May 23, 2013 The Villager

32
A New Yorker for all New Yorkers cats2013.com CATS For MAYOR Paid for by Catsimatidis 2013 515 CANAL STREET • NYC 10013 • COPYRIGHT © 2013 NYC COMMUNITY MEDIA, LLC Volume 82, Number 51 $1.00 West and East Village, Chelsea, Soho, Noho, Hudson Square, Little Italy, Chinatown and Lower East Side, Since 1933 May 23 - 29, 2013 BY TERESE LOEB KREUZER The nine-story build- ing that once housed the Bialystoker Center and Home for the Aged at 228 East Broadway will survive. On May 21, after around 15 minutes of discus- sion, the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to approve it for des- ignation as a New York City landmark. The Art Deco build- ing was erected during the Depression by immi- grant Jews from Bialystok, Poland, who scraped together $40,000 (equiva- lent to around $600,000 today) to create a place where the elderly and ill could receive the care they needed. It opened with great fanfare on June 11, 1931. It closed on Nov. 1, 2011, beset with debts. Continued on page 4 ‘A special building’: Landmarks O.K.’s Bialystoker Home BY LINCOLN ANDERSON The squeaky wheel gets the — bike-share docking station removed. Residents of 49 Renwick St. in Hudson Square were relieved Tuesday to see workers wielding hand trucks dis- mantling and removing the new bike-share sta- tion lining Renwick St. at Spring St. in front of their home. Bike-share critic Sean Sweeney, director of the Soho Alliance, alerted The Villager of the devel- opment by forwarding an e-mail in which the build- ing’s residents happily shared the news among each other. “Mad Men” actor John Slattery was Continued on page 5 D.O.T. backpedals, removes Renwick rack in Hudson Sq. And now, up at bat... p. 18 BY ANDY HUMM The point-blank shooting murder of a gay man this past weekend has galva- nized concern in the L.G.B.T. commu- nity about a spate of anti-gay attacks in Manhattan that number at least seven since May 5. Mark Carson, 32, a gay man out socializing with friends in the West Village, was shot in the face and killed Continued on page 16 Eighth St. murder follows wave of anti-gay assaults Photo by Lincoln Anderson Ribbons to recall hate’s victims In response to the recent spike in anti-gay attacks, St. John’s Lutheran Church on Christopher St. has put up lavender ribbons on its fence, with the names of some of the victims. A black bar at a ribbon’s bottom indicates a fatal attack.

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May 23, 2013 The Villager

Transcript of May 23, 2013 The Villager

Page 1: May 23, 2013 The Villager

A New Yorker for all New Yorkers

JOHN CATSIMATIDIS JOHN CATSIMATIDIS JOHN CATSIMATIDIS FOR MAYORFOR MAYORFOR MAYOR

cats2013.com

CATS For

MAYORPaid for by Catsimatidis 2013

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

Volume 82, Number 51 $1.00 West and East Village, Chelsea, Soho, Noho, Hudson Square, Little Italy, Chinatown and Lower East Side, Since 1933 May 23 - 29, 2013

By TERESE LOEB KREUZER

The nine-story build-ing that once housed the Bialystoker Center and Home for the Aged at 228 East Broadway will survive. On May 21, after around 15 minutes of discus-sion, the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to approve it for des-ignation as a New York City landmark.

The Art Deco build-

ing was erected during the Depression by immi-grant Jews from Bialystok, Poland, who scraped together $40,000 (equiva-lent to around $600,000 today) to create a place where the elderly and ill could receive the care they needed. It opened with great fanfare on June 11, 1931. It closed on Nov. 1, 2011, beset with debts.

Continued on page 4

‘A special building’:Landmarks O.K.’sBialystoker Home

By LINCOLN ANDERSONThe squeaky wheel gets

the — bike-share docking station removed.

Residents of 49 Renwick St. in Hudson Square were relieved Tuesday to see workers wielding hand trucks dis-mantling and removing the new bike-share sta-tion lining Renwick St. at Spring St. in front of their

home.Bike-share critic Sean

Sweeney, director of the Soho Alliance, alerted The Villager of the devel-opment by forwarding an e-mail in which the build-ing’s residents happily shared the news among each other. “Mad Men” actor John Slattery was

Continued on page 5

D.O.T. backpedals, removes Renwick rack in Hudson Sq.

And now, up at bat...p. 18

By ANDy HUMM The point-blank shooting murder of a gay man this past weekend has galva-nized concern in the L.G.B.T. commu-

nity about a spate of anti-gay attacks in Manhattan that number at least seven since May 5. Mark Carson, 32, a gay man out

socializing with friends in the West Village, was shot in the face and killed

Continued on page 16

Eighth St. murder followswave of anti-gay assaults

Photo by Lincoln Anderson

Ribbons to recall hate’s victimsIn response to the recent spike in anti-gay attacks, St. John’s Lutheran Church on Christopher St. has put up lavender ribbons on its fence, with the names of some of the victims. A black bar at a ribbon’s bottom indicates a fatal attack.

Page 2: May 23, 2013 The Villager

2 May 16 - 22, 2013

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Above, City Councilmember Margaret Chin visited the Children’s Magical Garden on Norfolk St. last Thursday — a day after developer Serge Hoyda fenced off his land — and spoke with garden member Dave Currence, who was holding his 4-month-old son, Wells. Below, Chin, accompanied by staff member Matt Viggiano, surveyed the garden and new banners that the gardeners had put up on Hoyda’s fence. Hoyda’s workers later ripped down the banners. Two adjacent lots are owned by the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development. Community gardeners and the LES Prep School across the street, whose students use the lots for gardening, are asking that Hoyda and the city work out a “land swap” so that the full Children’s Magical Garden can be preserved. For an in-depth article on the situation at the garden, check thevillager.com .

Fighting to hold an L.E.S. community garden together

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May 16 - 22, 2013 3

DIETHER BACK WITH A BLAST — SLAMS WITKOFF, BATALI: Longtime Community Board 2 member Doris Diether finally returned home to Waverly Place last Thursday after rehabbing her broken hip and broken shoul-der at VillageCare on W. Houston St. She got great care at VillageCare since, she said, “I had the two best aides — Jainisha and Whitney.” But the veteran activist, 84, said she was glad to go home since there just wasn’t enough for her to do at the rehab center. We called her Tuesday and she had just returned from a Board of Standards and Appeals hearing on Steve Witkoff’s residential project on Charles St. The project’s opponents drove her down to the hearing. The board allowed Diether to testify first, and she blasted the plan. “I’m against it,” she told us. “I said, they lied.” The developer, in order to get a zoning boost, was supposed to retain the building’s base — and build on top of this — but didn’t, Diether asserted. “They didn’t. It’s a vacant hole,” she told us. “No bonus!” she declared in a hoarse whisper due to an ongoing problem she’s been having with a paralyzed vocal cord, another health issue she’s been grappling with. But Scott Alper, principal with the Witkoff Group, said Diether doesn’t have it right. First of all, the project was never granted any bonuses, he stressed. Instead, he said, the building will be contextual. “It will be a 15-story building instead of a 30-story tower in the West Village — analogous to the Trump Soho — which could have been built there.” The B.S.A. will reportedly render its decision on the chal-lenge on July 23. And the walls that were required to be left standing are still there, he assured. Diether is O.K. living at home but needs assistance going in and out of the building with her walker, navigating the front three steps. She’s been busy, doing some cleaning, opening six weeks worth of mail, “and my cats want attention,” she added. Friends are coming by to help feed the felines, because Diether can’t bend over to feed them due to her hip. Meanwhile, Diether, in another B.S.A. battle, is also continuing to bash Mario Batali’s Babbo restaurant across the street from her. She charges that the building’s top two floors — which Batali was using as offices — are supposed to be residential. Batali recently put a “For Rent” sign up on the floors, but Diether scoffed that it’s not a genuine effort and that, “He’s just doing that to get the B.S.A. off his case.”

WITKOFF PROJECT FALL: Speaking of the Witkoff proj-ect, Jean-Louis Bourgeois, one of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Charles St. luxury development, called us on Tuesday to report a construction accident at the site. He said he witnessed a slew of police cars and emergency vehicles responding to the scene. A police spokesperson later con-

firmed that a worker at the site, a male in his 50s, had fallen about 25 feet and suffered broken bones and been removed to Bellevue Hospital, and was “not likely to die.” Alper said he and Witkoff visited the man in the hospital on Wednesday, and that he has a broken leg but is doing O.K. “It was a freak accident,” said Alper. “It was his negligence. It was a misstep — he admitted that.” Told that Bourgeois is now saying the project is unsafe and should be shut down on safety grounds, Alper said, “That’s the furthest thing from the truth,” adding, “I wouldn’t be surprised that’s coming out of his mouth.”

LIU RISES AS THE ‘ANTI-QUINN’: In a shocker, that has some folks scratching their heads, Comptroller John Liu recently won the endorsement for mayor from both the Village Independent Democrats club and the Coalition for a District Alternative. At V.I.D., a West Side club, there was a runoff between Liu and Council Speaker Christine Quinn. On the first ballot, Liu got 32 votes to Quinn’s 31, while Public Advocate Bill de Blasio got only 9 votes and former Comptroller Bill Thompson just 5. Quinn picked up no votes in the runoff, with Liu going on to beat her, 41 to 31. Of course, the club voted before former Congressmember Anthony Weiner jumped into the race this week, and one can

only speculate how much support the sexting scandal-scarred candidate would have garnered. Among borough president candidates, former Community Board 1 Chairperson Julie Menin romped, with 48 votes, while Councilmember Jessica Lappin, Gale Brewer and Robert Jackson netted 20, 6 and 2 votes, respectively. In their vote for public advocate, the V.I.D.’ers went for state Senator Dan Squadron, giving him 44 votes, to 27 for Councilmember Letitia James, 3 for Reshma Saujani and 1 for Cathy Guerriero. The leadership of the club, including District Leaders Jonathan Geballe and Keen Berger, were firmly behind Quinn. “What’s shock-ing to me is that de Blasio is not getting any traction,” said V.I.D. President Tony Hoffmann. “I cannot explain why Liu is getting traction as the ‘anti-Quinn.’ How much scandal can there be in a campaign before it touches a candidate? I don’t have an answer for that. Two low-level people being convicted of campaign fraud — but if it’s more it would be very difficult.” Many consider Liu the most progressive candidate in the field. Hoffman said the club was true to its name. “ ‘Independent’ is the big word in Village Independent Democrats,” he noted. “The leadership went with Quinn, but the membership went for Liu.” As for borough presi-dent, state Senator Brad Hoylman supported Lappin, while Assemblymember Deborah Glick backed Menin. “I think a lot of it was geographic,” Hoffman said of the B.P. vote. “Jessica is from the Upper East Side. Julie is more focused on the Downtown community that we consider ourselves a part of.” Meanwhile, over at CoDA on the East Side, Liu convincingly beat de Blasio in a runoff, 23 to 12. On the first ballot, Quinn received only 7 votes, and Thompson just 1. Again, voting for Weiner wasn’t an option because he hadn’t announced yet. CoDA backed James for advocate, with 31 votes, to 10 for Squadron. But they had no endorsement for borough president, with Brewer edging out Jackson in a runoff, 18 to 17, which didn’t reach CoDA’s required 60 percent margin for victory. In another stunner, CoDA did not endorse Councilmember Margaret Chin for re-election in the First District. In the first round of voting, Chin won 19 votes, to District Leader Jenifer Rajkumar’s 9, and 12 for “no endorsement.” On the second ballot, Chin still had 19 votes, Rajkumar suddenly had none, and “no endorsement” bumped up to 14. In short, Chin didn’t get enough to win the club’s nod. When she challenged then-incumbent Alan Gerson four years ago, CoDA was just about the only politi-cal club that endorsed Chin. Meanwhile, CoDA executive board member Chad Marlow accused Liu of packing the club with new members. But Ayo Harrington, CoDA co-president, told us that a quick check of the club’s membership list didn’t bear that out, with only one new member being a strong Liu supporter. Most of the recent sign-ups, she said, are actually “lapsed CoDA members, well-known names.” As for the club’s support for James, who is African-American, for advocate, State Committeeman Michael Farrin said, “We like Daniel, but we like him as a senator — and we’re

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Continued on page 9

Page 4: May 23, 2013 The Villager

4 May 16 - 22, 2013

“It’s a special building and it has special character and more than meets our criteria and it tells so many stories,” said the commission’s chairperson, Robert Tierney, after hearing from the other com-missioners, who also lauded the building.

“The form of the building is so sculp-tural,” said Margery Perlmutter, a commis-sion member. “It’s quite extraordinary in its architecture.”

“I’m always astounded that this build-ing could be constructed on the Lower East Side in 1929,” commissioner Michael Goldblum commented. “It’s just fantas-tic.”

The motion to designate the Bialystoker Home as an official New York City land-mark passed unanimously.

As Tierney announced the vote, two members of the audience, Joyce Mendelsohn and Mitchell Grubler, applauded and grinned. Along with Linda Jones, they had founded the Friends of the Bialystoker Home to save the building. They had won.

Praise and the quick, decisive vote to landmark the Art Deco building came at the end of a year and a half of struggle, during much of which, it seemed that the Bialystoker Home might be sold by its board of directors to a developer who

would raze the building in order to build luxury apartments.

At the time it closed, the Bialystoker Home was roughly $14 million in debt for wages and pensions owed to its healthcare

workers and for taxes. The board of direc-tors claimed that a sale to the highest bid-der would be the only way to repay that debt — and also said that landmarking would preclude such a sale.

Grubler, Mendelsohn and Jones, all of whom have ties to the Lower East Side, were just acquaintances when they heard in August 2011 that the Bialystoker Home was about to close. Quickly, they became determined confederates.

“We had our first official meeting [to try to save this building] at the end of September 2011,” Mendelsohn recalled.

Shortly thereafter, they went to a strat-egy session with Simeon Bankoff, the executive director of the Historic Districts Council.

“We really felt that this was a very long shot,” Mendelsohn said. “But we felt that we had to stand up for this cause, so we just kept going.”

She and Grubler said they never felt discouraged, even though, according to Mendelsohn, “the whole campaign was a roller-coaster, so our adrenaline was always at a high level.”

“There were plenty of adversities,” Grubler said.

At a meeting of Community Board 3’s Preservation Subcommittee in December 2011, some people argued against land-marking. A representative of Local 1199, SEIU United Healthcare Workers East, spoke about the union’s concerns that its members get the wages and contributions to medical and pension funds that were due to them. Nevertheless, the subcommit-tee voted to support a resolution in favor of landmark designation.

In April 2012, the Friends of the Bialystoker Home met with union rep-resentatives and “aired our case,” in Grubler’s words. The union said it would

remain neutral and not oppose landmark-ing.

At a subsequent full C.B. 3 meeting that month, the community board passed a landmarking resolution with a vote of 20 in favor, 12 opposed and four abstentions.

Three days later, Grubler and Mendelsohn met with City Councilmember Margaret Chin, who represents the Lower East Side. She said that she would support landmarking.

“Margaret has said that the union [Local 1199] not being in opposition was the deciding factor in her coming out in favor of it,” Mendelsohn said.

Now that the Landmarks Preservation Commission has approved landmark-ing for the Bialystoker Home, the City Planning Commission must weigh in, and then the designation goes to City Council.

Mendelsohn said that City Planning invariably approves the L.P.C. decision and that, after that, “City Council usually votes according to the wishes of the coun-cilmember of that district. Margaret has been a strong supporter.”

City Planning has 60 days to con-sider the matter and the City Council has 120 days. However, according to Lisi de Bourbon, spokesperson for Landmarks, “Legally the building has been designated, so any work done to the building would require a permit.”

Grubler, Mendelsohn and Jones will no longer have to stand vigil over the vacant building, as they did during the months of uncertainty, to make sure that it wasn’t damaged while it was in limbo.

They have not yet been permitted to go inside, but are concerned about what they will find when they do. They know that there are historic plaques and that there may be important records in the basement.

“The Bialystoker Landsmanshaften [mutual aid society] is very important to immigrant history, American history, New York City history,” Grubler said, “and any records of this organization deserve to be preserved in a publically accessible archive.”

As for the building’s future, Grubler said, “In an ideal world, it would con-tinue to serve the demographic that it has always served — people in need, seniors. Whether that is economically feasible, I cannot say.”

Mendelsohn thought it might be suit-able for affordable housing.

“My grandparents moved to the Lower East Side when they came to the United States,” she said, summing up her feelings about the landmarking vote. “My parents were born there.”

When the vote occurred, she said, “I was thinking about my grandparents, and I was thrilled that we were able to save another building that reflects the Jewish heritage of the Lower East Side, since the neighborhood is changing so rapidly. That’s so important that here we have a visible link.”

Landmarks Commission designates Bialystoker Home

Photo by Terese Loeb Kreuzer

Mitchell Grubler and Joyce Mendelsohn applauded after the Landmarks Preservation Commission voted to landmark the Bialystoker Home for the Aged at 228 East Broadway. With Linda Jones, they founded the Friends of the Bialystoker Home a year and a half ago to fight to save the building.

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Page 5: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 5

cc’d.Titus Leung, the president of the

building’s co-op board, said they suc-ceeded in getting the rack removed only because “we spoke out as a group.”

Leung said he received a message from the Department of Transportation “commissioner” — apparently referring to Margaret Forgione, the agency’s bor-ough commissioner — confirming that the racks were permanently removed, and also that that they would not be re-sited anywhere in the area.

“I guess they decided that we really don’t need these many stations in our little neighborhood,” he said.

“I don’t want to get into specifics, but let’s just say the decision to reverse location of the racks on our street was probably easy,” Leung told The Villager. “It’s a very narrow, one-way street, and there are a number of construction projects just beginning at the south

end of the street. So these racks likely would’ve created a significant safety issue, in addition to all the practical issues it would’ve created. Somehow, I believe, these facts were not known — or were ignored — when our location was first identified.”

That D.O.T. was willing to back-pedal and remove the Renwick rack in response to residents’ concerns was encouraging, Leung said.

“From my point of view,” he said, “at the very least, this does show that D.O.T. is ultimately being rational in its deployment of these racks.”

Architect Stas Zakrzewski said the building’s courtyard sports a bike rack and that all the residents are avid cyclists, but that the bike-share station just had been sited in a bad spot, “on one of the most narrow streets pos-sible.”

“I really think the bike program is awesome,” he said. “I just think that parts of it didn’t seem to be thought-out in terms of where it was going.”

D.O.T. backpedals, removes Renwick rack in Hudson Sq.

Photo by Lincoln Anderson

The Citi Bike docking station on Renwick St. at Spring St. was removed Tuesday in response to residents’ complaints. All that was left were painted white lines and fl ex-ible bollards, which presumably will be removed sometime soon.

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6 May 16 - 22, 2013

By LINCOLN ANDERSON To help South Village superblock residents endure the years of construction, dust and general upheaval from its N.Y.U. 2031 mega-expansion plan, New York University is preparing to install sound-buffering windows in its Washington Square Village and Silver Towers complexes. Alicia Hurley, N.Y.U. vice president of govern-ment affairs and community engagement, recently set up a demonstration for The Villager by the acoustical consultants that the university is work-ing with on the windows project. As part of the city’s approval of the 2031 plan, N.Y.U. agreed to mitigate the construction’s impacts, such as noise and dust. N.Y.U.’s plan is to start construction some-time in the near future on the south superblock, then to begin work on the north superblock a number of years after that. Even though the con-struction work would thus occur in stages, the university plans to do the windows project for all of its buildings on both blocks in one fell swoop, according to Hurley. Doing it all at once is more economical, she said, plus sound-attenuating windows would immediately benefit Washington Square Village residents, for example, who live along Bleecker St. and currently have to deal with the noise of loud bar patrons going to and from the Bleecker St. bars. “The faculty are eager to have this,” Hurley said, “especially those facing out on Bleecker St. The faculty have been asking for a long time to do window improvements.” About 17 percent to 20 percent of residents

in Washington Square Village are non-N.Y.U. affiliated. Installing the windows would entail a two-to-three day process per apartment. A faculty group was expected to give its recom-mendations on the windows project this month. The Villager was given demonstrations of noise levels — with and without sound-attenuation — in a pair of model apartments mocked up with the

new window treatments. For Washington Square Village, the idea is to replace all the buildings’ existing windows with new double-paned ones. Also, the air conditioners that are built into the wall would be fitted with covers on their inward-facing sides that would help block out the noise. Taking the cover off and running the A/C would block out even more outside noise by creating white noise. In Silver Towers the approach is to leave the existing windows in place and install a second pane of glass behind them. Hurley said this is because Silver Towers are landmarked, and also because the original windows — some of which are in very bad shape — are set into the facade in such a way that they would be difficult to modify. Starting out in a Washington Square Village apartment on a low floor facing the complex’s courtyard garden, Dan Abatemarco, an acoustical consultant with AKRF, used a handheld control and speakers to play audio recordings simulating the noise levels one could expect to hear under different conditions. “We’ve calculated these noise levels for every apartment in Washington Square Village and Silver Towers,” he noted. First, he played a recording of how it sounds with the current single-pane window shut and no construction going on — a car could be heard driving away into the distance, the sound fading away. The sound level reaching the room was 38 decibels. Next, Abatemarco clicked a recording simulat-ing “peak period of construction noise.” There was suddenly the jarring racket of bulldozers snorting, the screeching of metal against metal, something being crushed. The simulated reading inside the apartment: 51 decibels. The next audio clip was of the “improved con-dition” — with the double-paned windows. The simulated outside construction noise was barely audible, registering at 38 decibels. Taking the A/C cover off, this jumped a bit up to 46 decibels. He then turned the air conditioner on, which effec-tively masked the outside noise. Abatemarco noted the decibel-deflecting win-dows would also dampen the din from “emer-gency sirens and aircraft flyovers.”

However, one resident of the complex recently told The Villager that residents, after receiving a notice on the noise-mitigation plan, took it to mean that their windows were going to be “sealed over,” and that they themselves would thus be “sealed in.” “We’re wondering if that’s legal!” she said. But Hurley pointed out, “Remember, con-struction ends around 4 p.m. or 4:30 p.m.,” so residents could open their windows after then. The new, double-pane windows would have the same panel configurations as the current windows, so as not to alter the views tenants are accustomed to. The demonstration next shifted to a 15th-floor apartment in the easternmost Silver Tower, with its windows overlooking the rooftop of Coles gym below. Without any mitigation, the simulated noise in the apartment was very loud, even with windows closed — partly because there were no nearby buildings of the same height to block out the surrounding street noise. Abatemarco then played an audio sound clip he called, “unimproved — peak construction,” meaning with the current, single-pane windows. It sounded like a cross between a forest being felled and a building being demolished. With the attenuation — a new, second, slider window added behind the first — with 9 inches of “dead air” between the two panes — and a new cover added over the built-in A/C unit, the decibel level dropped to a very quiet 40. However, the low pitch of a diesel engine could still be heard on the sound clip. Abatemarco said that while noises like jackhammers and metal clanking on metal can be attenuated, it’s harder to block out the low rumble sound. “There’s no such thing as soundproof,” he noted. However, he added, with the sound-miti-gation improvements, outside noise levels inside the apartments will actually be lower than they are currently. As for 505 LaGuardia Place, Hurley said — as noted in the environmental impact state-ment for the 2031 plan — this building already has double-paned storm windows installed, plus its own “means of alternate ventilation,” i.e. air-conditioning units. “Consequently,” she said, “the [university’s] mit-igation offering is not warranted for this building.” The building 505 LaGuardia Place is a Mitchell-Lama affordable co-op, and its tenants are non-N.Y.U. affiliated. Constructed as part of the original three-building University Village (Silver Towers), N.Y.U. ceded it for residential housing as a “giveback” to appease the commu-nity in return for the university’s gaining control of the superblock. Meanwhile, Professor Mark Crispin Miller, a leader of N.Y.U. FASP (Faculty Against the Sexton Plan), said faculty residents aren’t exactly ecstatic about the windows plan. “They said you also have to run the air condi-tioner,” he noted. “There are two problems with this. One, you don’t run an air conditioner in cold weather. And when someone said, ‘What about fresh air?’ they said, ‘You get fresh air through the air conditioner.’ … None of the top N.Y.U. administration people live on these superblocks.” Plus, Miller added, “It’s not just noise. We’re also talking about toxic emissions and copious dust and huge holes in the ground and traffic jams lasting years.”

New windows, A/C will help muffle N.Y.U. project din

Photos by Tequila Minsky

In a Washington Square Village apartment, acoustic consultant Dan Abatemarco dem-onstrated a time-tested way to mask outside noise — switch on the air conditioner.

Page 7: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 7

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Page 8: May 23, 2013 The Villager

8 May 16 - 22, 2013

Nim-rods busted

Police hauled in two men on the afternoon of May 20 after they were spotted trying to beat each other’s brains out on a West Village sidewalk. Dawud Stewart, 37, and Hama Amadou, 31, were apparently engaged in a heated argu-ment near the corner of Washington and Christopher Sts., around 4:30 p.m., when they both picked up blunt objects and began merci-lessly whacking each other, police said. After witnesses called to report the incident, offi cers arrived to fi nd Stewart wielding a metal rod and Amadou waving a wooden broomstick. Stewart and his heavier weaponry got the better of the duel, as he left the fi ght with only a cut on his hand while Amadou was taken to Bellevue Hospital for treatment of several cuts on his neck, police said. Though each man claimed he was the victim, both were slapped with assault charges.

Wild chase for mugger An opportunist crook thought he would have an easy time stealing from a senior citizen, but the tables were turned when the victim, his son and several bystanders chased the thug down. The victim, 70, told police he was walking past the corner of W. Ninth St. and Sixth Ave. with his son, 45, around 1:15 p.m. Sat., May 18, when the alleged thief — later identifi ed as Eric Collier, 29 — ran up from behind and snatched his wallet out of his hand. And when the senior struggled to take his property back, Collier reportedly muscled him down, regained control of the billfold — containing a credit card, MetroCard and $60 cash — and fl ed on foot. The victim’s son ran after Collier and was able to corner him down the street, but the shifty thief feigned a punch and got away, police said. But the son continued the chase — now aided by three citizens who had witnessed the crime. After several more failed attempts to corner Collier, the posse of pursuers succeeded in stopping Collier, soon after which police arrived to arrest him, charging with robbery.

Bottle smasher acted out Police arrested Tal Grinbram, 21, early on Sun., May 19, after they say he smashed a beer bottle over another patron’s head dur-ing a bar fi ght. Grinbaum got into it with a 20-year-old man shortly after midnight, while they were both having drinks at the Actors Playhouse, at 100 Seventh Ave. South (an establishment that doubles as an indie theater), police said. The victim told offi cers that he was left with cuts on his head and chest after Grinbaum hit him with the glass bottle, but he didn’t require hospitalization. Grinbaum was apprehended about an hour later just down the block from the Playhouse, after police on patrol identifi ed him by the description given by the victim. He was charged with assault.

Made in the shades, not Two women tried making off with $1,200 worth of merchandise stolen from two swanky Bleecker St. stores on May 14. An employee at Marc Jacobs called police around 7 p.m. to tell them that two women — later identifi ed as Sonia Ufot Johnson, 35, and Fatou Fadiga, 20 — had just left the shop with a pair of $340 sunglasses without paying. The employee then fol-lowed the women on the street for several minutes, until cops arrived and quickly dis-covered the stolen shades. Upon searching Johnson and Fadiga, the offi cers also found pricey earrings and bracelets that had just been reported stolen from the nearby Alexis Bittar shop. Both women were charged with grand lar-ceny.

‘Spirited’ away her cash Police are searching for three women who allegedly conned an elderly woman out of $2,000 on a Nolita sidewalk by claiming they could use psychic powers to cleanse her cash of “evil spirits.” The three suspects, all believed to be in their 40s, approached the victim, 72, near the corner of Prince and Elizabeth Sts. around 9 a.m. on Thurs., May 9, police said. One of the alleged scammers reportedly told the older woman her entire family would be haunted by the spirits if she didn’t “purify” her money. But when the unwitting woman took the suspects back to her Spring St. home and gave them $2,000 in a bag, the thieving trio kept it and gave her back a fake replacement bag, full of shredded newspapers, police said. The scammers covered their tracks by telling the senior not to open her newly “purifi ed” bag for several days, in order to make sure all the spirits had left the cash. When the woman fi nally peered in her purse, she realized she’d been had, and reported the crime to police, who are still investigating.

6th Precinct A.T.M. safety tips Be aware of suspicious people outside and inside A.T.M. location; Don’t leave A.T.M. without completing your transaction, even if you need to switch machines; Block bystanders’ view while conducting your transaction. Use the mirrors positioned at the A.T.M. to see behind you; If you feel someone is looking over your shoulder, cancel the transaction and leave immediately; Only use A.T.M.s in well-lit, populated areas; Avoid A.T.M. locations that have unlocked doors or are open to the street; Put your money away and take your card and receipt before leaving the A.T.M.

Sam Spokony

poLIce bLotteR

Morton Williams Salutes Our Fallen

Soldiers.

130 Bleecker Street

212-358-9597

Page 9: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 9

also interested in a diverse ticket reflecting a majority minority city. It’s good to have an elected official at the citywide level who’s representative of the city. Diversity was the tie-breaker between two very good candidates.” Farrin is a big Chin supporter personally, though conceded, “She wasn’t great on the N.Y.U. stuff — but she was great on Seward Park [SPURA].” As for borough president, Harrington said of Menin, “She’s likable. She seems smart. She’s a tough cookie.” But she added that club members spoke critically of Menin’s having “a 25,000-square-foot apartment and a multimillionaire real estate devel-oper as a husband.” Harrington admit-ted, however, she doesn’t really know if Menin’s place is actually that big. “The idea is people got the idea, you know — she’s privileged,” Harrington said. Plus, she added, versus Jackson and Brewer, Menin “just pales in comparison.” For his part, Farrin is a strong backer of Menin, who recently picked up impressive sup-port in Northern Manhattan, as well. Will anybody be re-voting for mayor now that Weiner has entered the race, and how would he have done if he had been in the

running before? V.I.D.’s Hoffmann said, “We have gone through our endorsement process. There will not be a revote. I have no idea how Liu would have fared if Weiner was in the race. Given that I didn’t predict that Liu would win in the first place, I will not venture a guess how Weiner would have affected the outcome.”

VACATING THE VOICE: The talent purge / exodus at the Village Voice continues to snowball. Just after reading that Michael Musto and other top writers were getting canned, we bumped into reporter Nick Pinto Monday on Eighth St. at the rally against the surge in anti-gay hate crimes, including Mark Carson’s murder. It turns out Pinto is also bailing from the Voice. “Actually, I just gave notice earlier today,” he told us. P.S., We haven’t even seen The Voice distributed in its news boxes this week!

ROCK THE MAyO! One doesn’t usu-ally associate Whole Foods with rock ’n’ roll, but that was the explanation for the couple of slinky-looking, long-haired guys walking around Hudson Square in black jeans and no shirts on Wednesday afternoon. Turns out they were shooting a print ad at the old Don Hill’s club for a W.F. product, Fakin’ Bacon Mayonnaise.

Scoopy’S notebookContinued from page 3

By JULIO MORA Gloria Harris, who worked as a com-munity assistant at Community Board 2 for 17 years, passed away suddenly on Thurs., May 9. Harris’s responsibilities at the com-munity board included scheduling meet-ings, arranging the monthly calendar and administering for several committees, as well as dealing directly with inquiries from the public. She was dedicated to the community board and considered her co-workers an extension of her family. Her colleagues on the C.B. 2 staff, District Manager Bob Gormley, Florence Arenas and Julio Mora, will remember her great sense of humor, her laugh and smile, her collegiality, her commitment to her job, and most especially, the great love and pride she had for her family. Harris was born on Oct. 24, 1961. She graduated from Grace Dodge High School with honors and continued her educa-tion at Bronx Community College, while simultaneously working to support her family. She was a deeply religious woman, with a devotion to God and her Christian

faith. She will be remembered by many as a loving individual, with a quiet wisdom and a resilient nature. She is survived by her mother, Cynthia, her three children, Laticia, Frederick and Shamira, her two grandchildren, Zaniya and Jocelyn, and her longtime partner, Archie. She will be greatly missed by all who knew her.

Gloria Harris, 51, community assistant at Village’s Board 2

obItUARy

Gloria Harris.

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Page 10: May 23, 2013 The Villager

10 May 16 - 22, 2013

By EILEEN STUKANEEvidenced by the large turnout at the May

14 public forum “Lung Cancer and New York City Kitchens: Why Increased Radon in Natural Gas Could Be a Public Health Disaster,” local residents are growing increasingly concerned about seemingly high radon levels in the natu-ral gas that the Spectra Energy pipeline will be bringing to New York City. The newly constructed pipeline enters Manhattan at Gansevoort Peninsula, near W. 14th St.

The event, primarily sponsored by The Cooper Union Institute for Sustainable Design, with six other organizations related to either health or the environment, had backing from a strong cohort of 60 other community, envi-ronmental, health and political organizations as co-sponsors. About 350 people gathered in The Great Hall at Cooper Union to learn from a panel of fi ve experts about radon: the taste-less, odorless, colorless gas, the leading cause of lung cancer among nonsmokers, second leading cause among smokers, that may be arriving in our homes in unsafe levels to breathe.

The Environmental Protection Agency esti-mates 21,000 U.S. lung cancer deaths a year are due to radon inhalation. Noting that sober-ing fi gure, the panelists — from the fi elds of environmental law and public and occupational health — explained just how the radon content will increase in the gas we are using to cook in our kitchens and heat our homes, and they alerted everyone to the fact that this could

potentially be a major public health issue. The forum concluded on a note of hope,

however, as Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal made a powerful announcement of her sponsor-ship of a bill “to amend the public health law in relation to the protection of public health from exposure to radon in natural gas.”

But fi rst everyone heard the facts.Jeff Zimmerman, an environmental lawyer

with a degree in physics, has spent most of his career with the Environmental and Natural Resources Division of the U.S. Department of Justice and now represents various environ-mental and citizen groups. He explained how radon gas results from the radioactive decay of uranium, thorium and radium, minerals present in signifi cant quantity in the Marcellus Shale. The Marcellus Shale stretches thousands of feet below ground, from West Virginia, through Pennsylvania, into a bit of Ohio, and along the west side of the Hudson River in New York. Hydraulic fracturing — hydrofracking —blasts open the underground rock by using an array of unspecifi ed chemicals and tons of water and sand to release the gas from the shale’s uranium and radium-226. Gas from the disturbed miner-als contains, as a side effect, radioactive radon.

Radon is present in all natural gas, and Zimmerman, along with other panelists, decried the fact that there is little information, very few studies that have looked at radon levels in natural gas. The E.P.A. considers 4 picocuries per liter (pCi/l) as the safe level in homes. The

World Health Organization cites a lower 2.7 pCi/l as safe. Zimmerman explained that most of our New York City natural gas has come from the Gulf Coast, and studies from offshore Louisiana wells have shown that this gas starts at 5 pCi/l.

Radioactive radon has a relatively short half-life of 3.8 days, after which its concentration drops in half. After another 3.8 days, that half divides in half, so it’s a fourth of the original, and so on. It dissipates quickly. Radon in the gas New Yorkers have been receiving from the Texas-Louisiana coast, takes six to eight days to travel through pipelines to get here, so radon is diluted and the levels we are breathing in are considered safe.

However, natural gas hydrofracked from the Marcellus Shale, which Zimmerman explained is a “dark shale” — indicating high uranium and therefore high radon content — will be mixed into the natural gas travelling through the Spectra Energy pipeline from the Gulf Coast and other locations. The Marcellus Shale is already being hydrofracked in near-by Pennsylvania and in certain locations in Upstate New York, and more locations may be approved in the future. Gas from the close-to-home Marcellus Shale area travels an estimated 10 miles per hour and can be here to fi re our gas stoves in less than a day, not the usual six to eight days, and certainly not enough time for radon’s radioactivity to reduce to safer levels.

A recent U.S. Geological Survey tested

radon levels at 11 wellheads — chosen by the industry, according to Zimmerman — in the Marcellus Shale in Western Pennsylvania and found 37 pCi/l as the median radon read-ing. This is not anywhere even near the E.P.A.’s safe level of 4 pCi/l of radon in our homes.

Another panel member, Elizabeth Glass Geltman of CUNY School of Public Health, also noted that based on reviews of natural gas from other parts of the country, which she did not see relating to more local nat-ural gas, New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation and Department of Health have stated that they “do not believe that radon in Marcellus Shale gas poses a sig-nifi cant risk to residents in homes that utilize gas.” She remarked that, in “backwards think-ing,” D.O.H. has stated that if New York State permits further hydrofracking of the Marcellus Shale, D.O.H. will assess radon levels through samplings, “in order to verify that they do not pose an unanticipated health risk to end-users of the gas.” Geltman added, “If you wait for that to happen, the infrastructure will be in place and the argument will be that we can’t change the infrastructure.”

Dr. Sheila Bushkin-Bedient of Concerned Health Professionals of New York highlighted those who would be most vulnerable to radon inhalation: children, the elderly and those with compromised immune systems.

Spectra pipeline radon fear starting to catch fi re

an Episcopal parish in the city of New York

trinitywallstreet.org

All Are WelcomeAll events are free, unless noted.

212.602.0800

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

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

sUNDAY, 9am & 11:15am

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

MONDAY – FRIDAY, 12:05pm

Trinity Church · Holy Eucharist

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

Watch online webcast

musicThURsDAY, MAY 23, 1pmConcerts at OneEnsemble ACJWTrinity Church

MONDAY, MAY 27, 1pmBach at OneA weekly service of J.S. Bach’s cantatas.St. Paul’s Chapel

educationsUNDAY, MAY 26, 10amDiscovery: Instruments of GraceAn intergenerational class featuring Trinity’s Movement Choir, Sunday School for Children & Youth, and Choristers in a collaborative arts offering for all ages.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parish Hall

sUNDAY, MAY 26, 10amThe Gospel, Times, Journal, and YouA discussion group that reads the editorial pages of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and the assigned gospel for the day. Led by the Rev. Mark Bozzuti-Jones.74 Trinity Pl, 2nd Fl, Parlor

TRINITY ChURChBroadway at Wall Street

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

sT. PAUl’s ChAPel Broadway and Fulton Street

ChARlOTTe’s PlACe107 Greenwich Street btwn Rector & Carlisle Streets

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

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communityFRIDAY, MAY 24, 6pmFamily Friday Yoga and Veggie NightPractice with your children in this family-focused yoga class! As kids discover the foundations of yoga, adults can sweat away their stresses from the week. Charlotte’s Place

TUesDAY, MAY 28 & JUNe 4, 1-3pmOpen Hours OrigamiLearn origami with interfaith minister Lisa Bellan-Boyer. Origami stimulates creativity and spatial awareness in addition to being a gentle contemplative practice and stress reliever.Charlotte’s Place

WeDNesDAY, MAY 29, 6pmDancing with MarleyLove to dance? Free your mind from the worries of the day! Come on out and let your body move to the sublime reggae beats of Bob Marley.Charlotte’s Place

Leah R

eddy

Continued on page 14

Page 11: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 11

By DAVID GRUBER AND COREy JOHNSON Let’s start with the obvious: We support the bike-share program. Our respective community boards wrote resolu-tions that said just that. There was outreach, but it was not done well and there wasn’t enough of it. Most residents did not know about the details of the program or maybe didn’t focus on the public meetings that took place more than a year ago. Many people went to the see the sample bike docks in wide-open areas, like Washington Square Park and Matthew Palmer Playground, and saw a four- or five-bike installation and likely left say-ing, “This seems O.K.” This lack of true understanding is both a discredit to the residents of New York City’s hundreds of neighborhoods as well as the New York City Department of Transportation itself. Folks were left completely unprepared for the size and bulk of the racks — 30, 40 or 50 in a solid wall. They were unimaginably placed with almost total disregard for any other city operational needs in many instances. The location of these large stations are already having detrimental and potentially dangerous consequences — such as blocking essential services for garbage collection, building entries and Access-A-Ride services. They create impossible situations for moving vans and delivery vehicles, creating dangerous turning radii by extending the dock corner-to-corner on narrow blocks. In one location docks

were put in a designated spot held by another city agency for an outdoor arts program. The stations have been placed on small, historic Village streets that don’t even allow car parking, or on very intense commercials streets, where bikes must be extracted from the docks directly into heavy traffic. We can go on ad nau-seam except we are getting nauseous. The Department of Transportation has trumpeted the reaction in London, saying that residents will “hate you for six months and then they will love the program.” Maybe that’s true, maybe not. Perhaps in London they were more sensitive and flexible in their dock-station placements from the start. That statement is very insulting to local residents and neighborhoods. It says, ignore the criticism because it is simply NIMBYism (Not In My Back Yard). We don’t know how well they positioned the bike racks in London or Paris or Amsterdam or Montreal, but those cities have seemingly integrated their respective bike-share programs into the fabric of each city. Additionally, many of these cities have a real “stop for red lights and pedestrians” culture, and we would wager that the vast majority of cyclists in these cities obey traffic rules, which still isn’t the norm in New York. D.O.T. is saying, let the stations be in place for six months and then let’s evaluate the effects. While a few of the docks have been removed, there has been, for the most part, a refusal to respond to many legitimate complaints voiced by community leaders, elected officials and everyday New Yorkers. It feels like the program has been driven to be implemented — good, bad or dangerous — since the

stations starting popping up on our blocks. Six months won’t remedy a poor placement decision — it will just make a bad situation six months worse. And here is the kicker. With a little juggling and tweak-ing all the docking stations (in the critical-mass numbers needed to have a successful program) could be placed in locations that actually make sense. Almost everyone at the very well-attended recent Community Board 2 forum said, “I support bike-share,” and then followed up by pleading for the city to work with them to achieve smarter, more nimble and appropriate locations. Not everybody is a NIMBYist. Some New Yorkers are just smart, concerned citizens who simply want their government to listen and really hear them — you know, it’s called participatory democracy.

As the New York City garment industry proverb goes: Measure 10 times, then cut just once. Evaluation and greater community engagement must occur each step along the way. We welcome this innovative program to the streets of New York, but D.O.T. must listen to affected communi-ties, give residents a voice in shaping the implementation, and not worry about an artificial legacy timetable. We are told the bike-share program has been designed to be easily moved and adjusted, so let’s do just that. Let’s work together to ensure that this program is integrated into our neighborhoods appropriately. Only then will it become right-sized and a win-win for New York City.

Gruber is chairperson, Community Board 2; Johnson is chairperson, Community Board 4

Bike-share sites could have been a win-win, but alastALkInG poInt

With a little tweaking all the bike stations could be placed in loca-tions that make sense.

 

63rd Annual Feast Day and Street Procession

in honor of Saint Anthony of Padua Thursday, June 13, 2013

Shrine Church of St. Anthony of Padua West Houston and Sullivan Streets

New York NY 10012 Phone 212-777-2755 www.stanthonynyc.org

               

       

Thursday,  June  13  Feastday  of    

Saint  Anthony  of  Padua                                                Mass  Schedule:  9  AM  (English)      11  AM  (English)  2  PM  (Italian)                      4  PM  (French)  6:00  PM  (English)  Solemn  Mass  followed  by  

Street  Procession  

ITALIAN FOOD FESTIVAL Saturday, June 8 Sunday, June 9

Thursday, June 13 ALL DAY

St.  Anthony’s  Bread  and  Oil  will  be  available  in  the  vestibule  of  the  church  each  day  of  the  Novena  beginning  June  5.    Religious  articles  and  refreshments  in  the  Church  Hall  on    June  8,9,  and  13  

NOVENA  IN  HONOR  OF  ST.  ANTHONY-­‐  JUNE  5-­‐13  

 

Page 12: May 23, 2013 The Villager

12 May 16 - 22, 2013

Sounds like 8th is getting great!

To The Editor: Re “8th St. walks away from shoes toward something new” (notebook, by Elissa Stein, May 16):

If hearts could smile, mine would. As an ex-sole pro-prietor of a small stationery and gift store that survived 28 years (25 terrific years, three not so much), this is music to my ears: Japanese bakery, Peruvian restaurant, Wisconsin cheese, burgers, beer, wine, jazz lounge, inde-pendent coffee shop and more — all walking distance from a midrange boutique hotel...complete with brilliant artists’ spirits in residence.

I felt so good after reading this. If I could do it all again, I’d head straight to Eighth St. and join in the resurgence. Can’t wait for my next visit to New York.

Nice story.

Christie Cluff

Will stores become extinct?

To The Editor:Re “8th St. walks away from shoes toward something

new” (notebook, by Elissa Stein, May 16):Elissa Stein, writing about Eighth St., says that “new ten-

ants have been moving in, and more are on the way in the coming weeks and months.” I hope she is correct, but I am worried. Eighth St. has often been ahead of its time, and per-haps vacant storefronts are the wave of the future. Borders bookstores has gone out of business, and Barnes & Noble has closed several stores, with the one on Eighth St. being only the most recent. People shop online nowadays. The only stores that seem to be resisting this trend are restaurants, supermarkets and nail salons.

George Jochnowitz

Ridiculous spin on bike-share

To The Editor: Re “Like a cult — but on wheels” (letter, by Jack Brown, May 16):

I can understand the divergent opinions on bike-share, but the statement by Coalition Against Rogue Riding (CARR) founder Jack Brown that “New York City has...the nation’s longest commuting time and the fifth-worst traffic

congestion,” in large part because of “the misapplication of bike amenities” is like blaming the overactive heater in my apartment for global warming. Might I suggest he change the name of his organization to CARR-AZY?!

Chad Marlow

The artistic life vs. media hype

To The Editor: Re “Francine Morin, 62, artist and longtime East Villager” (obituary, May 9): “Those of us who cherished our neighborhood for encouraging and embracing creative energy, should cel-ebrate not just those who became ‘art stars,’ but also those who came here to experience the joy of trying.” This was a beautiful quote from Larry Gregory and it is said in the real spirit of the longtime East Village. The East Village creative energy — what people call the buzz — was built on people living an artistic life, not on so-called “art stars,” usually invented by the media.

Penny Arcade

Very strange bedfellows

To The Editor: Re “Dormitory foes warn Cooper: Don’t get in bed with Singer!” (news article, May 16): One of your best headlines to date. Very sassy.

Lawrence White

Chin is smart, fair and fun

To The Editor: Re “Chin’s all in: Silver, Nydia back bid for a second term” (news article, May 9): Margaret Chin represents her whole district, which is proven by her actions. She is smart, fair and hard-working, plus she has a sense of humor and fun. I bet she will be re-elected by the majority who support her.

Peggy Friedman

LetteRS to the edItoR

Continued on page 19

Seven anti-gay attacks in 16 days. One a shocking close-range shooting of Mark Carson in the face, resulting in the 32-year-old man’s death. The West Village, the East Village, Madison Square Garden, Union Square and Soho. The city’s elected leadership laudably stepped up to con-demn the hatred, support the victims and mourn Carson. Mayor Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Kelly spoke unsparingly of their outrage at the murder. City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, an out lesbian and a leading may-oral contender, was the driving force behind a May 20 march in remembrance of Carson that drew an estimated 1,500 participants. All four of her Democratic mayoral rivals also joined the gathering. The gay community in New York has enjoyed equal mar-riage rights for nearly two years. As Quinn’s strong position in the mayoral race attests, gays and lesbians are rapping on the doors of some of the highest political offices. And still the hatred continues. It’s always ugly, sometimes brutal, and on the most tragic occasions lethal. And the big-otry which helps fuel the hatred also continues. When gay marriage first headed for the floor of the Assembly in 2007, Assemblymember Dov Hikind said, “If we authorize gay marriage in the state of New York, those who want to live and love incestuously will be five steps closer to achieving their goals as well.” In April, Cardinal Timothy Dolan wrote that his parents welcomed anyone into his childhood home, so long as they remembered to “wash your hands.” A group of gay activ-ists with dirty hands who attempted to enter St. Patrick’s Cathedral the following Sunday were met with determined N.Y.P.D. resistance. More to the point, while New York has come so far in terms of L.G.B.T. civil rights, this recent wave of shocking vio-lence — culminating in Carson’s senseless murder — shows us that the threats to safety, and to just being able to live one’s life, remain. Some say the upsurge in violence is precisely because gays and lesbians are more high profile than ever now, that the L.G.B.T. community most notably is continuing to make great — long-overdue — strides on marriage equality. In other words, the fear is that there is a backlash against the advances of gays and lesbians. One speaker, a pastor, at Monday’s rally at Eighth St. and Sixth Ave. — the site of Carson’s murder — noted the significance of basketball player Jason Collins having recently publicly come out, finally cracking the macho bastion of pro sports. As he put it, to the crowd’s cheering approval, pro hoops players are “taking off Jordans and putting on pumps!” At the same time, Carson’s death also points to the ongo-ing need for gun control. It was sadly far too easy for an inebriated, bigoted and twisted coward — who served time in jail previously on assault charges — to shoot Carson to death, after having initiated things by insulting the victim and his friends verbally. Guns need to be kept out of the hands of highly dangerous, unbalanced individuals like this. We were glad to see a strong, reassuring police presence posted along Sixth Ave. at Eighth St. on Saturday after the shooting. Merchants on Eighth St. tell us the block is safe. Even so, alcohol, a gun and hate proved a volatile combination. We were inspired to see 1,500 people turn out for Monday’s anti-violence rally in the Village. “We will not be harassed! We will not be threatened!” one of the speakers exhorted the crowd. In shades of Stonewall, one man at the rally answered back with his own words, punctuating them by punching his fist repeatedly into the air, “We will fight back! We will fight back! We will fight back!” Backlash or not — we won’t let our society go back-ward. We will stand up to the hate. We will fight back. It’s up to all of us.

We will fight backedItoRIAL

evAn foRSch

Page 13: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 13

The Villager (USPS 578930) ISSN 0042-6202 is published every week by NYC Community Media LLC, 515 Canal Street, Unit 1C, New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 229-1890. Periodicals Postage paid at New York, N.Y. Annual subscription by mail in Manhattan and Brooklyn $29 ($35 elsewhere). Single copy price at offi ce and newsstands is $1. The entire contents of newspaper, including advertising, are copyrighted and no part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher - © 2011 NYC Community Media LLC.

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Jerry Tallmer

By JERRy TALLMER Shannon RoseEclectic Media ProductionsTampa, Florida Dear Ms. Rose:I am in receipt of your May 17 e-mail head-

lined, “FREE AMMO FOR THE MONTH OF MAY.”

It sort of stopped me in my tracks.Free ammo for me? Golly gee.Reading further, I learn that a gentleman

named Tim Schmidt, president and founder of the United States Concealed Carry Association and its Concealed Carry periodical, is telling us that “right now ammunition is nearly impos-sible to fi nd,” and “To combat that, the United States Concealed Carry Association is giving away 1,000 PHYSICAL rounds of ammunition every day for 31 days during the month of May.”

The merry, merry month of May.In the springtime, the only pretty ring time,

When birds do sing, nay ding a ding ding, Sweet lovers love the spring… .

All an ammo-seeker has to do is subscribe to the U.S.C.C.A. magazine — the kind you read, not the kind you shoot — and the free bullets are yours, though it’s not clear whether that means one round per new subscriber or 1,000 rounds.

I wonder if sure-shot Dick Cheney has ever subscribed to your publication.

Tim Schmidt, claimant of a degree in engineering from Michigan Tech University, describes himself as “a passionate defender of the 2nd Amendment” and donor of $10,000 “to lift the handgun law in Chicago in 2010.” Last month, April, an even prettier ring time —

when he met his wife at Michigan Tech — his U.S.C.C.A. gave away 30 new guns to new subscribers.

“I know without a doubt,” says Mr. Schmidt — why do these gun guys never have the slight-est doubt? — “that what we are doing at the U.S.C.C.A. is helping communities across the nation become more safe.”

With friends like that… .It is time to reread Hemingway’s “The

Short, Happy Life of Francis Macomber.” Margo Macomber had no doubts either, when she grabbed a gun against a charging buffalo.

And blew her husband’s head apart by mistake.Myself, whenever the subject of guns comes

up, I always think of Pop Taylor. He looked like Walter Brennan, if you can remember Walter Brennan — Bogart’s leathery sidekick in “To Have and Have Not.” Pop Taylor was a New England version of Walter Brennan.

I can hear him now, the calm, dry rifl e counselor, as I'm lying on my belly on the grass of the 50-foot target range at Camp Menatoma, Readfi eld, Maine, a .22 cradled in my arms.

“Squeeze it, son,” Pop Taylor is saying. “You don’t pull the trigger, you squeeze it. If

you pull it, you’ll miss.”And then Pop Taylor says one more thing:

“Never point a weapon at anything you don’t intend to kill.”

The merry month of May. A maypole, my Eclectic friend, is a longstanding symbol of sex, of love. It is not a Bushmaster .223 or an AK-47. So, dear Ms. Shannon Rose, what are you and your Concealed Carry client offering us — love or death?

I can’t wait till June and High Noon.

Yours very truly, J.T.

Conceal and carry: And the lead poisoning is free!tALkInG poInt

‘Keep on keepin’ on,’ writes SeegerPete Seeger sent a postcard, above, to say he enjoyed the recent article by Sarah Ferguson on the New York City Community Garden Coalition’s candidates forum at The Cooper Union. The folk icon, 94, stole the show with his appearance — and a classic photo of him plucking his long-neck banjo, by Tequila Minsky, ran on the East Villager’s front page. The article also ran in The Villager. Underneath his signature on the card, Seeger drew a banjo.

Whenever guns come up, I think of Pop Taylor and the target range at Camp Menatoma… .

Page 14: May 23, 2013 The Villager

14 May 16 - 22, 2013

Jill Greenberg of the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health, and Heather Carlucci-Rodriguez, representing Chefs For The Marcellus, both emphasized the added risk to restaurant workers, as well as maintenance workers who service utilities, buildings, subways and schools.

The evening’s highlight, however, came at the end when Assemblymember Rosenthal announced her sponsorship of a new bill to create a monitoring process for checking radon levels in natural gas at the city gates. Specifi cally, the bill requires the Bureau of Environmental Radiation Protection, which is under the State Department of Health, along with consultation with D.E.C. and the Public Service Commission, to create a compliance assurance system to monitor levels of radon and its progeny at each city gate location in real time, as well as periodic inspec-tion. Stipulations about acceptable radon levels, procedures to follow should these lev-els not be reached, and the grounds for civil action by individuals, are all included in the bill. In the Assembly, the bill is Public Health Law A 6863, and is co-sponsored with state Senator Diane Savino, who presented it in the Senate as Public Health Law S 4921.

These bill numbers are important because if the bill is to be signed into law,

New Yorkers who support it, must e-mail, snail mail, text or call their representatives, in both the Assembly and state Senate and cite support of the bill numbers. For Assembly representatives’ contact informa-tion, visit assembly.state.ny.us/mem/ . For state Senators’ contact information, visit : www.nysenate.gov/senators .

Rosenthal emphasized that before the Assembly’s session ends in six weeks, the bill needs as much support as pos-sible to show Governor Cuomo and Mayor Bloomberg that public energy is behind it.

“They need to be inundated,” she said. She recalled 2001, when after 9/11, E.P.A. Director Christine Todd Whitman obstruct-ed the truth and told Lower Manhattan resi-dents the air was safe to breathe. Rosenthal believes that the government should be there to protect its citizens, and this bill is legislation for just such protection.

City Councilmember Gale Brewer was not at the forum, but she is working with attorneys on a local level, to see what jurisdiction the city has to require radon testing. Her goal is to propose a resolution through the City Council.

David Braun, co-founder of the anti-fracking group United For Action, was seated next to Rosenthal at the forum. He summed up the event and the risk at stake.

“It’s up to us,” he said, “to raise our voices and say, ‘We are not your lab rats in a radon gas experiment.’ ”

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Page 15: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 15

By LINCOLN ANDERSON One of the frequently heard fears about the soon-to-launch Citi Bike program is that it will just mean thousands of more cyclists zooming around on the streets dangerously out of control. The Villager recently got a chance to test-ride one of the new bike-share cycles, and “zoom-ing” wasn’t exactly the first word that sprang to mind. In fact, these bikes are pretty heavy — 45 pounds — and, well, definitely on the slow side. I was among a group of reporters who got to take the bikes for a spin at the Brooklyn Navy Yard last Friday. First, Dani Simons, director of marketing and external affairs for NYC Bike Share, the operator of Citi Bike, explained the basics about the bikes, and demonstrated how the docking system works. Clearly printed on the top of each bike’s handlebar stem, she noted, are the instructions — ones that many Downtowners say bicyclists disobey — “Yield to pedestrians”; “Stay off the sidewalk”; “Obey traffic lights”; “Ride with traffic.”

“I call these the four cardinal rules of biking in New York City,” Simons noted.

If you have purchased a $95 annual mem-bership, you’ll receive a key — a small, blue, plastic stick — that you can insert into any docking station to release a bike. You’ll then be able to ride that bike for 45 minutes, after which you’ll have to park it at another dock, or face additional charges. You can wait a minute and then take another bike for another 45-min-ute spin, and so on, for as long as you like.

So-called “casual members,” people who purchase a daily ($9.95) or weekly ($25) bike-share pass, won’t get a key, but will swipe a credit card on a bike-share kiosk. They’ll receive a five-digit code that they’ll use to unlock a bike, which they can ride for a shorter period — 30 minutes — before re-docking it, and can then take additional 30-minute rides.

People with yearly memberships can start riding May 27. The daily and weekly program will kick off June 2.

If cyclists don’t return the bikes within the allotted time, charges kick in: $2.50 for the first half hour, $6.50 for the second half hour and $9 for each additional half hour.

If you ride to a bike dock and all its slots are full, you can get a 15-minute extension. I assumed people would just use the extra time to wait for a slot to open up, but the ener-getic Simons said she’d use it to bike to another nearby station.

Once the key or the code is put in, there’s a beep and a small green light displays on the dock, indicating the bike can be pulled out. A reporter for one of the city’s daily tabloids who recently test-rode one of the bikes moaned about how difficult it was to remove the bike from the dock, saying she literally had to get on her knees and yank it out with all her strength.

But there’s a right way and a wrong way to pull out a Citi Bike. As Simons explained, the wrong way is to try to pull it out by the handlebars, which doesn’t work — the bike barely budges. The right way is simply to grab hold under the seat’s back with one hand and lift the bike up a couple of inches, which is quite easy to do — “and I don’t have biceps like Michelle Obama,” Simons quipped — and then

step backward. The bike slides out of the dock effortlessly.

Next, check that the tires have air and that the brakes are working properly. If there’s a problem, put the bike back and take another.

Then, adjust the seat to waist height, if it isn’t already, Simons said. Though the seat can be lowered all the way down for a very small person, Citi Bikes aren’t for kids. You must be 16 or older.

Finally, it was time to take a spin around the Navy Yard.

The bike glided along, coasting surprisingly well, if not particularly fast. The seat was wide and comfortable. The tires were fairly fat and cushy, making for smooth rolling.

One of the charges made by 99 Bank St. residents in their lawsuit against the bike-share station in front of their building is that Citi Bike riders will use their sidewalk, since Bank St. is cobblestoned. But the historic Brooklyn Navy Yard has an uneven, patchwork surface — from cobblestones to old railroad tracks half-buried in asphalt pavement — and, from the feel of the ride, I was confident that my Citi Bike could roll over these rough surfaces without problem. On the other hand, my 10-speed bike with narrow tires that I had ridden over to the Navy Yard could never handle these conditions.

Citi Bikes have three gears, with a twist-grip handlebar shifter. In first gear, in the flat Navy

Citi Bikes not ‘Fast and Furious,’ but slow, stable

A reporter had plenty of room for her two bags in the front basket of her Citi Bike.

Photos by Lincoln Anderson

Dani Simons, bike-share’s marketing director, held out the blue key that comes with a Citi Bike annual membership.Continued on page 28

Page 16: May 23, 2013 The Villager

16 May 16 - 22, 2013

just after midnight on the morning of Sat., May 18, by a gunman shouting anti-gay slurs. Apprehended nearby shortly after the shooting, Elliot Morales, 33, has been charged by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance with murder in the second degree as a hate crime, menacing in the sec-ond degree, and two weapons charges. Less than 24 hours after the killing, hundreds turned out for a vigil at the site of the murder at 60 W. Eighth St. just east of Sixth Ave. following a social media call from Adam Feldman, a writer for Time Out. On Mon., May 20, three days after the murder, elected officials and L.G.B.T. groups organized a march of more than 1,500 people from the L.G.B.T. Community Center on W. 13th St. to a rally at the same site. Just hours after that rally, Dan Contrarino, a club promoter, was attacked on Avenue D and E. Fourth St. by an assailant shout-ing “faggot,” NightLifeGay.com reported. Contrarino posted on Facebook, “GAY BASHED LAST NITE… back from small surgery…. CHEST XRAYS THIS AM…. suspect still at large… police n media wait-ing to interview me… U JUST WANNA CRY N MOVE ON…” At 5 a.m. on Tues., May 21, a gay couple, Steven Dixon, 42, and Michael Coleman, 41, were attacked in Soho by men shouting anti-gay epithets and repeatedly punching Dixon, causing lacerations, swelling and pain to his eye, the New York Post reported. Fabian Ortiz, 32 and Pedro Jimenez, 23, were arrested on charges of felonious assault as a hate crime. Unlike these two attacks and four others since May 5, where violence erupted quickly, seemingly out of nowhere, Morales is alleged to have been carrying on in an abusive and menacing manner for some time prior to the Carson shooting. According to police, after urinating outside the Annisa bar and eatery on Barrow St. at West Fourth St., he entered the establishment, spewing anti-gay slurs at the bartender, showing off a weapon, and threatening to kill him if he called 911. Morales and his friends then encountered Carson’s group outside a 99-cents pizza store on Sixth Ave. near W. Eighth St., and Morales allegedly targeted anti-gay invective at them as well, including, “Look at you fag-gots, you look like gay wrestlers.” Carson’s group moved on, but minutes later Morales — after his friends failed to dissuade him from another confronta-tion — allegedly came back at Carson’s group, saying to them, “You want to die tonight?” According to the district attorney’s complaint, Morales then asked Carson, “Are you with him?” and “Carson answered, ‘Yes,’ at which point the defen-dant shot Carson in the head with a silver pistol.” Carson was brought to Beth Israel Hospital and pronounced dead at 1:40 a.m. Morales was confronted at 12:05 a.m. by police officer Henry Huot who ordered him to stop, “at which point the defendant drew a gun and turned toward Officer Huot,

but the gun fell to the ground.” It contained three live rounds. Morales was arrested. In recounting the murder, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said, “It’s clear that the victim here was killed only because and just because he was thought to be gay.” The Daily News reported that “the commis-sioner added that Carson in no way antago-nized his killer.” Morales’s sister told The New York Times her brother, who was in prison for 10 years for robbery, had not been homophobic and “he doesn’t remember anything [about the murder]; he was under the influence, he was drinking.” The defendant “laughed in hideous glee as he confessed, a prosecutor told the judge” at Morales’s arraignment, according to the Daily News. Carson worked as a manager at the Ciao Bella gelato store in Grand Central Terminal and was “very good with people” and open about being gay, a colleague told the Times. He had once been a client at the Hetrick-Martin Institute for L.G.B.T. youth, on Astor Place, according to Thomas Krever, the agency’s executive director. Carson’s broth-er, Michael Bumpars, said Mark was a “cou-rageous” and “beautiful” person, the Daily News reported. Carson had recently moved from Harlem to Brooklyn, according to the Times. His friend Kay Allen told the newspaper, “His spirit was too big for this city. He didn’t have a negative bone in his body.”

Eighth St. murder follows wave of anti-gay assaultsContinued from page 1

Photos by Tequila Minsky

Soon after Mark Carson’s murder on Eighth St. just off Sixth Ave., a memorial sprung up at the corner in front of the former Barnes & Noble store. Below and opposite page, top, on Monday, 1,500 people marhed from the L.G.B.T. Center to Eighth St. in a rally against anti-gay violence.

Page 17: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 17

Photos by Lincoln Anderson

On Saturday afternoon, Takis Kouvatseas lit a candle in what would soon grow to be a much bigger memorial for Mark Carson at Eighth St. and Sixth Ave. The Cirque du Soleil drummer, who lives nearby on Sixth Ave., said he knew Carson from hanging out with him around the neighborhood in gay bars, like Pieces. Kouvatseas also posted a quote by Martin Luther King: “Darkness cannot drive out darkness…only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate…only love can do that.” Eric Einstein, the owner of Pieces, however, said he actually didn’t recall seeing Carson from his photo. The afternoon after the shooting, police tape was left on a pylon near the scene.

‘Only light and love can drive out darkness and hate’

Page 18: May 23, 2013 The Villager

18 May 16 - 22, 2013

Yankee Stadium was packed with a crowd of 33,000 Wednesday — not for a baseball game, but for New York University’s 181st commencement. Also, it was in the morning, not the evening. But pretzels and Nathan’s hot dogs were still being sold at the concession stands. Under overcast skies, 8,000 students receiv-ing undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees were joined by faculty members and

25,000 guests at the ceremony, which filled most of the stadium, stretching up to the nose-bleed seats, all the way from the right-field foul pole to the third-base line. Down on the field, there was one guy wear-ing a Yankee cap, though it wasn’t Robinson Cano or Mariano Rivera, but John Sexton, the university’s president, who officiated the cer-emony, along with Martin Lipton, chairperson of the university’s board of trustees.

N.Y.U. bestowed honorary degrees on attor-ney David Boies, genome scientist Claire Marie Fraser, Afghan Museum Director Omara Khan Masoudi and film director Oliver Stone, who is an alumnus of N.Y.U.’s Tisch School of the Arts. Boies, the renowned attorney and litiga-tor, is the lead co-counsel in Hollingsworth v. Perry, the historic same-sex marriage civil rights case challenging Proposition 8 now before the

Supreme Court. Boies addressed the graduates on behalf of the honorary degree recipients. Boies said these are “interesting times,” with L.G.B.T. civil rights and liberties being chal-lenged. Sadly, he said, alluding to the recent bias attacks in New York City, there is still violence in the streets against gays. He said his hope is that in the future, the children of today’s gradu-ates won’t have to ask why gay and lesbian couples can’t marry each other. In addition, the 2013 N.Y.U. Presidential Medal was awarded to Edith Windsor, an N.Y.U. alumna and Greenwich Village resident who is the plaintiff in the fight against the Defense of Marriage Act, the other same-sex marriage case currently being considered by the Supreme Court. Adressing the graduates, Sexton said, “The challenges that confront your generation — climate change and developing sustainable energy sources, political and religious extrem-ism, poverty, to name just a few — may appear daunting and complex. They require men and women with a global outlook who are prepared to act with thoughtfulness, resolve and wisdom. But I am confident that the les-sons you learned at N.Y.U. have given you the tools, the knowledge, and the critical thinking skills to take on these challenges and make the world a better place.” However, the crowd reception for Sexton — particularly from faculty — seemed lukewarm. The student speaker was Chelsea Garbell, who graduated summa cum laude from the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development and was a national final-ist for the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship. Garbell was founder and president of Bridges: Muslim Jewish Interfaith Dialogue @ N.Y.U., which encouraged communication, under-standing and friendship among Jewish and Muslim students. Under her leadership, Jewish and Muslim students rebuilt tornado-damaged homes in Alabama and Missouri. A highlight of the commencement was a video of the song “Diamond In The Sky” sung, shot and produced by N.Y.U. students.

Gay nups advocates a hit at N.Y.U. stadium ceremony

©NYU Photo Bureau: Gallo

President John Sexton with Edith Windsor, the plaintiff in the Supreme Court case challenging DOMA.

©NYU Photo Bureau: Hollenshead

Each N.Y.U. school division — such as Tisch, Stern, Gallatin, Steinhardt, etc. — gets its own distinctive type of sticks to wave at commencement to show their school spirit.

©NYU Photo Bureau: Hollenshead

Tisch School of the Arts graduates cheered as they received their diplomas. (One graduate from each N.Y.U. school ceremoni-ally receives a diploma on behalf of all the graduates from that particular school.)

Page 19: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 19

P.R. push for N.Y.U. and Chin

To The Editor: Re “N.Y.U. gives space for tots and seniors on its superblocks” (news article, May 16):

This is just one big P.R. move for N.Y.U. and Councilwoman Chin. Creative Steps, as noted, has been in Washington Square Village rent-free for years — and now will pay rent? Apparently there’s some sort of sweetheart deal between N.Y.U. and the councilwoman to pump up the university’s “credentials” by portraying it as being kind to the community, in an election year, naturally.

The few thousand square feet provided in the agree-ment, as Andrew Berman notes in the article, is a pittance compared to the overwhelming addition of 2 million square feet by N.Y.U. that will dominate our once-pleasant residential community.

Sylvia RackowRackow is chairperson, The Committee to Preserve Our Neighborhood

It’s about oversaturation, not art

To The Editor:Re “Soho House has my support, but won’t get Acker

Awards” (Clayton, May 16):Mr. Patterson’s view of accepting the Soho

House proposal seems to be mainly based on the idea of the “lesser of two evils.” But we also have to keep in mind that though we would all like to see a better and community-friendly use made of this space, adding a new liquor license to a neigh-borhood already oversaturated with bars is not the way to go.

If Soho House is approved, that will mean this address will have a liquor license where none existed before, and that license will remain there whether Soho House is successful or not. I have had similar battles on the northern end of Avenue A where oversaturation has been an ongoing issue for years, with landlords claiming the only businesses that could survive needed a liquor license. Not enough daytime foot traffic, they said. But residents campaigned against this argument and now on my block (between 12th and 13th Sts.) where we had

five liquor licenses, we now have an architects group, a hair salon, a veterinary clinic, a tech shop and an antiques store. Two of the bars remain, but now there is a balance and a once out-of-control block has reclaimed some quality of life.

Mr. Patterson admits the artist benefit claimed by Soho House is dubious and limited at best. I would say there is not public benefit here — only a public buy-in. It will still be another late-night bar bringing additional out-of-neighborhood crowds to a block already oversatu-rated with liquor licenses — maybe not rowdy frat types, but additional crowds nonetheless.

We didn't buy the “lesser of two evils” line on Avenue A and neither should the residents of Ludlow St.

Dale Goodson

Rock on, Richie Havens

To The Editor: Re “Woodstock icon Havens dies at 72” (April 25): Your recent coverage of Richie Havens leaves much to be desired! Your paper routinely gives tons of print space to bums, criminals, Yippies, crusties and other ne’er-do-wells. Richie lived in the Village for 50 years! His widow, Nancy, is on Jane St. in the West Village! As a young man, Richie came to the Village from Brooklyn and read poetry in our cafes! He then turned toward folk singing and performed in small cafes, like the Why Not, Raffio’s and Four Winds. He then want on to Cafe Wha? and then starred in shows at the Night Owl Cafe, where he was on the bill with the likes of the Lovin’ Spoonful, Tim Hardin, Fred Neil and Bob Gibson. Richie was a star long before he appeared at Woodstock in 1969. He was a credit to all of us Villagers!

Joseph Marra

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

LetteRS to the edItoRContinued from page 12

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Page 20: May 23, 2013 The Villager

20 May 16 - 22, 2013

By BOB KRASNER “Forget about the Met show — this is where it’s at,” Monte A. Melnick, former tour manager of the Ramones, firmly stat-ed. He was speaking of the May 9 opening of “Just Chaos,” a photo show by some of the major documentarians of punk rock at Marc Jacobs’s hip literary emporium, Bookmarc, at 400 Bleecker St., at W. 11th St. Conceived and curated by noted photog-rapher Roberta Bayley, the modest exhib-it is meant to be an addendum to the Metropolitan Museum’s “PUNK — Chaos to Couture” show, which concentrates on the influence of punk on fashion, and in which photos of New York rockers are not a priority. Bayley, who photographed the first Ramones album cover, put together a group of 13 artists, including herself, whose love of the music led them to document a brand-new scene that seemingly had little commercial potential. David Godlis, who just goes by Godlis, was one who found himself at the epicenter, C.B.G.B., “just to hear good music.” After a few weeks, he realized that he wanted to record, in the available-light style of Brassai, the scene on the street outside the legend-ary dive that gave birth to punk. After three years and a whole lot of film, he produced a body of work and became friends with many of the others who were covering the scene. Most of the participants in the show turned out to celebrate alongside some of their sub-jects, including Richard Hell and Deborah Harry. “It’s like a high school reunion,” said Godlis. The energy of the attendees was palpable

as East Village scene makers such as film-maker Amos Poe, music industry legend Danny Fields (also a photographer in the show) and The Dictators’ Handsome Dick Manitoba rounded out an upbeat and col-orful crowd that was dressed mostly in black. The mélange of photogs, fans, celebs and gawkers spilled out of the store, onto the sidewalk and into the street, leading to a warning from the local mounted police. The store has taken the opportunity to stock its shelves with a wide variety of books on the subject, including attendee John Holmstrom’s new book, “Best of Punk Magazine,” Bryan Ray Turcotte’s “Punk Is Dead” and Richard Hell’s new autobiogra-phy, as well as rare ephemera and out-of-print titles, such as “Making Tracks — The Rise of Blondie.” As much fun as it is to look back, howev-er, nostalgia — as one might expect from the survivors of the punk aesthetic — is not at the top of the list. Not many wished to return to the New York of the late 1970s, although photographer Marcia Resnick said that she missed “the audacity, the immediacy and the conversation” of the times. Bayley, however, doesn’t harbor any desire to go back. “I don’t long for those times,” she said. “I’m 63 and I have no desire to be poor.” Leee Black Childers, a photographer who became manager for the Heartbreakers and later, Iggy Pop, is content to sit at his computer listening to Ethel Waters. Does he miss anything about the punk years? Well, maybe a few things, he said: “Being young, getting high and getting laid.”

Forget the couture, ‘Just Chaos’ puts focus on punks

Photos by Bob Krasner

Singer Deborah Harry and photographer Roberta Bayley at the opening of “Just Chaos” at Bookmarc earlier this month. Bayley was wearing a T-shirt with her vin-tage image of Harry.

Amos Poe, director/producer of “The Blank Generation,” about the early days of punk, got ready to split.

Bob Gruen, left, and Godlis, who documented the punk scene with their photography, caught up at the opening. The image on the “Just Chaos” show poster/invite, behind them, was a shot by Godlis.

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May 16 - 22, 2013 21

villagerARtS&enteRtAInment

By SAM SPOKONyWhenever the seasons change, it’s like

I’m seeing everything for the first time…again. Yes, maybe I could chalk that up to some rapid diminishment of long-term memory — a possible result of all those things I may or may not have done during high school and college — but I’d rather try to see something a little more uplifting there. Maybe it’s nice to have that feel-ing of a little rebirth of the consciousness every few months. It can remind us of the importance of spontaneous discovery and rediscovery.

Anyway, we’re here to talk about music. Yes! This year, spring and summer (along with those long-awaited rays, warm breez-es, etc.) bring great improvisers and musi-cal performers to that wonderful portion of Manhattan below 14th Street, with something for everyone and, I would think, someone for everything. The question is, “What do you want to explore? And what sounds do you feel like revisiting? It’s moments like these when I think, you know, maybe it’s not so bad to live amid the perpetual drone of city life and all its politicized, corporatized mayhem — because even when the absurdity seems too much to bear, when you just can’t seem to find any semblance of understanding, you can just head Downtown and find all the right vibes. And you know you’re in the right place…again.

JAZZ I’d like to begin with an exciting Thursday

night series that began in April at Drom (85 Avenue A, btw. Fifth & Sixth Sts.), and which includes one show every month through August. It’s the intriguingly titled “Music and Architecture Series,” curated by the equally intriguing Cuban-born pia-nist Aruán Ortiz — who has already done enough solid work composing and perform-ing with his own quartet to make this a must-see for all our experimentally inclined listeners. According to Revive Music, the forward-thinking jazz collective that’s spon-soring the series, these concerts “intend to narrate different concepts and ritualism behind ancient architectures, deconstructing their forms, shapes and textures.” Sounds good enough for me. Each gig has its own distinct subtitle — so check out “Reflections as a Reality” on June 20, “A Piece Within a Piece” on July 18, and “The Alchemist and His Sacred Family” on August 29. All concerts start at 9:45pm. Tickets cost $10 in advance, and $15 at the door. To purchase,

visit dromnyc.com.Few cats indeed have been able to match

saxophonist Joe Lovano’s ability to channel the roots of swing and bop while also help-

ing to drive the free-thinking expression of 21st-century performance. Dig Mr. Lovano at the Village Vanguard (178 Seventh Ave. South, just below W. 11th St.), where he’ll

be joined by his nonet from May 28 to June 2. This incarnation of the nonet will comprise almost exactly the same person-nel (including baritone saxophonist Gary Smulyan and pianist James Weidman) as those featured his brilliant 2006 album “Streams of Expression,” and, happily, Lovano and company will be rehashing tunes from that record throughout their six-night stand. You’ll have a choice between two sets each night, at 8:30 and 10:30pm, and tickets cost $25. To purchase, visit vil-lagevanguard.com.

For those of you who’d rather take your avant-garde jazz with a healthy spoonful of soulfully foot-stomping church music, I would of course recommend clarinet-ist/saxophonist Don Byron and his New Gospel Quintet. The group’s first album, “Love, Peace and Soul,” which came out a little over a year ago, was rightly praised for its depth of exploration into the gospel idiom, along with Byron’s typically vibrant playing. Catch the quintet at 92YTribeca (200 Hudson St., just below Canal St.) on Wed., June 12, where they’ll be the fea-tured act for a live presentation of WBGO 88.3 FM’s award-winning radio show, “The Checkout.” The show, which also includes opening act The Bridge Trio, begins at 8pm, and tickets cost $12. To purchase, visit 92y.org/tribeca. On an unfortunate side note, this will be one of the final events staged at the 92Y’s Tribeca location, as it’ll be closing later in June. From that point on, all 92Y events will take place at the orga-nization’s Upper East Side headquarters, at 1395 Lexington Ave.

Aside from the fact that I’ve always found him to be a generally insightful guy, saxophonist/flutist Ras Moshe represents an important element of the New York music scene — that which, in essence, refuses to compromise, remaining true to a very spiritually introspective core of freely improvised music. The ghosts of people like Albert Ayler and Pharoah Sanders truly do live on, and you’ll usually find them floating through the air at Ras Moshe gig (the sound of which, while certainly not for squares, can send us on some of our most incredibly powerful aural journeys). Moshe plays at the Downtown Music Gallery (13 Monroe St., btw. Catherine & Market Sts.) at 6pm on July 7, alongside vocalist Kyoko Kitamura, guitarist Anders Nilsson and bassist Shayna Dulberger. And there’s no cost to enter!

Downtown heats up with the diversity of jazz and indie Avant-garde, acoustic, other sounds make the coming months rock and swing

Photo courtesy of the artist

Challenge your perceptions of sound and design at the Music and Architecture Series, curated by Aruán Ortiz, at Drom.

Photo courtesy of the artist

Feast on the swinging wisdom of Joe Lovano, who will lead his nonet at the Village Vanguard from May 28 to June 2.

Continued on page 22

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22 May 16 - 22, 2013

INDIEThe Thermals are a real throwback

for me, if you’ll allow a 23-year-old to use that expression. Their haphaz-ardly titled 2004 album “Fuckin A” was an integral part of my high school playlist. Now, a decade later, the post-punk trio is still going strong. Just last month, they released “Desperate Ground,” an album which is a self-described “brash and irresponsible ode to human violence.” You’ll probably hear plenty of those new tunes, full of punchy beats and urgent lyrics, during their back-to-back dates at the Bowery Ballroom (6 Delancey St., btw. Bowery & Chrystie St.) on May 28 and 29. Both shows, which also feature Screaming Females as the opening act, start at 9pm. Tickets cost $16 in advance and $18 at the door. To purchase, visit bow-eryballroom.com.

Some bands these days need all the production technology money can buy in order to sound bigger and more affect-ing — but the duo of Death From Above 1979 have made a career out of turn-ing bass, drums and a well-place synth into a colossal wall of sound. Whether you want to call them alt-rock, noise rock, electro-dance-punk or whatever else comes to mind, Jesse Keeler and Sebastien Grainger probably represent the best thing to come out of Canada since ice hockey. When this band broke up in 2006, I remember being heartbro-ken — not least of all because I’d just that week bought a super sweet band tee-shirt — but when they decided to reunite a couple of years ago, all was quickly forgiven. Check them out at Irving Plaza (17 Irving Pl., at E. 15th St.) on Fri., June 7, at 11pm. Tickets cost $32. To purchase, visitvenue.irvingplaza.com.

I always like to include a little some-thing for those acoustic singer/songwrit-er fans out there. With that in mind, I’ll introduce you to Maya Isacowitz, whose voice is very much the equal to her radi-ant beauty — which is to say that they both rank quite highly in my (rather self-professedly) esteemed opinion. Ms. Isacowitz first made a name for herself while performing throughout Israel, the country in which she was raised, and is now rightfully spreading her sphere of influence overseas, with sensitive guitar work, wonderfully penned tunes

and a very balanced, low-key vibe. You can catch her at SubCulture (45 Bleecker St., btw. Mott & Mulberry Sts.) on Wed., June 26. The show starts at 7:30pm, and tickets cost $12. To pur-chase, visitsubculturenewyork.com.

Now, if you’re looking for a real throwback — and this one actually goes way back, far beyond that happy accident that was my birth — I would suggest donning your best rude boy

outfit and heading down to see those living legends of ska and rocksteady, those inimitable Brits, The Specials. Yes, it’s been a while, and the current lineup certainly doesn’t include all of the group’s original personnel. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth giving a nod to one of the hippest socio-politically minded bands to ever hit the stage. The performance I’ll now direct your atten-tion to represents a particularly special chance to see these guys live, because

it’ll be an outdoor gig at Pier 26 in Hudson River Park (located off of West St., btw. Hubert & N. Moore Sts.). The Wed., July 17 show starts at 6pm, and tickets cost $35 in advance and $40 on the day of the show. To purchase, visit bowerypresents.com.

Happy listening, and enjoy the weather! If you have any suggestions or hidden secrets about sweet shows on and under the Downtown radar, drop me a line at [email protected].

Smooth sounds and dance grooves

Continued from page 21

Photo courtesy of the artist

Turn up the distortion with The Thermals at Bowery Ballroom on May 28 and 29.

Photo courtesy 92nd Street Y

June 12: Catch Don Byron and his New Gospel Quartet, at 92YTribeca.

Photo courtesy of the artist

Enjoy the warm tones of singer/songwriter Maya Isacowitz at SubCulture on June 26.

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May 16 - 22, 2013 23

Six-Day Planet‘Connections’ kicks off summer theater fest season

By MARTIN DENTON(of nytheatre.com and indietheater-now.com)

New York City’s busy summer theater festival season kicks off on May 29 with Planet Connections, a four-week celebra-tion of independent theater and social con-sciousness that is now in its fifth year.

Its official moniker is “Planet Connections Theatre Festivity” — and that last word is just one thing that sets this event apart from the many other theatrical marathons that dot (dominate!) our landscape here in the Big Apple from June through August.

So what’s different about Planet Connections? This: the fact that all of the shows presented, in addition to being inter-esting new works spanning many genres and styles of the indie theater landscape, also champion specific causes. Each show is a benefactor for a nonprofit organization

— and these entities will be represented in talkbacks, promotions, information sessions and fundraising throughout the Festivity.

Among the recipients of Planet Connections shows’ largesse this year are my own (The New York Theatre Experience, Inc.) along with many others — ranging from The LIT Fund to The Ali Forney Center to The Blue Green Alliance to the ASCPA. You should definitely check out the information about these charitable groups on Planet Connections’ website (planetco-nections.org).

But of course, artistically, the Festivity is well worth your time! I’ve been a regular attendee at all the previous editions, and I’ve met some truly exceptional playwrights, directors, actors and other theater artists along the way. Works by a diverse and tal-ented roster of playwrights, ranging from Yvette Heyliger and Duncan Pflaster to Jason

S. Grossman and Kimberly Pau have been seen at Planet Connections, and many of the best scripts from past years are assembled at Indie Theater Now (indietheaternow.com/Collection/Index/planet-connections).

This year’s Festivity runs from May 29 through June 23 at two East Village venues — the Robert Moss Theater and the Gene Frankel Theater. This is a fun, vibrant neighborhood with many shops, bars and restaurants where you can fill the time before, after and in-between the shows you catch at the festival.

There are 30 mainstage productions in Planet Connections 2013, along with a vari-ety of special events and readings (including a special gala event on June 16th featuring readings of short plays by Neil LaBute, John Patrick Shanley and Winter Miller, at the Signature Center at Pershing Square). Because this is a relatively compact event, in terms of geography and size (but not in

terms of timeframe), it is very possible for an audience member to see virtually every-thing the Festivity has to offer.

Here are a few of the works in this year’s Festivity that I know enough about to comment on, based on experience with the artists and companies involved. Don’t limit yourself to what I talk about here, though. Check out the variety and range of work and find subjects, styles and worthy causes that appeal to your sensibility.

“9mm America” — This devised theater piece from Girl Be Heard, about violence in America, was created by 10 young women of high-school age. Director Ashley Marinaccio, a passionate and dedicated activist/artist, is a Planet Connections veteran. Expect thought-provoking, raw, documentary-style theater.

“Artaud…mon momo” — Roi “Bubi” Escudero is a one-of-a-kind artist, with a deep knowledge of the avant-garde, a limit-less imagination and a penchant for never repeating herself. This is her second look at the ethos of “Theater of Cruelty” inventor Antonin Artaud. There won’t be anything in the festival remotely like it.

“Dragon” — Articulate Theatre Company is launching with this new play by Jenny Connell Davis that looks to blend realism and mythology within the framework of a timeless love story. Director and company founder Cat Parker has been responsible for some excellent productions over the years, including the NYC premiere of “Sister Cities” back in 2007.

“Fix Number Six” — If nytheatre.com’s annual Person of the Year recognition means anything to you, then this is a show to see. This new play by Jerry Polner is about a travel agent who longs to be a spy. It’s directed by Michael Criscuolo, and its cast includes Arthur Aulisi and Alyssa Simon. All three of these luminar-ies have been People of the Year, which means that we think they’re top-notch artists.

“Straight Faced Lies” — This is the fourth year in a row that Mark Jason Williams will have a new script in Planet Connections

Photo by Ashley Marinaccio

Breani Michele, in Girl Be Heard’s pro-duction of “9mm.”

Photo courtesy of Articulate Theatre Company

Articulate Theatre Company launches, with Jenny Connell Davis’ “Dragon.”

Continued on page 24

May 29-June 3

At the Robert Moss Theatre (440

Lafayette St., near Astor Place)

And the Gene Frankel Theatre (24

Bond St., corner of Lafayette St.)

For tickets ($18), call 866-811-4111

or visit planetconnections.org

THEATERPLANET CONNECTiONS

THEATRE FESTiViTY

Page 24: May 23, 2013 The Villager

24 May 16 - 22, 2013

(each of the other three was nominated for a playwriting award, with 2011’s “The Other Day” winning that honor). Mark is a smart, sensitive, courageous writer — and I expect this new piece, set at a family Thanksgiving dinner, to be one of this year’s highlights.

“Subject 62” — Rhode Island-based Lenny Schwartz is another four-time Festivity con-tributor. His latest play, which he calls his most personal, follows last year’s somewhat sensa-tional “Accidental Incest,” 2011’s “Fidelity” and 2010’s “The Six Month Cure.” Expect an earnest treatment of a serious topic — how the onset of illness affects one family’s life.

“The Greatest Pirate Story (N)ever Told!” — On a lighter note we find this new musical by Christopher Leidenfrost, whose contributions to Planet Connections over the years include his award-winning starring roles as Whizzer in last year’s revival of “Falsettos” and appearing in drag in the gay marriage drama “The Declaration.” This new show ought to be just as it sounds — a fun, musical romp with plenty of audience interaction.

“What Do You Mean” — This entry from Ego Actus marks my first time seeing a play written by Bruce A. Kraemer. He is usually a designer and producer, so I’m excited to see him stretch in this meta tale of a person who is writing a play for a fes-tival but doesn’t know what to write about.

His longtime partner, Joan Kane, directs.As I said, these represent just a sam-

pling of what’s on offer at the Festivity. Browse their websites, check out previews and reviews on nytheatre.com and elsewhere and keep your eyes and ears open as you shuttle between the festival venues for audi-

ence buzz. Planet Connections is a fun event that’s much less intense than FringeNYC, yet still packed with entertainment value. I’m hoping to do one or more talkbacks and am looking forward to taking in as much as I can during the festival’s four weeks.

Enjoy!

Fifth year of ‘Festivity’ set to connect with audiencesContinued from page 23

Photo by Samir Abady Photography

Moira Stone and Mateo Moreno, in Jerry Polner’s “Fix Number Six.”

155 1st Avenue at East 10th St.Reservations/Info 254-1109

Tickets available online at www.theaterforthenewcity.net www.facebook.com/theaterforthenewcity

The Fabulous 18th Annual

L.E.S.LOWER EAST SIDE FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS

Friday, Saturday, Sunday, May 24, 25, 26Theater • Music • Dance • Film • Poetry • Puppetry • Youth Program • Visual Arts

Performances Every Night 6pm-1amOutdoors on E. 10th St. Saturday 12pm - 6pm w/Performances & Vendors

Youth Program Sat 2 - 5pm Film Sat 12pm - 12am Poetry Sun 4pm - 7:30pmScheduled to Appear:

SPEAKERS: Joe Franklin, Council Member Rosie Mendez, Judith MalinaPERFORMANCES BY: Tammy Grimes, Reno, Phoebe Legere. George Bartenieff, Epstein & Hassan,

John Jiler, Katherine Adamenko, Stan Baker, Louisa Bradshaw, Susana Cook, Lindsay Davis, J. Lois Diamond, Michael Domitrovich, Dixie Lee Estes, Evan, Tjasa Ferme, Ines Ferre, Benno Haenel, Clare Helene, Inma Heredia, Bobbie Horowitz, Baba Israel, Ariana Johns, Evan Laurence, Mike Lesser, Ed Malin, Fran McGee Jessie "Hula Hoops" McGee, MD, Lissa Moira, Stephan Morrow, Vernita N'Cognita, Aidan O'Shea, Karen Oberlin, Valery Oisteanu, Anne Pasquale, Mike Perrie, Poez, Elizabeth Ruf, Therese Schorn,

Robert Schwimmer, Margo Lee Sherman, Alice Shields, Connie Flagtwat, John Taylor Thomas, Mary Tierney, Richard Weber, Lei Zhou

MUSIC: David Amram, KT Sullivan, Judy Gorman, Lucas Papaelias (LPFunk), Bill Zeffiro, Gingger Shankar, David Ippolito, Maquina Mono, Arthur Abrams, Burning City Orchestra, Judeth DeMott, Peter Dizozza,

Downtown Music Productions, Ben Harburg & Friends, David Jacobsen, Kitsch, Dawoud Kringle, Melange, Susan Mitchell, Marissa Mulder, Open To The Hound, Lorcan Otway, Danielle Erin Rhodes, Norman Savitt,

Silvercloud Singers & Drummers, Ellen Steier, Jacob Merrik Storms, Alison Tartalia, Michael Vazquez, David Vernon, Richard West

DANCE: Rod Rodgers Dance Co., e-Dance, Kinding Sindaw, The Love Show, Kitty Lunn, Amy Marshall Dance Co., Alessandra Belloni, Andre Brown, Constellation Moving Co., Desert Sin, Maya DeSilva, Raqsuncommon,

House of Ducatti, Human Kinetics, Kaoru Ikeda, Infinity Dance Theater, John J. Zullo Dance, Juana Cala Flamenco, Kalpulli Atlachinolli, Laura Shapiro, Suspended Cirque, Thunderbird American Indian Dancers, Vangeline Theater,

VonDuvois Dance Collective, Ashley LiangTHEATER GROUPS: G.O.L.E.S., Cooper Square, New York Theatre Workshop, The Living Theatre, La Mama E.T.C.,

Yangtze Theater Co., Rev. Billy & The Church of Earthallujah, Cobu, Accidental Rep, Alternative Theater of Manhattan, Arts Without Walls, Beautiful Soup, BK Culture Jammers, Bond Street Theatre, Caps Lock Theater, The Cell, Chinese Theatre Works, Coatlique Theater Co., Dixon Place, Downtown Urban Theater Festival, Ego Actus,

The Experimentals, Le Squeezebox Cabaret, Less Than Rent, Lesser America, Loretta Auditorium, NY Lyric Circus, Project Girl, Prophecy Productions, The Slipper Room, Take Wing and Soar, Teatro La Tea, The Troupe Theatre,

Time Banks NYC, Wise Guise, Yara ArtsWRITERS: Eduardo Machado, Lyle Kessler, Barbara Kahn, Bina Sharif, Lissa Moira, Matt Morillo, Tom Attea, Seymour Barab, Liza Birkenmeier, Sara Cooper, Walter Corwin, Tom Diriwachter, Chris Force, Anthony Laura, Eugenia Macer-Story, Sabura Rashid, Ramiro Sandoval, Oliver Thrun, Trav S.D., Peter Welch, David Willinger

FREE!!! FREE!!! FREE!!! FREE!!! FREE!!! FREE!!!

FREE!!! FREE!!!

Photo by Marcus Yi

A gay couple must decide between love or liberty, in Marcus Yi’s “The Procedure.”

Page 25: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 25

By SCOTT STIFFLER

THE 17TH ANNUAL LOWER EAST SIDE FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS

Founded 18 years ago by Theater for the New City’s prolific, indefatigable Crystal Field, the Lower East Side Festival of the Arts — like TNC’s annual Halloween bash and its upcom-ing summer street theater — just keeps going and going (and growing). Organized in col-laboration with local civic, cultural and busi-ness leaders, this three-day indoor/outdoor festival offers performances from over 100 arts organizations, local and international celebri-ties, independent artists, poets, playwrights, dancers, comedians, musicians, puppeteers, filmmakers and other utterly unique creative types who call the Lower East Side home.

This year's lineup includes Academy Award-winning actor F. Murray Abraham, solo performer and comedian Reno, TV and radio host Joe Franklin, aerial performance group Suspended Cirque, dance groups Desert Sin and The Rod Rodgers Dance Company — plus new work from Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Nilo Cruz. Cultural institutions such as New York Theatre Workshop, La MaMa, Bond Street Theater, Beautiful Soup Theatre Collective, The Living Theatre and TNC will present work, and there will be plenty of creative output by kids, as well as performers with disabilities. The area’s distinct ethnic populations will also be represented — including the Latin American, African American, Chinese, Indian, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Native American, Polish and Ukrainian communities. “Art for Eco Justice: Ecology and Economy” will be the theme.

FREE. In and around Theater for the New City (155 1st Ave., btw. E. 9th & 10th Sts.) throughout Memorial Day weekend: Fri., May 24, 6pm-1am; Sat., May 25, noon-1am (noon-5pm: Cultural Fair, outside on E. 10th St., btw. 1st & 2nd Aves., and from 2pm-5pm, perfor-mances for kids and by kids, inside Theater for the New City) and Sun., May 27, 6pm-1am. For info and a full performance schedule, call 212-254-1109 or visit theaterforthenewcity.net.

WHAT I’M FAILING TO LEARNBack when old school was still in session,

we used to call it “high concept” — but these days, the ensemble of young artists who’ve collaborated on “What I’m Failing to Learn” characterize their work as “a mashup of theatri-

cal drama/live concert/multimedia video.” No matter what name you give it, there’s plenty going on here. Anchored by the folk, rock, punk and Latin-infused compositions of 14-year-old Schuyler Iona Press (the youngest artist ever to play the singer/songwriter sessions at the Bitter End), this journey through the unpredictable streets of NYC also gives audiences a glimpse into the interior world of a modern adolescent. Played close to the bone by Schuyler, that main character’s constant questioning of her world and status as “an outsider longing to be on the inside” is used to confront the “positives and negatives of growing up unsheltered from certain truths of our human world.” Sound familiar? Her quest may sound a lot like your teen years — but chances are, you didn’t have the benefit of a live band, percussive modern Irish dancers and video. That’s the advantage of searching for self, mashup-style.

Through June 15. Wed. at 7pm, Sat. at 3pm. At the 13th Street Rep (50 W. 13th St., btw. 5th & 6th Aves.). For tickets ($18-$30), call 866-811-4111 or visit 13thstreetrep.org. Also visit whatimfailingtolearn.com.

HOWL! FESTIVAL 10TH ANNIVERSARY EXTRAVAGANZA

He saw the best minds of his generation — but even at the pinnacle of his meditative clarity, it’s not likely that “Howl” author Allen Ginsberg managed to conjure up a vision of the future in which a festival named for him would be celebrating its tenth anni-versary (with no signs of shrinking or slow-ing down). The 2013 edition of the Howl Festival promises to “continue the Ginsberg tradition with more poetry, theatrical mad-ness and activities for parents and kids than ever before!” After the three-day Tompkins Square Park festival, HOWL! extends its reach throughout June — in the form of the HOWL! Arts Project (a month-long program of poetry, theater, performance art, music, dance, puppetry and children’s performance to support HOWL! Emergency Life Project — which provides assistance, and a health fund, for the East Village and Lower East Side arts community).

First things first, though. The May 31-June 2 offerings include an opening celebration featuring the work of contemporary poets (and the traditional reading of “Howl”). At the weekend-long “Art Around the Park” event, festivalgoers will connect with more than 140 artists as they turn a giant blank canvas encir-cling the exterior of Tompkins Square Park into an explosion of color and creativity. The Kids Carnival offers games, fairway attractions and art activities for “toddler taggers and pint-sized Picassos” — while those of more advanced years will heed the siren call of Riki Colon’s Men In Skirts “And Still I Rise” (featuring an international cast of singers, dancers and drag performers). Elsewhere, “The Beautification Station” is a marathon reading by the Poetry Project, and “Low Life 7: Bowery Bombshells” features generations of local contemporary and alternative performers — including butoh performance ensemble Vangeline Theater, Velocity Chyaldd, The Rachel Klein Theater and The Duelling Bankheads.

FREE, Fri., May 31 through Sun., June 2 (4:30-7pm on Fri., 11am-7pm on Sat./Sun.). At Tompkins Square Park (enter through south-west entrance, Ave. A & 7th St.). Visit howlfes-tival.com for a full schedule of events.

Just Do Art!

Photo courtesy of the artists

Dance band Maquina Mono (“The Monkey Machine”) will open the Lower East Side Festival of the Arts, at 6pm on Fri., May 24.

Photo by Roe Carroll

At the HOWL! Festival’s 2012 opening celebration, a Greek chorus of voices read their own work, followed by the signature reading of Allen Ginsberg’s “Howl.”

Photo courtesy of the artist

The compositions of Schuyler Iona Press anchor the mashup musical “What I’m Failing to Learn.”

Page 26: May 23, 2013 The Villager

26 May 16 - 22, 2013

Notice is hereby giveN

that license #1270842 has been applied by the under-signed to sell wine at retail in a restaurant under the alco-holic beverage control law at 412-414 East 9th Street, New York, NY 10009 for on-prem-ises consumption. CAGEN JAPANESE LLC

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Vil: 05/23 - 06/27/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of 54 east 64th street toWNhoUse,

llcAuthority filed with NY Dept. of State on 5/9/13. Office loca-tion: NY County. LLC formed in DE on 4/15/13. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: Kelley Drye & Warren, LLP, 101 Park Ave., NY, NY 10178, Attn: John J. McDonald, Esq. DE addr. of LLC: c/o National Registered Agents, Inc., 160 Greentree Dr., Ste. 101, Dover, DE 19904. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/23 - 06/27/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of rs fUNDs DistribUtor llc

Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 3/6/13. Office location: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: 388 Market St., Ste. 1700, San Francisco, CA 94111. LLC formed in DE on 9/6/12. NY Sec. of State des-ignated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corpora-tion System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: c/o Corporation Service Co., 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: broker-dealer, securities and other lawful business.

Vil: 05/23 - 06/27/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of ivP cif ii (aiP

a), l.P.Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 12/14/12. Office location: NY County. LP formed in DE on 12/11/12. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LP upon whom pro-cess against it may be served and shall mail process to the principal business addr.: c/o Insight Venture Associates Coinvestment II, L.P., 680 Fifth Ave., 8th Fl., NY, NY 10019. DE addr. of LP: c/o The Corporation Trust Co., 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Name/addr. of genl. ptr. available from NY Sec. of State. Cert. of LP filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/23 - 06/27/2013

Notice is hereby giveN

that a Tavern Wine license, #TBA has been applied for by SFK Foods, Corp d/b/a Flatiron Green Cafe to sell beer and wine at retail in an on premises establishment. For on premises consump-tion under the ABC law at Flatiron Public Plaza South, Between 22nd & 23rd Streets New York NY 10010.

Vil: 05/16 - 05/23/2013

Notice is hereby giveN

that a restaurant wine license, #TBA has been applied for by RV Partners Inc. d/b/a Bombay Duck to sell beer and wine at retail in an on premises establish-ment. For on premises con-sumption under the ABC law at 190 Bleecker Street New York NY 10012.

Vil: 05/16 - 05/23/2013

Notice is hereby giveN

that a Tavern Wine license, #TBA has been applied for by You’re Almost There, Inc. d/b/a Bibi to sell beer and wine at retail in an on premises establishment. For on premises consumption under the ABC law at 211 East 4th Street New York NY 10009.

Vil: 05/16 - 05/23/2013

Notice of formatioN of limiteD liability

comPaNy. Name: Pacif-ic 4, llc.

Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/08/13. Office location: New York County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, c/o Vin-cent Boitier, 431 Broome Street, New York, New York 10013. Purpose: For any law-ful purpose.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of aPPlicatioN for aUthority for a foreigN limiteD lia-bility comPaNy (llc):

Name: STORY SHELTER, LLC. Application for Author-ity filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/23/2013. Office location: New York County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: C/O STORY SHEL-TER, LLC. 635 West 42nd Street, Apartment 4H, New York, NY 10036. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. Latest date upon which LLC is to dis-solve: No specific date.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of atalaya sPe-cial oPPortUNities fUND (caymaN) iv lP

Authority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 05/01/13. Office location: NY County. LP formed in Cay-man Islands (CI) on 06/16/11. Princ. office of LP: 780 Third Ave., 27th Fl., NY, NY 10017. SSNY designated as agent of LP upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. Name and addr. of each general partner are available from SSNY. Arts. of Org. filed with Registrar of Companies, P.O. Box 123, Ground Fl., Citrus Grove Bldg., Goring Ave., George Town, CI KY1-9000. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of formatioN of east 74th street

briDge, llcArts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/30/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP, Attn: Jay Neveloff, 1177 Ave. of the Americas, NY, NY 10036. Pur-pose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of 53 froNt

street, llcAuthority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/26/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in Dela-ware (DE) on 03/19/13. Princ. office of LLC: 5 Hanover Sq., 25th Fl., NY, NY 10004. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corpora-tion Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. DE addr. of LLC: 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of DE, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of formatioN of NeW Wave Diag-Nostic raDiology,

Pllc Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/06/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY has been designated as an agent upon whom process against the PLLC may be served. The address to which SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the PLLC is to: The PLLC, 400 Jericho Tnpk., Ste. 100, Jericho, NY 11753. Pur-pose: To engage in any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of formatioN of No, No, No, No, No,

yes llcArticles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 02/22/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY has been designated as an agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. The address to which SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC is to: The LLC, 290 Third Avenue, #30A, New York, NY 10010. Purpose: To engage in any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

saNDemar coNstrUc-tioN, llc, a Domestic

llcArts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 3/1/13. Office loca-tion: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Moss & Kalish, PLLC, 122 E. 42nd St., Ste. 2100, NY, NY 10168. General Purposes.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

UNity yoga llc, a Domestic llc

Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 12/10/12. Office location: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 311 W. 127th St. #807, NY, NY 10027-1892. General Purposes.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of JZ reit fUND flatbUsh Portfolio,

llcAuthority filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/26/13. Office location: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: 767 5th Ave., 48th Fl., NY, NY 10153. LLC formed in DE on 4/11/13. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilm-ington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of screamiNg sPirit ProDUctioNs,

llcAuthority filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/26/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in DE on 8/12/11. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to the principal business addr.: c/o Home Box Office, Inc., 1100 Ave. of the Ameri-cas, NY, NY 10036, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilm-ington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of valar veN-

tUres llcAuthority filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/25/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in DE on 4/22/13. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, Attn: CT Corporation System, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE address of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/16 - 06/20/2013

Notice of formatioN of marmelaDe, llc

Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/26/13. Office location: New York County. SSNY desig-nated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 281 Hollow Tree Ridge Road, Darien, CT 06820. Purpose: any lawful activity. The LLC is to be managed by one or more managers.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of carlo balestri

architect, Pllca professional service limited liability company (PLLC). Articles of Organiza-tion filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 1/24/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY has been designated as an agent upon whom process against the PLLC may be served. The address to which SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the PLLC is to: Carlo Balestri Architect, PLLC, 40 Wall Street, 28th Floor, New York, NY 10005. Purpose: To engage in any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of limiteD liability

comPaNy. Name: cmt bootcamP llc.

Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/01/13. Office location: New York County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, 111 Broadway, Suite 1702, New York, New York 10006. Pur-pose: For any lawful purpose.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

aPPlicatioN for aUthority of 114 5th

aveNUe NeW yorK city, llc

filed with the Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/23/13. The LLC was formed in DE 4/19/13. Office loc.: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The principal busi-ness loc. and address SSNY shall mail copy of process is 600 Madison Ave., 20th Fl., New York, NY 10022. The office address in DE is 203 NE Front St., Ste. 101, Milford, DE 19963. Cert. of Formation filed with DE Div. of Corporations, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of WellgeN PoWer,

llcArt. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 2/8/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 330 Madison Ave., 6th Fl., NY, NY 10017. Purpose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of 150th Debt llc

Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/12/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Blue-stone Group, 225 Broadway, 32nd Fl., NY, NY 10007. Pur-pose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of ageNte creativo,

llcArt. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/26/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to c/o Ana Leshen, 451 Broadway, 3rd Fl., NY, NY 10013. Pur-pose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of raPha raciNg Ny

llcArt. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 2/21/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Salans LLP, Att: Jody Saltzman, Esq., 620 Fifth Ave., NY, NY 10020. Purpose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of QUal. of tWg oe fUNDiNg llc

Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 2/22/13. Office loc.: NY County. LLC org. in DE 2/20/13. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to NRAI, 111 Eighth Ave., NY, NY 10011, the Reg. Agt. upon whom proc. may be served. DE off. addr.: 160 Greentree Dr., Ste. 101, Dover, DE 19904. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of maKi bar llc

Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 9/13/12. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: Yaniv Shaky Cohen, 451 Broome St., #5E, NY, NY 10013. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of loNg JohN

silver’s, llcApp. for Auth. filed Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 2/27/13. Off. loc.: NY County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 6/6/69. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011. DE address of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Arts. of Org. filed DE Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of QUalifi-catioN of shaNer

iNDUstries, llcAuthority filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/17/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in DE on 8/12/11. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: c/o CT Corpora-tion System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of 48150 boxWooD

holDiNgs llcArts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State on 8/29/12. Office location: NY County. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: c/o The Community Preservation Corp., 28 E. 28th St., 9th Fl., NY, NY 10016, principal business address. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of 48152 chestNUt

holDiNgs llcArts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State on 7/31/12. Office location: NY County. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: c/o The Community Preservation Corp., 28 E. 28th St., 9th Fl., NY, NY 10016, principal business address. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/09 - 06/13/2013

Notice of formatioN of besame mUcho

llcArts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/7/13. Office location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: c/o Rothstein Kass, 9171 Wilshire Blvd., 5th Fl., Beverly Hills, CA 90210. Pur-pose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of aec PoWer-

floW, llcAuthority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/8/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 3/15/07. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: National Registered Agents, Inc., 111 Eighth Ave., NY, NY 10011, also the reg-istered agent. Address to be maintained in DE: 160 Green-tree Dr., Ste. 101, Dover, DE 19904. Arts of Org. filed with the DE Secretary of State, P.O. Box 898, Dover, DE 19903. Purpose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of berKshire acQUisitioN ii, llc

Authority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/19/13. Office location: NY County. LLC formed in Dela-ware (DE) on 04/17/13. Princ. office of LLC: 7 Hanover Sq., 20th Fl., NY, NY 10004. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corpora-tion Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. DE addr. of LLC: 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

p U b L I c n o t I c e S

Page 27: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 27

TO PUBLISH A LEGAL AD,CONTACT JULIO TUMBACO646.452.2490 • [email protected]

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of 156 east 33rD

street llcAuthority fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/18/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in Dela-ware (DE) on 04/17/13. Princ. offi ce of LLC: c/o CORIGIN, 505 Fifth Ave., NY, NY 10017. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. offi ce. DE addr. of LLC: c/o Corporation Service Co., 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of the State of DE, Corp. Dept., Loockerman & Federal Sts., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

big gUlP hacKiNg llc, a Domestic llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with the SSNY on 3/15/13. Offi ce location: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 415 W. 127th St., NY, NY 10027. General Purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of formatioN of looKoUt PoiNt

films, llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/8/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: c/o S. Reid Kahn, Esq., Kane Kessler, P.C., 1350 Ave. of the Americas, 26th Fl., NY, NY 10019. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of formatioN of barclay 7 realty

llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/19/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: c/o Goldberg Weprin Finkel Goldstein LLP, 1501 Broadway, 22nd Fl., NY, NY 10036. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of formatioN of mb 1200, llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/27/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: Marisa Bellis, 182 Poppasquash Road, Bristol, Rhode Island 02809. Pur-pose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of mcfarlaND DeWey comPaNy, llc

Authority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 4/15/13. Offi ce location: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: 420 Lexington Ave., Ste. 300, NY, NY 10170. LLC formed in DE on 3/12/13. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: c/o CT Corpora-tion System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. fi led with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of PartNers

vii/98 aveNUe a oWNer llc

Authority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 4/18/13. Offi ce location: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: c/o AEW Capital, Two Seaport Lane, Boston, MA 02210-2021. LLC formed in DE on 4/12/13. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: c/o The Corporation Trust Co., 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. fi led with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of select meDia

services, l.l.c.Authority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 4/8/13. Offi ce location: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: 18th Fl. - 1067 W. Cordova St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V6C 1C7. LLC formed in DE on 12/23/97. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilm-ington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. fi led with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of Walleye traD-

iNg aDvisors, llcAuthority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 3/20/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in MN on 3/24/05. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to the principal business address: 16-18 W. 22nd St., NY, NY 10010, Attn: Peter Goddard. MN address of LLC: 14601 27th Ave N, Ste. 102, Plymouth, MN 55447. Cert. of Org. fi led with MN Sec. of State, 60 Empire Dr., Ste. 100, St. Paul, MN 55103. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of ZeNtis sWeet

ovatioNs holDiNg, llc

Authority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 4/12/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in IN on 11/22/06. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail pro-cess to: c/o CT Corpora-tion System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. IN and principal business addr.: 2050 North Oak Rd., Plymouth, IN 46563. Cert. of Org. fi led with IN Sec. of State, 302 W. Washington St., Indianapolis, IN 46204. Purpose: all lawful purposes.

Vil: 05/02 - 06/06/2013

Notice of formatioN of foreigN limiteD liability comPaNy

(llc)Name: Prevention Metrics Advisors LLCApplication for Authority fi led by the Department of State of New York on: 10/26/12 Juris-diction: Delaware Organized on: 2/15/12 Offi ce location: County of New York Principal offi ce: 137 Riverside Drive, #6D, New York, NY 10024 Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: 137 Riv-erside Drive, #6D, New York, NY 10024 Address of offi ce required to be maintained in Delaware 1209 Orange Street Wilmington, DE 19801 Autho-rized offi cer in its Jurisdic-tion is: Secretary of State of Delaware John G. Townsend Building 401 Federal Street, Suite 4. Dover, DE 19901 Purpose: any and all lawful activities

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

caPe eND east holD-iNgs, llc

Arts., of Org., fi led with NY Sec. of State (“SSNY”) 03/28/2013. Offi ce in New York County; SSNY desig-nated agent for service of process with copy mailed to Cape Advisors, Inc., 483 Broadway, 5th Fl. New York, NY 10013, Attn: Curtis Bashaw, All lawful business purposes.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of fortis bara llc

Articles of Organization fi led with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 02/13/12. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY has been des-ignated as an agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. The address to which SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC is to: The LLC, 1196 PARK PLACE, BROOK-LYN NEW YORK 11213. Pur-pose: To engage in any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of limiteD liabil-

ity comPaNy. Name: harPer sPiN llc.

Articles of Organization were fi led with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 09/17/12. Offi ce location: New York County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, 214 W. 21st Street, Apt. 5A, New York, New York 10011. Pur-pose: For any lawful purpose.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of morteNseN miD-atlaNtic of Ny llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/3/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: National Registered Agents, Inc., 111 Eighth Ave., NY, NY 10011, also the reg-istered agent. Purpose: any lawful activities.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of emPire state DeN-tal maNagemeNt, llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/15/13. Offi ce location: NY County. Princ. offi ce of LLC: 577 Isham St., 1G, NY, NY 10034. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to the LLC, Attn: Ysabel Ulerio at the princ. offi ce of the LLC. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of mPP #9 acQUisi-

tioN llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/15/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to c/o Millhouse Peck Properties LLC, 420 Lexing-ton Ave., NY, NY 10170. Pur-pose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

beNito oNe llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/12/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to Carter Ledyard & Mil-burn LLP, Christian Moretti, 2 Wall St., NY, NY 10005. Pur-pose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

samaNtha litZiNger lUtZ, Ph.D. Psycholo-gist Pllc, a Domestic

PllcArts. of Org. fi led with the SSNY on 2/22/13. Offi ce location: New York. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the PLLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Ron-ald Lawrence Crane, Esq., 5 Farmers Rd., Great Neck, NY 11024. Purpose: Psychology

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

arexa rUriK eKstrom aND associates llc

a domestic LLC, Arts. of Org. fi led with the SSNY on 2/20/13. Offi ce location: New York County. SSNY is desig-nated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 35 Canal St., 3rd Fl., NY, NY 10002. General Purposes.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

Notice of formatioN of ePhocUs caPital,

llcArts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/8/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: c/o Kustal & Kustal, PC, 237 W. 35th St., Ste. 1001, NY, NY 10001. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

Vil: 04/25 - 05/30/2013

287a Webster aveNUe llc

Art. Of Org. Filed Sec. of State of NY 01/11/2013. Off. Loc.:New York Co. SSNY des-ignated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY to mail copy of process to The LLC, c/o Ian DeFronze, 1396 Third Avenue, #1B, New York, NY 10075. Purpose:Any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of Us vc Part-

Ners gP, llcAuthority fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/08/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 03/11/13. Princ. offi ce of LLC: 900 Third Ave., 19th Fl., NY, NY 10022. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corporation Service Co. (CSC), 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. DE addr. of LLC: c/o CSC, 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Arts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State, Div. of Corps., John G. Townsend Bldg., 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of sNoWPloW

holDiNgs llcAuthority fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/09/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in Dela-ware (DE) on 04/04/13. Princ. offi ce of LLC: 950 Third Ave., 18th Fl., NY, NY 10022. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o The World-wide Group, Attn: David Lowenfeld at the princ. offi ce of the LLC. DE addr. of LLC: c/o Corporation Service Co., 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. fi led with Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of sNoWPloW

lh llcAuthority fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 04/09/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in Dela-ware (DE) on 04/04/13. Princ. offi ce of LLC: 950 Third Ave., 18th Fl., NY, NY 10022. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o The Worldwide Group, Attn: David Lowenfeld at the princ. offi ce of the LLC. DE addr. of LLC: c/o Corporation Service Co., 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. fi led with Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

a.c. laWreNce West, llc, a Domestic llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with the SSNY on 1/4/13. Offi ce loca-tion: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Leon-ard Franzblau, 729 Seventh Ave., NY, NY 10019. General Purposes.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

D28 caPital llc, a Domestic llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with the SSNY on 1/16/13. Offi ce location: New York County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Douglas A. Lobel P.C., 28 W. 44th St., Ste. 1205, NY, NY 10036. General Purposes.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of formatioN of NelsoN, robiNsoN & el ashmaWy, Pllc

Arts of Org fi led with Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 1/22/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to principal business address: 342 Broadway, #164 NY, NY 10013. Purpose: any lawful act.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of forma-tioN of gretcheN &

Waters llcArticles of Organization fi led with the Secretary of State of New York. SSNY on 03/12/2013, Offi ce located in New York County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC at 1509 Broadway, Suite 1920, New York, NY 10038. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of fbs eDUca-

tioN, llcApp. for Auth. fi led Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/3/13. Offi ce location: NY County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 6/8/12. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: Capitol Services, Inc., 1218 Central Ave., Ste. 100, Albany, NY 12205. DE address of LLC: 1675 South State St., Ste. B, Dover, DE 19901. Arts. of Org. fi led DE Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of formatioN of leslie earl rob-

ertsoN, strUctUral eNgiNeer, llc

Arts. of Org. fi led with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/5/13. Offi ce location: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail pro-cess to: 100 Riverside Blvd., (18-D), NY, NY 10069. Pur-pose: practice the profession of engineering.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of formatioN of 22 bNDo llc

Arts. of Org. fi led Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 2/27/13. Off. loc.: NY County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o Wachtel Masyr & Missry LLP, 885 Second Ave., 47th Fl., NY, NY 10017, Attn: Mitch-ell Fenton, Esq. Purpose: any lawful activity.

Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

Notice of QUalifica-tioN of flUeNt meDi-

cal llc Authority fi led with NY Dept. of State on 4/2/13. Offi ce loca-tion: NY County. Princ. bus. addr.: 377 Broadway, 11th Fl., NY, NY 10013. LLC formed in DE on 8/1/06. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilm-ington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. fi led with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful

purposes.Vil: 04/18 - 05/23/2013

p U b L I c n o t I c e S

PUblic Notice

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO LAW, that the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs will hold a Public Hearing on Wednesday, June 5th, 2013 at 2:00 p.m. at 66 John Street, 11th fl oor, on a petition from RECTOR STREET FOOD ENTERPRISES LTD. to continue to, maintain, and operate an unenclosed sidewalk café at 11 RECTOR STREET in the Borough of Manhattan for a term of two years. REQUESTS FOR COPIES OF THE PROPOSED REVOCABLE CONSENT AGREEMENT MAY BE ADDRESSED TO: DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS: FOIL OFFICER, 42 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10004.

Vil: 05/16 - 05/23/2013

PUblic Notice

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO LAW, that the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs will hold a Public Hearing on Wednes-day, June 5th, 2013 at 2:00 p.m. at 66 John Street, 11th fl oor, on a petition from FRANCIS LOUIS, LLC to continue to, maintain, and operate an unenclosed sidewalk café at 570 HUDSON STREET in the Borough of Manhattan for a term of two years. REQUESTS FOR COPIES OF THE PROPOSED REVOCABLE CONSENT AGREEMENT MAY BE ADDRESSED TO: DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS: FOIL OFFICER, 42 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10004.

Vil: 05/23 - 05/30/2013

PUblic Notice

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO LAW, that the NYC Department of Consumer Affairs will hold a Public Hearing on Wednes-day, June 5th, 2013 at 2:00 p.m. at 66 John Street, 11th fl oor, on a petition from RADIANTE LLC to continue to, maintain, and operate an unenclosed sidewalk café at 131 DUANE ST in the Borough of Manhattan for a term of two years. REQUESTS FOR COPIES OF THE PROPOSED REVOCABLE CONSENT AGREEMENT MAY BE ADDRESSED TO: DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AFFAIRS: FOIL OFFICER, 42 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, NY 10004.

Vil: 05/16 - 05/23/2013

Page 28: May 23, 2013 The Villager

28 May 16 - 22, 2013

Yard, I found my feet spinning cartoonishly fast — I actually imagined the kooky bongos from when Fred Flintstone starts running — plus the bike didn’t really move very much. I ruled out ever using first gear again, except possibly for going up Mount Everest.

Third gear I honestly found a bit hard to pedal in; I don’t know if this was because I had just earlier zipped over the Manhattan Bridge to get to the Navy Yard — maybe blowing out my legs a bit? — but third gear felt “heavy,” and again, the bike didn’t really go very fast.

It was tricky to get into second gear with the twist shifter, requiring a very delicate touch. But once I did, I found second was still slightly too easy for me. I was pedaling a little too fast, and wanted a bit more resistance; meanwhile the bike was not making incredible forward progress. I felt, well...frustrated. Another gear between second and third — a 2½ — was where I wanted to be.

As I continued to pedal around, however, the greater realization dawned on me — in a bit of a letdown — that this bike, no matter what gear it was in, simply would never go any faster.

I returned to the docking station, where Simons demonstrated how to park it.

Grabbing the bicycle by both handlebars, she lined up a small metal triangular prow on its front with the dock, and — explaining, “Use a little force” — pushed it firmly into the slot. A green light displayed, showing the bike had locked into place.

Carlos Rivera, a Citi Bike mechanic, said the cycles are built to handle city conditions.

“Great bikes, durable,” he said. “It’s New York City — they’ve got to be tough.”

As he slowly rode off on one of the Citi Bikes — they were disassembling this Navy Yard bike station, in preparation for deploying all the bikes to the street — I noticed he was “standing” on the pedals, as in not sitting in the seat. This is what cyclists do when climbing a hill, when it’s tough to pedal. I later realized: Rivera must have been in third gear.

So maybe it’s not only me who thinks Citi Bike’s third gear is a bit hard to pedal.

I later asked Simons about the bike’s gears, wondering if maybe mine had been off.

“These are the standard gear settings,” she replied.

Oh well, even if my gears did need a tune-up, probably the answer is simple: The bikes are configured to keep anyone from being able to ride fast — which should make many readers of The Villager extremely happy.

Anaïs Digonnet, a reporter with a French Web TV station who also took a Citi Bike for a spin last week, said these ones are actually lighter than the bike-share cycles they had in Lyon a few years ago. She said it’s fine if the bikes are slow.

“Anyway, in New York you don’t want to ride too crazy,” she said. “The streets are really not made for bicycle.”

On the other hand, her native town is quite bike friendly, she said, noting, “In Lyon we have special areas for the bikes. There is a line. If the driver crosses it, there is a fine, like 90 euros.”

Digonnet said she would ride a Citi Bike in New York, but only on a street with a bike lane — never on a normal street amid busy traffic.

As for the bikes’ lack of speed, Simons said they are really meant for short trips, and so speed isn’t the goal.

“The typical bike-share user is someone who wants to get somewhere and have a bit more control on their way,” she said. “It’s not the bus or subway, and it’s a lot cheaper than a cab.”

Bike-share is also convenient, Simons added, for someone such as herself who might not want to have her bike with her all day, for example, if she’s going out after work, or if rain is forecast later in the day.

As for myself, I was a little underwhelmed by Citi Bike. I don’t exactly need to be in “The Fast & Furious 6” (even if Vin Diesel did grow up in Westbeth), but these wheels were a bit too slow. In the meantime, I think I’ll stick with my 10-speed 1980s road bike.

Again, many Villager readers will be relieved at least to hear that these bike-share cycles won’t be careening around out of control — not at high speeds, anyway.

And who knows? Since these new blue cruisers are safe and slow, maybe some of the Citi Bike critics might even want to try riding one themselves sometime.

‘The Slow, Comfy and Stable’; How Citi Bike rolls

Each Citi Bike has these four basic rules of the road displayed clearly on the top of its handlebar stem.

Continued from page 15

Photos by Lincoln Anderson

Dani Simons demonstrated the right way to pull a bike-share cycle out of the dock — lift it with one hand by the back of the seat and just step backward, and it comes out easily. Don’t try pulling it out by the handlebars — it won’t budge.

Page 29: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 29

Golden years health guidelinesBy HEATHER DUBIN Senior citizens received sound advice on how to “Take Charge of Your Health” at the second annual free community health forum co-sponsored by the New York University Office of Civic Engagement and VillageCare on May 14. Moderated by Dr. Max Gomez, an Emmy award-winning CBS television medical reporter, the event — held at the N.Y.U. Global Center for Academic and Spiritual Life, on Washington Square South — was attended by about 100 people. Audience members listened to five experts discuss personal healthcare issues, and learned preparation tactics for future health challenges. With a clear view of the Freedom Tower, and catered dinner, the seniors were advised to take control of their health, from navigating doctor’s visits to securing end-of-life care. Emma DeVito, president of VillageCare, spoke of the organization’s origins in the 1970s as a community nursing home and its growth into a multifaceted health-care provider. Today, VillageCare includes facilities for people living with H.I.V. and AIDS, plus a new rehabilitation center on W. Houston St. “When we closed the nursing home, we wanted to serve individuals, and 13,000 were served at home last year,” DeVito noted. Alicia Hurley, the university’s vice president of government affairs and com-munity engagement, said, “N.Y.U. has a long history and tradition of community service, particularly in the health arena.” Elizabeth Butson, former publisher of The Villager, the event’s media spon-sor, expressed the importance of having a voice in the changing landscape of health-care. “Planning ahead is necessary to avoid becoming a statistic,” she said. While Gomez infused his speech with humor, he was anything but lighthearted when dispensing guidance. “I’m not just a moderator,” he said. “I was a caregiver for my dad, who passed away a year ago of Alzheimer’s. I know from firsthand experience how important this information is.” Dr. Tara Cortes, executive director of the N.Y.U. College of Nursing / Hartford Institute for Geriatric Nursing, was the first expert. “Age is relative, but you have to keep yourself healthy,” she said. Cortes urged seniors to have a relationship with their primary healthcare provider, whether a physician, nurse or physician’s assis-tant. According to Cortes, only 16 percent of Americans take advantage of Medicare wellness visits; and the first visit (no co-pay) is a question-only exam about cognitive issues, eyesight, screenings and general well-being. She suggested seniors who take 20 to 30 pills a day bring the bottles to their next doctor’s visit. Primary care is for medication review, resources and track-

ing immunizations. Write questions down before your visit. On the legal front, attorney Sharon Cooper, a partner at Gardner, Weiss and Rosenblum LLP, recommended a health-care proxy, someone to communicate your healthcare wishes if you cannot, and a liv-ing will, a written directive of these same wishes, honored by law. These documents dictate whether tube feeding, a ventila-tor or cardiopulmonary resuscitation are administered, if one has a terminal condi-tion or is in a vegetative state. Find a trusted family member or friend for a healthcare proxy. “It helps if they have the same idea you do on end-of-life care, and you can name people in succession,” said Cooper. Since multiple copies are allowed, keep one at home in a marked file, give one to your doctor, and bring one in for surgery. “These are important decisions to have with people when you are healthy,” Cooper said. Forms are available online, and you don’t need an attorney. Dr. Marcia Wade, VillageCare medical director for managed long-term care, said long-term care fills in the gaps between regular insurance and nursing home insur-ance. “People do not leave their home because they do not want to be put in a nursing home,” she said. But after a fall, or not taking medicines, they end up in one. With a personal care attendant or a health-coor-dinated package, people can have better managed long-term care, allowing them to remain at home. “By transporting social workers to them, and primary care help at home, people can stay safely there as long as possible,” Wade said. Wade advocated the shingles vaccine, which reduces shingles by 50 percent, pneumonia vaccine and Prevnar vaccine. Kimberly Williams, Citigold relation-ship manager, said to go over retirement assets, income, expenditures and mort-gages with your banker. Also, seniors should use online banking for reoccurring payments so they won’t forget. The final speaker, Dr. Jonathan Whiteson, director of cardiopulmonary rehabilitation at N.Y.U. Langone Medical Center, Rusk Rehabilitation, is a physiat-rist, who looks at the whole person and how the body functions. Traumatic brain injury and fractures are possible consequences of a fall, and at least a third of people over age 65 will fall every year. Just from a hip fracture, Whiteson said, 25 percent will die in six months, and 25 percent will need lifelong nursing care. To prevent falls, Whiteson said, any kind of movement is important. It can be T’ai Chi or yoga, and even walking in your apartment or building hallways improves cardio. Audience members asked questions of the experts, plus reps of the 10 health-related businesses present. In closing, Gomez concluded, “Old age is not for sissies.”

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Page 30: May 23, 2013 The Villager

30 May 16 - 22, 2013

DEADLINE WEDNESDAY 5:00 PM MAIL 515 CANAL STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013 TEL 646-452-2485 FAX 212-229-2790

CLASSIFIEDS www.thevillager.com

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EMPLOYMENT

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CONSTRUCTIONBIDS WANTED FOR CONSTRUCTION Chen Dance Center is soliciting bids

for alterations to its space70 Mulberry St, NY, NY.

For more info go to our website:www.chendancecenter.org

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LIC PETITE 3BR DPLX LRG STUDIO RM

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Page 31: May 23, 2013 The Villager

May 16 - 22, 2013 31

119 W 23rd St • 212.929.3645 • tekserve.com

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Photos by Don Loggins

Members of the Liz Christy Garden, at Bowery and East Houston St., celebrat-ed the 40th anniversary of the city’s fi rst community garden. There was the famous hat party, with this year’s win-ner sporting a chapeau in the shape of a watering can. There were free hot dogs and nonalcoholic drinks, and a band played. Founded by legendary green-thumb Liz Christy, today the lush swath of foliage across from more recent arrival Whole Foods Market is home to an eight-story-tall Metasequoia, or dawn redwood, the biggest example of the tree in the city. Dawn redwoods were once thought to be extinct, but a former Liz Christy gardener, today only recalled as “the soldier,” brought back a seeding from a remote area of China where a stand of the stately trees was discovered.

Hats off — make that on! —to 40 years at Liz Christy

Page 32: May 23, 2013 The Villager

32 May 16 - 22, 2013

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