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The Paper of Record for Greenwich Village, East Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Union Square, Chinatown and Noho, Since 1933
January 8, 2015 • $1.00 Volume 84 • Number 32
Kings and politicians ask mayor for greatest gift of all: the old P.S. 64 back BY LINCOLN ANDERSON
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oping that this will finally be the year that the old P.S. 64 is restored as a community center, East Village activists trekked down to City Hall in the frigid weather Tuesday afternoon to ask Mayor de Blasio to fulfill their holiday wish.
But, in fact, it’s been a wish ever since the building was sold to a developer 16 years ago. For most of the time since then, it’s sat vacant, even as the neighborhood around it has rapidly gentrified. They were led by City Councilmember Rosie Men-
Chumley’s foes file appeal to block reopening; Hope to 86 historic watering hole BY SERGEI KLEBNIKOV
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humley’s has been out of business for more than seven years following a partial building collapse that forced its closure. The bar, which sported an unmarked doorway, is a legendary location, dating back to the 1920s Prohibition era as a speakeasy.
In April 2007, due to a collapse in a building next door that was being renovated, part of the Chumley’s building’s wall also collapsed. Due to “structural deficiencies,” the city’s Department of Buildings revoked the building permit for 86 Bedford St., Chumley’s location. Over the years, plans to reCHUMLEY’S, continued on p. 12
PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY
OLD P.S. 64, continued on p. 20
Candles burned in Kimlau Square Saturday evening at a memorial for Police Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu.
A moment for healing BY TEQUILA MINSKY
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scaping a drenching rain, dozens of people huddled under two white tents in Kimlau Square that had been erected by volunteers so that Chinatown neighbors could pay their last respects to slain Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu on Sat., Jan. 3. Before noon, Councilmember Margaret Chin had attended the public wake for Liu in Dyker Heights. At the Brooklyn funeral home, the councilmember waited with others in line for two hours
for the viewing. There was also a special separate room at the funeral home for Chinese cultural observance. The vigil in Manhattan’s Chinatown gave the local community a chance to say goodbye. “We put this together very quickly,” said Chin, who represents Chinatown, Lower Manhattan and parts of Soho and the Village. “There are elderly and others who couldn’t make it to the wake.” During her brief statement at the vigil, she said, “The public has come to see how
great these men were.” She also mentioned how, historically, Chinese parents didn’t want their children to become police officers, but that the public outpouring of grief and support has indicated respect for this profession. Liu immigrated from Guangzhou with his family. Glowing red candles circled the plaza, offering some light and a symbol of warmth in the wintery downpour. Inside the square, flames darted from a small drum VIGIL, continued on p. 10
B.P. Brewer on Leichter park flap.................page 2 Memories of feisty G’ma Gussie....................page 9 Cops turn backs on Blaz again......................page 11 Bringing ‘Ubu’ sexy back.............page 16
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