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Pride March about-face: Will end in Chelsea BY DUNCAN OSBORNE
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fter saying as recently as January that this year’s Pride March would be staged in Chelsea and end at 29th St. and Fifth Ave., the organization that produces the parade and related events has reversed course. The march will now be staged in the blocks above 26th St. and Fifth Ave., in the Flatiron District, and will end at 23rd St. and Seventh Ave. “Our intention originally was to go the exact same route as last year,” said James Fallarino, the spokesperson for Heritage of Pride, the group that produces the march and related events. “After we got the community feedback and we spoke with folks in the Mayor’s Office, Corey Johnson’s Office and the N.Y.P.D., all of us got together to figure out what made the most sense.” The 2019 march commemorates the 50th anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall Riots, which mark the start of the modern L.G.B.T.Q. rights movement. The first march took place in 1970 and it has taken various routes in the years since. This year, the march will head south on Fifth Ave., west on Eighth St. and Christopher St. past the Stonewall Inn, then north on Seventh Ave. to the
dispersal area. permit using last In 2018, the year’s route when march was staged Gay City News, in Chelsea, which a sister paper of enraged some lothis newspaper, cal residents, in contacted them part because they for comment. were only told of The March the plan very close 19 press release to the date of the that announced event. The march the 2019 route always occurs on quoted Julian the last Sunday Sanjivan and in June. Heritage Chris Frederick, of Pride promtwo senior HOP ised Chelsea resimembers, Mayor dents that continBill de Blasio gents would only and Corey Johnbriefly test sound son, the openly systems during gay speaker of the day and that This year’s Pride March will star t the City Council. discipline held in in the Flatiron District, head down Johnson reprethe morning, but to the Village and then finish in sents Chelsea, collapsed by the Chelsea. along with the afternoon. The West Village and last contingents, which were comprised Hell’s Kitchen, and has had to contend of an estimated 50,000 marchers, left with the competing demands of resiChelsea at about 7 p.m. The last march- dents there and the broader L.G.B.T.Q. ers arrived at the dispersal area at 9:14 community. pm. The march always begins at noon. “As we commemorate the 50th anThis year, some Chelsea residents niversary of the Stonewall Uprising, were angered because they first learned it is fitting that we will march down that HOP had applied for a city parade Fifth Ave., past the Stonewall Inn and
through the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village and Chelsea, cradles of the modern L.G.B.T.Q. civil rights movement,” Johnson said in the press release. “I want to thank Mayor de Blasio, the N.Y.P.D., NYC Pride and all their partners for their hard work in planning WorldPride NYC 2019, a tremendous logistical feat.” HOP, which also goes by the name NYC Pride, is expecting 150,000 marchers this year — three times last year’s total, in large part because WorldPride is taking place simultaneously, the first time the global gathering will be held in the U.S. Since 2010, the city has required that all parades last no longer than five hours. The Pride March, which is one of the four largest public events in the city, has not come close to that target in years. The 2017 march was just under 10 hours long, and the marches in 2016 and 2015 were each more than eight hours long. “That’s the big thing now is figuring out how to get this moving,” Fallarino said. “We want everyone to be seen and we want them thinking about everybody else, as well.”
Williams talks on traffic tax, SBS, Two Bridges my only caveat,” Williams said, of keeping an eye on where the funds go. Williams was also queried about the proposed Two Bridges towers development plans. “The fact that they went around ULURP is ridiculous,” scoffed Williams, referring to the review process that the City Planning Commission allowed the towers to avoid. He noted that the public advocate, in fact, can appoint people to the City Planning Commission. “I want to put someone in who has a different point of view with that, because overdevelopment obviously is a huge issue,” he said. Williams noted that, even if developments were being properly devoted to affordable housing, most people don’t want to live next to tall buildings. “I’ve called for a moratorium on most rezonings,” he said. “And I’ve also called for a racial-impact study to be done before rezonings go through, because we are failing. And if we’re going to ask people to accept some density, it should be for the housing that we actually need — and I haven’t seen that.” A number of C.B. 3 members told Williams that the new M.T.A. plan to reduce stops on the M14A and M14D — the 14th St. crosstown bus — while implementing a Select Bus Service for those routes, would harm the commu-
BY GABE HERMAN
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ust a week into his new job as the city’s public advocate, Jumaane Williams visited Community Board 3 on March 26. Williams said he came to say thank you and hear from board members about what concerns are most pressing in the East Village, the Lower East Side and Chinatown. Issues raised to him included proposed changes to the M14 bus routes and congestion pricing. Williams received a warm reception as he was introduced at the meeting, held in the auditorium at P.S. 20 at 166 Essex St. “Community boards are dear to me,” Williams said, noting he started out as a member of Community Board 18 in Brooklyn 20 years ago. He said he knew how critically important community boards are, and he thanked those who voted for him in the race for advocate. “For those who didn’t, I’m still your public advocate,” he said to laughs. “I have a job to do and that includes making sure your issues are heard, as well.” Nancy Ortiz, the board’s second vice chairperson, asked Williams to give his position on congestion pricing. “I may get some boos, but I do support congestion pricing,” he responded, mostly to applause. Williams called the Schneps Media
Jumaane Williams speaking at Communit y Board 3 on Tues., March 26.
initiative “critically important.” It’s a matter of parity, he said, since subway riders are usually the ones asked to pay, but drivers should contribute funding, as well, for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Williams said he was open to exemptions on the congestion surcharge, such as for disabled and elderly people. And he stressed that he wants to make sure the funds actually would go to the M.T.A. “I do not trust the governor. That is
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nity. One member called the plan horrendous and a disservice that would disenfranchise older people, who would have to walk extra blocks to reach a bus stop. “We need your help in saving the M14 bus stops,” C.B. 3 member Lee Berman urged Williams. The public advocate said he was still learning about the issue and didn’t have a full answer. He assured board members that he had also listened to local residents’ testimony criticizing the plan during the “public session” at the start of the meeting. Among those speaking against the bus plan was Kate Puls, co-chairperson of the Ninth St. A1 Block Association. She said she was representing the group’s 80 members, plus hundreds of seniors, parents and children in Alphabet City. “The SBS will be welcome, but we rely on all the stops,” she stressed. C.B. 3 District Manager Susan Stetzer said that SBS being added to a local route could actually decrease ridership on local buses, which happened to the M15. She said that change led to local buses arriving as much as 20 minutes apart. Stetzer urged people to ask questions about the full impact of having SBS and local routes, because even if all stops were kept, it could still have negative results. April 4, 2019
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Police Blotter repeatedly kicking the front door and cracking it before fleeing the scene.
Sixth Precinct
13th St. stabbing Police are searching for a suspect believed to have stabbed a 38-year-old man near the corner of W. 13th St. and Broadway around 6:40 p.m. on Feb. 20. Cops say the alleged stabber approached the victim and then jabbed him once in the torso with a cutting instrument. E.M.S. medics responded to the scene and transported the victim to the hospital, where he was treated and released. The alleged attacker is described as a Hispanic male with curly or wavy hair, wearing a black jacket, black jeans and tan boots. Anyone with information is asked to call the Police Department’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). Tips can also be submitted on the CrimeStoppers Web site at WWW.NYPDCRIMESTOPPERS.COM, on Twitter @NYPDTips or by texting to 274637 (CRIMES) then enter TIP577. All tips are strictly confidential.
‘Punches girlfriend’ Police have arrested a local actor for allegedly punching his 39-year-old girlfriend in the left eye during an argument sometime between 4:40 p.m. and 5:15 p.m. on Sun., March 31, in their W. 10th St. apartment. The woman was reportedly left with a black eye and intense pain. William Geberth, 43, was arrested at the scene.
Whole Foods scam Two employees at the Whole Foods Market on 14th St. between University Place and Broadway have been arrested for allegedly carrying out a months-long scheme to make money through fraudulent returns at the store by using old receipts. Ashley M. Harvey, 22, and Cecely Reyes, 27, reportedly stole $3,287 from the place between Sat., Oct. 13, and Tues., March 26. The two women were arrested March 26.
Fifth Precinct
Big Mac attack Police said that on March 25, at 10:25 a.m., a 33-year-old male was sitting inside the McDonald’s at 262 Canal St., between Lafayette St. and Broadway, when a woman who was unknown to him began making anti-Hispanic statements at him. The woman then picked up a chair and struck the man on the face with it. The attacker then fled the location and tried to get into the Canal St. train station but was unable to get past the turnstile. The victim was removed to the New York-Presbyterian Lower Manhattan Hospital for a contusion to his face. The suspect is described as white,
COURTESY N.Y.P.D.
This man allegedly stabbed a man on 13th St., according to police.
Phony phone sales
around 35 to 45 years old, 5-feet-2-inches tall and weighing 180 pounds. Anyone with information should contact the CrimeStoppers Hotline. (See “13th St. stabbing” item, above.)
Seventh Precinct
Body in water Police said that on Thurs., March 21, just after 6 p.m., police responded to a 911 call of a person in the water near the Williamsburg Bridge. Upon arrival, Harbor Unit officers recovered an unconscious and unidentified male from the water. The man was transported to the E. 23rd St. pier and was pronounced dead by E.M.S. The city’s Medical Examiner will determine the cause of death and the investigation is ongoing. On April 3, a police spokesperson said the man was 31 and decomposed, but he could not provide more details. He said police, per protocol, are not releasing the man’s name because they have not yet located family members to notify them of the man’s death.
First Precinct
Luxe crooks
A 24-year-old employee at Russell Cellular, a Verizon Wireless retailer, at 154 W. 14th St., was arrested Tues., March 26, for stealing $6,070 worth of electronics on Tues., March 5, between 3 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., police said. The store says Elijah Alexandra, who is no longer employed by the shop, made up multiple false transactions over that period and stole three iPads, 12 iPhones, 3 Samsung phones and a personal hotspot.
Teen caffeine team Police arrested a 15-year-old on Mon., March 25, for allegedly attempting to break into Blackstone Coffee Roasters, at 502 Hudson St., near Christopher St., shortly before midnight on Fri., March 15. He and another teen are accused of
COURTESY N.Y.P.D.
Police say this woman shouted anti-Hispanic insults at a man, then clocked him with a chair at the Canal St. McDonald’s.
Police arrested Anibal Zaldivar, 60, on March 30 in connection with two recent Soho store robberies. The first occurred Sat., March 23, around 3:15 p.m. at luxury consignment shop The RealReal, at 80 Wooster St. Police said he and an elderly black woman walked into the store together and grabbed a $1,145 pair of Gucci shoes from a display and hid them in her shoulder bag before leaving. The incident went unreported for six days. On Sun., March 24, at the Polo Ralph Lauren store on 109 Prince St. around 6:45 p.m., the man is alleged to have taken two sweaters and two pair of jeans from a shelf, concealing them and fleeing north on Greene St. The stolen goods were worth a total of $1,186.
Rico Burney and Lincoln Anderson
The Villager (USPS 578930) ISSN 0042-6202 Copyright © 2019 by Schneps Media is published weekly by Schneps Media, One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. 52 times a year. Business and Editorial Offices: One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. Accounting and Circulation Offices: Schneps Media, One Metrotech North, 10th floor Brooklyn, NY 11201. Call 718-260-2500 to subscribe. Periodicals postage prices is paid at New York, N.Y. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Villager, One Metrotech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Annual subscription by mail in Manhattan and Brooklyn $29 ($35 elsewhere). Single copy price at office and newsstands is $1. The entire contents of newspaper, including advertising, are copyrighted and no part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher - © 2019 Schneps Media.
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Obituary
Henry Stern, 83, Parks chief under two mayors how it got in. Greitzer recalled another time when Stern was at her Village apartment for a gathering and he just lied down on the floor and took a nap, while people were talking. Stern had a dog, Boomer, and in another quirk, he would tally the number of times people pet him. Stern’s humor could sometimes be seen as politically incorrect. In later years in his post, he was accused of discr imination against black and Hispanic employees in a federal class-action lawsuit. He denied the accusations. The city settled the case in 2008 for $20 million. Greitzer said that Stern often hung out at the Village Independent Democrats club, which endorsed him and Bobby Wagner for the two councilmember at large seats. Stern was a Liberal while Wagner was a Democrat. “There were many sides to Henry. He was very smart and had a good memory,” Greitzer said. She recalled him talking to her about becoming a father, about its obligations and if he could do a good job. Stern married Dr. Margaret Ewing in 1976. He is survived by her and two sons, Jared and Kenan, along with a sister Susanne, brother Kenneth and five grandchildren. Stern was born on May 1, 1935. He grew up in Inwood, in northern Manhattan. His father sold tents and his mother was a bookkeeper. He graduated from Bronx High School of Science at age 15 and earned a Harvard Law degree at 22. At a memorial service at Park East Synagogue on the Upper East Side on March 31, family and longtime colleagues spoke of Stern’s decades in public service and shared quirky stories about his personality. “His greatest legacy is the people he brought together,” said son Jared, “and who shared his passion for public service, including for public parks.” Jared noted his father’s famous penchant for giving out “park names” to people, handing out more than 6,000 nicknames over all. His own park name was Starquest, “Star” from Stern and “Quest” for his love of questioning things.
BY GABE HERMAN
F
ormer Parks Commissioner Henry Stern, who was passionate about green spaces and grew the city’s parklands by 1,600 acres, died on March 28. He was 83 and reportedly died of complications from Parkinson’s disease. Stern lived on the Upper East Side but had a long connection to Greenwich Village, according to Jonathan Kuhn, director of art and antiquities for the Parks Department. As assistant to Borough President Constance Motley in the early 1960s, Stern was a liaison to Community Board 2. Stern was also a councilmember at large in the 1970s. During his early political years he worked often with Tony Dapolito, a longtime leader of C.B. 2 and its Parks Committee. Stern was also close to former Mayor Ed Koch, and would sometimes go to the Film Forum with him to watch movies, according to Kuhn. “He had a great affection for the Village,” Kuhn said. When asked about Stern’s personality, Kuhn said he could be very demanding, and was interested in history and streetscapes. “He was a passionate advocate for open space,” Kuhn said. Stern served as the city’s Parks commissioner from 1983 to 1990 under Koch and from 1994 to 2002 under former Mayor Rudy Giuliani. Kuhn said that in the mid-’90s, Stern set up the Partnerships for Parks, which cultivated friends groups for parks. The effects in the Village alone can be seen in friends groups for such parks as Abingdon Square, Jackson Square and Christopher Park. Kuhn said that Stern, along with former Parks Commissioner Gordon Davis, both inherited the parks under hard times. He said both Stern and Davis improved the city’s green spaces through a philosophy that included, “have the public feel some ownership over their parks and some deeper connection, rather than it being something remote and government will just take care of. A partnership between citizens and government. A pretty brilliant idea,” Kuhn
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COURTESY STERN FAMILY
Parks Commissioner Henr y Stern, right, with Mayor Ed Koch.
said. Stern issued the historical-signs project, so every park would have signs for people to identify them. The signs would give background about who a particular park was named after and that person’s accomplishments. Stern created more than 1,000 of the signs and often wrote them himself. Village parks were given names like Father Demo Square and Golden Swan Garden, the latter for a former cafe at the W. Fourth St. and Sixth Ave. site. Stern wanted to honor Dapolito by naming the Thompson St. Playground after him, but there was a rule that parks could not be named for living people. So it was called Vesuvio Playground for the bakery the C.B. icon ran. After Dapolito’s death, the Carmine St. Recreation Center — a Parks Department facility — was named for him. “He was serious when he was working, and eccentric in other ways,” recalled Carol Greitzer, a former longtime councilmember who worked with Stern when he was a councilmember at large. Greitzer said that once when Stern was Parks commissioner, someone went to see him at his office at The Arsenal in Central Park for an interview, and Stern was sitting there with a live duck. No one knew where the duck came from or TVG
“My dad was not a conventional father,” said Kenneth, to laughs in the packed sanctuary. He said his father had a dry humor and wit, and wouldn’t take anything at face value. “Henry made the parks a place of joy,” said former Mayor Giuliani at the service. “You can’t think of Henry without smiling and laughing.” Giuliani noted that Stern was able to institutionalize his legacy over two terms as Parks commissioner. “I was proud to be his friend,” Giuliani said, “but I was prouder he did something very special for the city I love.” Ian R. Shapiro, a former assistant to Stern, noted that Stern introduced using animal art in every playground, such as sprinklers shaped like different creatures. And he wanted every traffic triangle to be turned into a green space, known as “greenstreets.” Stern famously held tree funerals when ones were cut down or destroyed. Shapiro recalled that after one such event, Stern was walking away when a reporter asked what the message of the tree funeral was. “Don’t f— with our trees,” Stern replied. Other officials at the memorial service included Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, former Borough President Ruth Messinger, Gordon Davis and current Parks Commissioner Mitchell Silver. In a statement to this paper, Silver said of Henry, “he was unique, memorable, and most of all, a dedicated public servant. We are grateful for his passion for all things parks; his work brought our city’s green spaces back into the forefront of public consciousness. His legacy will live on eternally.” Adrian Benepe, Parks commissioner from 2002-12, said at the service that Stern was “an unabashed tree hugger,” who fought for “arborcide” laws and had a guide published about the city’s trees. He noted that Stern initiated the creation of the City Parks Foundation and other nonprofits that spend $180 million annually for parks. Benepe said that Stern was trying to create a community of park devotees in handing out so many nicknames. And he said that Stern could be quirky, demanding, worked long hours, and always had time to listen to people, especially those without any type of lofty status. Rabbi Arthur Schneier said at the memorial that Stern remained humble even with all his accomplishments, and he didn’t have ego or pride. And the rabbi said he had never been to a memorial service that shared so much laughter, and history of New York City. Schneps Media
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HOLY WEEK
At The Church of St. Luke in the Fields
SUNDAY, APRIL 14—PALM SUNDAY FRIDAY, APRIL 19—GOOD FRIDAY Services at 8 am, 9:15 am* 9:00 am Morning Prayer & 11:15 am* 1:00 pm Vigil at the Altar of Repose ends MONDAY, APRIL 15 & 1:00 pm Good Friday Liturgy TUESDAY, APRIL 16 6:30 pm Stations of the Cross 6:15 pm Said Eucharist in the Chapel SATURDAY, APRIL 20— WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17 HOLY SATURDAY 6:15 pm Stations of the Cross & 10:00 am Morning Prayer Holy Eucharist 8:00 pm The Great Vigil of Easter THURSDAY, APRIL 18— MAUNDY THURSDAY 6:30 pm Choral Eucharist with Foot Washing, Agape Supper and Stripping of the Altar 8:00 pm Vigil at the Altar of Repose begins
SUNDAY, APRIL 21—EASTER DAY Services at 8 am, 9:15 am* & 11:15 am* 10:15 am Easter Egg Hunt
*Child care is available for children ages 6 and under
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Mercer Playground redesign kicks off BY GABE HERMAN
A
public meeting was held in Greenwich Village on March 27 to get design ideas from the community for an upcoming renovation of Mercer Playground. New York University has pledged $380,000 for upgrades to the playground as part of its Core Plan commitment to the neighborhood, which will invest in local community projects. It was agreed upon as part of N.Y.U.’s development projects in the immediate area, which were opposed by much of the community. Mercer Playground is a thin strip that runs the length of the block between Bleecker and W. Third Sts. Under former Planning Czar Robert Moses, the parcel was put under the city Department of Transportation’s jurisdiction as part of a plan to widen the street for the Lower Manhattan Expressway project. The cross-borough highway was defeated by Jane Jacobs and community advocates in the late 1960s, but the strip remained under D.O.T. control. In 1991, the community group L.M.N.O.P. raised funds for the playground’s design and development for preteens. The playground, which is mostly paved, currently has little in it. There’s a curving oval path intended for bik-
ing, scooters and running a presentation of the plan games. There’s a plot of and will be able to offer daffodils at each end, further comments and each fully enclosed input. by metal bars. Simon said he There are several especially wanted benches and a to hear from kids water sprinkler. about what they Mercer Playwant for the park. ground was ofSeveral youngficially mapped sters attended and as city parkland mostly said they in 2016 as part wanted a skate of N.Y.U.’s Core park, with some Plan, and is now adding it should managed by the also be for bikes Parks Depart- A long view of Mercer Playground, and scooters. ment. Other ideas which is mostly paved. The meeting raised by locals this past Wednesincluded an area day was hosted by the Parks Depart- for parkour — a recreational sort of ment’s Steve Simon, chief of staff to obstacle-course training — and enthe Manhattan borough commissioner. hancing the playground’s water feature, Other officials there included a repre- partly since it could offset noise. sentative from N.Y.U. Community EnA space for seniors was mentioned gagement, and reps from Councilmem- by numerous people, and a basketball ber Margaret Chin and Manhattan court was also mentioned. One woman, Borough President Gale Brewer’s of- however, said she was against a hoops fices. court because it would be noisy. She The meeting kicked off the formal also said a basketball court had been process for the park’s renovation. A installed there years ago, but teens schematic design will be developed came in and drove away the younger based on community input, Simon said, kids and took it over, and the court had and then go to Community Board 2 for to be removed. public review no later than September. Several people noted that the park ofThe public will then be invited back for ten attracts homeless people, who sleep
on benches and wash clothes in the sprinkler. Some also said the side paths on either side of the park are partially hidden and invite drug use and other sketchy behavior. The more accessible the park is to the general public, people said, the less inviting it would be for vagrants. Larry Maslon, chairperson of the Superblock Stewardship Advisory Committee, which represents the superblock’s 2,000 residents, said he hoped the park would be for tweens, to complement nearby spaces like a park in Washington Square Village for younger kids. Maslon said he disliked the “prison for daffodils” at either end of the park. “It is useless. It is locked,” he said. There are two fire lanes that split the park into thirds, and people said they made good barriers for dividing the park’s use into three sections. Local resident Steve Rodriguez, known as the “Mayor of New York City Skateboarding,” is a professional “skater” who has helped the city design more than 20 skate parks and spaces for mixed uses. “I think you could have a great, complete park that checks many boxes for residents of the area. And I’d be willing to offer my services for free,” Rodriguez said to applause. “I think we’re going to take you up on that offer,” Simon responded.
Celebrating Village Historic District at 50 BY GABE HERMAN
T
he Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation will host events throughout this year to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the landmarking of the Village as a historic district. G.V.S.H.P. was founded in 1980 and works to protect the historic district, which includes about 100 blocks and 2,300 buildings. The actual anniversary of the district’s landmarking is April 29, 1969. G.V.S.H.P. will host a big event on Sat., April 13, in Washington Square Park. There will also be a wide range of open-house events that weekend involving 70 local partners, including businesses, theaters, schools and churches. Andrew Berman, executive director of G.V.S.H.P., said that community organizations will open their doors to the public to give a look at what these groups do and how they play a part in preserving the area’s history. “We’re hoping it’s another way people will be able to engage with and appreciate the really rich diversity of the Greenwich Village Historic District,” Berman said. The April 13 event in the park will run
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from noon to 3 p.m. SpeakBerman said that in April, ers will include City the society will begin Council Speaker Corey releasing interactive Johnson; G.V.S.H.P tools to view images Director Berman; of buildings from Sarah Carroll, the today and back in chairperson of the 1969, or somecity’s Landmarks times even earlier. Preservation People will also Commission, and be able to look up other local politiinformation about cians. important sites Several musical and events in the acts will perform district’s history. at the park event, Site users will be including Ryo Saable to search by COURTESY G.V.S.H.P. saki & The Jazz A map of the Greenwich Village various categories, Park Rangers, and Historic District. such as great writRichard Barone & ers, 19th-century Friends. Barone row houses or hosts Village Nights, a monthly salon churches. series that features local musicians and “It’s a way for people to engage with a celebration of the Village’s musical his- and appreciate the really rich history of tory. the district from whatever angle interests That weekend will also include several you most,” Berman said. walking tours, including a literary pub When asked about the general state crawl, an L.G.B.T.Q. history tour, a tour of the Village and preservation efforts, of Abingdon Square Park, and another Berman said that, on the one hand, it’s one that explores the historic district’s remarkable that the area has been able to countercultural bohemia. A full list of maintain its character and human scale, events and participating organizations especially when sandwiched between big for the weekend can be on the gvshp.org business districts in Midtown and Lower web site, under “events.” Manhattan. TVG
“On the other hand, it’s under tremendous pressure,” Berman said of the Village. He called the 1969 historic district designation just the start of the battle. “You have to be vigilant every day to make sure that the provisions are enforced,” he noted, “and that bad decisions aren’t made by the Landmarks Preservation Commission to allow things that they shouldn’t allow. So it’s a constant effort.” One current battle is a push to landmark the interior of the White Horse Tavern. The historic bar recently changed ownership and many locals are concerned that it will change or lose its character. Berman said the Village unfortunately has been a victim of its own success, being so popular that today it’s hard for anybody other than the wealthy to move in. “One of the challenges we struggle with is how can we hold onto small businesses,” he said. “How can we make sure that the Village remains a place that’s open to people of all socioeconomic levels. How can we keep it culturally vital.” The preservationist added there are no easy answers. “I think we’re making some progress on some fronts,” he said, “but we definitely have a lot further to go on others.” Schneps Media
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Announcement of Public Hearing for the East Side Coastal Resiliency (ESCR) Project located within the Borough of Manhattan, New York County, New York AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development ACTION: Notice of Availability and request for comments; Notice of public hearing. SUMMARY: The New York City Office of Management and Budget (OMB) announces the availability of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) and a public hearing on July 31, 2019, in the Borough of Manhattan, New York (NY) for the East Side Coastal Resiliency (ESCR) Project (the Proposed Project). The Proposed Project was developed from a concept conceived through Rebuild by Design (RBD), a design competition to promote the development of resiliency in the Sandy-affected region and has been allocated United States (US) Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Community Development Block Grant-Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR) grant funds. The Proposed Project is a comprehensive urban water management project designed to reduce the risk of floods from coastal storm surges and/or flooding from high-intensity rainfall events. The Proposed Project would be located in the Borough of Manhattan in New York County, NY. Further description of the Proposed Project and Project Area is provided in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section. The DEIS includes a detailed project description and a description of environmental impacts, including direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts, associated with a No Action Alternative, Preferred Alternative, and three other With Action Alternatives. We request your comments on the ESCR DEIS. AVAILABILITY OF THE DEIS: Electronic copies of the DEIS are available for public review on the following websites: http://www.nyc.gov/cdbgdr and https://www.nycgovparks.org/planning-and- building/planning/neighborhooddevelopment/east-side-coastal-resiliency CDs and paper copies of the DEIS will also be available for review at the following locations during regular business hours: OMB, 255 Greenwich Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10007 NYC Department of Parks & Recreation, The Arsenal, Central Park, 830 Fifth Avenue, Room 401, New York, NY 10065 DATES AND PUBLIC COMMENT: The DEIS will be available at the locations identified in the AVAILABILITY OF THE DEIS section starting on April 5, 2019. This date will mark the beginning of the public comment period. Comments and related material must be submitted on or before August 15, 2019, using one of the methods in the ADDRESSES section of this NOA. A public hearing will be held by the New York City Planning Commission (CPC) along with OMB and the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation (NYC Parks), on Wednesday, July 31, 2019, at 10:00 AM to provide an opportunity for oral comments. NYC Parks has assumed the responsibilities of Lead Agency under the New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) and the New York City Environmental Quality Review (CEQR) so comments will be accepted by NYC Parks at the public hearing as well. The public hearing will be held at 120 Broadway, Concourse Level, New York, NY, 10271. Additional details regarding the public hearing are provided in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section. Any oral comments provided at the meeting will be transcribed and considered by OMB and NYC Parks. Please note that the hearing may close early if all business is finished. Written comments and related material for consideration in the Final EIS (FEIS) may also be submitted to OMB or NYC Parks at that meeting. ADDRESSES: You may submit comments using any of the following methods: (1) Email: CDBGDR-Enviro@omb.nyc.gov (2) Online at http://www.nyc.gov/cdbgdr (3) Mail: New York City Office of Management and Budget, c/o Calvin Johnson, Assistant Director CDBG-DR, 255 Greenwich Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10007 (4) Hand delivery: Same as mail address above, between 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday, except Federal and State holidays. To avoid duplication, please use only one of these methods. OMB will maintain a paper copy of the DEIS for public review at 255 Greenwich Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY, 10007. A paper copy of the DEIS will also be available at NYC Parks offices at the Arsenal, Central Park, 830 Fifth Avenue, Room 401, New York, NY 10065. The document will be available for inspection or copying at this location between 9:00 AM. and 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday, except Federal and State holidays. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions regarding this notice or on the public hearing, please write to or e-mail: Calvin Johnson, Assistant Director CDBG-DR New York City Office of Management and Budget 255 Greenwich Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10007 Fax: 212-788-6222, Telephone: 212-788-6282, Email: CDBGDR-Enviro@omb.nyc.gov SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Project Description: OMB and NYC Parks has prepared a DEIS for the Proposed Project. The Proposed Project was selected by HUD through the RBD competition, and HUD CDBG–DR funds have been allocated for it. CDBG–DR funding requires compliance with NEPA as stated in HUD s regulations outlined in 24 CFR Part 58. The Proposed Project is also subject to the CEQ NEPA regulations at 40 CFR Parts 1500-1508. On behalf of HUD through the City of New York, as the recipient of HUD grant funds, OMB is the “Responsible Entity,” as defined by HUD regulations at 24 CFR § 58.2(a)(7)(i), for the Proposed Project. In accordance with criteria in 40 CFR § 1501.5(c), HUD has designated OMB as the Lead Agency to prepare the DEIS for the Proposed Project in accordance with NEPA (42 USC §§ 4321 et seq.). The Proposed Project would occur on the East Side of the Borough of Manhattan, New York County, NY. The Project Area begins at Montgomery Street to the south and extends north along the waterfront to East 25th Street and is composed of two sub-areas: Project Area One and Project Area Two for environmental review and design purposes. Project Area One extends from Montgomery Street on the south to the north end of John V. Lindsay East River Park (East River Park) at about East 13th Street. Project Area One is approximately 61 acres and consists primarily of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt East River Drive (the FDR Drive) right-of-way, a portion of Pier 42 and Corlears Hook Park as well as East River Park. The majority of Project Area One is within East River Park and includes four existing pedestrian bridges across the FDR Drive to East River Park (Corlears Hook, Delancey Street, East 6th Street, and East 10th Street Bridges) and the Houston Street overpass. Project Area Two is approximately 21 acres and extends north and east from Project Area One, from East 13th Street to East 25th Street. In addition to the FDR Drive right-of- way, Project Area Two includes the Consolidated Edison Company of New York (Con Edison) East 13th Street Substation and the East River Generating Station, Murphy Brothers Playground, Stuyvesant Cove Park, Asser Levy Recreational Center and Playground, the VA Medical Center, and in-street segments along East 20th Street, East 25th Street, and along and under the FDR Drive. The Proposed Project was developed as a concept through the RBD competition to respond to Hurricane Sandy s devastation and promote resiliency in the Sandy-affected region. Hurricane Sandy underscored the City s need to bolster its resiliency efforts to protect property, vulnerable populations, and critical infrastructure during design storm events. The need to protect the area is magnified by the potential for more frequent flooding events and would align with resiliency planning goals described in OneNYC and A Stronger, More Resilient New York. To that end, the purpose of the Proposed Project is to address this coastal flooding vulnerability in a manner that reduces the flooding risk while enhancing waterfront open spaces and access to the waterfront. Specifically, the Proposed Project includes the construction of flood risk reduction measures to address the impacts of inland and coastal flooding on the quality of the natural and human environment due to both storm hazards and sea level rise within the Project Area. The principal objectives of the Proposed Project are as follows: (1) provide a reliable coastal flood protection system against the design storm event for the protected area; (2) improve access to, and enhance open space resources along, the waterfront, including East River Park and Stuyvesant Cove Park; (3) respond quickly to the urgent need for flood protection and resiliency, particularly for communities that have a large concentration of residents in affordable and public housing units along the proposed Project Area; and (4) achieve implementation milestones and comply with the conditions attached to funding allocations as established by HUD, including scheduling milestones. Additionally, design considerations for the proposed project include: (1) reliability of the proposed coastal flood protection system; (2) urban design compatibility and enhancements; (3) improving the ecology and resiliency of East River Park; (4) minimizing environmental effects, including construction-related effects, and disruptions to public right of way; (5) constructability; (6) operational needs; (7) maintenance needs; (8) minimizing use of pre-storm event deployable structures; (9) FEMA accreditation; (10) scheduling that meets HUD milestones; and (11) cost effectiveness. DEIS: The DEIS has been prepared and is available for public comment. The DEIS is available for review on the project websites at http://www.nyc.gov/cdbgdr or https://www.nycgovparks.org/planning-and-building/planning/neighborhooddevelopment/east-side-coastal-resiliency as well as at the locations listed above in ADDRESSES. The DEIS includes a detailed project description and describes environmental impacts, including direct, indirect, and cumulative environmental impacts, associated with No Action Alternative, the Preferred Alternative, and three other With Action Alternatives, described below. Preferred Alternative (Alternative 4): Flood Protection System with a Raised East River Park - The Preferred Alternative is a flood protection system comprised of a combination of floodwalls, 18 closure structures (i.e., swing and roller floodgates), and supporting infrastructure improvements that together would reduce risk of damage from coastal storms in the area proposed for protection. The inland limits of the proposed protection area are generally along First Avenue, Avenue B, Avenue C, Avenue D, and Columbia Street and includes private and public properties and streets within the Lower East Side, East Village, Stuyvesant Town, Peter Cooper Village and Kips Bay communities that are currently in the East River coastal flood hazard area. The design flood elevation for the project is 16.5 feet NAVD88, which is generally 8 to 9 feet above the existing land surface along the project alignment but diminishes in height along the inland alignments (e.g., along Montgomery Street). This design elevation was developed based on the 100-year Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) flood level and adding to that wave effects and the 90th percentile projection for sea level rise through to the 2050s (30 inches). A key element of the Preferred Alternative is elevating and reconstructing John V. Lindsay East River Park (East River Park) to make it more resilient to coastal storms, The Preferred Alternative also includes integrating flood protection with open space improvements at other parks along the flood protection alignment including Murphy Brothers Playground, Stuyvesant Cove Park, and Asser Levy Playground, with an improved shared use path (bikeway/walkway) along the entire project length (from East 23rd Street to Montgomery Street), and a new shared-use flyover bridge to address the narrow and substandard waterfront public access along the segment at the Con Edison facility (on the east side of the FDR Drive) known as the “pinch point”. Also proposed are redesigned and enhanced connections to the waterfront and East River Park, with the reconstruction of the Corlears Hook Bridge, the replacement of the Delancey and East 10th Street bridges, and the abovementioned flyover bridge. These proposed bridge improvements would create more inviting and accessible crossings over the FDR Drive to the reconstructed East River Park and the East River waterfront, including the waterfront shared-use path. With the proposed project, the reconstructed bridges at Delancey and East 10th Street have also been designed to provide more community-oriented access that supports and encourages public access to the waterfront with gentler grades that are consistent with the principle of universal access. Within the park, the bridge landings would provide an elevated gateway with expanded views of the reconstructed park and the river. The park s underground water and drainage infrastructure, some of which is reaching the end of its serviceable life, and bulkhead and esplanade would be reconstructed, along with existing park structures and recreational features, including the amphitheater, track facility, and tennis house, as part of the raised park. Two existing embayments along the East River Park esplanade would be relocated further north on the bulkhead to allow for siting of active recreation fields within the park and to facilitate a direct and ADA accessible connection to the water. The Preferred Alternative includes modifications to the existing sewer infrastructure to reduce the risk of interior flooding as well as reconstruction of the water and sewer infrastructure within East River Park, some of which is reaching the end of its serviceable life. The flood protection system, raised East River Park, and support structures for the shared-use flyover bridge proposed under the Preferred Alternative would be constructed in 3.5-years and completed in 2023. The superstructure for the shared-use flyover bridge would be completed in 2025. Other Alternative (Alternative 2): Flood Protection System on the West Side of East River Park –Baseline. - Alternative 2 would provide flood protection in Project Areas One and Two using a combination of floodwalls, levees, and closure structures (i.e., deployable gates) from Montgomery Street to East 25th Street. In Project Area One, the line of flood protection would generally be located on the west side of East River Park. Protection would be provided by a concrete floodwall starting at Montgomery Street within the sidewalk adjacent to the Gouverneur Gardens Cooperative Village. The floodwall would then cross under the FDR Drive with closure structures across the FDR Drive s South Street off- and on-ramps. A combination of floodwalls and levees would then run along the west side of East River Park for the length of the entire park. The park-side landings for the Delancey Street and East 10th Street bridges would be rebuilt within East River Park to accommodate the flood protection system. As with the Proposed Alternative, a shared-use flyover bridge linking East River Park and Captain Brown Walk would be constructed. In Project Area Two, the flood protection alignment would be similar to that proposed under the Preferred Alternative. However, the potions of Murphy Brothers Playground and Asser Levy Playground that are affected by construction of the floodwall would be replaced in kind rather than redesigned and reconstructed. Similar to the Preferred Alternative as described above, this alternative also includes modifications of the existing sewer system. The flood protection alignment proposed in Alternative 2 would require that the majority of flood protection construction be performed during night-time single-lane closures of the FDR Drive and in close proximity to sensitive Con Edison transmission lines. Given the related construction complexities and logistical considerations, the flood protection system and associated components under this alternative are assumed to be constructed in 5-years and completed in 2025. Other Alternative (Alternative 3): Flood Protection System on the West Side of East River Park -Enhanced Park and Access Alternative - Alternative 3 provides flood protection using a combination of floodwalls, levees, and closures structures in Project Areas One and Two. As with Alternative 2, the line of protection in Project Area One would be generally located on the western side of East River Park. However, compared to Alternative 2, there would be more extensive use of berms and other earthwork in association with the flood protection along the FDR Drive to provide for more integrated access, soften the visual effect of the floodwall on park users, and introduce new types of park experience. Due to the extent of the construction of the flood protection system, compared to Alternative 2, this alternative would include a more extensive reconfiguration and reconstruction of the bulk of East River Park and its programming, including landscapes, recreational fields, playgrounds, and amenities. In addition, the existing pedestrian bridges and bridge landings at Delancey and East 10th Streets would be completely reconstructed to provide universal access, and a new raised and landscaped park-side plaza landing would be created at the entrance to the park from the East Houston Street overpass. As with the Proposed Alternative, a shared-use flyover bridge linking East River Park and Captain Brown Walk would be constructed. In Project Area Two, the flood protection alignment would be similar to that proposed in the Preferred Alternative and would include reconstruction of Murphy Brothers Playground and Asser Levy Playground. Similar to the Preferred Alternative as described above, this alternative also includes modifications of the existing sewer system. As with Alternative 2, Alternative 3 would involve construction of the flood protection system alignment along the FDR Drive and in close proximity to sensitive Con Edison transmission lines. Given the associated complexities and logistical considerations involved when working in and around these facilities, a 5-year construction duration is assumed, with the proposed project estimated to be completed in 2025. Other Alternative (Alternative 5): Flood Protection System East of FDR Drive - Alternative 5 proposes a flood protection alignment similar to the Preferred Alignment except for the approach in Project Area Two between East 13th Street and Avenue C. This alternative would raise the northbound lanes of the FDR Drive in this area by approximately six feet to meet the design flood elevation then connect to closure structures at the south end of Stuyvesant Cove Park. Maintaining the flood protection alignment along the east side of the FDR Drive would eliminate the need for gates crossing the FDR Drive near East 13th Street as well as the need to install floodwalls adjacent to NYCHA Jacob Riis Houses, Con Edison property and Murphy Brothers Playground. As with the Preferred Alternative, this alternative would also include the construction of the shared-use flyover bridge to address the Con Edison pinch point. Similar to the Preferred Alternative as described above, this alternative also includes modifications of the existing sewer system, reconstruction of the water and sewer infrastructure within East River Park. Alternative 5 is anticipated to be constructed in 5-years and completed in 2025 and this duration is driven by construction of the raised northbound lanes of the FDR Drive and the adjacent shared-use flyover bridge in this same footprint. PUBLIC NOTICE REGARDING SECTION 106 REVIEW - OMB has assumed HUD s environmental responsibilities as the Responsible Entity for New York City for the purposes of administering the CDBG-DR Program in New York City, and OMB is also issuing this Notice of Public Hearing as a part of its assumed responsibilities under 36 CFR Part 800, the regulations implementing Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended. The regulations at 36 CFR Part 800 require OMB, as the Responsible Entity for the HUD grant funds, to identify if any buildings proposed for demolition are listed or eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places (NR); to assess any direct or indirect effects the new construction would have on other historic properties, including archaeological resources; and to seek ways to avoid, minimize, or mitigate any adverse effects. In consultation with the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation, acting as the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), two Phase 1A Archaeological Documentary Studies and a Supplemental Archaeological Documentary Study were prepared. The studies concluded that portions of the Area of Potential Effect were sensitive for historic-period archaeological resources and recommended additional archaeological investigation that would include additional pre-construction testing and/or monitoring during project construction. OMB in consultation with SHPO also determined that the proposed project develop and implement Construction Protection Plans for eleven architectural resources located within 90 feet of project construction activities to avoid inadvertent construction-period damage from ground-borne vibrations, falling debris, collapse, dewatering, subsidence, or construction equipment. The additional archaeological investigation and the preparation of the Construction Protection Plans will be stipulated in a Programmatic Agreement (PA) that is being prepared and will be included in the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS). It is expected that the PA will be executed among the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the New York City Office of Management and Budget (OMB), NYC Parks, SHPO, Indian Tribes, the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP), and other Consulting Parties as appropriate. OMB has initiated public consultation to seek ways to avoid, minimize, or mitigate adverse effects to historic properties that may result from the proposed project. Members of the public are encouraged to provide views at this public hearing on how the project may affect historic properties and ways that these effects may be avoided, minimized, or mitigated. Public Hearing: The CPC will hold a public hearing together with OMB and NYC Parks at 10:00 AM on July 31, 2019. The hearing location is 120 Broadway, Concourse Level, New York, NY, 10271. One purpose of the public hearing is for OMB as NEPA Lead Agency and NYC Parks as SEQRA/CEQR Lead Agency to receive comments on the information provided in the DEIS, as well as for CPC, OMB, and NYC Parks to accept comments on the Proposed Project s New York City s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) application. OMB and NYC Parks will not respond to any of the comments or take action on the project at the hearing. Comments and/or statements at the public hearing will become part of the public record during the comment period and will also be considered during the preparation of the FEIS. The meeting facility is accessible to those with disabilities. Any individual who requires special accommodations, such as a sign language interpreter, accessible seating, or documentation in alternative formats, is requested to contact Eram Qadri, Unit Head – Environmental Review, CDBG Disaster Recovery, OMB, (212)788-6282 or CDBGDR-Enviro@omb.nyc.gov.
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April 4, 2019
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Hoylman raps Google over ‘gay cure’ app flap BY ALE JANDR A O’CONNELL-DOMENECH
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tate Senator Brad Hoylman is calling for Google to examine why it took so long to remove a gay-conversion therapy app from its Play Store. Last year, Hoylman reintroduced his bill banning the pseudoscientific practice and it was signed into law on Jan. 15. New York thus became the 15th state in the nation to ban gayconversion therapy. “This needs to be a real soul-searching moment for the company,” Hoylman said. “Where did the resistance come from and why?” According to the senator, Google only moved to scrap the app after the Human Rights Campaign decided not to endorse the company on its 2019 Corporate Equity Index. “After consulting with outside advocacy groups, reviewing our policies, and making sure we had a thorough understanding of the app and its relation to conversion therapy, we’ve decided to remove it from the Play Store, consistent with other app stores,” a Google representative said when asked why it chose to stop distributing the app at this moment. Living Hope Ministries, the group behind the app, did not respond to a request for comment from this paper. But in January, Living Hope Ministries — which was founded with a gay-conversion mission — denied to The Verge that it was performing conversion therapy. The company’s Web site sates that it proclaims a Christ-centered, Biblical world-view of sexual expression rooted in one man and one woman in a committed, monogamous, heterosex-
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State Senator Brad Hoylman speaking in the Senate chambers in Albany on Mon., March 25.
ual marriage for life. “Anything less than this ideal falls short of God’s best for humanity,” the site states. Last December, Amazon, Microsoft and Apple all stopped providing the app after an online petition on change.org — blasting the app as “bigoted” and “hateful” — demanded its removal. More than 141,806 people called for Google to remove the app on a separate petition on change.org . Hoylman said that he met with multiple representatives from Google at least half a dozen times since January to ask about the status of the app’s removal. He was told technical issues and legal concerns were delaying the process. To him, the company was just using delaying tactics. He said he found it very disappointing that the Google would not respond to an elected official representing the district that is now home to their New York City headquarters. “Something is broken at Google,” Hoylman said in a statement. “It’s on them to fix it — the L.G.B.T.Q. community is watching.”
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The Jefferson Market Librar y, at Sixth Ave. and W. 10th St., was built as a courthouse in 1876. The photo above shows a scene from its cour thouse days. By 1945, the building was vacant. In 1961, the Committee for a Librar y in Jefferson Market Cour thouse was formed, leading to the building’s eventual renovation. Last year, the librar y celebrated its 50th anniversar y.
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April 4, 2019
VICTORIA SCHNEPS-YUNIS JOSHUA SCHNEPS LINCOLN ANDERSON GABE HERMAN MICHELE HERMAN BOB KRASNER TEQUILA MINSKY MARY REINHOLZ PAUL SCHINDLER JOHN NAPOLI MARCOS RAMOS CLIFFORD LUSTER (718) 260-2504 CLUSTER@CNGLOCAL.COM MARVIN ROCK GAYLE GREENBURG JIM STEELE JULIO TUMBACO ELIZABETH POLLY
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In 1959, Village residents and preser vationists rallied to save the decommissioned Jefferson Market Courthouse from demolition. The building’s renovation was then painstakingly planned over four years. When it was originally built, the courthouse was hailed as one of the five most beautiful buildings in America.
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Op-Ed The Angry Buddhist: L-pocalypse now redux BY CARL ROSENSTEIN
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angkok and New York can serve as metaphors for the opposite natures of Eastern and Western mind. As are its klongs (canals), and famed go-go dancers, Bangkok’s streets are all sinews and curves that flow and return like all things, at 4 in the morning, anyway. Otherwise the city is choked in interminable traffic. But the Thai, who have seen their GDP explode over the past 30 years, have the laissez-faire wisdom to know affordable automobiles have helped lift millions out of subsistence-level poverty. Do you want to bend over in a rice paddy your entire life? “Progress” is attended by other social ills, but that’s another matter. This screed is about traffic and government. Back in the antithetical West on 14th St., the Department of Transportation’s proposed street closure, dedicated bus lane and already emplaced and hated Village bike lanes are back like a bad case of herpes. The viral carrier in this case are Brooklyn’s Bicycle Bolsheviks, i.e. Transportation Alternatives. TransAlt’s didactic manifesto induces its followers to “save the planet,” and that requires “reclaiming New York City’s streets for people” from the bad karma of the elitist motorist. “Vision Zero” will “save us” and possibly cure cancer. Like the small clique of apparatchiks who engineered all aspects of Soviet society, this fevered cell of Brooklyn Bolsheviks have been transforming Manhattan’s gritty grid into a cow pasture for dumb, grazing tourists and a thruway for the piggish, 36-speed lycra junta from Park Slope. The social experiments promoted by TransAlt — dedicated bike and bus lanes and pedestrian plazas, forcing traffic-lane closures — first instituted by an aloof and above-it-all Michael Bloomberg and now by an aloof and beneath-it-all Bill de Blasio, have been catastrophically sclerotic, adding danger to pedestrians and stress to the lives of everyone who drives. A D.O.T. 2017 study counted only 10,000 bike commuters from the outer boroughs daily over the East River bridges, and a maximum total of 27,000 when combined with Manhattan-only riders. Manhattan accommodates 1.6 million commuters daily. Outer-borough bike commuters constitute 0.00625 percent. The proposed closing of 14th St., a central artery, to automobiles and the entire “L-pocalyose” plan that was thrust upon the Village, Chelsea and adjacent communities is a nightmare. It was promoted by a TransAlt study by Brooklyn-based BRT Planning International, whose only projects apparently were in Kirkland, Washington, and sub-Saharan Africa. I guess they took AOC’s subway to Kenya. De Blasio and Council Speaker Corey Johnson recently backed away from the 14th St. “busway.” The mayor was using it as a social experiment for liberal causes — because it would look good on his résumé as he pathetically beats the bushes around the country before tiny bored audiences. Johnson, like Bloomberg and de Blasio, is a Bostonian. He never cheered for Reggie, Jeter, Doc, Clyde, L.T. He probably worships Tom Brady. Like de Blasio, he seeks higher office. The self-annointed transportation gurus want to shut down 14th St.: Do it for them, without a permit. It will make international news. Do the same in Nolita outside the Elizabeth St. Garden. Ommmmmm. Schneps Media
Letters to the Editor Sylvia Rackow
Johnson sends a signal? To The Editor: Re “New biz bills don’t fix closings’ cause” (op-ed, by Sharon Woolums, March 28): Thank you for your fine opinion piece on the Small Business Jobs Survival Act, Sharon. I wonder why Speaker Corey Johnson took his name off the bill. Your writing on this important subject is always informative and important. Maura Tobias Editor’s note: According to City Council sources, bills are reintroduced every session of the Council. When the S.B.J.S.A. was reintroduced, Johnson did not sign on as a sponsor, as he had done before. As Council speaker, he signs onto fewer bills than he did when he was just a councilmember.
Storefronts ghost town To The Editor: Re “New biz bills don’t fix closings’ cause” (op-ed, by Sharon Woolums, March 28): It’s been six months since the City Council first began debating the passing of a bill, the Small Business Jobs Survival Act, to rescue our small businesses from rent gouging and death at lease-renewal time. Since then, I’ve seen my favorite stationery store close, a little pastry shop I love shuttered, my favorite bodega abandoned, the Cornelia St. Cafe destroyed. And along Sixth Ave. from Eighth St. down, a virtual ghost town of empty stores has emerged like an urban cancer. Ignoring cancer is not advisable. Nor is taking snake oil to save our struggling little businesses, which Councilman Mark Gjonaj’s touted “nine bills” surely is. Please! Pass the S.B.J.S.A. intact immediately. We can’t take much more of this death by a thousand cuts, slashing away the cherished uniqueness of our city. Bennett Kremen
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PHOTO BY TEQUILA MINSKY
The Native Leather shop was on Bleecker St. for nearly 50 years, but closed after the landlord would not renew its lease. The landlord wanted to double the rent.
Property taxes killing ’em, too To The Editor: Re “New biz bills don’t fix closings’ cause” (op-ed, by Sharon Woolums, March 28): High property taxes are also to blame for high commercial rents. New York City is characterized by overspending and overtaxation. High rents are a symptom, not the root cause. Anthony Pappas
Congestion exemption To The Editor: Re “Traffic pricing a great idea, if done right” (editorial, March 28): I live in the Village and visit my family in Brooklyn via the bridge. I believe anyone who lives below 60th St. should be exempt from congestion pricing. The congestion is often from trucks from Jersey and other states. There are also too many out-of-state cars that clutter our streets and pollute the air. Bleecker St. used to be little used. Now it’s continually backed up by traffic from people wanting to “visit” or who think of our area as a “tourist” destination. Stop the congesters — not the residents.
To The Editor: Re “Cheers and fears at traffic pricing forum” (news article, March 28): Let’s understand that those private car services — Uber, Lyft, Via, black cabs, etc. — and yellow and green taxicabs are for-hire public transportation, which make it unnecessary for people to own and use their own cars. They also provide an alternative to the currently inefficient and “never-on-time” buses and subway. Bikes, too, are a boon, providing economical, environmental and exercise benefits. If congestion charging has the goal of pushing more of us to use public transportation, the charge should not be implemented until the governor’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority increases the number of bus and subway runs. Alan Flacks
Taking taxis is taxing To The Editor: Re “Traffic pricing a great idea, if done right” (editorial, March 28): The congestion fee has been in effect for weeks for taxis ($2.50 per ride) and car services ($2.75 per ride). With the initial charge and other surcharges, it now costs $6 just to open a taxi door. Have we seen fewer “blocked boxes”? Less congestion? It doesn’t work in London. It won’t work here. Jan Hashey E-mail letters, maximum 250 words, to news@thevillager. com or fax to 212-229-2790 or mail to The Villager, Letters to the Editor, 1 MetroTech North, 10th floor, Brooklyn, NY 11201. Please include phone number for confirmation. The Villager reserves the right to edit letters for space, grammar, clarity and libel. Anonymous letters will not be published.
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‘Cornelia St. in Exile’ lives in Brooklyn BY GABE HERMAN
T
he Cornelia Street Cafe is back, though after its West Village closing on Jan. 2, it is now taking its show on the road. On the evening of Wed., March 27, owner Robin Hirsch sent out an e-mail announcement that there will be three nights of shows in Brooklyn on April 5, 6 and 7. “Well, my dears!” the message began. “It’s been a long and difficult time. We have been in the wilderness. A lost home to mourn, a long history to celebrate, a present and future to ponder and devise.” Hirsch went on to write, “Cornelia Street in Exile (as the great David Amram so eloquently calls us)
will pop up in Brooklyn for 3 nights next week.” The events will be held at Brooklyn Commons/ Commons Cafe, at 388 Atlantic Ave., on the southern edge of Downtown Brooklyn, just a quick subway ride from Manhattan. “Many of our beloved stalwarts will be performing in the beautiful and congenial space,” wrote Hirsch. The schedule so far includes international poetry on Fri., April 5, at 6 p.m. — featuring Italian-American, Greek-American and Russian and Romanian poets — and legendary musician David Amram and Co. performing later that same evening at 8:30 p.m. Sat., April 6, will include Cafe Stories at 6 p.m., featuring the cafe’s owner. “Our longstanding Minister of Culture, Robin
Hirsch,” reads the description, “regales us with 41+ years of cafe stories (hopefully not in real time) with carefully timed interruptions from various co-conspirators.” Also performing Saturday, at 8:30 p.m., will be Arturo O’Farrill, legendary Afro-Cuban pianist/conductor of the Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra. The Sunday shows on April 7 will include an installment of the cafe’s long-running “Science Series” at 6 p.m. — plus subversive music/performance by Evan Eisenberg — and Israeli Jazz at 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Hirsch wrote that another message will be sent out soon with updates, instructions on how to book and “various other juicy tidbits.” “In the meantime, hold us in your heart — as we hold you!” the message fi nished. David Amram, 88, who performed at the Cornelia Street Cafe for 14 years, told this paper that he’s happy Hirsch adopted his idea to call it Cornelia Street in Exile. And he said he’s honored to be performing on the opening night. “I’m happy to be there and just to be a part of it,” Amram said. “And just to bear witness to what Robin has been doing for 41 years, and what New York City still has to offer the world.” Amram said he hoped to focus on the positive aspects of what the cafe offers, instead of negatives related to its closing. “Rather than being a ‘whine-ologist’ or ‘blameologist’ in criticizing landlords and that type of thing,” he said, “I hope this could be a positive thing, to show and encourage young people that they have something to look forward to and for them to create their own venues.”
PHOTO BY DUSICA SUE MALESEVIC
Robin Hirsch, longtime owner of the Cornelia St. Cafe, will be telling “cafe stories” on April 6.
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Google gives young coders of color access BY ALEJANDR A Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;CONNELLDOMENECH
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oogle is doubling down on its efforts to foster greater diversity among tomorrowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s tech leaders. Its Chelsea-based program, Google Code Next, now has a larger physical space. The enlarged center, twice the size of its previous incarnation, officially opened on March 5. Besides its increased size, the space has a fresh and inspiring look. The faces of black and Latino tech innovators, like Kenneth Dunkley, the inventor of 3-D glasses; Jordi MuĂąoz, the Mexican immigrant who co-founded the company 3D Robotics; and Dr. Shirley Jackson, an American physicist responsible for technology that led to fiber optics and portable phones, all look down from the walls of the new space. Peta-Gay Clarke is the program leader for Google Code Next in New York City. â&#x20AC;&#x153;One of the things we learned was that access was a big issue,â&#x20AC;? Clarke said, regarding challenges black and Latino students face in pursuing computer science as a career. â&#x20AC;&#x153;When you go into communities that are highly populated with black and Latino youth, there arenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t a lot of places where they can go where they can get
access to innovative tech, laptops, software,â&#x20AC;? she said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;where they can just try and be exposed to different things.â&#x20AC;? Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s this lack of access that Google is trying to mitigate in order to solve the tech industryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s diversity problem. According to the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, only 7 percent of all high-tech industry employees are black and only 7.97 percent are Latino. The racial disparity is even greater within the industryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s leadership, according to the most recent E.E.O.C. data. Blacks only make up 1.92 percent of leadership positions in high tech while Latinos make up just a slightly larger share, at 3.11 percent. According to a report by Fast Company, in 2016 only 2 percent of Google
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employees were black and only 3 percent were Latino. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We would love for them to work for Google,â&#x20AC;? Clarke said. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s the goal.â&#x20AC;? Code Next launched that same year in Oakland, providing free computerscience classes to black and Latino middle and high school students, both after school and on weekends. Now Code Next has expanded to include Chelsea and Harlem locations. But the center in Harlem is run out of the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem and is managed in partnership with the New York Urban League and Emerging Leaders in Technology and Engineering. The one in Chelsea is the largest of the three Google Code Nexts. Besides after-school classes, Code Next offers tutoring and mentorship program. Code Nextâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s first cohort graduated last year, and according to Clarke, Code Next is going to start thinking about how they can help their students now that they head off to college.
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8cc k_\ Nfic[Ëj X =Xi\ E\n Pfib :`kpËj cXi^\jk Xe[ dfjk [`m\ij\ ]ff[ ]\jk`mXc Zfd`e^ kf Hl\\ej 9P AF< ;@JK<=8EF As a kid, I was always fascinated by the World’s Fair. It all started when I first saw the glittering stainless steel Unisphere out the car window on the ride back to Long Island from my grandmother’s house in Glendale. When I asked my mother about it, she’d fondly recall taking my brothers to the 1964–65 World’s Fair. Many years later, I would move to Queens and wholeheartedly embrace its diverse cuisines and culture and come to love the Unisphere — a sculpture originally commissioned as a tribute to the Space Age — as a symbol of the diversity of the World’s Borough. So when Joshua Schneps, CEO and co-publisher at Schneps Media and founder of LIC Flea & Food, approached me a few years ago to tell me of his plans to pay tribute to the largest event ever to take place in the history of New York City with a culinary and cultural festival with 100 vendors representing 100 cultures, I jumped on board immediately. The second annual World’s Fare, which will be held on May 18 and 19 at Citi Field, features many of my personal favorites from all over the world, including the Arepa Lady, the crown jewel of Colombian street food in New York City; Indonesian desserts from Moon Man; as well as Italian arrosticini, succulent lamb skewers from D’Abruzzo, which won first place in the savory division at last year’s Fare. Newcomers this year include Chef Troy’s Table representing Jamaica with their nutritious and delicious I-tal Rastafarian vegetarian cuisine, Balkan Bites flying the flag of Kosovo with flaky savory burek and sweet baklava, Cafe Escencia representing Spain with scrumptious sourdough churros wheel, and a
after completing her formal culinary education at :LC@E8IP :<C<9I8K@FE1 8Yfm\ K_\ Nfic[Ëj =Xi\ Ç knf [Xpj f] ]ff[ Xe[ g\i]fidXeZ\j i\gi\j\ek`e^ ('' the Culinary Institute of Zlckli\j Ç `j Zfd`e^ YXZb kf :`k` =`\c[ fe DXp (/ Xe[ DXp (0% :fclde`jk Af\ ;`Jk\]Xef Y\cfn n`cc Y\ Zflek$ America. She now owns `e^ [fne k_\ n\\bj kf k_\ ]\jk`mXc% K_\ È@ejXk`XYc\ :i`k`ZÉ >X\c >i\\e\ Xk i`^_k # n`cc j\im\ fe k_\ Zlc`eXip and operates four restauZfdd`kk\\% rants: Txikito, Chelsea’s acclaimed Basque restaurant; Wheels, but as restaurant El Quinto Pino, named the critic of New York Magazine Absolute Best Tapas by New from 1968 to 2002, she changed York Magazine; La Vara, the way Americans think exploring Jewish and Moorabout food. One could trace ish inf luence in southern the evolution of New York res- Spain; and her latest, Saint taurants on a timeline that Julivert, a petit fisherie inwould reflect her passions and spired by ports of call near and far. taste over 30 years I am truly from Le Pavilamazed that the lon, which has 19 World’s Fare its roots in the has managed 1964–65 World’s to assemble a Fair, to nouvelle lineup of cuicuisine to coutusines that alrier pizzas, pasmost rivals the tas and hot fudge diversity of the sundaes, to more World’s Borough. healthful eating. In the coming weeks Chef Anita Lo, author of “SOLO: A Mod- I’ll be profiling some of my ern Cookbook for a Party of favorite vendors. Check One,” has appeared on “Top back next week to learn how thoroughly modern take on anIn addition to Schneps, this Chef Masters,” “Iron Chef the Sainted Arepa Lady got cient Eastern Mediterranean year’s culinary committee fea- America,” and “Chopped.” her start. This is the first edition frozen confection from the Re- tures a trio of female culinary In 2015, she became the first public of Booza. powerhouses: Gael Greene, female guest chef to cook at of a weekly column written by Joe DiStefano, a QueensThere will also be a dessert Chef Alex Raij, and Chef the White House. classic that many attendees of Anita-Lo. Chef Alex Raij began her based food writer, culinary the iconic 1964 World’s Fair These days, the Detroit- lengthy love affair with tra- tour guide, and author of may remember: Belgian waf- born Greene is best known ditional Spanish cooking at the bestselling guidebook fles as prepared by street food as the Insatiable Critic and Meigas, an ambitious Span- “111 Places in Queens That sensation Wafels & Dinges. co-founder of Citymeals-on- ish restaurant in Tribeca, You Must Not Miss.”
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Eats
Sweets by CHLOE, a go-to for vegan treats tiramisu. And cookies include the old-fashioned chocolate chip, along with a cinnamon espresso cookie that is big, crispy and flat. There is also pecan pie and matcha chocolate babka. Also, full cakes that go for around $40, such as carrot cake, mocha almond fudge cake, and chocolate or vanilla birthday cakes. Yelp reviews for Sweets by CHLOE average three and a half stars out of five. Most find the desserts to be tasty, and like the friendly atmosphere, but some say the taste is compromised by using vegan-only ingredients. Other Yelp reviewers felt it was a bit too pricey but not terrible. Sweets by CHLOE is open 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. on weekends. More information can be found at eatbychloe.com.
BY GABE HERMAN
W
ith so many bakeries in the Village, whether trendy, old-fashioned or otherwise, Sweets by CHLOE stands out as a vegan shop with tasty options. Sweets by CHLOE opened at 185 Bleecker St. in September 2016. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s an offshoot of by CHLOE, the vegan casual restaurant right next door at Bleecker and MacDougal Sts. that opened in July 2015 and immediately saw long lines as a new hot spot in the area. By CHLOE has expanded to several locations throughout the city and around the country. There are also two locations in London. But so far, Sweets by CHLOE only
PHOTO BY IIAMJELLY/INSTAGRAM
A slice of matcha chocolate babka from Sweets by CHLOE
PHOTO BY EATUPFORNYC/INSTAGRAM
Sweets by CHLOEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s spin on vegan pecan pie.
has this one spot on Bleecker St. It seems to do good business, with a constant flow of customers, but doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get the long lines like by CHLOE next door, which also sells a few sweets, like cookies and cupcakes. So, Sweets by CHLOE is a nice option for those looking to try the brand but skip the hassle of the crowds. And the treats are tasty, too. One may be naturally skeptical of how delicious vegan sweets can be, and there might be a slightly lower level of flavor in the offerings. But over all, there is still a richness to the flavors and textures, and I donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t know if I could tell the difference in a blind taste test. The shop offers standards like cookies and cupcakes, in the $2 to $4 range. Along with vanilla and chocolate cupcake options, there is also a raspberry
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SHERIFF S SALE BY VIRTUE OF AN EXECUTION ISSUED OUT OF THE SUPREME COURT, COUNTY OF NEW YORK, in favor of THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Petitioner and against DAVE FRIEDMAN 2, LLC., Respondents, to me directed and delivered, I WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION, by DENNIS ALESTRA DCA# 0840217, auctioneer, as the law directs, FOR CASH ONLY, on the 8th day of May, 2019, at 12:30, in the AFTERNOON, at 66 JOHN STREET, 13th FLOOR, OFFICE OF THE NYC SHERIFF in the county of NEW YORK all the right, title and interest which DAVE FRIEDMAN 2, LLC., the judgement debtor, had on the 31st day of July, 2014, or at any time thereafter, of, in and to the following: 470 Audubon Avenue, New York, NY 10040 Block 2158 Lot 47 on the New York Count Tax Map ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the building and improvements thereon erected, situate lying and being in the County of New York, City and State of New York, bounded and described as follows: BEGNINING at the corner formed by the intersection of the Westerly Side of Audubon Avenue, as legally opened, and the Southerly side of West 189th Street, as laid out on a certain map filled in the Office of the Register of New York County on October 16, 1914 as Map Number 1857; RUNNING THENCE westerly along the Southerly side of 189th Street, 100.00 feet; THENCE Southerly and parallel with Audubon Avenue, 100 feet ¾ of an inch to the center line of the block; THENCE easterly parallel with said Southerly side of 189th Street and part of the distance through a party wall, 100 feet to the Westerly side of Audubon Avenue; and THENCE Northerly along the westerly side of Audubon Avenue, 100 feet ¾ of an inch to the point or place of BEGNNING FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY: 470 Audubon Avenue, New York, NY a/k/a Block 2158 Lot 47 on the New York County Tax Map. For conveyancing only: TOGETHER with all the right, title and interest of the party of the first part, of in and to the land lying in the street in front of and adjoining said premises. DEPUTY R. SHULYAR (212) 487-9734 CASE # 18054296
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PHOTO BY MOAMY/INSTAGRAM
Sweets by CHLOE spor ts a sidewalk cafe on Bleecker St.
:SO`\ BVSW` ASQ`Sba
JOSEPH FUCITO Sheriff of the City of New York
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Arrest in Riis slay the first time it turned violent,â&#x20AC;? Captain John L. Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Connell, the Ninth Precinctâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s commanding officer, told this pasper on March 27. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was no gang or narcotics nexus. This was a specific thing between these people. We have no signs of retaliation.â&#x20AC;? The East Village precinct had impressively gone nearly two years without a murder, he noted. â&#x20AC;&#x153;I was hoping, but we didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t quite make it to two years,â&#x20AC;? he said. According to an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Off the Gridâ&#x20AC;? article by the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, 710 E. Ninth St. was originally built as an â&#x20AC;&#x153;Hâ&#x20AC;?-style public school in 1876 and continued to serve as such until the 1970s. After that, it was the home of Loisaida Inc. for 30 years. The building then underwent a complete renovation funded by the cityâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Department of Housing Preservation and Development. Supportive housing units for youth aging out of foster care, plus a new 10,000 squarefoot Loisaida Community Center, were created as part of the renovation.
BY LINCOLN ANDERSON
P
olice have made an arrest in the fatal stabbing on Mon., March 25, around 8:47 p.m., in front of 1115 F.D.R. Drive, near E. 11th St., at the Jacob Riis Houses. Responding officers found a 27-yearold man with a stab wound to the stomach. E.M.S. medics transported the victim to Bellevue Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. On Wed., March 27, police released the name of the victim, Phibeon Smalls, 27, of 710 E. Ninth St., and said that Christopher Dixon, 26, of the same building, had been arrested for his murder. The victim lived on the second floor and the alleged killer lives on the fifth floor at the address, less than a block west of the Riis Houses. A witness said the two had argued prior to the stabbing, a police spokesperson said, though it was not clear how long before the incident it was. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Apparently, they had a little bit of an ongoing back and forth, and this is
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Health
Getting to the truth about canned foods can assuage some of those concerns and help those on the fence stock up on these budget-friendly staples.
Canned food myths debunked T
he affordability of canned foods entices many people to stock up on the essentials. However, there are some people who still harbor concerns about the safety of canned foods. Getting to the truth about canned foods can assuage some of those concerns and help those on the fence stock up on these budget-friendly staples:
savory ingredients. The term processing is used to describe any food that has been changed from its natural form. So removing corn from a cob counts as processing, as is baking or boiling potatoes. Canned foods are preserved by heating the items and sealing them under pressure. No other preservatives are needed to keep them fresh.
Myth #1: Canned foods are not as healthy as fresh foods. Myth #3: Can linings are dangerous. Fresh foods, once harvested, have a finite shelf life. Plus, once fruit or vegetables are picked, their vitamin and mineral content decreases each day that they are not consumed. Many canned foods are picked and processed on the same day, helping to retain nutrients at their peak and lock them in for many months. Also, according to the Hy-Vee supermarket chain, sometimes canned foods are packed with additional nutrients, such as increased lycopene in canned tomatoes.
There has been controversy concerning BPAcontaining plastics for many years. Even though the Food and Drug Administration, as well as other international food safety agencies, has evaluated the extensive body of science and continue to affirm BPA’s safety in food packaging, some manufacturers are voluntarily moving away from it. Consumers can find many foods packed in cans with non-BPA linings. However, even foods packaged in BPA are considered safe for consumption.
Myth #2: They are full of preservatives.
Myth #4: Canned foods are full of sodium.
The perception that canned foods are “processed” foods often leads people to believe they’re full of un-
Some canned foods will contain salt as an added ingredient to improve taste and act as a freshness
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preservative. But canned foods do not rank among the biggest offenders in regard to excessive amounts of sodium. In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a study that identified the top 10 food categories that contribute to high sodium diets. Pizza, cured meats, cold cuts, and rolls made the list, while canned foods did not.
Myth #5: They do not taste good. Because foods are canned when they are at peak freshness and ripeness after harvest, they retain full flavor if properly stored.
Myth #6: All dented cans are unsafe. Cans can become dented in transit. Drop a can and it will dent. But that doesn’t necessarily mean foods inside dented cans are unsafe to eat. If a can is bulging or if the top or bottom of the can moves or makes a popping sound, the seal has probably been broken or compromised by bacteria and should be thrown out. Canned foods are safe and can make for valuable additions to any pantry.
April 4, 2019
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Health
How certain nutrients affect your body
M
any people are aware that their bodies need nutrients like protein and carbohydrates every day, but they may not know just what these and other important nutrients do for their bodies:
Proteins Online medical resource WebMD notes that the body uses protein to build and repair tissues. An important component of every cell in the body, protein provides amino acids that help cells in the body perform various functions. Breastcancer.org notes that proteins help the body create hormones and enzymes and keep the immune system healthy. A diet low in protein may make people more susceptible to illness and result in longer recovery times.
Carbohydrates The Cleveland Clinic notes that carbohydrates, or â&#x20AC;&#x153;carbs,â&#x20AC;? are the bodyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s main source of energy. Carbs are found in
most foods, but not all carbs are the same. Foods that contain complex carbohydrates, which include quinoa and oatmeal, are loaded with fiber. It takes awhile for the body to break that fiber down, helping people feel full and stabilizing their blood sugar levels. Simple carbohydrates, including processed foods such as sugarsweetened beverages and dairy desserts, are quickly digested, raising blood sugar levels.
Water The body is about 60 percent water, which performs a host of important functions. Water aids in digestion, absorption of nutrients and circulation, and also facilitates the transportation of nutrients through the body. Water also helps the body get rid of waste. WebMD notes that water also helps to energize muscles, which might suffer from fatigue if the bodyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fluid balance is not maintained. Water also helps the body maintain a healthy temperature.
Water aids in digestion, absorption of nutrients and circulation, and also facilitates the transpor tation of nutrients through the body.
Nighttime snack best bets VILL AGE C APOTHECARY alorie-conscious individuals may wonder if eating at night or after a certain time can derail their diets and fitness regimens. The jury is still out on whether eating at night can pack on the pounds or not, with various health recommendations contradicting one another. However, if one does choose to snack at night, there may be a smart way to do so. The U.S. Department of Agricultureâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Weight Control Information Network says that a calorie is a calorie no matter when it is consumed. That means it doesnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t matter if calories are consumed in the morning, afternoon, or evening. It is how many are consumed and the amount of physical activity individuals perform that will affect their weights. Conversely, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics says itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s not sure if a calorie is a calorie no matter when it is consumed. Its research and data from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicineâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Center for Weight and Eating Disorders indicates that when food is consumed late at night the body is more likely to store those calories as fat and gain weight rather than burn it off as energy. Certain animal studies show that food is processed differently depending on the time of day it was consumed. For nighttime snacks, choose a food that is high in protein, fiber or healthy
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Late-night snackers should choose a food that is high in protein, fiber or healthy fats, which will be more likely to keep them satiated throughout the night.
fats, which will be more likely to keep a person satiated throughout the night. Apples and peanut butter, string cheese and fruit, or whole-grain crackers and Greek yogurt can be healthy, satisfying nighttime snacks. Avoid sugary, calorie-dense foods. More studies may be needed to determine the relationship between weight and snacking at night. Schneps Media
Health
The health benefits of eating apples T he phrase, “An apple a day keeps the doctor away,” is a familiar one that many people first heard as children. Apples are among the most cultivated and consumed foods in the world. They’re also among the healthiest. Medical News Today, a market leader for medical news that is owned and operated by the United Kingdom-based healthcare publisher Healthline Media, listed apples among its 10 healthiest foods. Apples provide many health benefits, lending credence to the notion that consuming one per day might just keep the doctor away: Apples may reduce risk for stroke. Apples are rich in antioxidants, including quercetin, which researchers have determined can help people lower their risk for thrombotic stroke. In that study, which was published in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2000, researchers studied more than 9,200 men and women over a 28-year period. Those who ate the most apples during that time had a lower risk for thrombotic stroke, a type of stroke that occurs when a blood clot forms in an artery that supplies blood to the brain. Such blood clots block the flow of oxygen-rich blood to the brain, producing long-term brain damage.
They lower levels of bad cholesterol. “Bad cholesterol” refers to low-density lipoprotein, or LDL. LDL is considered bad because high levels of it lead to a buildup of cholesterol in the arteries, raising a person’s risk for coronary artery disease. Thankfully, in 2011, researchers at Florida State University found that older women who consume apples every day had reduced their LDL levels by 23 percent in six months and even increased their “good” cholesterol levels by four percent over that period. Apples can help people maintain healthy weights. The flavonoid polymers found in apples inhibit enzymes that break down simple sugars. That means the flavonoid polymers in apples help you flush more of the sugar in apples out of your system instead of storing it as fat. That can help people maintain healthy weights. Fuji apples have the most flavonoids. They can lower risk for diabetes. A recent cohort study published in BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal) that involved researchers from the U.K., the U.S. and Singapore found that consuming three servings per week of blueberries, grapes, raisins, apples or pears reduced participants’ risk for type 2 diabetes by 7 percent.
Apples provide many health benefits, lending credence to the notion that consuming one per day might just keep the doctor away.
Three ways oatmeal can benefit your body
O
atmeal is one of many options people have when sitting down to breakfast each morning. Few foods pack as nutritious a punch as oatmeal. Instant oatmeal might be found in the pantries of many households. But it’s important to note that packets of instant oatmeal are often loaded with sodium and sugar, which can compromise the nutritional benefits of the oats. Oatmeal can provide a great start to your day and pay other dividends as well, though it’s important that consumers read package labels so they are getting the nutritional benefits of whole-grain oats without the added sugar and sodium.
“bad” cholesterol.
1. Oatmeal can help lower ‘bad’ cholesterol
Oatmeal, so long as it isn’t instant oatmeal, is one of the rare foods that’s both filling and low in calories. Oatmeal is filling because of its fiber content. Unlike other carbohydrates, fiber does not break down into sugar once it’s consumed. When fiber is consumed, it absorbs water and takes up space in the stomach, giving feelings of fullness that can prevent overeating.
According to the Mayo Clinic, oatmeal contains soluble fiber, which can reduce the absorption of cholesterol into the bloodstream. And it doesn’t even take much soluble fiber to reap such benefits. Five to 10 grams of soluble fiber per day has been shown to decrease low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, which is commonly referred to as “LDL” or Schneps Media
2. It is loaded with vitamins and minerals The online medical resource Healthline notes that oats contain a well-balanced nutrient composition that can help people get well on their way to consuming their recommended daily intake of various vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants. For example, half a cup of oats contains 41 percent of the RDI of phosphorous and 20 percent of the RDI of iron. That same serving contains 51 grams of carbohydrates and 13 grams of protein.
3. It can help people maintain healthy weights
Few breakfast foods pack as nutritious a punch as oatmeal. TVG
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PHOTOS BY BOB KRASNER
From left, Clay ton Patterson presented Cr ystal Field, of Theater for the New Cit y, with the Lifetime Achievement Award, as Phoebe Legere emcee’d the proceedings.
Ackers honor avant-garde’s ‘real heroes’ BY BOB KR ASNER
I
f you want to receive an Acker Award, keep doing what you’re doing — and who knows? — it could happen. In the meantime, if you want to get a seat at the ceremony, get there early. The East Village community quickly filled the seats at The Theater for the New City, sending the staff scrambling to bring in extra seats and floor cushions, and still part of the audience was left standing. The draw was longtime resident Clayton Patterson’s annual salute to the people who make the East Village / Lower East Side what it is. Honoring an eclectic mix of avant-garde artists, musicians, writers, filmmakers, activists and more, the evening moved quickly as emcee Phoebe Legere — appropriately dressed as a very fashionable ringmaster — presented each award. Patterson hung back, handing out the boxes containing a mix of memorabilia and art contributed by the winners, and occasionally snapping pics. Crystal Field, director of TNC, received the first award for Lifetime Achievement. Field gave a brief speech, noting that she thought that “things are getting better,” while reminding us that “we are a grain of sand in history’s march forward.” Cynthia Carr, a writer and historian, received the Candy Darling Award. “I hope that I’ll end up deserving this someday,”
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April 4, 2019
Ivan Galietti , who received the Jack Smith Film Award, was adorned by Phoebe Legere with a sash made by the late Jack Smith.
she said. Linus Coraggio, of the Rivington School, accepted his Acker “in the name of positive cultural transforTVG
mation.” “This award means more to me than any other, because my life is avant-garde theater,” noted Melba LaRose. Trigger, former owner of the late, lamented Continental bar, reminisced about his friend Joey Ramone’s last show, which took place at his club. An Acker Award “honors the past, present and future,” he remarked. Musician Jesse Malin related how he “found my tribe on St. Mark’s Place.” Power Malu began his turn at the mic with a tribute to Patterson and ended with an impassioned spoken-word piece about the plight of posthurricane Puerto Rico. Community activist Lila Mejia also had Puerto Rico on her mind, as she offered T-shirts for sale to raise money for the island. Tattoo artist Tommy Houlihan thanked his mother, who bought him his first tattoo machine. Patterson, who spoke only sporadically during the ceremony, summed up the reasons for the Ackers’ existence. “If we don’t save our own history, who will?” he asked. Explaining his desire to recognize local talent, he explained, “A lot of the time, the real heroes are the ones you don’t know about until years later. The real geniuses are in the background. “These are people who inspire the community,” he added. “I’m not trying for a crew, I’m going for a community.” Schneps Media
Chelsea gallery tags street art as fine art BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH
O
n March 23, the new exhibit “Blended” opened at the Amsterdam Whitney Gallery in Chelsea. The exhibit is a collection of street and pop artists’ works that have been reimagined. Pieces that, in their original form, are the size of an entire building wall have been redone to fit a small canvas. By miniaturizing these larger-than-life paintings, curator Denise Cummings is making a powerful statement: Street art is fine art. “Opinions are changed by what the artist chooses to say about the definition of their work,” Cummings said. “Blended” is Cummings’s curatorial debut and signals a seminal moment for the Amsterdam Whitney Gallery. But there is still a long way to go before the world stops viewing street as mere vandalism. And, in order to do that, according to Cummings, more street artists need to be given spaces in high-end galleries and museums where their style and intent can be better explained to the masses. Most of the artists featured in “Blended” are relatively unknown outside of the street and pop art scene. But some, like the artist Hektad, who has several murals in the area around the World Trade Center, are more recognizable. Other artists in the show include Robert Mars, Biaggio, RiiisaBoogie, Pitch Black, SFGrajales, Rezones, Wilfredo Feliciano and Michele Allgood. There is even a piece by the curator herself in the exhibit. The energy at the opening of “Blend-
day, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and by appointment. For more information, visit www. amsterdamwhitneygallery.com.
“Make It Your Own,” by riiisaBoogie.
“Bl ack Swan,” by Biaggio.
ed” was the opposite of what one might expect at a gallery. Graffitied trucker hat-wearing viewers laughed with friends as they drank out of champagne flutes. Family members of a gallery worker took selfies in front of collages of Marilyn Monroe. An artist gestured wildly as she explained her piece — a cup of ramen with tentacles and eyes coming out of it. “I feel like street art is the new voice,” said Sanger Russell, a Dumbo resident who was taking in the opening. “It’s a really cool voice, and I just feel like it’s kind of the future.” “Blended” will be on view until May 1 at the Amsterdam Whitney Gallery, at 531 W. 25th St., Tuesday through SaturA piece by Pitch Black.
212 - 254 - 1109 | www.theaterforthenewcity.net | 155 First Ave. NY, NY 10003
Shareholder Value
Time It Is: To Music
by Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theatre (CAMT)
Written by Tom Attea Dir by Mark Marcante Thur - Sat 8PM, Sun 3PM April 04 - April 14
Books & Lyrics: Lissa Moira Directed by Lissa Moira Thur - Sat 8PM, Sun 3PM April 4 - April 28
Directed by Vit Horejs Thur - Sat 8PM, Sun 3PM April 04 - April 07
A photo by planet brz. Schneps Media
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Manhattan Happenings BY ROSE ADAMS AND RICO BURNEY
COMMUNITY L-Train Open House: The Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Department of Transportation will be holding their last open house at which residents can learn about and give feedback on the upcoming L-train “slowdown” and the future of M14 crosstown bus service. Mon., April 8, at the 14th St. Y, 344 E. 14th St., between First and Second Aves. Rent Laws Town Hall: New York’s current rent regulations are set to expire in 2019. The Cooper Square Committee will be holding a discussion with elected officials, including state Senator Brad Hoylman and Assemblymember Harvey Epstein to discuss the way forward to protect New York City renters. Sat., April 6, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., at Speyer Hall, 184 Eldridge St.
TALKS “Let’s Talk Democracy”: Tompkins Square Library hosts a weekly community conversation about how federal, New York State, and New York City governments function, and how residents can affect lasting change. Thursdays, April 11, 18 and 25 at 5:30 p.m. at 331 E. 10th St. Free. The Lillian Wald Symposium: In this year’s fourth annual symposium at the Henry Street Settlement, a group of panelists who work in city government, local activism and historical research discuss solutions to the city’s housing crisis. Wed., April 10, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at 99 Essex St. Free, but RSVP required. To learn more, visit http://les. nyc/events/fourth-annual-lillian-waldsymposium-at-henry-street-settlement/
ARTS The MoCCA Arts Festival: This two-day festival for independent comics, cartoons and animation will feature the work of more than 400 artists, as well as lectures and workshops. From 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sat., April 6, and from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sun., April 7, at Metropolitan West, 639 W. 46th St. Tickets $10. To purchase tickets, visit https://www.societyillustrators.org/ events/mocca-arts-festival Soundtrack of America: Hudson Yard’s performing-arts venue, The Shed, opens this weekend with a fivenight celebration concert series celebrating the impact that African-Americans have had on American music through the years. Each night will be a unique program with a different lineup of musicians. The series will be orchesSchneps Media
trated by “12 Years a Slave” director Steve McQueen, with creative input from Quincy Jones. The series starts Fri., April 5, and runs every other night through Sun., April 14. The Shed at Hudson Yards can be found at W. 30th St., between 10th and 11th Aves. Tickets start at $25. For showtimes and nightly lineups, visit https://theshed.org/program/ series/1-soundtrack-of-america.
6 p.m. at Grand Prospect Hall, 263 Prospect Ave, Brooklyn. Tickets $50. To purchase tickets, visit https://www. thebloodymaryfest.com/nyc-ny-4-7-19. The Spring Fling Dance Party benefit for the Lower Eastside Girl Club promises to be an exciting night filled with music by DJs Va$htie and Mia Moretti. This year’s party will be hosted by “Orange Is the New Black” star Natasha Lyonne. Wed., April 10, from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m. at the DL, 95 Delancey St. Tickets $100. To purchase tickets, visit https://girlsclubspringfling.org/ lite-ui/?controller=home.
FOOD Smorgasburg WTC 2019 kicks off Fri., April 12, and will bring 25 food vendors to Fulton St. every Friday through October, from 11:30 a.m. to 7 p.m., at Oculus Plaza, between Church and Greenwich Sts. No admission fee.
RECREATIONAL
KIDS
The Bloody Mary Festival: Fans of Bloody Marys can sample a variety of tomato-vodka cocktails from across the city and vote for their favorite one. The festival will include a live DJ, local vendors and temporary tattoo artists. Sun., April 7, from 10:30 a.m. to
“Atropia!”: This festival, presented by Wingspan Arts, offers free creative workshops, like leaf stamping, ballet and improv, to children ages 4 to 10. For a $2 fee, children can also get their TVG
The Shed at Hudson Yards officially opens on Fri., April 5, and kicks off with a series of programs highlighting the outsized contribution of African-Americans to the nation’s music.
face painted, make buttons or pose in the photo booth. Sat., April 6, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Anderson School, 100 W. 77th St. For more information, visit https://wingspanarts.org/events/
COMMUNITY BOARDS Community Board 5 meets Thurs., April 11, 6 p.m., at Xavier High School, 30 W. 16th St., second-floor library. Community Board 6 meets Wed., April 10, 7 p.m., at N.Y.U. School of Dentistry, 433 First Ave., Room 210.
COMMUNITY COUNCIL Seventh Precinct Community Council meets Wed., April 10, 7:30 p.m., at 19 1/2 Pitt St. April 4, 2019
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April 4, 2019
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Schneps Media
E3227<5 27@31B=@G TUXEDOS
TUXEDO WORLD OF STATEN ISLAND 2791 Richmond Avenue, #6, Staten Island, NY 10314 (718) 698-4859 www.tuxedoworldsi.com
CATERING & VENUES
BAY RIDGE BAKERY 7805 5th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 238-0014 www.bayridgebakery.com www.glutenfreegloriously.com BAY RIDGE MANOR 476 76th Street, Brooklyn (718) 748-8855 www.bayridgemanor.com BAYSIDE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 208 Totten Avenue, Fort Totten Bayside NY 11359 (718) 352-1548 email: siterental@baysidehistorical.org GLEN TERRACE 5313 Avenue N, Brooklyn (718) 252-4614 GRAND OAKS COUNTRY CLUB 200 Huguenot Avenue, Staten Island (718) 356–2771 www.grandoaksnyc.com GRAND PROSPECT HALL 263 Prospect Avenue, Brooklyn (718) 788-0777 www.grandprospecthall.com GREENHOUSE CAFE 7717 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn (718) 989-8952, www.GreenHouseCafe.com HUNTERS STEAK HOUSE 9404 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 238-8899, www.HuntersSteakhouse.com IL FORNETTO 2902 Emmons Avenue, Brooklyn (718) 332-8494 www.ilFornettoRestaurant.com NICK’S LOBSTER HOUSE 2777 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11234 (718) 253-7117 www.Nickslobsterhouse.com PARADISE CATERING HALL 51 Avenue U, Brooklyn, NY 11223 (718) 372-4352 www.theparadisecateringhall.com THE PEARL ROOM 8518 - 3rd Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 833-6666 www.pearlroombklyn.com RECEPTION HOUSE 167-17 Northern Blvd., Flushing, NY (718) 445-1244 www.ReceptionHouse.com RIVIERA CATERING & EVENTS 2780 Stillwell Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11224 (718) 372-3031 www.rivieracaterers.com SHERATON BROOKLYN NY HOTEL Contact Stephanie Mendez, Sales Mgr. (917) 281-5550 stephanie.mendez@ sheratonbrooklynnewyork.com
SHERATON LAGUARDIA EAST HOTEL 135-20 39th Avenue, Flushing NY 11354 (718) 670-7408 sales@sheratonlaguardia.com sheratonlaguardiaeast.com SIRICO’S CATERERS 8015-23 13th Avenue, Brooklyn (718) 331-2900, www.siricoscaterers.net SOTTO 13 5140 West 13th Street, New York, NY (212) 647-1001, sotto13.com TERRACE ON THE PARK 52-11 111 Street, Flushing, NY 11368 (718) 592-5000 www.terraceonthepark.com THALASSA 179 Franklin Street TriBeCa, New York City (212) 941-7661, www.thalassanyc.com THE VANDERBILT AT SOUTH BEACH 300 Father Capodanno Boulevard Staten Island, NY, (718) 447-0800 www.vanderbiltsouthbeach.com
ENTERTAINMENT
EXPRESS ENTERTAINMENT Professional DJ’s & MC’s (917) 808-7573, curtis03291962@gmail.com HARRY’S HABANA HUT 214-09 41st Ave., Bayside, NY 11361 (718) 423-5049, www.harryshabanahut.com ND CIGARS INC. AKA LA CASA GRANDE CIGARS 2344 Arthur Avenue, Bronx, NY, 10458 (718) 364-4657, lcgcigars.com
FAVORS & INVITATIONS
UNFORGETTABLE EVENTS 2049 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn (718) 377-4535
FLORISTS
FLORAL FANTASY 3031 Quentin Road, Brooklyn, (718) 998-7060 or (800) 566–8380 www.floralfantasyny.com HENRY’S FLORIST 8103 Fifth Avenue in Brooklyn (800) 543-6797 or (718) 238–3838 www.henrysfloristweddingevents.com MARINE FLORIST AND DECORATORS 1995 Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn (800) 447-6730 or (718) 338-3600 www.marineflorists.com
JEWELERS
BOBBY’S JEWELERS 514-81 St., Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 745-1725 BUONO JEWELERS 1250 Hylan Blvd., #6a, Staten Island, NY 10305 (718) 448-4900, www.buonojewelers.com
LIMOUSINE SERVICES
MILA LIMOUSINE CORPORATION (718) 232-8973, www.milalimo.com M&V LIMOUSINES LTD. 1-800-498-5788 1117 Jericho Tpke, Commack, NY (631) 543-0908 151 Denton Ave., New Hyde Park, NY (516) 921-6845 535 8th Ave., 3rd Flr., NY, NY (646) 757-9101 www.mvlimo.com ROMANTIQUE/DOUBLE DIAMOND LIMOUSINES 1421-86 Street, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 232-7273 2041-Hylan Boulevard, Staten Island (718) 351-7273, www.rddlimos.com
SOPHISTICATED LIMOUSINES Servicing the Tri- State Area, (718) 816-9475 www.sophisticatedlimousines.com
PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEO
FANTASY PHOTOGRAPHY 3031 Quentin Rd., Brooklyn NY (718) 998-0949 www.fantasyphotographyandvideo.com NY PHOTO VIDEO GROUP 1040 Hempstead Tpke Franklin Sq., NY 11010 11 Michael Avenue Farmingdale, NY 11735 Office: 516-352-3188 Joe Cell: 516-445-8054 Peter Cell: 516-343-6662 www.nyphotovideogroup.com info@nyphotovideogroup.com ONE FINE DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS 459 Pacific St., Massapequa Park (516) 690–1320 www.onefinedayphotographers.com ZAKAS PHOTOGRAPHY info@zakasphotography.com www.zakasphotography.com
REAL ESTATE
DREAM HOUSE REALTY 7505 15th Avenue Brookyn, NY 11228 (718) 837–2121, carolynctrp@aol.com Carolyn Trippe, Lic. RE Broker
SALONS
PILO ARTS SALON 8412 3 Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 748–7411, www.piloarts.com
SERVICES
COSMETIC & LASER CENTER OF BAY RIDGE 9921 4th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 833-2793 or (718) 833-7616 www.BayRidgeDerm.com DENTAL PLACE Manhattan office: 17 Ave. D, NY, NY 1009 (212) 647-1588 Brooklyn Office: 7420 6 Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 759-9669 www.drmehtadental.com ELITE WEIGHT LOSS 1316 Kings Highway, Brooklyn, NY 11229 (917) 444-3043, EliteWeightLossNY.com KHROM DERMATOLOGY & AESTHETICS 2797 Ocean Pkwy, 1st fl., Brooklyn, NY 11235 (718) 866-3616 www.josephlichterdds.com JOSEPH LICHTER, D.D.S. 1420 Avenue P in Brooklyn (718) 339-7878, www.khromMD.com OMNI DENTAL CARE 313 Kings Highway in Brooklyn (718) 376-8656, www.omnidentalcare.com
TRAVEL
JOLYN TRAVEL 7315 13th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11228 (718) 232-3139, (917) 797-7341 jolyntravel@aol.com
WEDDING INSURANCE
TRI-STATE INSURANCE BROKERAGE 609 E 188th Street Bronx, NY 10458 (718) 618-7666
WEDDING EXPOS
BRIDAL AFFAIR (718) 317–9701, www.bridalaffair.com
TO BE INCLUDED IN THIS DIRECTORY CALL (718) 260–8302 Schneps Media
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