.

A week after the D.O.E.’s third rezoning proposal was approved, which zoned the Roodmans and a group of other families out of P.S. 397, the couple reached out to the D.O.E. requesting a waiver for Max to matriculate into the school’s kindergarten class. In a Jan. 6 letter addressed to Max’s parents, a spokesperson of NYC Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott responded, stat-ing that out-of-zone students such as Max will not receive priority for kindergarten enrollment at P.S. 397.

“Please be advised that pre-kindergarten students no longer zoned to the Spruce Street School do not automatically matriculate into kindergarten,” the letter reads. “Instead, pre-kindergarten students will be provided a seat at their new zoned school.”

However, spokesperson Frank Thomas said the D.O.E. is contemplating making an excep-tion for the Roodmans and the other Spruce Street pre-kindergartners. Giving kindergar-ten students preference based on their pre-k attendance “is not a policy that’s permitted any longer in individual schools,” according to

Let’s do something togetherTrinity Wall Street

an Episcopal parish in the city of New York

Max

Mad

dock

trinitywallstreet.org

All Are WelcomeAll events are free, unless noted.

212.602.0800

MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1pmThe Broad WayDiscuss how the Gospels can be interpreted and applied to contemporary life. Bring lunch.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parlor

TUESDAY, JANUARY 31 12pm Creative Business SolutionsFree weekly one-on-one small-business consulting advice, ranging from startup advice to marketing strategy and business management.Charlotte’s Place

12:45pm Brown Bag Lunch MinistryVolunteer to distribute lunches Tuesdays and Thursdays to people in need.

1pm Gospel on GreenwichA Bible study and prayer group with seminarian Joe Mitchell. Bring lunch.Charlotte’s Place

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1:05pmTrinity Institute Presents: Wall Street Dialogues James Copland, Director, Center for Legal Policy at the Manhattan Institute, asks the question “What are the moral values of capitalism?” as he discusses “Capitalism, Inequality, and Scripture.”Trinity Church

THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1pmConcerts at OneEmerald Trio: Karen Bogardus, flute Orlando Wells, violin, viola James Matthew Castle, pianoTrinity Church

SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 10amHow Do I Experience God. . . as a Hispanic American?Explore the experience of God from diverse perspectives.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parish Hall

On Tuesdays and Thursdays at Trinity Church, join others and volunteer to distribute brown bag lunches to people in need.

worshipSUNDAY, 8am and 10amSt. Paul’s ChapelCommunion in the round

SUNDAY, 9am and 11:15am

Trinity ChurchPreaching, music, and EucharistSunday 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

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 PLACE109 Greenwich St, btwn Rector & Carlisle

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

Downtown Express photo by Aline Reynolds

Joel Roodman and Jill Tafrate, with their son, Max, remain concerned over the D.O.E’s latest rezoning plan that could keep Max from attending the Spruce Street School in the bottom of the Gehry building only a few blocks from their home. Continued on page 21

Page 7: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 7January 25 - 31, 2012

BY MARSHALL JAMES KAVANAUGHIt was a scene out of science fi ction.

Trina Schattenkirk, a Pace University School of Education graduate and New York City Teaching Fellow, stood in front of a class of fi ve animated students projected onto the wall. She wore a headset with headphones, a microphone, and an antenna with a small metal sphere projecting out the top. The device looked like something you would see in an episode of Star Trek.

The display in front of her followed Schattenkirk’s every motion, so when she stepped forward to the left, the projection zoomed in on the student in the back left corner of the classroom. When she stepped back, the camera zoomed out and again the virtual class was displayed.

Schattenkirk spoke as a teacher would speak to her class during their fi rst week, introducing herself and asking the digital students to introduce themselves to each other through various exercises. The virtual students had lifelike and very thoughtful responses making it diffi cult to tell whether the whole performance was scripted or if this was some form of new artifi cial intel-ligence, at least 20 years ahead of its time.

This wasn’t at a conference for techno-logical advancement, though.

It was at the ribbon-cutting ceremony held on Wednesday, Jan. 18 for a new technology that will be part of the spring semester curriculum for student teachers at the Pace University School of Education. The technology is called TeachLivE, with an emphasized “E” for education. It was devel-oped at the University of Central Florida (UCF) about four years ago to help student teachers build their confi dence before enter-ing the classroom.

The software is much like a fl ight simula-tor for pilots. It gives the teacher a chance to practice creating a positive learning atmo-sphere with students of various personality types. They can even record their perfor-mance for later review with their instructor. The student teacher can learn from their mistakes and get used to a teaching style that works without the pressures of being put into a classroom with real life students for the fi rst time.

“TeachLivE helps a student teacher learn how to build the classroom community and get students excited,” said Schattenkirk who teaches middle and high school students at the Henry Street School for International Studies.

Pace unveils the future of student teaching

Assemblyman Shelly SilverIf you need assistance, please contact my office at (212) 312-1420 or email [email protected].

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

Continued on page 13

Page 8: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

8 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

BY ALBERT AMATEAUNew York University presented two more

aspects of its 2031 redevelopment plan to hostile Village audiences over the past seven days.

On Thurs., Jan. 12, Community Board 2’s Parks Committee heard an outline of the open space proposed for the university’s large-scale redevelopment of its two super-blocks over the next 20 years.

On Tues., Jan. 17, the board’s Education and Social Services Committee hosted a forum on the proposed public elementary school space proposed as part of the project, which is intended to add 2.5 million square feet of new construction on the superblocks, including 1.5 million of that aboveground and the rest belowground.

While the public school space is included in the 2031 land use review, it was still uncertain this week when or whether the proposed school would be built.

N.Y.U. is proposing to provide 100,000 square feet of space for a 650-seat kindergar-ten-to-eighth grade public elementary school on the fi rst seven fl oors of a new building, where the Morton Williams market is now located on the northwest corner of the south superblock.

The proposed building, at the corner of Bleecker St. and LaGuardia Place, would also rise an additional six or seven stories for an N.Y.U. student dorm — but the dorm would be set back at the eighth fl oor to allow for a children’s playground on the roof of the school space.

Alicia Hurley, N.Y.U. vice president for government relations and community engagement, said the university is provid-ing the property for the school for free, but that the city’s School Construction Authority would have to construct the “core and shell” of the school at its own expense. There would be separate lobbies and entrances for schoolchildren using the public school and N.Y.U. students using the dorm. The S.C.A. would be able to build the public school by 2025 or before.

Although N.Y.U. and the S.C.A. have been discussing the school space, Hurley acknowledged that the agency has not yet agreed to build. Moreover, the school does not appear on the Department of Education’s fi ve-year capital plan.

“I don’t want to speak for the S.C.A.,” Hurley said. “You will have to ask them. The S.C.A. is the main driver on the timing of the school.”

C.B. 2 members and speakers at the Jan. 17 hearing were outraged about the lack of certainty on the school.

Brad Hoylman, C.B. 2 chairperson, said N.Y.U. should be responsible for a fi rm com-mitment on the school.

Moreover, he declared, the board and school advocates want a school sooner than 2025.

“We don’t want this space to become a windfall for N.Y.U.,” Hoylman said.

Because N.Y.U. has agreed to ensure that

the Morton Williams supermarket would operate continuously, construction of the Bleecker St. building must wait until com-pletion of the large “Zipper Building” on the Mercer St. side of the south superblock, where the new food market will be sited.

Of the four proposed new buildings in the two superblocks currently undergoing the city’s uniform land-use review procedure (ULURP), the building proposed for the Morton Williams site is the only one that could be built as of right — meaning without the approvals needed for the entire 2031 plan — said Will Haas, N.Y.U. planner on the project.

Hurley said the university is donating 100,000 square feet of its private space for a public purpose as part of the 2031 project under review.

“If the whole application goes down in fl ames and N.Y.U. has to go back to the drawing board, the school space would be out,” Hurley said. However, she said the school space would remain available if the plan is approved with modifi cations.

“It is untoward of N.Y.U. to say we have to approve the whole project for the commu-nity to get the school space,” said Andrew Berman, director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.

Berman insisted that N.Y.U. Senior Vice President Lynne Brown told a public forum a few years ago that the school space would be offered to the community without being tied to approvals of the entire plan.

“I have yet to fi nd a single person who would say, ‘Yes, I’ll accept a 2.5 million-square-foot project in exchange for a public school,’” said Berman, urging the commu-nity board to vote no on the entire project.

Responding to a question by committee member Keen Berger, Hurley said the uni-versity was not considering providing space sooner for a neighborhood school outside the superblocks.

Mary Johnson, a resident in a superblock residential building, urged N.Y.U. to consid-er outfi tting a school in the state-owned but underutilized building at 75 Morton St.

Annette Evans recalled that N.Y.U. prom-ised to build a school in 1954, again in 1960 and yet again in the late 1970s.

“They owe the community a school before anything gets built,” Evans said.

“I don’t want a school as part of a

Continued on page 15

N.Y.U. takes heat on schooland open space at hearings

‘They owe the community a school before anything gets built.’

Annette Evans

Page 9: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 9January 25 - 31, 2012

BY ZACH WILLIAMSWhile the diffi culties of winter have

taken their toll, Occupy Wall Street organiz-ers say they are confi dent that an ‘American Spring’ is in the making.

Occupy events in recent days have not drawn the same volume of participants as months ago. The movement continues to remain active in the area though, includ-ing Tuesday when at least one activist was arrested at Zuccotti Park.

A recent spending freeze has curtailed many of the movement’s activities. However, recent events in Lower Manhattan under-score an increasing collaboration between ‘occupiers’ and progressive organizations that, organizers say, will keep the movement moving.

“The Occupy Wall Street movement re-ignited, revitalized, rekindled the spirit of struggle, the spirit of movement build-

ing among all peoples,” said Dr. Benjamin Chavis, an organizer for Occupy the Dream and an associate of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in the 1960s.

“An American spring, it’s coming,” he added. “You are going to see mass mobiliza-tions, but they are going to be orderly. They are going to be organized. They are going to be disciplined ... it’s our responsibility to out-maneuver, out-smart, out-organize the enemies of the movement.”

Ongoing meetings between civil rights leaders and Occupy Wall Street activists are focusing on how to stage joint actions in the coming months, according to Chavis who declined to provide specifi c details.

Many ‘occupiers’ say the movement will remain in “hibernation” in Lower Manhattan until warmer weather prevails in the upcom-

Funding not an issue; OWS in hibernation

PUBLIC NOTICE

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has received a Brownfield Cleanup Program (BCP) application from Bridge Land West, LLC for a site known as the West & Watts Development, site ID #C231076. This site is located in the City of New York, within the County of New York, and is located at 281 West Street and 456 Washington Street. Comments regarding this application must be submitted no later than March 2, 2012. Information regarding the site, the application, and how to submit comments can be found at http://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/60058.html or send comments to Shaun Bollers, Project Manager, NYS Department of Environmental Con-servation, Region 2 Office, One Hunter’s Point Plaza, 47-40 21st Street, Long Island City, NY 11101, 718-482-4096, [email protected].

TO HAVE INFORMATION SUCH AS THIS NOTICE SENT RIGHT TO YOUR EMAIL,

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CHEMICAL/61092.HTML .

Our mission at the Alliance for Downtown New York is to advance Lower Manhattan as a global model for a 21st century central business district, a compelling place to work, live and visit. This objective contemplates the future as well as the past, because for much of the last 400 years our community has been both commercial and residential. Though the canyons of 20th century Wall Street were business-only, the Financial District first took shape in the 1700s as securities traders who lived in the neighborhood met to make deals under a buttonwood tree near what is now 68 Wall.

So it’s back to the future for the Financial District. I’ve been proud to witness firsthand its most recent resurgence—as New York City’s premier live/work community. The transition from business-only to business-plus was just starting when I moved below Fulton Street in 1982.

The neighborhood was starkly different then. In fact, it wasn’t yet a neighborhood, or hadn’t been one for more than a century. Wall Street was the world’s best-known business address, which meant lots of action during business hours but not much in the evenings or on weekends. Though 10,000 of us lived below Chambers Street, there was only one all-night diner, and forget about buying a quart of milk after hours.

But we loved life on the cusp of New York City’s past, present and future. No supermarket? We lugged our groceries home on the subway. No chic Saturday night bistro? We dined in. No gift shop? We found great things at J&R, Century 21, Brooks Brothers, Dick’s Hardware and the Nassau Street specialty stores memorialized by Red Grooms in Ruckus Manhattan. The adventure was worth the challenge of being pioneers.

Slowly, then all of a sudden, things changed. The Financial District remains a prime business address, but it has also become a hot residential neighborhood. New restaurants and markets opened, and old ones expanded their hours.

The past 10 years, especially, have brought a dizzying array of companies, merchants, schools and parks—and a new generation of people who call this part of Lower Manhattan home. Nowhere is this more evident than on Wall Street itself, home to some of the world’s most prominent financial institutions but also to thousands of residents, more than a dozen new retailers and a museum.

In other words, Lower Manhattan has become a community, a place that hosted nine million visitors last year alone and where 309,000 people work and 56,000 live together. There is a powerful commonality of spirit and interest, the shared belief that, here in Lower Manhattan, Wall Street and Main Street are the same street.

This was obvious when the Community Board 1 Financial District Committee recently considered a proposal to open a methadone clinic on Maiden Lane. The proponents must have been surprised to learn that 20,000 people live within four blocks of the proposed location and that there are four primary and elementary schools within the same radius. Led by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a group of property owners, small-business people and residents made the case that this is not your father’s week-day Wall Street but the heart of a 24/7 residential and commercial district. The application was withdrawn.

As Speaker Silver of ten says, Lower Manhattan is a great place to live, work and raise a family. Nowhere is this truer than in the Financial District. No longer Manhattan’s post-modern frontier, Lower Manhattan gets better and better as more companies, more nonprofits, more entrepreneurs, more open space, more hotels, more restaurants, more stores and more people combine to make it New York City’s most dynamic place to work, live and visit.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance

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Stone Street in the Financial District

Back to the Future For the Financial District

Downtown Express photo by Marshall James Kavanaugh

On Tuesday, following the arrest of an Occupy Wall Street activist, Zuccotti Park was again in the NYPD’s crosshairs.

Continued on page 19

Page 10: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

10 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

EDITORIALPUBLISHER & EDITOR

John W. Sutter

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

John Bayles

ARTS EDITOR

Scott Stiffl er

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Aline ReynoldsAlbert Amateau

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ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

Allison GreakerColin Gregory Julius Harrison

Alex MorrisJulio Tumbaco

BUSINESS MANAGER / CONTROLLER

Vera Musa

ART / PRODUCTION DIRECTOR

Troy Masters

ART DIRECTOR

Mark Hasselberger

GRAPHIC DESIGNER

Vince Joy

CONTRIBUTORS

Helaina N. Hovitz • Terese Loeb Kreuzer • Jerry Tallmer

PHOTOGRAPHERS

Milo Hess • Jefferson Siegel • Terese Loeb Kreuzer

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LETTERS TO THE EDITORSeaport Museum’s re-opening provides teachable moment

This week’s reopening of the Seaport Museum is cause for celebration. The maritime museum, which for years was struggling to stay afl oat with dwindling patronage and sparse exhibits, was seemingly on the verge of closing altogether until a deal was struck between the museum and the city last September. That deal would never have happened without the grass-roots effort that took shape over the last year to make sure the museum did not go the way of the Titanic.

In the months prior to the deal, the museum was forced to lay off the majority of its staff and shut-ter its galleries. But even that did not deter people from doing everything they could to try and save the museum.

Local elected officials, Community Board 1 and the dedicated people behind the group Save Our Seaport, are all to thank for their continued advocacy to make sure this Lower Manhattan treasure was not lost.

At the same time, Mayor Michael Bloomberg recog-nized the institution’s importance not only as a tour-ist attraction, but also as a crucial thread in the fabric of this city’s history. Once called New Amsterdam due to the Dutch immigrants that settled the area, the South Street Seaport, as it is now known, is one of the remaining neighborhoods in Manhattan that cannot escape its historical significance. Even as the neighborhood changes, it remains the same. For every fancy clothing store that replaced a nautical themed thrift shop and every fancy restaurant that replaced a fish stall or a dive bar, there is a cobblestone that is no different than it was a century ago.

In short, the Seaport Museum is a Downtown resource that now remains visible and accessible for everyone so that New York City’s past can continue to inform its future.

With all that being said, there is news of the Howard Hughes Corporation’s impending plans to redevelop certain parts of the Seaport. We encourage them to bring this plan to the community as quickly as possible, and to work with the community to ensure the plan respects the community’s wishes.

These wishes include not just preserving the char-acter and past of a neighborhood, but also preserving buildings like the Tin Building and the New Market building, both of which are considered landmarks in our eyes and in the eyes of those who cherish the his-tory of the Seaport.

Indeed, Community Board 1 has adopted two resolutions directing the city Landmarks Preservation Commission to extend the historic district boundaries so that these buildings are protected. Another proper-ty to be considered is the north side of Pier 17, which once was Pier 18, and is not landmarked. Therefore, it remains vulnerable to development even though it’s on the National Register of Historic Places.

Howard Hughes Corporation should be prepared for a spirited debate on such issues, which carry deep historical significance, as well as continuity of use over four centuries.

Whatever plans they have, they should take some inspiration from the fanfare that will accompany the re-opening of the Seaport Museum this week, which will revolve around the acknowledgement of the importance of the past.

N.Y.U. is so aggressive

To The Editor:Re “Villagers pack town hall, hoping to

stop N.Y.U. plan” (news article, Jan. 11):N.Y.U. expansion plans are very aggres-

sive. The plan asks that we rezone the Village to build oversized high-rises, that the residents of Greenwich Village live within a massive construction site for 20 years and that a private university be allowed to take public lands that are now used as parks. We want N.Y.U. to be a part of the Village — we don’t want N.Y.U. to change the Village. Build farther downtown where you are welcomed.

Sara Jones

The people have spoken

To The Editor:Re “Notes from a heckler: The Angry

Buddhist returns” (talking point, by Carl Rosenstein, Jan. 18):

Councilmember Chin, there were 500 of your constituents at the Jan. 9 Community Board 2 Land Use and Business Development Committee meet-ing on the New York University expansion plan. Not a single one supports the plan; all were there to oppose it. Please assure your constituents that you stand with us on this issue. Be unequivocal; do not hesi-tate. Say no to N.Y.U.

Georgette FleischerFleischer is founder, Friends of Petrosino Square

My fi rst meeting with Mead

To The Editor:Re “My times with Taylor Mead” (Clayton,

Jan. 18):Taylor Mead is a great poet. We read

together in Baltimore, of all places, one time when Herbert Huncke found the best ham-burger and fries in town.

But I’d like to add my “fi rst meet” sketch, if I may. I think it was 1962 in Venice when Taylor used to hang at Big Eric Nord’s. Taylor’s scene was minimal(ist). He secured a grocery cart for his belongings and pick-ings and had a transistor radio attached to

it with his antenna up — all he needed to camp anywhere.

Charles Plymell

Clayton’s keeping it real

To The Editor:Re “My times with Taylor Mead” (Clayton,

Jan. 18):As usual, Clayton Patterson strives to

preserve and promote the real history of art in Downtown New York at a time when art is king but completely ruled by the market-place.

Great piece, Clayton!

Penny Arcade

Ground Zero agendas

To The Editor:Re “9/11 Museum squabble must end”

(editorial, Jan. 4):

For years, 9/11 families called for a plaza-level museum. Instead, an elite hand-ful, including Deputy Mayor Patricia Harris, dictated that in order to bury all evidence of the attacks out of sight, the museum would go underground — thus adding wildly exorbitant costs. All to be borne by you, the taxpayer, in one fashion or other.

Had Lower Manhattan Development Corporation offi cials listened to the families, the museum would already be open and gener-ating revenue. Private agendas, however, have been prioritized above common sense, what makes economic sense and our duty by 9/11.

Michael Burke

Letters policy Downtown Express welcomes letters to The Editor. They must include the writer’s fi rst and last name, a phone number for confi rmation purposes only, and any affi li-ation that relates directly to the letter’s subject matter. Letters should be less than 300 words. Downtown Express reserves the right to edit letters for space, clarity, civility or libel reasons. Letters should be e-mailed to [email protected] or can be mailed to 511 Canal St., N.Y., N.Y. 10013.

Keep on top of local crime,every week in THE POLICE BLOTTER

Page 11: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 11January 25 - 31, 2012

BY ALINE REYNOLDS

Financial District resident Elizabeth Williams, who has served on Community Board 1 for close to four years, will be resign-ing from the board in March. Williams dis-cusses her accomplishments on the board, why she’s leaving and recalls recent memo-rable moments as a Downtown courtroom sketch artist.

When and why did you join the community board?

I became a member in April 2008. What really got me was that, after 9/11, we always had illegal vending and crime on our streets. I was the one to harass the First Precinct Commanding Offi cer about it. I had ended up being involved in a lot of other communi-ty board stuff already, like harassing the city Department of Transportation to stop the 24-hour-a-day jackhammering Downtown, so somebody suggested that I join the board, and I did.

Why are you leaving?

It’s been a lot of work — a lot of very rewarding work… It’s just I have other things to move on to. At Borough of Manhattan Community College, I’ve joined a strategic planning group to service college students with autism like my son. I know I’m going

to have to devote more time to that, since it’s such an unknown area. I’m still on the First Precinct Community Council, I’m on the New York City Police Museum board, and I also work in the courts. Some people said to me, ‘Why don’t you just stay on at C.B. 1 and come to the meetings and vote?’ But that’s not what this job is about.

What are three issues or projects you helped see to fruition as a C.B. 1 member?

I knew Aggie Kenny, a courtroom col-league who did drawings at Ground Zero, so I pitched the idea of an exhibit to Julie Bose at the Police Museum. I also conceived the idea of the shields exhibit, which really helped with the last, six-month push of the Zadroga [9/11 healthcare] bill.

In 2009, I helped to eliminate a pond-ing problem in Battery Park City. What happened was, there were two different contractors fi nishing a sidewalk near Pier A — one was the Metropolitan Transit Authority, the other was the state D.O.T. — and they couldn’t come to an agreement on how to handle it. Meanwhile, the whole sidewalk was fi lled with water, and when it would freeze, people could literally not walk down it. It was dangerous. Somebody could have killed themselves. It took me months to get it fi xed, but it fi nally happened.

I also thought of a Civic Center map that the Downtown Alliance designed last year

to direct people who want to get a mar-riage license, a birth certifi cate, or a pass-port to the federal courtrooms and offi ces. Their address is 26 Federal Plaza, but the entrance is on Broadway, which makes it rather confusing. The map is placed on the construction fencing that borders the building, across from Foley Square.

What are you going to miss most about being a part of the commu-nity board?

I really like the peo-ple. But also, there will be things that are going to bother me that I’m not going to be able to devote the time to. I’m really bugged, even though I don’t have a car, that there’s no parking Downtown for residents. But unless I really scream and yell and make a big stink, it’s probably not going to go anywhere.

What exciting courtroom art projects have you been assigned to recently?

I covered the Occupy Wall Street hear-ing the day of the cop raid at Zuccotti Park. It was very crowded and really chaotic,

but it wasn’t as intense as some other things I’ve covered. I was in court

every single day Bernie Madoff and Dominique Strauss-Khan were there. I’ll never forget the Madoff assignment. It was a rainy night on Dec. 11, 2008, and I got a call from the news desk saying, “We got a guy with a $20 billion fraud [case]. Can you make it to court?”

I said, “Did you say bil-lion?”

The largest case I had sketched before was $2 billion. I remem-ber sitting in the jury box look-ing sheepishly around, and Madoff tried to look at me with a smile. I was disgusted.

TALKING POINT

ON THE SPOT WITH ELIZABETH WILLIAMS

BY BILL WEINBERGLast year, I was approached by Peter

Lamborn Wilson — the elusive underground intellectual who is a refugee from the Lower East Side — who beseeched me to revive the Libertarian Book Club.

Revolution was shaking the Arab world, although the wave had not yet come to Europe, Wall St. and Oakland. At this propitious time, New York City’s oldest anarchist institution could not be allowed to die, I was implored.

We had worked together in the L.B.C. for years, before Peter left the city and the Book Club became moribund. Old members were getting older, and we lost our long-time offi ce at 339 Lafayette St., the notorious “Peace Pentagon” run by the pacifi st AJ Muste Institute. But more signifi cant, ultimately, was our identity crisis.

The L.B.C. was founded (to the best of anyone’s reckoning) in 1946, by anarchist exiles from fascist Europe, mostly Jews and Italians. At that time, the word “libertarian” was basi-cally synonymous with “anarchist” or “anti-authoritarian” — although with a more intel-lectual and perhaps slightly euphemistic ring. One of the founders, Jack Frager, had actually known Emma Goldman, so we could claim an unbroken lineage back to the “classical” era of revolutionary anarchism.

Jack was gone before my time, but I did know Valerio Isca — the last of the old-timers. Walking with a cane, in his trademark black beret, he rarely said a word. But I was privileged once to hear him boast in broken English, his face beaming, about how he had fought fol-lowers of Mussolini’s Black Shirts in the streets of Brooklyn in the ’30s. He died in 1996. (The words of these heroes can be read in the classic of oral history, “Anarchist Voices,” by the late Paul Avrich of Queens College, himself a long-time friend of the Book Club.)

I gravitated to the Book Club as a young, aspiring radical seeking a sense of heritage and continuity with my forebears, back in the ’80s. I was on the tail end of a “second wave” of New Left types, hippies and punks who were revitalizing the L.B.C. at this time. Peter Wilson, then producing the “Moorish Orthodox Radio Crusade” on WBAI, became our new leading light.

Although the Book Club had actually print-ed a few books over the years, its primary activ-ity was by then a monthly discussion series, hosted by the lefty Jewish fraternal organization Workmen’s Circle in the rec room of one of the Penn South buildings.

It was also at about this time that some of the younger members (myself included) began protesting that the word “libertarian” had been

appropriated by the free-market right, and sent the wrong message about who we were. Eventually, we decided on a compromise: The ongoing discussion series would be dubbed the Anarchist Forum, while — in stubborn defer-ence to the past — the organization holding the event would continue to be the Libertarian Book Club.

The years of my involvement with the L.B.C. saw the 1988 Tompkins Square Park riot, and subsequent backlash of squatter evictions and gentrifi cation on the Lower East Side; the 1989 revolutions in Eastern Europe, shortly followed by capitalist restoration; the 1994 Zapatista rebellion in Mexico, which I witnessed fi rst-hand as a journalist; and the 1999 Seattle pro-tests against the World Trade Organization, and ensuing anti-globalization campaigns. Despite the hopes represented by Chiapas and Seattle, the general trajectory of society worldwide was to the right — and there was a growing sense that anarchism, especially, was an irrelevant ideological artifact.

Not surprisingly, the L.B.C.’s real decline began after 9/11, with its unleashing of para-noia and war fever. By then, we had lost our meeting space as Workmen’s Circle moved out of the Penn South complex. For a while, we met at the Brecht Forum (a.k.a. the New York Marxist School) in the West Village, and at the

Living Theater on Clinton St. But sometime around fi ve years ago, the Anarchist Forum sputtered out. The Muste Institute, facing the prospect of expensive repairs on the old build-ing at Lafayette St., rightly requested that we vacate the offi ce.

Last year, at Peter’s urging, the Anarchist Forum rose from the ashes (now offi ce-less, in the age of social media). I organized three discus-sions, back at the Brecht Forum space. I spoke about anarchist perspectives on the Libyan war and the Arab Spring; Peter gave a talk on the poignant question, “Does Anarchism Have a Future in the 21st Century?” And we gave a focus-group screening for Wall St. Occupiers of the soon-to-be-released fi lm “Who Bombed Judi Bari?” — on the 1990 terror attack in California on ecological defenders struggling to protect some of the last old-growth redwoods from the timber barons.

Today, when I look at the generic masked protester featured as “Person of the Year” on the cover of Time magazine, I see the anarchist instinct — if not quite the ideol-ogy — re-emerging on the world stage. Even anti-capitalism — offi cially anathema since the fall of the Soviet bloc — is back in popular discourse. Economic grievances (despite the

The Left-Libertarians — the last of an ancient breed

Continued on page 20

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12 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

Two new exhibits highlight Lower Manhattan historyBY TERESE LOEB KREUZER

In the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s new galleries of American painting and sculpture, which debuted on Jan. 16, Downtown resi-dents can come face to face with some of the people who once walked Lower Manhattan’s streets.

George Washington emerged from the American Revolution as a totemic fi g-ure, but his preeminence was not always assured. Gallery 753 holds three portraits of Washington and one of his subordinate and adversary, Horatio Gates.

Both men, at one point in their lives, lived in Lower Manhattan. Washington came here at the end of the war, was inaugurated here as the fi rst U.S. president in April 1789 and served the fi rst months of his presidency here until the capital moved to Philadelphia. Gates lived in New York City at the end of his life and is buried in Trinity churchyard at Broadway and Wall Street, in an unmarked grave. Horatio Street in Greenwich Village is named for him.

In the early years of the war, Washington was disastrously defeated at the Battle of Brooklyn and was again trounced in and

around Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Gates with the help of the brilliant general Benedict Arnold, who ultimately betrayed the Colonial cause, defeated the British in upstate New York at the Battle of Saratoga in September and October of 1777. Some people wanted to demote Washington and put Gates at the head of the Continental armies. That didn’t happen, of course, and Gates may or may not have been an active participant in that plan. No one knows.

The portraits of Gates and Washington in the Met are probably good likenesses. The same cannot be said of a statue of the 21-year-old Connecticut schoolmaster Nathan Hale, who undertook the dangerous mission of entering British-held New York City in September 1776, trying to gain infor-mation for George Washington. Hale was caught and hanged as a spy. His last words were, “I regret that I have but one life to give for my country.”

In 1893, the Sons of the American Revolution in the State of New York erected a statue of Hale in City Hall Park. A miniature version of the work by sculp-tor Frederick MacMonnies is in the Met. MacMonnies had no idea what Hale looked like. He depicted him as a handsome, young man — his eyes closed as a shield against his

impending fate.Aside from these specifi c references, the

American galleries at the Met display fur-niture, silver, glassware, china and even complete rooms from the era before, during and after the Revolutionary War. Under con-struction, the streets of Lower Manhattan often yield fragments from that era. The Met galleries show gleaming and whole what otherwise could only be pieced together or imagined.

The American wing of the Met is a per-manent installation, but the exhibit of draw-ings, “Rembrandt’s World,” which opened at the Morgan Library & Museum on Jan. 20 will only be there until April 29. Four remarkable Rembrandt drawings are in the exhibit. The rest are by his contemporaries.

Rembrandt van Rijn was born in 1606, three years before Henry Hudson, sailing for the Netherlands, entered what is now New York harbor. The Dutch relinquished control of Nieuw Amsterdam to the English in 1664 — fi ve years before Rembrandt died. So the span of the great artist’s life — and the years covered by this exhibit, roughly coincided with the founding of what is now New York City and its growth under Dutch rule.

“Rembrandt’s World” shows what the colonizers of Nieuw Amsterdam left behind — the buildings, the markets, the frozen canals in winter where they skated, the ships they used to fi ght the Spanish and the English, and to explore the world. It shows windmills, churches, bridges and ordinary homes. It shows how people dressed and what they celebrated. It even shows what they looked like.

One portrait in the exhibit is of a merchant and politician named Cornelis Bicker (1592-1654) by an artist named David Bailey, who also depicted Bicker’s wife, Aertgen Witsen. The description reads, “They both descend-ed from old patrician families in Amsterdam, where their fathers were successful grain merchants and mayors. Cornelis and his three brothers came to dominate world trade, controlling goods coming in and out of the Netherlands from the Americas, East Asia, and the Mediterranean.”

So this well-dressed man with intense, dark eyes, only in his early thirties but already with a crease in his brow, would have been among the wealthy investors in the Dutch West India Company that fi nanced Nieuw Amsterdam and who prof-ited from the riches that this and other colonies returned to the mother country. This wealth, in turn, fi nanced the artists whose drawings of contemporary life were eagerly collected by the newly affl uent Dutch burghers.

For more information about visiting the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which is on Fifth Avenue at 82nd Street, go to www.metmuseum.org

For more information about the Morgan Library & Museum, and the special pro-gramming of lectures and fi lms associated with the exhibit, “Rembrandt’s World,” go to www.themorgan.org/exhibitions/exhibition.asp?id=58. The Morgan is at 225 Madison Ave.

Downtown Express photos by Terese Loeb Kreuzer

A portrait of Gen. Horatio Gates painted by Gilbert Stuart around 1793-1794 hangs in the American Wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Stuart painted Gates long after the Battle of Saratoga, which took place in 1777 and which the American forces won under his leadership.

A drawing of Cornelis Bicker (1592–1654), a merchant and politician in Amsterdam, by David Bailly (1584–1657) in the exhibit “Rembrandt’s World” at the Morgan Library & Museum.

“I regret that I have but one life to give for my country.”

— Nathan Hale

Page 13: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 13January 25 - 31, 2012

New software replaces live students with avatars

This learning experience would hardly be possible without the virtual students called “avatars.” Some actions are automatic and part of the programming, such as laughter and other small disruptions, but a single paid screen-guild actor from UCF called an “interactor” controls the majority of the avatars’ actions. The interactor does everything from the simple task of mimick-ing a different voice for each avatar to the more diffi cult task of providing separate personalities with complete backstories. The instructor can customize the personalities and the behavior of each avatar. The virtual class that Schattenkirk worked with had a mild setting.

One avatar named Monique, for instance, was a very enthusiastic student. While Schattenkirk was speaking, Monique would persistently raise her hand with a question that was off topic from the current discus-sion. Instead of ignoring Monique’s hand, Schattenkirk talked to her specifi cally in a calm, relaxed manner reminding her to save her questions until the end of the instruc-tions. Eventually, Monique was called on and allowed to ask her question.

Another avatar named Maria seemed shy but also delivered some of the more eloquent responses to the teacher’s questions. After recognizing Maria as this type of student,

Schattenkirk made sure to call on this avatar more often since the avatar was less likely to respond to a discussion on her own.

TeachLivE is constantly evolving based on feedback; the simulation already is in its third generation. An adult avatar is also in production for student teachers to prepare for their fi rst parent-teacher conferences. Pace University happens to be the only school in the northeast and one of only ten schools in the United States to use this tech-nology. During the spring semester, ten Pace classes with a total of over 300 students are scheduled to use TeachLivE.

For the next generation of real-life stu-dents, TeachLivE may turn out to be quite groundbreaking, producing experienced teachers that are confi dent enough to take on any and every type of classroom.

Continued from page 7

Downtown Express photo by Marshall James Kavanaugh

The TeachLivE technology, developed to help future teachers learn to interact with students, was unveiled at Pace University last Wednesday.

‘Another avatar named Maria seemed shy but also delivered some of the more eloquent responses to the teacher’s questions.’

Page 14: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

14 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

BY TERESE LOEB KREUZER

P.S./I.S. 276 WINTER CARNIVAL: A snowstorm couldn’t dampen spirits at P.S./I.S. 276’s second annual winter carnival on Jan. 21. There were games, face painting, crafts and a delectable array of international food prepared by the school’s parents. Money raised by the PTA-sponsored carnival will go for such things as more books for the library, the librarian’s salary, the music program, chess lessons and teacher enrichment.

Several businesses contributed to the fund-raising event, among them Manhattan Youth, Abel/Noser Corp., the Albanese Organization, Brookfi eld Offi ce Properties and 1 Rector Park. One third-grader, Darshan Singh, 8, made his own contribution. He came up with the idea of telling jokes — one joke for $1 — that brought $103 into the school’s kitty. Darshan was adamant that there would be no free jokes and no refunds. Some examples from Darshan’s repertoire: How do French fries get married? (With onion rings.) When is chicken soup bad for you? (When you’re the chicken.) What starts with T, ends with T and is full of T? (A teapot.)

“We have a variety of fundraisers through-out the school year,” said Gabriela Newman, a member of the winter carnival committee and the mother of a second-grader. She said the fundraisers include Run For Knowledge in September, held in collaboration with PS/IS 89, a pie sale in November, a holiday bazaar in December, and an auction in May.

The school at 55 Battery Place currently has approximately 520 students from pre-K through third grade plus a middle school. Next year, fourth grade classes will be added.

BLOCK PLAY: A young child who is fortunate enough to live in Battery Park City (or anywhere near by, for that matter) has unparalleled educational opportunities avail-able through the Battery Park City Parks Conservancy’s programs and through the parks themselves, where the natural world can be experienced and explored. To its already impressive roster of classes and programs for children ranging in age from babies to teens, the Parks Conservancy is adding Block Play for three- and four-year-olds.

Modular blocks were developed by (and perhaps invented by) Caroline Pratt, who, in 1913, founded the City & Country School in Greenwich Village. Pratt came from an industrial arts background and had uncon-

ventional ideas about how children learn. Rather than giving children pre-made toys, she gave them materials with which to exer-cise their imaginations and create what they needed. Modular blocks have enabled gen-erations of City & Country children to learn about spatial relationships, the fundamentals of mathematics and how to work coopera-tively. Beginning at the age of two and con-tinuing until they are seven, they build entire cities from blocks, populating them with everything that they experience. Stores sell merchandise and payments change hands. There are homes, hospitals, police stations, fi re departments, boats that steam up and down the rivers. Signs have to be written, and the children learn to read and write. Working with blocks that are fractional sizes of larger blocks, they learn math skills.

The B.P.C. Parks Conservancy Block Play sessions will be led by Doug van Horn, a pro-gramming leader at the Conservancy and a for-mer teacher at City & Country. The program takes place at 6 River Terrace and is limited to 10 children per session.

Tuesdays, Feb. 21 to April 10, 10 a.m.-11:30 a.m., three-year-olds and caregiver; 1:30 p.m.-3 p.m., four-year-olds and caregiver. The fee is $160. Call (212) 267-9700, ext. 348 to register.

BENVENUTI OPENS: Samantha’s at 235 South End Ave. closed a year ago, ending a 15-year run in Battery Park City. But on Jan. 23, a successor opened with Nick Liuzzi, formerly a partner in Samantha’s, now the sole owner and manager. The new store, Benvenuti, sells pizzas and Italian specialties such as homemade mozzarella, fresh pastas, soups (Italian wedding, pasta fagioli and minestrone are on the menu), Italian cookies and a variety of cheeses, olives and artisanal breads.

Liuzzi’s grandfather came from Bari, a city of around 320,000 on the Adriatic Sea in southern Italy, where the family still owns three supermarkets. That’s where Liuzzi spent his high school years. “I grew up in the family business,” he said. “I love to cook. My love and my passion is Italian cuisine.”

The opening of Benvenuti was greeted with applause by some customers. Shirley Feinberg, who has lived at Gateway Plaza for 24 years, stopped in to say hello on opening day. She recalled that on 9/11, Nick drove her and her husband, Wilfred, to Bowling Green so that they could escape.

“This is family over here,” Liuzzi said, as she told the story. “This is kids I saw grow

up, that I knew as babies. This neighborhood is my family.”

For now, Benvenuti is open from Monday to Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., with catering available. For deliveries, call (212) 945-2100.

TRIBATTERY POPS SEEKS MUSI-CIANS: The TriBattery Pops, founded nine years ago by B.P.C. resident Tom Goodkind, is seeking a few more musicians. “Another tuba, trombone or sax would really go well!” Goodkind said. Auditions are not required.

The band practices at 7 p.m. on the last two Fridays of the month, January through May, at the Church Street School for Music and Art, 74 Warren St. “This year, we’re celebrating the end of the Mayan calendar by wearing black,” Goodkind said.

Goodkind is proud of the fact that Stan Lee of Marvel Comics designed the TriBattery Pops logo. “I grew up next door

to Stan and we’re still close,” he explained. “He did a comic strip for the New York Daily Mirror based on the way I talked as a three-year-old in the 1950s. The invisible girl, Sue Storm of the Fantastic Four, is styled as my mom. I wrote a Strange Tales comic for Stan when I was 10. All this can’t make up for when my mom threw out all my collectors edition comics when I turned 18 - including 10 Spider Man No.1s! When I started the Pops, I asked Stan to design our logo, and he commented, ‘Wait a minute, Tommy. I have to put Steve Spielberg on hold.’ In less than a week Stan drew for me three batteries against a skyline of New York City.”

Goodkind said that, “Being in the Pops is a lot of fun and requires little work.”

To sign up or for more information, email [email protected].

To comment on Battery Park City Beat or to suggest article ideas, email [email protected].

Downtown Express photos by Terese Loeb Kreuzer

At P.S./I.S. 276’s second annual winter carnival on Jan. 21, third-grader Darshan Singh, 8, thought of telling jokes to raise money for the school — an idea that netted $103. His father, Harry, held a sign that said “$1 for a joke” as Darshan’s brother, Veer, 3, watched.

Nick Liuzzi, the owner and manager of Benvenuti, a pizzeria and Italian food shop that opened on Jan. 23 at 235 South End Ave. With his uncle Dominick, Liuzzi pre-viously owned Samantha’s at the same location.

Page 15: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 15January 25 - 31, 2012

BY TERESE LOEB KREUZEREven a glance through the window of Vintry Fine Wines,

which opened on Jan. 14 in Goldman Sachs alley, suggests it is no ordinary wine shop. Around a thousand different wines are displayed on undulating shelves that lead to a climate-controlled room where the most precious bottles are stored.

Additional bottles are in an off-site warehouse said Michael Martin, 39, Vintry’s general manager and wine director. Though Vintry currently offers more than 2,500 different wines, the collection is growing. Martin, who has been in the wine trade all his life, is responsible for making purchases for the store.

A set of iPads in the front of the shop allows staff and customers to search for wines by name and fi nd how many bottles are in stock, where they are located, and the price.

Soon to be operational, a Napa Technology wine tast-ing machine at Vintry will dispense tastes of four wines at a time.

Vintry’s stock ranges in price from $10 to $11,000. Among the more expensive offerings, a case of 12 bottles of 1982 Chateau Petrus goes for $95,000. A three-liter bottle of 1990 Chateau Lafi te Rothschild Bordeaux is $7,500.

“We have a lot of wine-geeky stuff here,” said Martin. As an example, sales associate Sarah Chappell pulled a

bottle of 2008 Ribolla from the shelf. It comes from Movia, a producer in Slovenia, and sells for $27.

“It has nutty complexity with a fresh acidity,” she said Chappell.

The Ribolla grape was fi rst mentioned in a notarized con-tract dating from the late 13th century. The grape was greatly prized for the next 600 years but was nearly wiped out by the phylloxera epidemic of the 19th century that destroyed most vineyards in Europe.

Martin also anticipates that Vintry will hold wine tast-ings and special events. “We have a lot of venues,” he said,

where these could be held. He noted that the shop is partially owned by the Poulakakos family, and that Harry’s Italian, another Poulakakos venture, will be opening this spring in Goldman Sachs alley, just across from Vintry.

Vintry Fine Wines is at 230 Murray St. The phone num-ber is (212) 240-9553. The website is vintryfi newines.com. The store is open daily, Mondays to Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sundays, from noon to 6 p.m.

Downtown Express photo by Terese Loeb Kreuzer

Elana Effrat, a sales associate at Vintry Fine Wines, uses one of the store’s iPads to check stock on bottles of certain wines, their price, and their location on the store’s shelves. Similar information will be accessible on the store’s website.

New shop in B.P.C. targets ‘wine-geeks’

ULURP,” said Shino Tanikawa, president of the District 2 Community Education Council, which covers Greenwich Village. “If John Sexton [N.Y.U. president] wants to leave a legacy, he doesn’t have to bulldoze the neighborhood,” Tanikawa said.

Timing was not the only problem with the school proposal. Speakers said a rooftop playground was a bad idea.

“Children are terrifi ed of them,” said Teresa John, a Village resident and former N.Y.U teacher. Mixing schoolchildren and N.Y.U. students in the same building, albeit with different lobbies and entrances, worried others.

Board members and local residents at C.B. 2’s crowded “open space” hearing on Jan. 12 were critical of the offi cial criteria defi ning open space in the two superblocks.

Of the 4 acres of what looks like open space in the two superblocks, less than an acre cur-rently qualifi es as accessible open space, said an N.Y.U. consultant on the 2031 plan.

The consultant said the redevelopment would add 3.1 acres of useable public space to the superblocks.

Outraged neighbors mocked the promise of “useable” public space.

“It will be crowded with students,” they shouted. “It’s all concrete,” was another

remark.On the north superblock, two large aca-

demic buildings are planned — a taller one on the Mercer St. side and a shorter one on the Bleecker St. side — between the two residential buildings. Beneath the two new buildings, about 1 million square feet of underground space is planned.

However, the underground space would mean eliminating the Sasaki Garden in Washington Square Village’s courtyard,

which would be relandscaped, and grant-ing easements to allow the university to dig through the green strips to construct and repair, if necessary, the subterranean spaces.

While the garden, which is 3 feet above grade, is not considered an open space acces-sible to the public, Washington Square Village residents hold the garden in high regard and oppose its planned elimination. Milton Polskey, a Washington Square Village resident, and Allan Horland, a tenant leader in the complex, spoke about the awards earned by the designer, Hideko Sasaki, who died in 2000.

G.V.S.H.P.’s Berman said the park space on the north superblock would be grossly overshadowed by the two new buildings.

Berman also denounced the proposed relocation of the dog run and playground now on the Mercer St. side of the south superblock to a space west of the “Zipper Building” planned to replace the Coles Sports Center.

“We want to stay where we are,” said Beth Gottlieb, the dog run’s president. “For over 30 years, 325 families have been able to run a dog run for the community.”

Berman characterized the proposed dog run location west of the planned 300-foot-tall “Zipper Building” as “the equivalent of a back alley.”

Berman said the plan would eliminate most of the usable open space and public green space on the two blocks. The univer-

sity’s proposal to acquire the green strips along Mercer St. between Houston and Bleecker Sts. and between W. Third and W. Fourth Sts. from the city Department of Transportation “is completely unacceptable,” Berman said.

Enid Braun, a member of L.M.N.O.P., the civic group that promoted the construction of the Mercer St. playground on the north superblock, criticized the criteria that rule out fenced areas as being denoted as acces-sible public space.

“By law, all playgrounds must have fenc-ing,” Braun said.

She also observed that the proposed new playground has no area designated for older children.

An elderly Washington Square Village resident noted that many in the audience looked older than 60.

“If we have to live for 20 years on a construction site, we won’t even be here,” he said.

C.B. 2 Chairperson Hoylman told the July 12 crowd at Our Lady of Pompei Church that it was the largest public attendance that he had seen on the N.Y.U. 2031 plan. “Keep it up in the coming weeks when we are planning further meetings,” Hoylman said. “I’m sure that the representatives of elected offi cials will want to hear you and report your feelings about this project [back to the politicians].”

N.Y.U. takes heat on school and open space at hearingsContinued from page 8

Andrew Berman, director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation.

Page 16: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

16 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

Pols want Lunar New Year to be offi cial school holiday

their schools. “About 14 percent of school children

in the NYC public school system are Asian American,” states the letter. “Our City prides itself on its multiculturalism -- and designating the Lunar New Year as a school holiday would be an important gesture to Asian Americans that their customs and contributions to our City are appreciated.”

On Tuesday, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer echoed the sen-timent in a statement saying, “I’m with Sen. Squadron and Assemblymember Meng. Make Lunar New Year a NYC school holi-day. Asian-Americans play a huge role in NYC; let’s honor their celebration.”

Lunar New Year is celebrated by cul-tures across East Asia including China, Korea and Vietnam.

Attendance at schools in Lower Manhattan dropped considerably Monday, as Asian American children took absences in order to observe the holiday with their families. About 80 percent of students at P.S. 130 did not come to school Monday, according to Principal Lily Woo.

“We usually have one of the highest attendance rates in the city excluding that one day,” said Woo. “We generally

fall above 98 percent but because we are located in Chinatown and because we have such a high number of Chinese stu-dents, our attendance that day fell to 200 students.”

New York City Councilmember Margaret Chin also acknowledged the fact that many students already take the day as an excused absence.

“I think it is a wonderful initiative and I am very supportive,” said Chin. “This week we celebrated the first day of Lunar New Year and anyone who was there can tell you the streets were full of children and families from all over Manhattan.”

2012 is the Year of the Dragon, con-sidered one of the most auspicious and prosperous Chinese Zodiac symbols.

“This year is the Year of the Dragon, which is a time to do big things. It is a perfect time to pass this legislation,” noted Chin.

The letter urged Bloomberg to declare the holiday while bills sponsored by Meng and Squandron addressing the issue attempt to gain traction in the state leg-islature. According to Amy Spitalnick, a spokesperson for Squadron, Bloomberg has not yet replied to the letter.

A request for comment on the issue to Bloomberg’s office resulted in a response from Marge Feinberg, a spokesperson for the city department of education.

“With so many religions practiced throughout our city, we have to weigh additional school closings with the need to give our students as much time in the classroom as possible,” said Feinberg in an email. She did not respond to further

requests for comment.Should the effort be successful, New

York City would join San Francisco as one of the few U.S. cities to recognize the holiday.

Gentle Blythe, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Unified School District, said the adoption of the holiday there resulted in a higher “average daily atten-dance” for the district which ultimately led to more state funding.

“It actually created a cost savings for the district,” said Blythe of the Lunar New Year holiday.

Currently, students in New York City who wish to celebrate the holiday with their families must take an excused absence and miss class that may affect their academic records, according to local school officials. Though the excused absences are granted for “religious obser-vances,” the holiday is not particularly religious but rather a time for families to join together, according to academics.

University of California at Berkeley Professor David Johnson, an expert in Chinese culture, said in an email that his-torically there have been some religious elements within holiday celebrations; they “have been radically weakened over the past several generations... and in the U.S. they do not exist in any significant way. I

think in the end Chinese New Year does not qualify as a religious holiday in the ordinary meaning of the term.”

Whether the holiday is religious or not should not determine whether the holiday is adopted in New York City, according to UC Berkeley Chinese Professor Paula Varsano who added that comparing Lunar New Year to Christmas puts the issue into perspective.

“It is doubtful that anyone would decide that Christmas should not con-tinue to be a public school holiday,” she said in an email.

— with reporting by John Bayles

Continued from page 1

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Downtown Express photos by Milo Hess

Crowds gathered at Roosevelt Park on Monday for the Fireworks Festival, one of the day’s many events marking the start of the Chinese Lunar New Year.

New York council member Margaret Chen.

Page 17: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 17January 25 - 31, 2012

“We hope that all the charges will be recom-mended for the remaining seven suspects, including those who have been initially charged with involuntary manslaughter.”

OuYang and other advocates are also requesting that the Army televise the Afghanistan-based hearings for the remain-ing suspects, which begin on Mon., Feb. 6. Wright, however, said the request would likely be denied.

“Our rules do permit closed-circuit video or audio transmission in very limited cir-cumstances as determined by the judge,” said Wright, “but the Army typically doesn’t record or broadcast Article 32 hearings or court-martials.”

While NYC Councilmember Margaret Chin also expressed her dissatisfaction, she said, “This is only a recommendation regard-ing one charge against one soldier. I am hopeful that this recommendation will be ignored and that the charges in the other cases will be upheld.”

“Investigators have confi rmed that Private Chen was a victim of egregious maltreatment prior to his death,” Chin con-tinued. “If the Army has zero tolerance for bullying and hazing, as they claim to, then they need to prosecute these eight individu-als to the fullest extent of the law.”

The Councilmember is holding a hearing Fri., Jan. 27 at 10 a.m. at 250 Broadway on the resolution she introduced to the

Council earlier this month urging the U.S. Department of Defense to scrutinize the Army’s cultural diversity training for its soldiers.

Wright said the Army has responded to the community’s list of previously asked questions about its training policies. Neither the questions nor answers were immediately available to the press.

Asked for an update on the location of the anticipated trials of the soldiers, Wright said, “It’s something procedurally we’re not ready to discuss yet, because the Court-Martial Convening Authority has yet to rule on whether or not the trials will or will not take place.”

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“If the Army has zero tol-erance for bullying and hazing, as they claim to, then they need to prose-cute these eight individuals to the fullest extent of the law.”

— Margaret Chin

Continued from page 1

Court martial not enough, says community

tive, immediate action. “They’re playing God right now,” said Feal of the S.T.A.C. “You know the saying, ‘It’s better late than never?’ Here’s a chance for them to prove it.”

In the meantime, N.I.O.S.H. has begun to fi nance scientifi c research of cancer and other health conditions thought to be linked to 9/11 exposure. The law directly allocates $15 million for the cause in 2012 alone. “Until the law was passed, there was really no [federal] money set aside specifi cally for promoting research,” noted N.I.O.S.H. Spokesperson Fred Blosser. Of the $15

million, $11.25 million is available for new research projects, while the remaining sum will continue to fund eight studies that were budgeted last year, including one being con-ducted by Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and another by the FDNY.

Meanwhile, Feal vows that he and his supported wouldn’t rest until cancer is incor-porated in the bill. “If they choose not to,” he said, “don’t worry about Occupy Wall Street; it’s going to be, ‘Occupy Ground Zero.’”

For a more detailed agenda of the S.T.A.C.’s February meeting, visit www.cdc.gov/NIOSH/topics/wtc/stac/meetings/ in the coming days.

Fight to add cancer continuesContinued from page 5

Read the Archiveswww.DOWNTOWNEXPRESS.com

Page 18: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

18 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

Students with hearing loss fi nd help at P.S. 89

“thriving” this year, Stobbe said, the youngsters still have room for improvement. During a game of Simon Says, for example, Henry accidentally touched his toes instead of his nose.

“With Henry, I’m working on sounding out words,” said Stobbe. “We talked about how the two words sound familiar.”

Despite certain challenges, Henry, who also wears hearing aids accompanied by an FM system, is excelling this semester, according to his teachers. During class last week, he was the fi rst student in a group of fi ve to come up with a “pattern” sentence on his sheet of paper and interacted fl uently with fellow classmates during a game of “racing words.”

“He just fl ows right in,” said Henry’s kindergarten instructor, Matt Halem. “He can fi gure out a lot of what you’re saying.”

“One of the most remarkable things is, for a child who is hard of hearing, he knows letter-sound correspondence bet-ter than some of the other children in the class,” remarked co-teacher Alysa Essenfeld.

Though most of Owen’s and Henry’s peers are aware of their hearing loss, neither is mocked in class for being differ-ent, according to the school staff.

“The other kids are used to it,” said Halem. “We tell them it’s just like wearing glasses.”

Despite their condition, Owen and Henry also participate in cross-grade reading time, when the fi fth graders narrate picture books to the kindergarteners.

“Owen does really well with it — he really likes little kids,” said his teacher. “He’s the youngest of four in his fam-ily, so I think he really likes the chance to be the big kid.”

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Downtown Express photo by Aline Reynolds

Owen Gallagher, a fi fth grade student at P.S. 89 who suffers from hearing loss, working on an assignment last Friday.

Continued from page 3

Page 19: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 19January 25 - 31, 2012

ing months. Protests, marches and other actions continue to mobilize supporters, though in smaller numbers than in prior months. Symbolic victories though continue to give Occupy Wall Street attention from the media.

A week before the Jan. 17 four month anniversary of the movement, Brookfi eld Properties dismantled the metal barriers which had encircled Zuccotti Park since a Nov. 15 NYPD raid ended the encamp-ment there. Private security still remains in Zuccoti with the barriers now stored in a corner of the park.

The move followed the release of a Jan. 9 letter from the New York Civil Liberties Union to Commissioner Robert LiMandri of the city Department of Buildings. The letter stated that the barriers violated fi rst amend-ment protections, city zoning ordinances and a 1968 agreement which required Brookfi eld Properties to allow public access to the park.

A spokesperson for Brookfi eld Properties declined to comment on the letter’s effect on the company policy concerning the park.

Though many activists said no new efforts at occupying public spaces in the area are currently underway, a few holdouts continue to maintain a presence at the park. Activists interviewed there said it was important to have information available for tourists who visit the once obscure park in addition to maintaining visibility at what had become the symbolic center of the movement.

Ned Merrill, a resident of the Upper West Side who joined the movement in September, said that the ongoing deployment of private security in the park underscores the need to maintain a presence there, regardless of size.

“All we need here is a symbolic presence, you know, fi ve, ten people is fi ne,” Merrill added.

Members of the New York City General Assembly, which ostensibly governs Occupy Wall Street, reached consensus on Jan. 14

to freeze most spending among its working groups. Medical and food services received exemptions along with the housing working group, which will be allowed to submit one more funding proposal to provide housing for activists who are currently homeless, according to Christine Crowther, a member of the accounting working group.

Before the freeze, working groups had been allowed to incur up to $100 in expenses per day without needing to secure approval from the General Assembly. Occupy Wall Street currently has about $340,000 in the bank of which about $100,000 is reserved for legal expenses, said Haywood Carey, a member of the accounting working group.

A discussion of the spending freeze Monday night centered on whether it applied to the Spokes Council as well. At the meet-ing members of the facilitation and archives working groups said that the freeze was inhibiting their respective efforts to set up meeting venues for the council and properly record events within the movement.

Whether the council can approve addi-tional funding for the groups has yet to be decided. The issue cannot be resolved until the exact wording of the spending freeze is determined by consulting meeting records, which as of Monday were not available, according to sources.

Despite the fi nancial and organization-al challenges facing the movement, many ‘occupiers’ said they remain patiently confi -dent their movement will maintain its vigor through the winter.

Tony Zilka, a singer from Portland, Oregon, came to NYC recently on his way to “Occupy Congress” last week. He said recent media coverage suggests the move-ment has lost vitality, though he feels that events in Lower Manhattan indicate Occupy Wall Street remains active.

“Coming out and seeing all of these amazing civil rights leaders, all of these amazing mega-organizers are still here and still want to help us,” he said at a holiday event celebrating Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “They want to see this movement grow so badly.”

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Funding not an issue says O.W.S.Continued from page 9

Downtown Express photo by Marshall James Kavanaugh

On Tuesday, an Occupy Wall Street activist was arrested in Zuccotti Park, once again drawing attention to the symbolic home base of the nearly four-month-old movement.

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20 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

best efforts of the Western media and politi-cians to obscure this) animated the protests in the Arab world; the wave that began in Tunisia a year ago has swept through Athens, Madrid and Barcelona, London and Birmingham, and fi nally Manhattan, Oakland and nearly every city in the U.S. Industrial actions and peasant protests rocked China’s Guangdong province, police massacred striking oil workers occupy-ing a public square in Kazakhstan, and rent protesters erected a street encampment for weeks in downtown Tel Aviv. Students protest-ing budget cuts repeatedly shut down Santiago and Bogotá. At year’s end, mass protests over contested elections broke out in Russia. And, with several Arab dictators overthrown, the uprisings continue in Syria, Yemen, Egypt and Bahrain. Nigeria appears to be next.

This made it all the more frustrating to see partisans of the “libertarian” Republican presidential hopeful Ron Paul maintaining a prominent (if, one hopes, unrepresentative) presence at Zuccotti Park. On the ’Net, Paul won enthusiasm from leftist talking heads for his antiwar and civil libertarian rhetoric.

There is, of course, a legitimate right-liber-tarian tradition that takes its tip from Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig von Mises rather than Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman. But Ron Paul’s positions aren’t even as progres-sive as those of the Libertarian Party on issues like abortion and immigration. The Libertarian

Party at least has a consistent position on per-sonal freedoms, while Paul says he wants to see Roe v. Wade overturned and birthright citizen-ship expunged from the Constitution. If Paul and his supporters don’t believe in fundamental freedoms like reproductive rights and birthright citizenship, they shouldn’t call themselves “lib-ertarian.” They give the word a bad name.

They seek to restrict rights for women and immigrants, and it makes little difference if the oppressor is Arizona or Alabama rather than the federal government in their “states’ rights” utopia. (Paul has even said he would overturn the Civil Rights Act!) Their “freedom” too often means the “freedom” of the states to deny oth-ers their freedom. For those outside the proper-tied, disproportionately white elite, their utopia would be completely dystopian.

Apart from the inconsistencies on civil liber-ties issues, the economic prescriptions of the Paulistas would be utterly oppressive for the fabled 99% — the dismantling of OSHA and the E.P.A.; the abolition of the federal minimum wage, Medicare, Medicaid, welfare and public education; the sale of the national parks to oil companies. Et cetera.

Left-wing anarchists — libertarian social-ists, in the more polite formulation — make no distinction between authoritarian power exercised by state or federal bodies, through governmental or economic means. A landlord, banker or industrialist owns the lives of his wards (tenants, debtors, employees) no less than a public-sector bureaucrat. The state is an entity of capitalism, and you can’t struggle

against one without struggling against the other. An unheeded lesson of the Cold War is how state “socialism” inevitably degenerates into capitalism.

We seek inspiration in such historical episodes as the Zapatistas in Mexico (1910-19), Makhnovists in the Ukraine (1917-20), Spanish anarchists in Catalonia (1936-37), and Zapatistas in Mexico again (1994 to date) — peasants and workers who took back the land and the factories, building socialism from below, without commissars or politburos.

Yet, nor (we hope) are we mere history buffs or impractical dreamers. Contrary to the right-wing libertarians, we recognize that as long as we live under capitalism, individual liberties are best served by massive public restraints on its workings. This need not be seen as reformism or an abdication of revolutionary aspirations. The British Marxist historian E.P. Thompson wrote of a principle of “moral economy” — the pressure that common people can bring to wrest a better deal from the system. New York tenants certainly understand this about rent-control laws — or they should, anyway.

There can be unity between left and right libertarians around issues of personal freedom — opposing the surveillance state, Internet censorship, the war on drugs. In fact, a few right-libertarians (albeit, the long-haired, can-nabis-smoking type) did gravitate to the L.B.C. in the ’80s. And some of the books the L.B.C. published were written by co-founder Enrico Arrigoni, an Italian veteran of the Spanish Civil War, who became an “individualist” in reaction

against Stalinism.But politicians like Paul shouldn’t be allowed

to usurp the “libertarian” label — and the left-libertarian tradition shouldn’t be erased from history. The memory of fi ghters like Valerio Isca should not be allowed to die.

More than that — can the left reclaim the libertarian legacy from the right? With Occupy Wall Street, the left has very effectively taken back the populist imperative from the right, which had cornered the political protest market with the Tea Party.

A libertarian left movement wouldn’t have to adhere rigidly to 19th-century anarchist dogmas. But it would have to be fundamen-tally serious about freedom — rooting for the protesters, not the despots, in Syria and Iran and China and Russia; unequivocal on “lib-ertine” or “lifestyle” issues like (yes) cannabis legalization; testing the limits of police control rather than acquiescing in it; and functioning (as O.W.S. does) with an ethic of internal democracy.

I don’t know if the Libertarian Book Club’s Anarchist Forum series will resume in 2012. But, for the sake of humanity’s future, the libertarian left tradition deserves a political renaissance. And now, for the fi rst time in my conscious life, I think it stands a fi ghting chance to get one.

Weinberg for 20 years co-produced the “Moorish Orthodox Radio Crusade” on WBAI. He now produces the Web site WorldWar4Report.com.

Continued from page 11

The Left-Libertarians — the last of an ancient breed

Page 21: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 21January 25 - 31, 2012

Donors needed for ‘Bach at One’

School rezoning woes persist

which there was no music director. Wachner embarked on an ambitious

schedule of programming that included bringing in new musicians, starting the Bach at One and Compline series, planning several music festivals and taking the Trinity Wall Street “Messiah” to Alice Tully Hall, where it was well received.

In an effort to upgrade the quality of the already excellent choir, Wachner added some singers and some who had been there previously were dropped.

Trinity Choir is over a hundred years old. Choir members are part-time employees of Trinity, and always sing at the church on Sundays. They are paid on an hourly basis, so the abbreviated music schedule cuts into their income but not into their relationship with the church. The members of the Trinity

Baroque Orchestra are freelancers.Trinity hopes that donors will come for-

ward to allow Bach at One and other concerts to continue. The Concert at One program at Trinity Church on Thursdays has been run-ning for more than 40 years. “In 1980, it received a very signifi cant gift from a donor and we’ve been able to add to that over the years,” said Hanick. “One of the things we’ll be looking at is whether we can partner with donors for the Bach at One series. Both are given freely to the public. Our heart wants to continue the Bach at One series.”

She said that within the next couple of months, Trinity Wall Street would be hiring a staff member to work on funds development. “Music and the arts would be a prime candi-date for attention,” Hanick said. She added that anyone interested in donating to Trinity’s music program can email the rector, Dr. James Cooper, at [email protected]. Donations of any size would be welcome and would be tax deductible.

“Music and the Arts plays a vital role in the parish’s life,” Rev. Mallonee said in the introduction to the programming catalog for the 2011-2012 season. On a previous occa-sion, she had remarked, “We believe the arts are transformative and in our world, beauty is much needed. It feeds people’s souls – and that’s what we’re about.”

Hanick said that Trinity Wall Street remains committed to the music program. “It’s balancing doing excellent programming with the economic realities,” she said.

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Continued from page 5

“Our heart wants to continue the Bach at One series.” Linda Hanick

Thomas, citing a 2009 D.O.E. regulation. “What is undecided is if these students will

get any preference over other out-of-zone stu-dents who have always been out of the zone,” Thomas continued. “There was some ongoing conversation about whether they can make an exception in this school, but that hasn’t been decided yet.”

In a recent resolution, Community Education Council District Two asked the D.O.E. to consider admitting current Spruce Street pre-k students into the kindergarten class if additional seats remain once students in the school’s new zone are accommodated.

“The D.O.E.’s not obligated to follow that particular recommendation, because it’s not a zoning issue,” said C.E.C. District Two

President Shino Tanikawa, “but we [included it in the resolution] because residents who lived next door to Spruce felt a certain level of emotional investment in the school.”

Due to the uncertainty, P.S. 397 parent Yanet Cruz is thinking about moving with her four-year-old son, Logan, out of the neighbor-hood. “

“We’re in limbo at this moment, and it’s quite stressful,” said Cruz. “I’m feeling pretty bummed that we have to go somewhere else. I don’t see why he can’t continue in the school.”

William Street resident Mark Rasso and his four-year-old son, David, are in the same boat.

“We’re applying to Spruce, although we’ve been told by their administration that the odds aren’t good,” said Rasso. “I thought it would have been more of an intelligent solution that would allow anyone currently in the zone at Spruce to continue their journey.”

Pre-k grandfathering wasn’t an issue during Downtown’s last rezoning in 2009, according to various sources. The only school that even had a pre-k at the time was P.S. 89, noted Eric Greenleaf, a former member of C.E.C. District Two’s zoning committee.

“A lot of the people who were going to pre-k at P.S. 89 that were put into the 276 [due to the rezoning] preferred going to 276 because it was closer to where they lived,” said Greenleaf. “People who would have been most inconve-nienced were people who had an older sibling in P.S. 89, but I didn’t hear an uproar about that.”

Continued from page 6

p a

“We’re in limbo at this moment, and it’s quite stressful.”

— Yanet Cruz

Page 22: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

22 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

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THE PICCOLINI TRIO: CIRCUS IN A TRUNK Just for the record, we have it on good authority that performers booked for shows at the Canal Park Playhouse almost always show up. But that’s not the case when The Piccolini Trio sits down

to enjoy a performance from a circus that never arrives. For-tunately, clowns always travel with an antique trunk full of all the props, costumes and surprises necessary for putting on a show of their own. Combining contemporary as well

as classic European clowning, the Piccolinis (Joshua Shack, John Stork and Joy Powers) also draw from the collective experience of having performed with the likes of Circus Smirkus, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey and the Mos-cow State Circus. The result is a repertoire of routines that use music, acrobatics, physical comedy, juggling and panto-mime in unique and unexpected ways. Their show, “Circus in a Trunk,” is part of Canal Park Playhouse’s Classic Brunch Matinee series — at which audience members can enjoy a selection of items from The Waffle Iron Café (open from 10am-6:30pm on Saturdays and Sundays, for ticket holders only). Among the Café’s repertoire: Hot-off-the-waffle-iron spinach, mushroom, smoked chicken sausage frittatas; French toast and traditional Belgian waffles. Greek yogurt, granola and fresh fruit provide a nice alternative to those making good on their New Year’s resolution to live on slightly less grease and sugar. Appropriate for all ages. Through Sun., Jan. 29; Sat. and Sun., at 2pm and 4pm. At Canal Park Playhouse (508 Canal St., btw. Greenwich and West Sts.). General admission is $20, with a pre or post-show pre-fixe brunch available for an additional $8 in advance or $10 at the door. For reservations or more info, call 866-811-4111 or visit canalparkplayhouse.com. For info on the artists, visit piccolinitrio.com.

THE BULLY This musical from Vital Children’s Theatre (part of their touring repertoire since 2005) returns to NYC for an extended run. “The Bully” tells the story of a bus mix-up stranding Lenny (the nerd) and Steve (the bully) at the wrong school — where they both get picked on for being “the new kids.” When the boys are forced to work together to get back to their school, they begin to learn that they might not be so different after all. Appropriate for ages 4-12. Through Feb. 26; Sat. & Sun. at 11am & 1pm. Weekday 11am & 1pm school holiday performances on Jan. 27 and Feb. 20, 21, 22, 23. At Vital Theatre (2162 Broadway, 4th Floor, on the North East Corner of 76th St. and Broadway). Tickets are $25 (seat-ing in the first three rows, $30). For reservations, visit call 212-579-0528 or visit vitaltheatre.org.

JIM HENSON’S FANTASTIC WORLD If you grew up on “Sesame Street” and have seen the new Muppet reboot cur-rently in theaters (“The Muppets”), then a seen visit to this

exhibit is a must. “Jim Henson’s Fantastic World” has much more to offer than just the chance to see Miss Piggy and Ker-mit under glass. There are also drawings, storyboards, props and a reel of witty commercials from the black and white era of television. “Fantastic World” can be seen through March 4. At the Museum of the Moving Image (36-01 35th Ave., Asto-ria). Museum hours: Tues.-Thurs., 10:30am-5pm. Fri., 10:30am-8pm. Sat. & Sun., 10:30am-7pm. Admission: $10 for adults; $7.50 for college students and seniors; $5 for children under 18 (free for members and children under three). Free admission every Fri., from 4-8pm. For info and a full schedule of events, visit movingimage.us — or call 718-777-6888.

THE FROG PRINCE The Galli Theater’s season continues with “The Frog Prince” (through Jan.29) and Aladdin (through Feb. 26). These productions are appropriate for all ages. All shows take place at 347 W. 36th St. (btw. 8th & 9th Aves.). For tickets ($20 for adults, $15 for children), call 212-352-3101 or visit web.ovationtix.com. Also visit gallitheaterny.com.

POETS HOUSE The Poets House Children’s Room gives children and their parents a gateway to enter the world of rhyme — through readings, group activities and interactive performances. For children ages 1-3, the Children’s Room offers “Tiny Poets Time” readings on Thursdays at 10am; for those ages 4-10, “Weekly Poetry Readings” on Saturdays at 11am. Filled with poetry books, old-fashioned typewriters and a card catalogue packed with poetic objects to trigger inspiration, the Children’s Room is open Thurs.-Sat., 11am-5pm. Free admission. At 10 River Terrace. Call 212-431-7920 or visit poetshouse.org.

CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF THE ARTS Explore painting, collage and sculpture through self-guided arts projects at this museum dedicated to inspiring the artist within. Open art stations are ongoing throughout the afternoon — giving children the opportunity to experiment with materials such as paint, clay, fabric, paper and found objects. Museum hours: Mon. & Wed., 12-5pm; Thurs.-Fri., 12-6pm; Sat.-Sun., 10am-6pm. Admission: $10; free for seniors and infants (0-12 months). Pay as you wish on Thurs., 4-6pm. At 103 Charlton St. (btw. Hudson and Greenwich Sts.). Call 212-274-0986 or visit cmany.org. For group tours, call 212-274-0986, ext. 31.

WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE YOUR EVENT LISTED IN THE DOWNTOWN EXPRESS? Send information to [email protected]. Please provide the date, time, location, price and a description of the event. Information may also be mailed to 515 Canal Street, Unit 1C, New York City, NY 10013. Requests must be received at least three weeks before the event. Questions? Call 646-452-2497.

YOUTHACTIVITIES

Photo courtesy of Chinese Theatre Works

Young dancers perform a traditional Chinese dance at CMA’s 2011 Lunar New Year Festival.

LUNAR NEW YEAR FESTIVALOn January 28, in celebration of the Lunar New Year, the Children’s Museum of the

Arts will explore the arts and culture of New York’s Chinese community. The festival will include a variety of visual art experiences to teach families and children about traditional and contemporary arts in China. The Chinese Theater Works will perform “Tiger Tales” — a shadow puppet show. The day will be capped off by a special performance of the Chinese Lion Dancers of P.S.124! Events unfold from 10am-5pm, with special perfor-mances between 1pm and 4pm. Regular museum admission fees apply. For more info on the Children’s Museum of the Arts, see the listing on this page.

Photo courtesy of the Piccolini Trio

Don’t stop clowning around. See listing for “The Piccolini Trio: Circus in a Trunk.”

COMPILED BY NIKKI TUCKER & SCOTT STIFFLER

Page 23: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 23January 25 - 31, 2012

BY MARTIN DENTONIndie theater cognoscenti in New York

City will all be heading to the Barrow Street Theater on January 28 and 29 (and so will I, and so should you). Why? Because on those two evenings, “The Piano Store Plays” will be performed by Nancy Walsh, Kevin Pariseau, and their author, John Clancy. It’s the first time that Clancy has appeared on stage in New York in a decade, and the first time these seminal early works have been seen any-where in more than two decades.

If you’ve never seen John Clancy on stage — or if, like probably the majority of NYC indie theater artists/mavens, you’ve seen him on stage only in the capacity of master of ceremonies/executive or artis-tic director/rabble-rouser/activist — then you won’t want to miss this rare chance to see him exercise one of his oh-so-many theatrical muscles.

Clancy is probably best known as one of the founders of the New York International Fringe Festival (with Elena K. Holy, Aaron Beall and Jonathan Harris; until 2001, he was its artistic director). Theater-makers in their 20s and 30s regard him as one of indie theater’s elder statesmen (though he’s not yet 50), as co-founder and executive director of the League of Independent Theater and as a teacher and advisor who has offered counsel and support to countless emerg-ing companies and artists.

But Clancy is also, first and fore-most, an artist himself — a Renaissance man of theater, in fact. His directing credits include THE seminal indie show “Americana Absurdum” (Brian Parks’s manic but clear-eyed comic view of life in America near the end of the millennium), as well as works by C.J. Hopkins such as “Horse Country” and “screwmachine/eyecandy.”

Working with a corps of excellent actors that has included Nancy Walsh, David Calvitto, Paul Urcioli, Matt Oberg

and many others, Clancy created a style of fast-fast-fast relentless and razor-sharp brutal satire that’s as distinctive as it is piercingly effective.

The first John Clancy play I ever saw was “Horse Country,” at the 1999 New York International Fringe Festival. I caught a 10pm performance at the old Present Company Theatorium, after a full day of Fringe-going (it was my sixth show of the day). Though I was pretty tired, his galvanizing production of Hopkins’ sly, brilliant script woke me right up. Clancy’s work demands attention, the way that, say, Yul Brynner did as the King of Siam.

“Horse Country” made me a fan not only of the Clancy style but more impor-tantly of his aesthetic — theater that doesn’t so much jolt or shock the audi-ence as slap them silly (and silly is very deliberately chosen in this context); the-ater that not only makes you think but may well prompt you to some overt and/or subversive action.

Perhaps no John Clancy work exempli-fies this idea more than his solo show, “Notice of Default and Opportunity to Cure” — which he performed for a few

weeks in March, 2000. The show was inspired by a legal document (whose title was the same as this play’s) sent by the Present Company’s landlord regarding some owed funds. Clancy shaped his own reaction to this notice, and his deeper and larger thoughts about the nature of money and art and the uncomfortable ways the two are made to intersect in con-temporary society, into an unforgettable show. Director Margarett Perry recently said on Facebook about this piece, “Still one of my favorite nights in the the-atre! When he burned that $20 bill after going through the finances I was beside myself.” (I should note here that “Notice of Default,” along with several other of Clancy’s plays, is published on Indie Theater Now, a new website that I created and curate that’s devoted to contemporary American drama.)

“Notice of Default” showed me two aspects of Clancy’s talent I had not here-tofore witnessed — his charismatic act-ing ability, and his incisive, insightful playwriting style. Since then, he has had significant success as a playwright with “Fatboy,” which reworks Jarry’s “Ubu the

King” as a grotesque latter-day Punch-and-Judy show, and with “The Event” — a solo piece that explores the very nature of performance itself, in a manner that might best be described as part postmodern deconstruction and part “Our Town.” He is also the author of an amazing and scary comedy called “Captain Overlord’s Folly, or The Fool’s Revenge,” in which a group of anarchic rogue clowns hijack a tradi-tional theater performance, which was commissioned at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2007 but has thus far not had an American production.

And now we have Clancy heading back on the boards in a triptych of his earliest plays. I got this wonderful scene-setting email from Nancy Walsh, John’s frequent collaborator, business partner and wife: “Remember the old Piano Store back when it was an illegal speakeasy? Before there was a Present Company or a New York Fringe? Back when we were performing at midnight on the Lower East Side when the Lower East Side was the Lower East Side?”

Back to The Piano StoreJohn Clancy revisits not so long lost era of LES theater

DOWNTOWN EXPRESSARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

Photo by Dixie Sheridan

Back in the day: John Clancy, with FringeNYC co-founder Elena K. Holy.

THE PIANO STORE PLAYSSaturday, January 28 at 10pm

Sunday, January 29 at 5pm

At the Barrow Street Theater

27 Barrow St., at 7th Avenue, South of Christopher St.

For tickets ($15), call 212-868-4444 or visit smarttix.com

THEATER

Continued on page 24

Page 24: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

24 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

Back to The Piano Store

“The Piano Store Plays,” coming to Barrow Street Theater on January 28 and 29, takes us back to that time and place — with John and Nancy reprising roles they performed 20 years ago in that (in)famous old storefront space, joined by Broadway veteran Kevin Pariseau (“Legally Blonde,” “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change”). The evening will be comprised of “Anyone” (described as “a love story on stage”); “Falling Out,” in which a marriage ends on stage; and “Solo for Spoon and Birdcage” (a meta-theatrical ballet of ineptitude with singing and loud noises).

Clancy writes, “These three plays were first performed on the Lower East Side in the early 90s, what was then the epicenter of the independent the-ater world. In a weird way, they are blueprints for all of the work we’ve done with Present Company and Clancy Productions ever since. Back then, Nancy was working Off-Broadway and doing some soap opera work. I was writing crazy shit that no one wanted to produce and auditioning for roles I didn’t want in shows that sucked and getting a few callbacks but no gigs. Nancy recognized the larger implications and said, ‘Let’s do it ourselves. Let’s just put up these

shows. Why not?’ So here’s the stuff we put on. The reason that we’re doing them here and now for you is because Martin and Rochelle Denton asked us for anything that John ever wrote to publish on IndieTheaterNow.com and Nancy said ‘What about the Piano Store Plays. They were pretty good.’ ”

I’m excited that we’ll have “The Piano Store Plays” online to share with everyone once this all-too-brief run concludes. In the meantime, I’m excited that John is back on stage in the work that “Started It All,” as they say.

Martin Denton is editor of nytheatre.com. His newest project is indietheater-now.com — the new digital theater library for the 21st century.

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Continued from page 23

Though I was pretty tired, his galvanizing production of Hopkins’ sly, brilliant script woke me right up. Clancy’s work demands attention.

You Saw It...

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Page 25: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 25January 25 - 31, 2012

Just Do Art!COMPILED BY SCOTT STIFFLER

WALL STREET DIALOGUESTrinity Wall Street — the Lower

Manhattan Episcopal church that knows a little something about what happens when Occupy Wall Street storms the gates — isn’t shying away from questioning our moral obligation to act upon ethical issues raised by the OWS movement. Presented by Trinity Institute and happening weekly through February 8, “Wall Street Dialogues” chal-lenges a pundit to confront the audience with a provocative question whose Biblical origins have modern implications.

On January 25, James Copland, of the Center for Legal Policy at the Manhattan Institute, mulls over the moral values of capitalism (“Capitalism, Inequality, and Scripture”). On February 1, Ben Roberts (occupycafe.org) asks what it feels like to have enough (“Occupy as a Leap of Faith”). The fi nal installment, on February 8, has Yale Divinity School’s Kathryn Tanner con-templating what the Bible has to say about economic disparity (“Thinking Theologically about Income Disparity and the Gospel Response”).

Free. Every Wed. at 1:05pm, through Feb. 8. At Trinity Church (Broadway, at Wall St.; or watch online at trinitywallstreet.org). For info, call 212-602-0800.

THE MUSEUM AT ELDRIDGE STREET: WINTERGREEN FESTIVAL

The Museum at Eldridge Street third annual “WinterGreen Festival” celebrates Tu B’Shvat (the Jewish New Year of Trees) on all three levels of their landmark, the 1887 Eldridge Street Synagogue. Among the eco-friendly cultural happenings: planting and composting activities, artmaking, an instrument design workshop and a concert featuring Rhythm for Recyclables. At the traditional Tu B’Shvat seder, sample nuts, grains and other holiday foods (courtesy of Russ & Daughters and The Sweet Life). Then, take the “Green Tour” and learn about sustainable practices used in the synagogue’s restoration.

Sun., Jan. 29 1-4pm. At The Museum at Eldridge Street (12 Eldridge St., btw. Canal & Division Sts.). Free with Museum admis-sion (admission is $10 adults; $8 students/seniors: $6 children under 18).

BY ANDY HUMMKevin Spacey’s Richard III exits à la

Mussolini, but he and his Anglo-American company under Sam Mendes’ direction deliver a play dominated more by jokes than fascist terror. Yes, Richard’s audacity can and should evoke laughter from time to time, but a nervous laughter at how stunningly vile he can be — an effect perfected by Ian McKellen in his Richard on stage and screen in the 1990s.

Spacey gets scattered chuckles at his goof-ing, which includes a Groucho Marx imita-tion. He stalks the stage like a coiled snake, but instead of the venomous cobra he ought to be, he often comes off as more Monty Python or the King of Fredonia. Other times, it felt like a Guy Ritchie gangster movie such as “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” but not as trenchant and funny. And they inexplicably use grown women to play the young princes he will have murdered. Oy.

There is nothing I can say to hurt this “Richard III.” BAM is the last stop on its international tour that began in Greece in July, hit fi ve continents, garnered high praise from most critics, and mostly sold out. It is lamentably the last production in the mostly terrifi c three-year Bridge Project collabora-tion between the UK and the US –– London’s Old Vic where Spacey is artistic director, Mendes’ Neal Street Productions, and BAM, Brooklyn’s crown jewel. Perhaps my expecta-tions were too high.

Mendes, who worked miracles as artistic director of the dynamic Donmar Warehouse in London, made his debut as a movie direc-

tor with “American Beauty,” which won Oscars for Spacey and himself. And Spacey performed the Herculean task of saving the Old Vic theater in London by taking its reins in 2003 and delivering a string of hits. They are having fun here in Brooklyn, but have sacrifi ced much of the menace and majesty of the play.

Richard as Duke of Gloucester has killed off enough people to get the crown himself but wants a popular mandate. We see Spacey as the hunchbacked predator on a really big fl at screen coyly cloistered with fake monks waiting to be coaxed into power. Here his mugging and camping for cheap laughs go into overdrive, as he defl ects loud entreaties from audience plants to take the throne. I wanted to shout, “Oh, get over yourself and come out” at the famously closeted actor, but

could not fi gure out how to say it in iambic pentameter.

Sad to say, this cast also does not come through –– on what is the essential of any Shakespeare production: the clear and cogent delivery of the poetry. I know these characters have an awful lot to be upset about (losing spouses and children, and sometimes both) but some of the perfor-mances — including Spacey’s — are pitched so high the screaming and snarling get in the way of what they are saying. Words are also

lost to an intrusive score, mostly percussion. All this may be okay for an audience that knows every line of the play, but not for the rest of us.

In truth, it is only the fi rst two hours before the intermission that are problem-atic. Hang on until after the break and this “Richard III” hurtles deftly to its conclu-sion — glorifying Richmond (a fi ne Nathan Darrow) and destroying Richard — with scenes both inventively and clearly staged. Especially good is the way the rivals’ sleep before their battle is interwoven, the virtuous Richmond untroubled while the ghosts of everyone Richard has killed essentially telling him to eat shit and die. No one is laughing at that point, least of all Richard.

George Weinberg, a noted psychotherapist who has written two books on Shakespeare, joined me at this production. He was glad he went, but said it was not “regal or rhyth-mic or poetic or highly dramatic” and that it “included scenes never done, scenes that added nothing.” George liked Buckingham (Chuck Iwuji), and I liked Queen Elizabeth (Haydn Gwynne), but unlike sex and pizza, Shakespeare isn’t pretty good even when it’s bad. This is one of those productions where a little less (drumming, projections introduc-ing characters, camping) would have been more.

George and I may be in a minority. Most of the audience gave it a standing ovation, but it is a gesture promiscuously dispensed in our time –– much like Richard’s death sentences and Kevin’s irony.

Richard III in Duck Soup Kevin Spacey camps his way through Shakespeare at BAM

Photo by Geoffrey Berliner

Joyful noise, circa 2011: children sampling their eco-friendly instruments. See “WinterGreen Festival.”

RICHARD IIIBAM’s Harvey Theater

651 Fulton St. at Ashland Pl.

Through Mar. 4

Tue.-Sat. at 7:30pm

Sat. at 2pm; Sun. at 3pm

$30-$100; bam.org

Or 718-636-4100

FILM

Photo by Alistair Muir

Kevin Spacey in the title role of “Richard III,” at BAM through March 4.

Page 26: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

26 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012

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Page 27: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

downtown express 27January 25 - 31, 2012

BY SCOTT STIFFLER

THUNDERBIRD AMERICAN INDIAN DANCERS

In 1963, a small group of like-minded Native American men and women from the Mohawk, Hopi, Winnebago and San Blas tribes came together to form what would become the Thunderbird American Indian Dancers. They were all “fi rst generation” — mean-ing their parents had been born on reservations. Founded as a way to keep the songs, dances, music and traditions of their predecessors alive, their annual Dance Concert and Pow Wow at Theater for the New City has become a tradition of its own (this is their 37th year at TNC).

Nearly two dozen members from over ten tribes will be on hand — with storytelling by the Coatlique Theatre (from the Chichimec tribe), a Hoop Dance by Marie McKinney (Cherokee), a Caribou Dance (from the Inuit people of Alaska), a Buffalo Dance (from the Hopi people), a Grass Dance and Jingle Dress Dance (from the Northern Plains peo-ple), a Stomp Dance (from the Southeastern tribes) and a Shawl Dance (from the Oklahoma tribes). The audience is invited to join in the Round Dance (a friendship dance) at the end of the program. The origin, meaning and signifi -cance of each performance will be explained through introductions by Thunderbird Dancers director and emcee, Louis Mofsie (Hopi/Winnebago). The matinees, which are shorter in length (90 minutes), have been designed for younger audiences. After the performance, the cast will be available to meet, greet and have their photos taken.

Fri., Jan. 27 through Sun. Feb. 5. Fri. at 8pm; Sat. at 3pm & 8pm; Sun. at 3pm. $10 general admission to all evening shows (running time, 2 hours). At mati-nees, children under 12 accompa-nied by a ticket-bearing adult are admitted for $1. Native American craft items will be displayed in the TNC lobby. All box offi ce proceeds go to the Thunderbird American Indian Dancers Scholarship Fund. For tickets and info, call 212-254-1109 or visit theaterforthenewcity.net. Access blog entries and video

clips at thunderbirdamericanindi-andancers.wordpress.com.

CAMILLE A. BROWN & DANCERS

Queens native Camille A. Brown brings her troupe back to The Joyce for the fi rst time since 2010. Blending modern dance techniques with elements of West African dance and hip-hop, the program by Camille A. Brown & Dancers (three performances only) will include “Been There, Done That.” Commissioned by Jacob’s Pillow in 2010, the character-driven piece eavesdrops on the lives of a danc-ing duo fro the 1950s. Set to the music of Ray Charles and Brandon McCune, 2007’s “The Groove to Nobody’s Business” imagines the meeting of two strangers (guest artists Christopher Huggins and Matthew Rushing) on the sub-way. “The Evolution of a Secured Feminine” (from 2007) features Brown in a performance whose taunt gestures and fast footwork celebrate the “limitless gift of being a woman.” Also scheduled are excerpts from “Mr. TOL E. RAncE” (a work in development) and a new solo performed by Carmen de Lavallade.

Fri., Jan. 27 at 8pm; Sat., Jan. 28 at 2pm; Sun., Jan. 29 at 7:30pm. At The Joyce Theater (175 Eighth Ave., at 19th St.). Tickets

are $10-$39; call 212-242-0800, in purchase at the Box Offi ce (Mon.-Fri., 12-6pm), or at Joyce.org. Visit camilleabrown.org.

DAVID DORFMAN DANCE: PROPHETS OF FUNK

Since its founding in 1985, David Dorfman Dance’s commu-nity projects have been presented over 30 times in 18 states and two foreign countries. “Out of Season” and “Familiar Movements” invite athletes and family members to rehearse and perform with the company. “No Roles Barred” chal-lenges groups ranging from corpo-rate executives and “at-risk” youths to college administrators, doctors and carpenters to contemplate identity and social constructs. This

performance at The Joyce (their fi rst since 2005) continues the company’s long tradition of asking big questions while shaking their groove things. Set to the music of kindred spirits Sly and The Family Stone, “Prophets of Funk” has its cast of eight exploring the power of dance to help everyday people draw strength from (and fi nd joy in) the muck and the mess — the “funk” — of everyday life.

Wed., Jan. 25 at 7:30pm; Thurs., Jan. 26 and Sat., Jan. 28 at 8pm; Sun., Jan. 29 at 2pm. At The Joyce Theater (175 Eighth Ave., at 19th St.). For tickets ($10-$39), call 212-242-0800, purchase at the Box Offi ce (Mon.-Fri., 12-6pm), or visit Joyce.org. Also visit daviddor-fmandance.org.

Bring on the funk, groove and thunderEssential dates for your dance card

Photo by Lee Wexler/Images for Innovation

L to R: Carlos Ponce/Eagle Feather (Mayan) and Alan Browne/Shooting Star (Delaware/Dutch).

Photo by Eve Jegou

Storyteller Elvira Colorado (Chichimec).

Photo by Matt Karas

Been there, done that: Juel D. Lane and Camille A. Brown as a 1950s dancing duo.

Photo by Christopher Duggan

Deep thought: David Dorfman Dance’s “Prophets of Funk” asks some big questions.

Page 28: January 25, 2012 Downtown Express

28 downtown expressJanuary 25 - 31, 2012