THE VILLAGER, 7/23/2015

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The Paper of Record for Greenwich Village, East Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Union Square, Chinatown and Noho, Since 1933

July 23, 2015 • $1.00 Volume 85 • Number 8

Amid signs of progress, #BlackLivesMatter still pushing for more reform BY ZACH WILLIAMS

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REFORM continued on p. 6

Extra! Library digitizing Villager’s entire archives BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

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he Villager’s archives have entered the digital age, thanks to the Jefferson Market Library. Corinne Neary, the senior librarian at the Sixth Ave. book and research haven, successfully applied for a $2,000 Innovation Project grant from the New York

PHOTO BY LINCOLN ANDERSON

meandering march from Columbus Circle in memorial of Eric Garner brought hundreds of #BlackLivesMatter protesters to the West Side on July 17. One year after the Staten Island man’s death helped inspire a national

movement against police brutality and institutionalized racism, activists acknowledged progress while pressing for more. Speakers at the evening rally spoke to similar themes heard throughout the year of protests, which reached their highest volume last

Public Library, which is being used to fund the project’s first phase. So far, The Villager’s first 26 years have been digitized, from April 1933 to April 1959. The Village library had all of these issues on microfilm. This, in turn, was sent to a facility in Florida, where ARCHIVES continued on p. 3

Feelin’ the funk!.........................page 10

As Steve Herrick, in orange shirt, of the Cooper Square Committee spoke about the project, Carl Siciliano of the Ali Forney Center, in white shirt, looking toward camera, and gay youths and advocates listened.

Bea Arthur Residence a Golden moment for gay homeless youth BY DUNCAN OSBORNE

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sing a $3.3 million grant from the City Council, the Ali Forney Center will renovate an East Village brownstone and open a residence for homeless queer youth there in late summer of 2016. “The last 13 years have been extraordinary,” Carl Siciliano, AFC’s founder and executive director, said at a July 20 event marking the start of the renovation of the E. 13th St. facility. “Our com-

munity has woken up to the need to help our L.G.B.T.Q. youth.” On June 29, AFC, which was founded in 2002, purchased the vacant building for a dollar from the city’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development. The City Council money, which was originally budgeted in 2012, will pay for the renovation. Because AFC owns the building, cash for operations from two grants the agency has from the federal Depart-

ment of Housing and Urban Development can go toward providing services, as opposed to paying rent. “It’s the first building we own, which is a real game changer,” said Alex Roque, AFC’s director of development. The 18-bed residence is named for actress Bea Arthur, who left $300,000 to AFC in her will. Arthur died in 2009. The beds will add to AFC’s existing inventory of HOMELESS continued on p. 26

St. Vincent’s park coming soon........................page 7 Skenazy on prison power abuse.....................page 13 The joy of sax in Wash. Sq. Park.......................page 15 www.TheVillager.com


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