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Chelsea VOLUME 11, ISSUE 30
JULY 25, 2019
YO U R W E E K LY C O M M U N I T Y N E W S PA P E R S E R V I N G C H E L S E A , H U D S O N YA R D S & H E L L’S K I T C H E N
Beautifying Broadway Art mural dazzles on Great White Way P. 3 Some literal “street ar t” — and car-free space — is enlivening Broadway in the hear t of Midtown.
PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN
ICE BREAKERS Local pols reassure immigrants, warn feds P. 6 PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH
Congressmember Nydia Velazquez and other local politicians said they have immigrants’ back amid the ICE depor tation raids.
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July 25, 2019
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Harm-reduction site opens on W. 37th St. BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH
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ew Yorkers facing homelessness, using drugs or suffering from H.I.V./AIDS have a new place to turn to for medical care. The social-services nonprofit Housing Works opened the Ginny Shubert Center for Harm Reduction on W. 37th St. on July 17. The center offers clients a combination of primary care and harm reduction. “We all need comprehensive primary care, but New Yorkers who are most at risk of contracting H.I.V./ AIDS, including those struggling with substance abuse and addiction, need a safe place to seek harm-reduction programs and substance-abuse treatment without fear of legal repercussions,” said Assemblymember Richard Gottfried, chairperson of the Assembly Health Committee, who attended a ribbon-cutting ceremony last week at the nonprofit. Although the nonprofit held a ribbon-cutting for the center’s opening, the building is actually home to one of the city’s oldest needle-exchange programs. In 1995, an organization called Positive Health Project began providing harm-reduction services there, along with a needle-exchange program, including overdose prevention health education and care coordination, and eventually became a part of Housing Works in August 2012. “Since 2012, the program has been evolving into becoming a lot more comprehensive and a lot more mindful of the drug user’s needs and services needed for the population,” said
PHOTO BY GARY GERSHOFF/GETTY IMAGES FOR HOUSING WORKS
From right, from second from right, A ssemblymember Richard Gottfried, state Senator Brad Hoylman, a guest, Ginny Shuber t, C.E.O. Charles King (in background) and Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, deput y commissioner for the city’s Division of Disease Control, attended the ribbon-cutting and dedication of the Ginny Shuber t Center for Harm Reduction on July 17.
Max Sepulveda, managing director for harm reduction at Housing Works. Since Housing Works became the managing agent for PHP, the program has evolved from just being a harmreduction syringe exchange program, and now offers health services, psychiatric services, hepatitis C treatment, a methamphetamine program, and 15 support groups, along with case management and care coordination for H.I.V.-positive individuals. The center is currently staffed with
one primary-care provider, a psychiatric provider, a nurse practitioner and a number of supportive staff to deal with the flow of 30 to 40 visitors a day. Part of the center’s care coordination involves addressing each visitor’s unique needs and appropriately referring them to culturally sensitive providers, if need be. Sensitivity is an important aspect of care at the center, since some clients who have tried obtaining medical services at more mainstream medical
facilities failed to stick with services because of stigma and a lack of sensitivity from providers. The center wants to be able to provide some help for everyone. “Some individuals come with very basic needs — they just need one specific service and then they go. Then we have individuals who are entirely and absolutely disenfranchised,” said Sepulveda, who added that the center works with individuals without health insurance.
Takin’ it to the (car-free) street: Broadway gets mural BY GABE HERMAN
T
alk about street art! A new mural that stretches along Broadway for a block in Midtown is part of the annual Urban Garden program by the Garment District Alliance, which cordons off a street to cars to create more pedestrian-oriented space. The closed-off block, Broadway between W. 37th and 38th Sts., features a 180-foot-long mural — on the street. Called “Nymph Pond,” it’s by artist Carla Torres and debuted on July 11. The artwork was inspired by a small pond in the Galapagos Islands where the artist used to visit, according to the Garment District Alliance, which is a business improvement district, or BID. Torres is originally from Quito, Ecuador, and moved to New York City in 2006 to pursue a career as an artist and illustrator. The block is also part of the BID’s year-round Art on the Plaza program, Schneps Media
PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN
Strolling in an “urban garden” of sor ts on Broadway, without cars.
which has run since 2010, along with the Department of Transportation’s Seasonal Streets Program, which turns streets into public plazas.
The closed-off block includes stretches of green turf, cafe chairs and tables, birch trees, planters and a bike lane that runs alongside the mural. There will CNW
also be free lemonade and live music on Wednesday afternoons. The Urban Garden will run through Aug. 31. This is one of several attempts in the city to transform streets temporarily into public spaces. The first three Saturdays in August will see the return of D.O.T.’s Summer Streets program; on Aug. 3, 10 and 17, between 7 a.m. and 1 p.m., seven miles of streets will be car-free from the Brooklyn Bridge to Central Park, including Park Ave. and connecting streets. Free activities on the closed-off Summer Streets will include fitness programs, play areas for kids and food stands. Last year the program drew almost 300,000 people, according to D.O.T. It’s modeled after similar events that occur worldwide, including in Paris, Bogota and London. Earlier this year, the city also held its annual Car-Free Day on April 27, during which 30 blocks of Broadway were closed to traffic between Times Square and Union Square. July 25, 2019
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Police Blotter Not only that — but his information had been used to open a charge account with Kay Jewelers. After an investigation, it was found that a man entered the Kay Jewelers at 5376 Kings Plaza in Brooklyn, in King’s Plaza Shopping Center, and made about $10,000 worth of purchases on the fraudulent account. Police released a surveillance image of the suspect, who is wanted for grand larceny. He is described as having an afro hairstyle and was last seen wearing a dark green military-patterned coat with black jeans. Anyone with information should contact the Crime Stoppers Hotline.
FIRST PRECINCT
Police seek 5-train creep Police are seeking the public’s help in identifying a man wanted for public lewdness aboard a subway train in Lower Manhattan’s First Precinct. Police said that on Sat., July 13, at 8:50 a.m., a 25-year-old woman boarded a southbound 5 train at the Fulton St. station, and an unidentified man followed her onto the train and began masturbating. Upon arrival at the Bowling Green station, the victim exited the train and the man fled the train and out of the subway system, heading south on Broadway. Anyone with information is asked to call the 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) and then entering TIP577. All tips are strictly confidential.
NINTH PRECINCT
He targeted Target Police said that on Sat., July 13, at around 11:30 p.m., at the Target store at 500 E. 14th St., a man removed a kitchen knife, a computer keyboard and mouse and attempted to leave the place without paying. The store loss-prevention agent tried to stop him, at which point the individual brandished the knife and menaced the agent and customers. The guy then fled the location with the stolen goods, heading in an unknown direction. There were no injuries reported. The suspect is described as black, in his mid-40s to early 50s and bald. He was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, white shorts and white sneakers. Anyone with information should contact the Crime Stoppers Hotline.
MIDTOWN SOUTH
Arrest ‘hypo stabber’ Police said that on Sat., July 20, they
C-train pervert There was a public lewdness incident on the subway on Thurs., June 27, according to a police report. Around 8:30 a.m., on an Uptown C train heading to the W. 14th St. station, a 53-year-old woman saw a man expose his penis. The perv left the train at the station. Police released a photo of him, and anyone with information is asked to contact the Crime Stoppers Hotline.
made an arrest in the case of a homeless man who allegedly stabbed a woman with a needle inside a Koreatown A.T.M., in the Midtown South police precinct. According to police, on Fri., July 12, around 6:30 p.m., a slim man wearing a Fordham ball cap approached a 58-year-old woman inside a Citibank location at 22 W. 32nd St. He then proceeded to display a hypodermic needle, and stabbed her one time in the neck. The victim took herself to an urgentcare facility after the incident. Boyd Taylor, 35, who police said is homeless, was arrested and charged with second-degree assault. No motive
9th Ave. robbery Police said they are looking for three men after a robbery in front of 150 Ninth Ave., at W. 19th St., early on Sun., June 23. Around 2:15 a.m., the group reportedly approached a 25-year-old male victim from behind, forced him to the pavement and assaulted him. During the attack, they took the victim’s cell phone and wallet. The three assailants then fled on foot in an unknown direction. Among the items in the victim’s wallet were two credit cards. That same day, the group of robbers reportedly used one of the cards around 4:50 a.m. to buy items in a deli at 215 Eighth Ave., at W. 21st St. Police released surveillance images of the three wanted men, who are all described as being 18 to 20 years old. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Police Department’s Crime Stoppers Hotline.
was given for the assault.
10TH PRECINCT
$10K bling bandit A man used a Chelsea resident’s personal information to fraudulently purchase thousands of dollars worth of jewelry earlier this year, police said. The victim, 49, reported that on Jan. 9, around 10:30 a.m., in a residential building near W. 15th St. and Seventh Ave., he discovered that his personal information had been compromised.
Un-fare assault A taxi driver was assaulted after a late-night ride on Thurs., July 18,
according to police. The driver, 59, told cops that, around 11:45 p.m., he dropped off a woman at 610 W. 42nd St., at 11th Ave. The woman refused to pay the cab fare of $9.80. As she was leaving the cab, she punched the driver once on the left side of his face, causing him pain. The hack refused medical attention on scene. Nikzoehla Patel, 39, was busted for misdemeanor assault.
Subway-sleep theft A man was robbed last Sunday after falling asleep on the subway, at 11th Ave. and 34th St., police said. On July 21, around 5 a.m., a 34-year-old man said that after he woke up, his wallet was on the floor and several of his possessions were missing, including $500 in cash, his cell phone, his black Nike shoes and even his contact lenses. The total value of the stolen items was $750. The man said he didn’t feel that he had been bumped or jostled awake. The case is open and there is no description of a suspect.
17TH PRECINCT
Hotel purse snatcher There was a theft at the Double Tree Hotel, at 569 Lexington Ave., at E. 51st St., on Thurs., June 13, police said. Around 2:35 p.m., a man took a woman’s purse that she had left unattended on a baggage cart. The man then walked out of the hotel and fled into the Lexington Ave./53rd St. E/M subway station. Items in the purse included $1,500 cash, three pair of sunglasses and four credit cards. Police released surveillance images of the suspect, who is wanted for grand larceny. He was last seen wearing a dark blue Yankees baseball cap, a gray hooded sweater, a white shirt, blue jeans and black sneakers, and was carrying an orange-and-white bag, plus two cases of Heineken beer.
Gabe Herman and Lincoln Anderson
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July 25, 2019
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Pols back immigrants vs. ICE raids BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH
L
ocal politicians and immigration advocates last Friday called on New Yorkers to prepare themselves for ICE raids. “This administration has really set its sights on immigrant communities and I want to make sure that New Yorkers stay vigilant,” said Congressmember Yvette Clarke, during a press conference at Foley Square. Congressmembers Nydia Velazquez and Adriano Espaillat, Public Advocate Jumaane Williams and Attorney General Leticia James were also present. On Wed., July 17, Mayor Bill de Blasio said that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents had been spotted in the city at least eight times since Sat., July 13, AM New York reported. “We are sending a strong message to immigrants across New York,” said Congressmember Nydia Velazquez,
PHOTO BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELL-DOMENECH
Congressmember Nydia Velazquez spoke at Foley Square, calling on New Yorkers to educate themselves on their rights if confronted by ICE agents.
whose district includes parts of the East Village, Lower East Side, Brooklyn and Queens. “You are our neighbor and here in New York City, we take care of our neighbors.” Attorney General Letitia James said she is working with attorneys general across the U.S. to strengthen an underground network of advocates, immigrant groups, politicians and attorneys to help individuals who feel threatened by ICE to know their rights. “My office has been carefully monitoring the situation,” she said, “and we are assessing our legal actions.” The Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs and the American Civil Liberties Union Web sites provide fact sheets and tips on how individuals threatened by ICE can protect themselves. For example, if ICE agents come to a person’s home, they must have a warrant signed by a federal judge to enter. “This is not new, they raid every day,” Espaillat said. “It’s what we are fighting.”
School-fundraiser portal vanishes; Cash, too BY MICAELA MACAGNONE
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YCharities is an online contributions portal that many nonprofit organizations and New York City parent-teacher associations use to manage donations. Web sites of organizations that use NYCharities often include a “donate” button that links directly to the NYCharities Web site. NYCharities then maximizes organizations’ abilities to get donations, by allowing the donor to create a recurring donation, asking if the donor works for a company with a matching-gifts program, and offering tiered ticket pricing if organizations have ticketed events. All nonprofits are required to file a Form 990, which is a federal tax return exempting charities and nonprofits from income tax. In August 2018, NYCharities’ nonprofit status was revoked by the Internal Revenue Service for “not filing a Form 990-series return or notice for three consecutive years.” NYCharities did not publicly report this revocation. NYCharities has gone into ghost mode. Phone calls to its office and knocks on its door are not answered, as are most e-mails. Google Reviews throughout the last month have featured warnings like, “FELLOW DONORS & CHARITIES PLEASE SUBMIT A COMPLAINT TO THE NYS ATTORNEY GENERAL. — This nonprofit has disappeared with countless donations it received on behalf of other non profits. The total amount could amount to federal charges…” and “The nycharities website is down. They have taken donations on our company’s behalf and now I am concerned I may not get that money…” and “Sent a com-
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July 25, 2019
but received no response. The P.S. 110 P.T.A. is owed $10,000 by NYCharities. The P.T.A. is responsible for all the Brooklyn school’s artenrichment programs; this past year the P.T.A. paid for art residencies, a program in the cafeteria called Wellness in the Schools, and an orchestra program with Carnegie Hall. After not receiving a response from NYCharities for a few days, Young called the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and went to the 94th Precinct, in Greenpoint. Police at the precinct told her that because the money wasn’t technically stolen from Young herself, donors themselves would have to come in to the precinct if they wanted to press charges or make a complaint. Leonie Haimson, the executive director of Class Size Matters, a nonprofit organization that advocates for smaller classes in the city’s public schools, is owed about $7,000 from NYCharities. Haimson is one of the few who has been able to get in contact with NYCharities by e-mail in the last two months. She emailed them on July 16 at 9:30 p.m., asking for the whereabouts of May and June donations. NYCharities responded at 10:30 p.m., saying: “We switched banks in June, and so sent most every charity amount by check. Is it possible that it wasn’t accounted for because of the way it came in?” Again, no name was used in the e-mail — and Haimson received no check. She reached out to the New York State Attorney General’s Office about the matter but received no information. Wendy Moore, the executive director of Little Essentials, tells a story similar to
plaint form to the NYS AG office. We did as we are very concerned about no communication from NYCharities, and what is happening to recurring monthly donation… .” The last time the organization posted on Facebook and Twitter was last November. Three organizations that worked with NYCharities, the P.T.A. for P.S. 110 (in Greenpoint, Brooklyn), Class Size Matters and Little Essentials, have not received any donations from NYCharities since May. In 2015, the P.S. 110 P.T.A. obtained 501(c)(3) nonprofit status. Parents involved in other nonprofits at the time had recommended NYCharities. Erica Young, the school’s P.T.A. president, said past interactions with NYCharities were normal: NYCharities would send the P.T.A. a check once a month, with the money donated through the Web site. The only thing that stuck out to Young was that names were never used in e-mails from NYCharities: No name signed off on e-mail exchanges. Last week, however, Young was redesigning the P.T.A.’s Web site and realized that the “Donate” button wasn’t working. Initially, she thought it was just a glitch. The following day, she got a phone call from a parent whose nonprofit also works with NYCharities, who told Young to check and see if she had received a June deposit from NYCharities, because her organization had not. Young realized they had not received a check; the last one they received from NYCharities was May 8, though the NYCharities Web site showed that it had “processed” all 138 donations it received from May and June. Young called and e-mailed NYCharities CNW
that of Young and Haimson. Little Essentials is an organization that offers “at-risk families living in poverty urgently needed children’s supplies and parenting education.” The group has used NYCharities without incident since 2012. But Moore realized something was wrong when they didn’t receive donations from May. Since then she has submitted complaints to the state attorney general and the New York State Charities Bureau. Moore, Young and Haimson all said they are concerned about asking people to cancel their recurring donations, and then asking them to recommit to contributing again on a different platform. The list of the board of directors and board of advisers on NYCharities’ Web site includes more than 50 influential names, along with their companies and positions. Among them are Silda Wall, founder of the Children For Children Foundation and ex-wife of former Governor Eliot Spitzer; John Haworth, director of the George Gustav Heye Center at the Smithsonian Museum of the American Indian; Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari; and Charles Radcliffe, senior V.P. at Morgan Stanley. The attorney general’s and Manhattan district attorney’s offices have both been informed of NYCharities’ unresponsiveness and the money it owes to P.T.A.’s and other school groups. However, the A.G.’s office did not respond to e-mails or phone calls requesting comment from this paper; no one picked up repeated calls to the press line. The D.A.’s office declined to comment, and a spokesperson there would neither confirm nor deny if there is an active investigation into NYCharities. Schneps Media
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July 25, 2019
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Obituary
Paul Krassner, 87, Yippies co-founder, editor BY MARY REINHOLZ
I
conoclastic author and humorist Paul Krassner, who coined the name “Yippie� for the Youth International Party and catapulted to 1960s counterculture fame, died Sunday at his Desert Hot Springs home in Southern California. He was 87. Krassner was also the founder/editor of The Realist, a now-defunct satirical publication he produced in the East Village while writing for Mad magazine. He was also a former standup comic at The Village Gate. His death followed a monthlong undiagnosed illness, said his daughter Holly Krassner Dawson. He had been ailing for about a year with an apparent neurological disorder, according to friends. Krassner, who has been touted as a forerunner to cutting-edge funnymen like Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert — blending fact with fiction — was born in Brooklyn to Jewish parents but considered himself an atheist. He started in show business as a 6-year-old child violin prodigy at Carnegie Hall. Five years ago, he told this writer how he fell asleep on the stage in the august music
house in “the middle of Vivaldi’s ‘Concert in A Minor’� and started scratching an itch on his left foot with his right foot. The audience roared. “And I was awakened by the sound of an audience laughing,� he said. “It was a life-changing moment. I perceived reality through the prism of absurdity. I had a technique for playing the violin, but I had a passion for making people laugh.� “Irreverence is our only sacred cow� was Krassner’s motto for The Realist, whose A-list contributors ranged from Norman Mailer to Mort Sahl. One of his most popular offerings at the magazine, which he launched with cheap paper in 1958, was a wall poster showing Disneyland cartoon characters at a 1967 “Disneyland Memorial Orgy.� His most infamous was a seemingly LSD-inspired fantasy of President Lyndon Baines Johnson committing necrophilia in the bullet hole of John F. Kennedy’s corpse while aboard Air Force One. Called “The Parts Left out of the Manchester book,� the gruesome article was based on a biography of J.F.K. by William Manchester, which had been
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rejected by his widow Jacqueline Kennedy. Some prominent writers thought Krassner’s put-on was true. “He went beyond irreverent to psychedelic and putting people on another life path,� said Los Angeles journalist Rex Weiner, a former contributor to the underground East Village Other and a founder of the short-lived New York Ace in the early 1970s. In noting how Krassner used to say, “The truth is silly putty,� Weiner noted that Krassner’s mind-bending satire “may have led to a disregard for objective truth� in the Trump era. “But at the time,� Weiner noted, “the government was deceiving the public on everything — Vietnam and civil rights.� Krassner, he said, wanted to alter people’s perceptions. Krassner wrote about 20 books, including second editions, and edited the autobiography of mentor Lenny Bruce’s “How to Talk Dirty and Influence People.� Besides co-founding the Youth International Party in 1967, he was a member of Ken Kesey’s band of Merry Pranksters. He always seemed intent on “giving the finger to The Man,� said fellow Yippie Aron “The Pie Man� Kay, 69, who first met Krassner at an A.J. Liebling media conference at Manhattan’s Commodore Hotel in 1974. “He was promoting The Realist and I was promoting Yipster Times,� recalled Kay. He recalled Krassner publicly French-kissing the so-called “Realist Nun� Margo St. James, a politicized sex worker in a nun’s habit who founded a prostitutes-rights group in San Francisco called Coyote (Call Off Your Tired
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Old Ethics). He acknowledged that such antics by Krassner inspired him to take a counterculture job throwing pies at political enemies. Kay lauded Krassner for his early advocacy of women’s reproductive rights. “He ran an underground abortion network providing abortion referrals to women who couldn’t afford to go to Europe,� he recalled. This was long before the 1973 passage of Roe v. Wade, the U.S. Supreme Court decision granting women the legal right to terminate unwanted pregnancies. Krassner went on to join fellow Youth International Party co-founders like Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin at the wildly chaotic 1967 Democratic National, Convention, dodging clubwielding Chicago cops. He was later dubbed an unindicted co-conspirator for the riotous scene, and testified at trial reportedly stoned on LSD, according to Los Angeles author Pat Thomas, who published a coffee-table biography of Yippie leader Jerry Rubin last year. Thomas, who kept in touch with Krassner since their first meeting in 2009, said that the older man was “profeminist but I know some feminists were pissed when he was [briefly] an editor at Hustler magazine.� Thomas noted that decades earlier, Krassner gave money to panhandling actress and writer Valerie Solanas to help her publish her savagely satirical “The Scum Manifesto,� not long before she shot and nearly killed Andy Warhol in 1968. “He gave her $50 so she could produce ‘The Scum Manifesto,’� Thomas said. “He said it wasn’t right for The Realist, but he felt she should print it on her own.� Krassner, he noted, once told him he went to the Spahn Ranch in Simi Valley and “dropped acid� with Charles Manson follower Squeaky Fromme, “so he would know what it felt like to be part of the Manson Family. Paul was fearless,� added Thomas in a phone interview. “I didn’t grill him about it. It was just a tiny anecdote he threw out one day.� These days, Thomas puts Krassner in the company of Jewish counterculture figures like the late beat poet Allen Ginsberg. “He was there before The Onion, before Spy,� he said. “He really invented print political satire. I think he mastered the art, like Lenny Bruce and George Carlin. He made an impact.� Besides his daughter Holly, Krassner is survived by his second wife, Nancy Cain, and a granddaughter Talia. Arrangements for a memorial are pending. His latest book is “Zapped by the God of Absurdity, The Best of Paul Krassner� (Fantagraphics Books, September 2019). Schneps Media
‘Angel’ buyer saves Boys’ Club building
FILE PHOTO
At a rally in fall 2018 outside the E. 10th St. Boys’ Club, Cit y Councilmember Carlina Rivera, left, and state Senator Brad Hoylman, right, called for deferring the building’s planned sale.
BY GABE HERMAN
A
fter the Boys’ Club of New York put its historic Harriman Clubhouse up for sale last year, there was an outcry from locals and concern that the building would become just more new luxury condos, further gentrifying the East Village. But an anonymous buyer has reportedly come to the rescue, buying the building at E. 10th St. and Avenue A for $32 million — with plans to keep it as a community space. The Harrison Clubhouse has served youth in the East Village and Lower East Side since 1901, helping around 1 million boys and young men. Last year, the Boys’ Club trustees put the building up for sale without seeking much input from the community. They said there had been declining attendance in recent years, though minutes from the organization showed attendance at the facility had actually been increasing. Last fall, local politicians, Community Board 3 members and residents rallied outside the 50,000-square-foot building, calling for postponement of the sale. “We must do everything within our power to make sure that the clubhouse building can continue to be a resource for youth in our community,” said Assemblymember Harvey Epstein at the time. “We cannot allow our community assets to be sold to the highest bidder and turned into market-rate housing that gentrifies our neighborhood.” But now a wealthy individual, who wishes to remain anonymous, has bought the building through a foundation, which intends to keep it for community use, Crain’s first reported. “The goal is to keep this as a community facility,” Paul Wolf, a real estate Schneps Media
broker who represents the foundation, told Crain’s. “The intent is to sell it to a nonprofit at a lower price than the purchase price.” St. Brigid’s Church, nearby on Avenue B, was also saved in recent years by an angel investor, who gave $20 million for renovations to save the building from destruction. The church reopened in 2013. As for the Harriman Clubhouse, state Senator Brad Hoylman expressed gratitude after the anonymous purchase. “Whoever this angel investor is, I want to thank them on behalf of our community,” Holyman said in a statement. “They are saving a century-old community facility from being converted into luxury condos or a high-priced hotel, which sadly has been the real estate narrative for the East Village. “While I wish the Boys’ Club had never put the Harriman Clubhouse on the open market in the first place,” Hoylman continued, “I’m grateful to them for finding this angel investor that will allow young people and families in our community to continue to benefit from this splendid facility. “I’m hopeful that the unnamed foundation will work with Community Board 3, elected officials and other local stakeholders to ensure that community organizations have a place in the new building, and that the Boys’ Club, which is reportedly taking space in the building, will decide to stay in this location and continue to provide the essential services it offers to boys and young men.” Hoylman was among the local politicians who rallied last fall for deferring the building’s sale, along with Epstein, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer and City Councilmember Carlina Rivera. CNW
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Cyclists ready to roll against cancer BY AIDAN GR AHAM
M
ore than 180 cyclists will don spandex and hit the saddle for a daunting seven-day cycling journey from Staten Island to Niagara Falls on Sun., July 28, in a race to fight an even more grueling challenge — cancer. The 540-mile annual Empire State Ride was conceived in 2014 by Terry Bourgeois to raise funds for cancer research — and has grown exponentially since his inaugural ride, he said. “Every year, this ride brings its participants an experience that will stay with them the rest of their lives,” Bourgeois said. “We keep saying it’s a ride cyclists must try once in their lives, but the impact — on you and on cancer — increases exponentially the more you do it.” This year, organizers hope to raise more than $1 million from riders and sponsors — which will go to supporting cutting-edge cancer research at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo, according to the organization. Riders push themselves to the physical limits during the exhausting crossstate cycling trek, but find inspiration to keep pedaling from those who have conquered cancer, according to one
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EMPIRE STATE RIDE
First-time Empire State Ride par ticipate Sari Schorr is gearing up for the star t of a seven-day journey across New York State, beginning July 28.
rider who will make his second voyage this year. “The idea of what they’ve gone through — this ride is nothing com-
pared to hours of chemotherapy,” said Brooklynite Phil Zodda. “I’m not a cancer survivor, but when you’re riding side by side with someone who has
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gone through that, you can’t feel bad for yourself — those mountains flatten out.” After their exhaustive days filled with nonstop riding, cyclists will make six overnight stops along the meticulously planned route at campgrounds in the Hudson Valley, Albany, Utica, Syracuse and Rochester until they reach the waterfall wonder of the world on Aug. 3. “It’s really more of an adventure as opposed to a race,” Zodda said. “It’s long and difficult, but I found it to be extremely rewarding.” Each night features a cancer-survivor speaker who inspires their fellow riders with their stories and speaks of the importance of raising funds to combat the disease — which claims the lives of around 600,000 Americans each year, according to government statistics. “Cancer can hit closer to home than we like,” said second-year rider Scott Cohen from Fresh Meadows, Queens. “I’ve battled several health issues for many years, including a bout of skin cancer… . I’ve lost several family members, and have friends that have and are fighting cancer.”
July 25, 2019
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Editorial
Hey, Bill! Can the campaign For many New Yorkers, Mayor Bill de Blasio’s delayed response to the Manhattan blackout on July 13 — as he continued his quixotic campaign for president a thousand miles away in Iowa — was the last straw. Since the days when Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia rode on a police motorcycle sidecar to get to major incidents around town during the Great Depression, New Yorkers have come to expect their mayors to be on the spot for any major crisis that may strike. But when the lights went out in Manhattan on Saturday night July 13 — trapping people in elevators, suspending subway service in Queens and beyond, and bringing the heart of the city to a standstill — de Blasio was nowhere to be found. While on yet another taxpayer-funded junket in his long-shot quest to become president, he phoned in the response, then waited hours before deciding he should get out of Iowa and come back to the city he was elected to serve. But by the time he returned, the crisis was long over. Surrogate leaders stepped up during de Blasio’s absence, including City Council Speaker Corey Johnson and Governor Andrew Cuomo. The blackout may have happened in Manhattan, but the rage over de Blasio’s no-show can be felt in every corner of the city. New Yorkers know that such a crisis could easily happen to them — and where would they be without the mayor’s leadership? Some have said it’s time for de Blasio to step aside, but we don’t think that’s required. Rather, it’s time for de Blasio to live up to the oath that he took to serve the people of New York City. And, yes, it’s time for him to drop out of the presidential race. Being mayor of New York City, it has been said, is the second-toughest job in America — second only to the presidency itself. De Blasio may be term-limited in 2021, but there are no limits to the very real challenges this city faces. Residents are dealing with myriad problems, including a higher cost of living, public transportation breakdowns, overcrowded schools, income inequality and more. Undocumented residents around the city also feared the worst over recent reports that ICE would be conducting a major deportation sweep. While the raid never materialized in the predicted large scale, the mayor decided to skip town anyway and campaign in Iowa — sending a message that he cares more about his fantastical White House hopes than he does for some of the city’s most vulnerable residents. Indeed, de Blasio’s blasé handling of the blackout weekend’s crises — not to mention past public policy blunders on everything from public education to public housing — indicate that he’s not ready for the White House at all. The Democratic field, crowded as it is, has far more competent and more qualified candidates for the presidency than our current mayor. No one on the campaign trail will miss de Blasio except for the mayor himself. Clearly, he can’t both be New York City’s mayor and run for president. Something’s got to give. Bill, get real — throw in the towel and stop being an absentee mayor — unless that is the legacy you truly want to leave.
A photo from the Aug. 11, 1960, issue of The Villager showed local Cub Scout Stephen Cossu, of 118 MacDougal St., presenting Yankees Manager Casey Stengel with a neckerchief and slide at Yankee Stadium. To the right of them, Thomas Aimone, of 8 Morton St., made the presentation speech on behalf of Troop 371, St. Joseph’s Church. The Scouts honored the legendary manager in connection with 50 years of Scouting, and Stengel’s 50th year in baseball and 70th birthday. Scout John C. Clifford, of 287 W. Fourth St., held the Pack flag in the background. Stengel played ball from 1912 to ’25, but became famous in later years as a manager. From 1949 to ’60, he won 10 pennants and seven titles as the Yankees skipper. He was fired after the 1960 season, when the team lost in the World Series to the Pittsburgh Pirates. The “Old Perfesser” went on to manage the inept inaugural Mets teams from 1962 to ’65.
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July 25, 2019
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Op-Ed
Letters to the Editor
Affordability could fly at old airfield BY LYNN ELLSWORTH
T
here are many weaknesses to Mayor de Blasio’s trickledown approach to affordable housing. One is that it abandons direct provision of housing at the low end of the market and ignores the need to make housing permanently affordable. Just as bad, every city initiative related to housing has become a partnership with a big-shot developer, with all the cost and profit biases, the distorted set of winners and losers, and all the negative social costs that such a partnership with Big Real Estate entails. If de Blasio really cared about housing supply, he would be much more aggressive about building 100 percent permanently affordable units on public land using the land trust model. By foot-dragging on the public land trust approach, de Blasio and his team are leaving amazing housing opportunities on the table without a fight. I see three examples of public land that de Blasio has not fought for, where an excellent case can be made that the properties should be given over to a public land trust for permanently affordable housing — namely, two sites at the World Trade Center complex and the entirety of Floyd Bennett Field. World Trade Center Site 5 is the site of the former Deutsche Bank. Strangely, the Port Authority and Lower Manhattan Development Corporation have recently decided they want to sell that site off to the highest private-sector bidder for roughly $300 million. The governor is apparently gung-ho for the idea, if his release of a request for proposals, or R.F.P., for the site is an indicator of his thinking. It all means the World Trade Center site will see yet another glass tower with a mix of luxury office and luxury retail, instead of what we need there, which is either low-income housing or a park that isn’t for tourists. The mayor ought to be fighting for these sites, battling the questionable theory of “highest and best use” for disposition of public land. The other public land on the W.T.C. complex that is bizarrely not devoted to housing is the site that is supposedly slated for a boondoggle of a performing arts center — a glassy box designed by Frank Gehry, for which the funding has not yet been found. That funding is utterly dependent on private philanthropy — much like “Diller Island,” off of W. 14th St., a billionaire’s private project. What a silly diversion of private philanthropic money which ought to be better allocated to the renovation of the public Delacorte Theater in Central Park, an actual theater in desperate need of funding! Meanwhile, Floyd Bennett Field has about 1,000 acres under federal control. Given that Trump is a real estate developer and dislikes the E.P.A., isn’t it worth trying to get the airfield back under municipal control for housing? The place is not “nature” but an abandoned airfield with a lot of asphalt. Think what 1,000 acres could do if it was in a public land trust devoted to affordable housing on a human (say, R6 residential zoning) scale! The point of these examples is to illustrate the dangers of relying on “public private partnerships” to build affordable housing: The approach blinds us to the 100-percent public opportunities staring us in the face. We clearly need a new policy that builds up our land assets for affordable housing rather than sells public land off to developers. It is timely to raise the issue since the next election cycle is coming. So who among the mayoral contenders will embrace a different approach to housing that is not de Blasio 2.0? Ellsworth is co-founder, Human-scale NYC, and chairperson, Tribeca Trust
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PHOTO BY WILLIAM ALATRISTE/NYC COUNCIL
City Council Speaker Corey Johnson was on Long Island on the evening of Sat., July 13, when a blackout hit his West Side Council District 3. But he rushed right back to the cit y and kept New Yorkers updated with a flurr y of informative t weets. Mayor de Blasio, meanwhile, did not return from Iowa until 12:30 p.m. the nex t afternoon, prompting some to say it was yet another sign that Johnson is the “de facto mayor.”
Fear cars, not bikes
lowed all his Twitter posts for blackout info. Very reassuring. Thank you, Corey.
To The Editor: Re “Sharing the city streets” (editorial, July 18): Thanks for shooting down the “New York City is not Europe” jive, and it is certainly incumbent upon bicyclists to be mindful and considerate of pedestrians. But there is such a double standard around this question. So far this year, 81 pedestrians in New York have been killed in traffic “accidents.” Exactly one of those deaths was caused by a bicyclist — and it was the first since 2017. When the anti-bike brigade that haunts The Villager’s comments start to express a little concern over the neardaily carnage caused by motorists, maybe I will take them a little more seriously.
Bonnie Stein
Bill Weinberg
He’s fresh, exciting To The Editor: Re “In blackout, Johnson shines, Blaz fizzles” (news article, July 18): Corey Johnson is a magnificent, fresh and smart voice in New York City politics. I fol-
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woman sculptor, in Central Park. Harry Pincus
Monumental statue debate To The Editor: Re “Harlem historian: Suffragettes statue is ‘racist’” (news article, thevillager.com, July 11): If Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony were champions of “white women’s suffrage” and Sojourner Truth and Ida B. Wells were champions of “universal suffrage,” wouldn’t it be improper to combine all of the figures in one monument? There should be two separate monuments. It’s wrong to “label” a monument honoring two very worthy historical figures who lived more than 100 years ago as “racist.” Was their work predominantly racist, in the context of their time — or feminist? Should Meredith Bergmann now destroy her beautiful monument? All I can say is that 2020 will mark the centenary of my mother’s birth, and I will be pleased to see a new monument, or two new monuments, executed by an acclaimed
What Fred said To The Editor: Re “Harlem historian: Suffragettes statue is ‘racist’” (news article, thevillager.com, July 11): Frederick Douglass said: “When there were few houses in which the black man could have put his head, this wooly head of mine found refuge in the house of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and if I had been blacker than sixteen midnights, without a single star, it would have been the same. There is no name greater than hers in the matter of woman’s rights and equal rights.” Coline Jenkins
E-mail letters, maximum 250 words, to news@thevillager.com or fax to 212-2292790 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. July 25, 2019
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Lessons Learned While On The Beat By Eric L. Adams
Protecting Homeowners When I bought my first house, where I still reside today, I felt a mix of pride of fear. Homeownership is a tremendous privilege and responsibility – I had scrimped and saved to get to this point, but I knew that many challenges, financial and otherwise, still lay ahead. Making a house into a home is a process that often takes several years. Some people undertake ambitious floor-to-ceiling renovations, while others are comfortable with adding a few personal touches but leaving everything else intact. But it is a labor of love – we make a home because we are investing in our future. We envision settling down, raising a family, and growing old in a place we call home. Even with the effort we put into building a home, homeowners – particularly in Brooklyn - are under increasing stress today. Some have fallen behind on their mortgage payments, others have lost their homes altogether. Foreclosures in Kings County last year reached their highest level since the housing bubble burst. And on top of that, a new epidemic of deed fraud has hit vulnerable homeowners in gentrifying neighborhoods, accelerating displacement and leaving many homeless. The kicker? The City may unintentionally be playing a role. The Third Party Transfer program (TPT) allows the City to foreclose on “distressed” properties and hand them over to developers to fix up and rent out at affordable prices. The program began in 1996, and is administered through the Department of Housing Preservation and Development. In theory, it sounds like a good idea. Using all the tools at our disposal to restore properties that have fallen into disrepair and increase affordable housing stock are noble goals. But the reality is much more complicated. Despite the City’s best intentions, TPT seems to be doing more harm than good. Often, the City deems properties “distressed” over something as trivial as an unpaid water bill. In November of 2018, after hearing from multiple people and sitting down with stakeholders throughout the borough that had firsthand experience with the program, I wrote a letter with Council Member Robert Cornegy to the Mayor outlining our concerns. We communicated our belief that TPT had unfortunately become tainted by fraud, and that homeowners were being stripped of their equity without the proper recourse. We also demanded that the City, State, and Federal government conduct a “full-scale, forensic audit” into the program.
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July 25, 2019
Eric L. Adams Our concerns turned out to be justified. In March of this year, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Mark Partnow ruled against the City and restored properties to six homeowners who had their properties seized through the TPT program. In his decision, Justice Partnow wrote, “While the Third Party Transfer Program was intended to be a beneficial program, an overly broad and improper application of it that results in the unfair divestiture of equity in one’s property cannot be permitted.” There is still a lot of work to be done. In July, the City Council held a hearing on the TPT program, and our office submitted testimony. In the testimony, we reiterated our call for a full-scale investigation, and urged the Council to pass Public Advocate Jumaane Williams’ bill imposing a two-year moratorium on the program until we could implement the necessary reforms and strengthen oversight. In the coming weeks and months, we plan to roll out an ambitious, comprehensive agenda formulated with the input of experts and advocates that combats housing theft and rein in the excesses of TPT. I am also encouraging the Governor to sign S1688, a bill the legislature passed in the most recent session that would return stolen properties to their original owners. After all the time spent making a house a home, it is almost unimaginable that it could be taken away from you over arrears or a bureaucratic error. Unfortunately, that is how TPT is currently structured. We have an obligation to homeowners throughout Brooklyn and the City to ensure the homes they spend years cultivating remain in their hands. Eric L. Adams is borough president of Brooklyn. He served 22 years in the New York City Police Department (NYPD), retiring at the rank of captain, as well as represented District 20 in the New York State Senate from 2006 until his election as borough president in 2013.
COURTESY ASSEMBLYMEMBER ROSENTHAL
A ssemblymember Linda Rosenthal with an A .S.P.C. A . cat named Oats. Rosenthal’s bill banning cat declawing in New York State was signed into law on July 22.
New York is first state to ban cats’ declawing BY ALEJANDR A O’CONNELLDOMENECH
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ew York has officially become the first state in the country to ban cat declawing. On Mon., July 22, Governor Andrew Cuomo signed into law a bill by Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal and state Senator Michael Gianaris banning cat declawing. Under the new legislation, unless the procedure is performed to address a legitimate medical condition, cat owners that declaw their pets are subject to a fine of up to $1,000. “By banning this archaic practice, we will ensure that animals are no longer subjected to these inhumane and unnecessary procedures,” Cuomo said in a statement. Declawing involves the removal of almost all of the last bone in each toe of the cat’s front feet, according to the Humane Society of the United States. The equivalent for a human being would be cutting off each finger at the first knuckle. The procedure also calls for the removal of some tendons, ligaments and nerves in the cat’s paw, and can lead to
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chronic pain for the animals. “Complications from declawing include an increase in biting and litterbox avoidance —which often results in the cat being surrendered to an animal shelter,” said Kitty Block, president and C.E.O. of the Humane Society of the U.S. “The organization applauds Assemblymember Rosenthal and Senator Gianaris for the bill.” According to The New York Times, several cities, including Los Angeles and Denver, have banned the practice. California, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and West Virginia are also pushing to ban declawing, according to the Humane Society. Several Canadian provinces and European countries, including the U.K., Sweden, Germany, Austria and Switzerland, have banned the procedure, as well. Rosenthal, who represents the Upper West Side, said she hopes others will now follow in New York’s paw steps… er, footsteps. “Now that my bill has become law,” she said, “New York has been catapulted onto the leaderboard of humane states, and we expect other states to quickly follow in our footsteps.” Schneps Media
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Dr. Sutton on keeping girls in sports BY NEW YORK FAMILY
S
ports have always been the go-to when it comes to finding an outlet for your children to unleash their unceasing energy. But it is more than just having them run around and get active. Sports play a key role in building your child’s confidence and set them up for success in the classroom, as well. However, studies have shown that today’s generation is the least active in history and girls are increasingly dropping out of sports because of some of the many obstacles they confront when it comes to playing the game. We caught up with sports expert Dr. Karen Sutton, who spoke to us about why young girls are dropping out of sports, how we can encourage them to stay involved, and the campaign “Keep Her In The Game,” which helps girls feel strong and confident about getting out there and playing sports! What is “Keep Her In The Game” all about? “Keep Her In The Game” is about empowering young girls to stay in sports — either athletically or professionally. I hope that girls will gain an understanding of how sports change during adolescence: the ins and outs of sports bras, deodorant, re-training muscles and managing your period during sports. Coaches and parents need to understand that younger female athletes respond to a positive tone in coaching, understanding the “why” behind drills, and enjoy a group camaraderie. As a surgeon in a field of 6 percent women, sports gave me the courage and tenacity to feel confident in a typically male profession. Surgery requires diligence, intelligence, ability to multitask and leadership, and I honed these qualities as an athlete throughout my life. Sports empowered me to push myself to succeed in my career and life. Studies have shown that girls are dropping out of sports at 150 percent the rate that boys do by the age of 14 and 17 years old. Why is this and what are some key factors involved? A study done by Refinery29 and Gatorade showed that key factors for girls dropping out of sports include social stigma, lack of access, safety and transportation issues, costs and a lack of positive role models. Social stigmas can exist where girls may feel less confident in sports when the spotlight is typically on the male athletes. Additionally, girls have a two-to-eight-times increased risk of anterior cruciate ligament injuries in pivoting and cutting sports. During adolescents there is a weakness in posterior muscles (gluteus medius and hamstrings), which can protect the A.C.L. from injury. Girls are at higher risk for patellofemoral pain syndrome and stress fractures. How are these studies about girl’s involvement in sports conducted? Surveying a diverse group of girls ranging from age 8 to 18 and understanding what is limiting their role in sports despite the work of Title IX. How can we encourage girls to stay in sports? Create a nurturing environment: It’s important to remember that girls respond to their environ-
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PHOTO BY LUKAS FROM PEXELS
Young girls in sports respond best to positive tone, encouragement and team camaraderie.
Dr. Karen Sutton.
ment. They prefer a group setting with teams that offer camaraderie, support and friendships. They want to understand the whys behind certain plays or decisions. If a team has a bad practice and the
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players hang their heads after, having a coach criticize and curse out players will not be well received nor achieve a productive result. Monitor progress: I like Oprah Winfrey’s approach. Keep a journal of your progress against immediate short- and long-term goals. This applies to sports, academics and your career. With respect to athletics, start by working with the team to come up with a saying that all can rally around. Determine your individual and team goals, then chart how you’re doing — whether it’s more playing time, working hard in practice or enhancing skills. Bring your coach, trainer and teammates into the loop, so all are invested in your goal-setting. Why is it so important for children to be involved in sports? Aside from health benefits, do these disciplines contribute to their development of life skills? Being on a team helps girls build confidence in their abilities, meet challenges, overcome adversity and connect the dots between hard work and results. On-field experiences can carry over to the classroom, among friend groups and even into the workplace. A 2017 Ernst & Young survey of high-level female executives found that 90 percent played sports. Among women who held C-suite titles, the proportion was even higher — 96 percent. The rate of girl’s participation in sports has been dropping. What can we hope to see for the future with girls in sports and what is being done now? We can hope to see positive role models in sports and careers and that playing sports increases success in the classroom, as well. Communities have to provide positive female role models in coaching and sports leadership roles. Nonprofits, such as Sporty Girls and Girls on the Run, promote sports and activities in girls for a healthier generation. Do you have daughters yourself? Or nieces? If so, how do you as a parent encourage them to take up sports and stick with them? I have a daughter who is 3 and three sons — 6, 7 and 9 years old — who are very active. My daughter likes to hang with the big boys, play in the backyard, attempt kicking soccer balls, and shooting a basket, etc. I give her developmentally appropriate skills to have fun while trying that out: lower basket, smaller basketball. It’s important to pay attention to developmental milestones. I also give her verbal cues — “Girls are so strong, girls are fast” — and her brothers encourage her, too. How would you deal with a child who swears to hate a certain sport? How long should a kid stick with an activity before quitting. We’re so focused on perfection and drills. Carve out practice time each week for a fun activity. Varsity and travel teams are not the right fit for everyone; consider joining house leagues and participating in intramural sports. Sutton is a sports medicine surgeon with expertise in arthroscopy of the shoulder, knee and hip. She is an associate attending orthopedic surgeon at Hospital for Special Surgery and head team physician for U.S. Women’s Lacrosse, chief medical officer for Federation of International Lacrosse, and team physician for US Ski & Snowboard.
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Oddfellows stands out with unique flavors list goes on. We focus on staying true to ourselves and our mission and make things with integrity.” The company pasteurizes its own ice cream base in its Brooklyn kitchen, and uses locally sourced dairy without hormones or additives. And the ice cream is made daily in small batches, with flavors changing on a daily basis in the shops and sometimes even more than once a day. “One of the reasons people come back to us is because we are constantly rotating flavors and have a strong commitment to texture,” Kumar said. “People know they’ll get classics and ‘odd’ flavors with us. But we hope they come back for our texture and curiosity of not knowing what will be in the cabinet when they step foot inside our scoop shop next.” Kumar co-founded Oddfellows with his wife Holiday and friend Sam Mason. The first shop opened in Williamsburg in June 2013.
BY GABE HERMAN
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s its name suggests, Oddfellows Ice Cream Co. makes some unusual flavors, in both savory and sweet categories, to go along with more classic choices. A recent trip to the location at 55 E. Houston St., at Mott St., presented ice cream options like Thai iced tea, miso cherry, lemon meringue pie, carrot cake, extra virgin olive oil and strawberry, and malt maitake mushroom peanut. There was also dark chocolate chunk, vanilla bean and milk and cookies for the slightly less adventurous. Co-founder Mohan Kumar said the wide variety helps Oddfellows stand out in the crowded local ice cream scene. “We were the first shop to really take some risks,” he said, “with flavors like Cornbread, Chorizo Caramel Swirl, Miso Cherry, Saffron Passionfruit, the
PHOTO BY GABE HERMAN
Oddfellows’ offerings at the Whole Foods on the Bower y include dark chocolate chunk.
Do you know THESE MEN?
In planning the company, the three co-founders decided on themes of “carnival” and “weird,” and a shop that wasn’t just for kids, according to Mohan. A Google search of “carnival” and “weird” yielded “Oddfellows,” and the name worked with the carnival feel and including the word “odd,” Mohan said. The store now has four locations, with two in Brooklyn and two in Manhattan, including the one on E. Houston St. and another in the East Village at 75 E. Fourth St., between Second Ave. and the Bowery. A fifth location is coming soon to Bushwick. Oddfellows has a small selection of flavors in Whole Foods shops. The location on E. Houston St. and the Bowery, for example, has three flavors: dark chocolate chunk, burnt marshmallow and banana puddin’. “There is no doubt that being in Whole Foods Market is a boost,” Mohan said. Since there are only a handful of flavors one can get at Whole Foods Market, it leads customers into one of our scoop shops where they’re excited by the unique variety of flavors they can find.” More information on the company can be found at oddfellowsnyc.com.
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PHOTO BY BOB KRASNER
From right, the Bush Tetras’ C ynthia Sley and Pat Place, with an audience member on percussion. Sley invited people to come up and dance onstage. One woman danced. This guy played.
Bush Tetras and Co. get hot for Justice BY BOB KR ASNER
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ance beats, punk rock and noise mingled in the heat in Tompkins Square Park on Friday in the interests of justice. Specifically, Avenues For Justice, a nonprofit that was founded 41 years ago on Avenue B. The organization’s main focus is to keep kids between the ages of 14 and 24 out of prison by finding alternatives to incarceration and preventing recidivism, according to Gamal Willis, the group’s manager of outreach and court advocacy. Headliners Collapsing Scenery instigated the show, suggesting to an A.F.J. board member that they celebrate their latest album’s release with a benefit gig. The Bush Tetras, definitely the crowd favorite, were also celebrating a new release — a single on Third Man Records. Their mix of old and new tunes included the classic “Too Many Creeps.” Lead singer Cynthia Sley had some complaints about the heat, but not after they hit the stage.
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PHOTO BY BOB KRASNER
Zah was a change of pace.
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“Once we were onstage we were happy,” she said. Also appearing were the ambitiously eclectic band Nymph and solo artist Zah. An intriguing performer, Zah mixed voice and electronics while wearing an elaborate robe, horrormovie contact lenses and a piece of lingerie that is not normally found on one’s head. Weston Muench, A.F.J. social media director, judged the event a success. “It was our first time doing this,” he said. “We raised money, people signed up for our newsletter and took the pamphlets. We’re gauging the possibility for future events — we want to do it again.” More information about Avenues For Justice, including on their two Manhattan community centers, can be found at www.avenuesforjustice. org . The Bush Tetras will be at the Mercury Lounge, at E. Houston St. near Essex St., on Aug. 3. Schneps Media
Marianne & Leonard: A lasting love BY LINCOLN ANDERSON
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he new documentary “Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love” reportedly may not break much new ground for hardcore Leonard Cohen fans. But it nonetheless paints a riveting and thought-provoking portrait of the artist and Marianne Ihlen, his Norwegian “muse,” from their idyllic time together on the Greek island of Hydra in their 20s all the way to the end of their lives. After achieving notoriety as a poet in his native Canada, Cohen bought a house on Hydra — which sported a bohemian artist enclave — and tried to make a go of it as a novelist. He met Ihlen in a cafe and soon they were living together. Baking on his porch in the hot sun while hammering away at his typewriter on speed, Cohen cranked out “Beautiful Losers.” Meanwhile, Ihlen did the shopping and adored him. But the book received mixed reviews. Instead, Cohen switched to songwriting. With an assist from Judy Collins, who promoted him, his brooding, romantic compositions and inscrutable mystique soon made him a star. Cohen asked Ihlen to come join him living in New York City, but the doors to fame had been flung open for him, and he jumped through lustily. We learn about how, while Cohen was trysting with Janis Joplin “on an unmade bed” at the Chelsea Hotel, Ihlen was in the dark about it all. Providing a knowing, humorous commentary on Cohen is Aviva Layton, the wife of his great friend the Canadian poet Irving Layton. Basically, she explains, Cohen is the type of man that all women want — but that none can have. Indeed, Cohen bounced from relationship to relationship throughout his life. We also learn about how the legacy of Hydra was like a curse for its bohemian artists and their families, who were racked by substance abuse and other problems. A thread of madness runs through the film, starting with Cohen’s mother. We see entertaining footage of Cohen on tour, showing his lighter, playful side with bandmates, a stark contrast to his stoic stage presence. Ron Cornelius, his guitarist — and a doppelganger for Bill Clinton — recalls they were taking so much Mandrax (Quaaludes) on tour, that one night he literally faceplanted onstage. And then there were the 23 straight nights of dropping acid.
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Marianne Ihlen and Leonard Cohen stepping out on Hydra.
We see a brief clip of Cohen during his Upstate Buddhist-retreat phase, where he is the servant of a seemingly crotchety monk.
man and get an office job. Through the years, Cohen continued to invite her to his shows. And we see her in the audience at one show in their later years, smiling and singing right along to his jaunty breakup song to her, “So Long, Marianne.” The two died just months apart from each other in 2016. Cohen was 82 and Ihlen, 81. A little online reading reveals that Ihlen gave Cohen the central image for one of his most famous songs, “Bird on a Wire.” She had seen a bird sitting on a telephone line, and said it looked like a musical note, and suggested he do a song about it. In a side note, after the movie’s release, Bono and his family, while “is-
Cohen is the type of man all women want. The movie’s director, Nick Broomfield, is an experienced filmmaker, known for his documentaries, whose credits include “Monster in a Box,” “Heidi Fleiss: Hollywood Madam,” “Kurt and Courtney,” “Biggie & Tupac” and “Sarah Palin: You Betcha!” among many others. Broomfield himself also had a shortlived affair with Ihlen, whom he recalls as having a knack for helping people identify their true skill. She encouraged him to get into documentary filmmaking. The director also artfully uses archival footage of Ihlen sailing off of Hydra by D.A. Pennebaker. These gauzy shots evoke the feel of an earlier, faraway paradise. It’s hard not to feel a bit sad about Ihlen’s fate. She does go on to return to Norway and marry a Norwegian
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land hopping,” visited Cohen’s former home on Hydra and posted a photo and slightly doctored lyrics to “Bird on a Wire” on the U2 Instagram page. This movie gives one a lot to think about, about creativity and relationships, Cohen’s music, career and psyche, endings — endings that are not really endings — life itself and aging. We are left with the haunting, somewhat faded and blurry image of Marianne on the gently bobbing sailboat, with the yellow sun burning over the silver-sparkling Aegean sea — a moment in time in two complex lives. As one filmgoer at the Angelika Film Center recently said, as the credits started to roll, “That was a beautiful film.”
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riends and family of Steve Cannon packed the Bowery Poetry Club on Sun., July 14, for a marathon memorial for the late East Village poet and arts icon. Cannon, 84, who was blind, died July 7 while recuperating from a broken hip he had suffered a month earlier in a fall in his Avenue D apartment. A writer who also had an earlier career as a teacher, in his mid-50s, Cannon turned his E. Third St. apartment into A Gathering of the Tribes, a welcoming, anything-goes literary and arts salon. He was known for nurturing â&#x20AC;&#x201D; and haranguing with tough love â&#x20AC;&#x201D; generations of young poets and writers. He also published some of them as an independent publisher. â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was six hours. It was Steveâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s domain,â&#x20AC;? Bob Holman, founder of Bowery Poetry Club, said of the event, which he emceed. â&#x20AC;&#x153;There was heckling. The hecklers were being heckled. There was music. There were tears.â&#x20AC;? He said 10 members of Cannonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family, mostly from Baltimore, were sitting at â&#x20AC;&#x153;the big table in the corner.â&#x20AC;? Meanwhile, a big blown-up whacky photo of Cannon, with his glasses askew, by Clayton Patterson, was â&#x20AC;&#x153;the backdropâ&#x20AC;? for the memorial speakers and performers. The memorials came in the form of poetry, reminiscences and music. Two Boots Pizza fittingly provided its aptly dubbed A Gathering of the Tribes pies. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s got a lot of meat,â&#x20AC;? Holman noted of the pizzas named after Cannonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s famed space. Summing up the eclectic mix of people, performances and pizza at the memorial, Holman said that, both literally and figuratively, â&#x20AC;&#x153;It was A Gathering of the Tribes.â&#x20AC;? Hoylman added itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hoped that a complete six-hour video of the memorial will be available for viewing by midweek.
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Manhattan Happenings BY MICAEL A MACAGNONE
THEATER Swashbuckling drama: Hudson Warehouse presents “The Man in the Iron Mask” — about the aging Four Musketeers — adapted by Susane Lee and directed by Nicholas Martin-Smith, July 25-28, on the North Patio of the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Monument, in Riverside Park at W. 89th St. and Riverside Drive, at 6:30pm. Admission is pay what you can and no tickets necessary. Free classical Greek: New York Euripides Summer Festival presents “Iphigenia Among the Taurians,” fully staged, free classical Greek theater. Synopsis: Iphigenia actually was not sacrificed by Agamemnon but saved by Artemis, whom she now serves as a priestess in the goddess’s temple at Tauris, which her brother Orestes and friend Pylades arrive to rob. Mon., July 29, 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m, at the East River Park Amphitheater. No intermission. Free. The festival will present its other summer show, “Daughters of Troy,” the following night, July 30. All dolled up: In “Reborning,” Kelly is an artist who creates lifelike dolls… often based on real babies – sometimes for collectors, other times for mothers dealing with the loss of their infants. Things take a dramatic turn in this dark comedy when new client Emily commissions baby doll Eva. At the Soho Playhouse, 15 Vandam St., through Aug. 3. Daily shows except for July 29. For tickets and information, visit sohoplayhouse.com.
MUSIC Kickin’ it: The Afropop quartet Magic System has been known for high-energy performances and magical vibes since its founding in 1996 in Ivory Coast. Their 2014 hit single “Magic in the Air” became a signature song of the FIFA soccer World Cup. Sun., July 28, 2 p.m. to 7 p.m., at Rumsey Playfield in Central Park. Free.
OUTDOORS High Line tour: Learn the history of the High Line on the “From Freight to Flowers” tour on Tuesdays, from Schneps Media
Magic System will be bring their upbeat Afropop to the Rumsey Play field in Central Park on Sun., July 28
about planting seeds, tending crops, harvesting and cooking. Includes a raw-cooking demo and tasting with produce harvested from Battery Urban Farm. RSVP at tbcevents.eventbrite. com. Sat., July 27, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m, at Battery Urban Farm, at State St. and Battery Place. Sunny delight: The Amateur Astronomers Association and solargazing return with solar telescopes specifically designed to look at the sun safely and see sunspots and prominences under a summer sky. Sun., July 28, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m at Pier I, in Riverside Park South, W. 70th St.
6:30 p.m. to 7:45 p.m., and Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 11:15 a.m., through October. The 75-minute tours are led by High Line docents — knowledgeable volunteer guides with an insider’s perspective on the park’s history, design and landscape. Meet on the High Line’s southern end at Gansevoort St. Because space is limited, arrive at least 15 minutes early to guarantee a spot. Tours are subject to cancellation due to weather. Check @highlinenyc on Twitter for updates prior to arriving at the park. Heroic coastal cleanup: Join Riverside Park Conservancy and TRASH HERO to clean up garbage and recyclables that are carried in with the tides and pile up along the Hudson River coastline. Closed-toed work shoes required. Do not bring additional bags; there is no storage for belongings. Dress comfortably and prepare to get dirty. For more event information or to register, call 212870-3073 or e-mail grassroots@riversideparknyc.org. Sat., July 27, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Meet at W. 59th St. by the Hudson River. Young green thumbs: Facilitated by Battery Conservancy, learn to engage kids of any age in gardening. Battery Urban Farm’s educators will share their insights with budding gardeners
TALKS Talks, for Reel: Film Every Monday until Aug. 19, the Reading Room in Bryant Park offers “Reel Talks,” hosted by film connoisseur Scott Adlerberg. On Mon., July 29, the talk will feature Radha Vatsal, co-editor of the Women Film Pioneers Project. 12:30 p.m. to 1:45 p.m, at the Reading Room in Bryant Park, at Sixth Ave. and W. 41st St.
DANCE It takes…you to tango: Put on your
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dancing shoes and learn to dance tango and milonga with Strictly Tango NYC Dance School in Washington Square Park. Come with your partner, your friends or by yourself and fi nd a new dancing partner! If rain, the event will be canceled. Tues., July 30, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., at Holley Plaza in Washington Square. Free. Sponsored by Washington Square Park Conservancy.
ART Staff stunners: For the fourth consecutive year, the Whitney Museum of American Art presents an art show — Westside Exposure: Whitney Staff Art Show 2019 — featuring the work of roughly 100 Whitney staff members. The exhibit is open Wednesdays to Sundays, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., until Aug. 15, at the Westbeth Gallery, 55 Bethune St., between Washington and West Sts.
COMMUNITY BOARD Community Board 1 full board, Tues., July 30, 6 p.m., Municipal Building, 1 Centre St., north mezzanine. July 25, 2019
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Real Estate
FiDi tenants win rent-reg fight BY GABE HERMAN
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ower Manhattan tenants scored a decisive win in a late June Appeals Court decision, which ruled they had the right to rent stabilization, rent refunds and lowered rents, and that landlords receiving 421-G tax breaks could not deregulate apartments. The 421-G tax exemption for landlords passed the state Senate in 1995. It incentivized turning Lower Manhattan office space into residential use during a time when people were fleeing the area. In return for the tax breaks, apartments would be rent stabilized, with only small rent increases and guaranteed lease renewals for as long as the 421-G benefits were being received. Before the state Senate voted on the bill back in 1995, then-Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno submitted a “Giuliani Letter” into the record. Not officially part of the legislation, the letter said that the city’s view of the bill was that luxury deregulation would still be allowed for apartments with rents over a certain amount. Landlords have used the Giuliani Letter to argue that they can raise rents. In two Manhattan State Supreme Court cases involving Financial Dis-
trict-area buildings, Kuzmich v. 50 Murray Acquisition and West v. BCRE—90 West, the court ruled in 2017 in favor of the tena nts
and said that luxury deregulation did not apply to 421-G tax breaks. However, the Appellate Division then overturned those decisions, ruling that the apartments had been properly deregulated under the Rent Stabilization Law from 1993, and were not exempted from deregulation by 421-G. Now the Court of Appeals has had what will likely be the final word on the matter, according to attorney Serge Joseph, who represented tenants at 50 Murray St. and 90 West St. The Court of Appeals wrote in its majority decision regarding the 421-G tax breaks, that the law required rent regulation for as long as the buildings receive the tax breaks. “The Legislature’s intention, as reflected in the language of the statute at issue here,” the decision read, “is clear and inescapable.” The Appeals Court decision was 6-1 in favor of the tenants. The majority decision noted that because the 421-G legislation passed after the Rent Stabilization Law, its exemption from luxury deregulation was sufficient and did not require go-
PHOTO BY GOOGLE MAPS
Tenants at 90 West St., above, blocked their landlord from using luxur y deregulation.
ing back to the earlier law to amend it for this exception. Joseph told this paper that he was very happy about the Appeals Court decision, after fighting for more than a decade on this issue, which affects thousands of Lower Manhattan tenants. “I’ve been partying, drinking Champagne,” Joseph said. “It was a long fight, and now this is it.” Tenants at 90 West had joined the issue over 421-G after the building’s owner, The Kibel Company, tried to raise rents by 33 percent in 2016, tenant Taylor West told this paper in 2017. An amicus brief supporting tenants at 90 West was filed by then-Public Advocate Letitia James in 2016 and signed by 37 other local politicians, including Assemblymember Deborah Glick, Councilmember Margaret Chin and state Senator Daniel Squadron. A similar suit was also previously filed by local politicians supporting the tenants at 50 Murray St. “It has been a very long and arduous fight,” said Joseph, in a statement after the Appeals Court decision. “We look forward to working with Downtown tenants to ensure that as many tenants as possible benefit from the Court’s decision.”
Bowling alley? Own pool? Amenities frenzy BY MARTHA WILKIE
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first experienced Hudson Yards accidentally, while en route to the High Line. I walked past a gleaming glass tower set directly atop the access route to the Lincoln Tunnel — 24hours-a-day honking. I thought, why would anyone live here? See that sunset on the roof deck? That’s why. Developers compete with each other for the most over-the-top amenities. (Warning: if you’re the type who rages that Manhattan’s being ruined by the 1 percent, you may wish to stop reading now.) Extras include climbing walls, IMAX theater, golf simulators, basket-
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ball courts, yoga studios, automated robotic parking (what even is this?) and even access to private yachts and jets. Parents used to lugging strollers to fourth-floor walk-ups will rejoice at stroller valet. Hand-delivered mail is a nice touch. Does someone pick up the garbage, too, or are there “Jetsons”-like pneumatic tubes? Adrienne Berman, an agent with Brown Harris Stevens, is realistic. “In some markets, amenities sell the apartment,” he said. “However, today, buyers are looking for value and are willing to forgo the valet parking. The one exception is in-unit washers and dryers. There’s no amount of money New Yorkers won’t pay for that golden amenity.”
As for me, I happily live in a building with laundry in the basement and a bike room. Here are four listings, all with the latest mod cons: A no-fee rental studio in Hudson Yards offers “unparalleled amenities,” including a climbing wall, full-size basketball court, piano and poker lounge, billiards room, and that stunning roof deck. $3,924. The Lucida, at 151 E. 85th St., is the first LEED-certified building on the Upper East Side and has a nifty indoor basketball court with a wall that opens to the street, a pool and free Pilates and yoga classes. A two-bedroom, two-and-a-half bath with soundproof TVG
floor-to-ceiling windows is renting for $12,000. In the Financial District, the former J.P. Morgan building, at 15 Broad St., offers reflecting and swimming pools, a sports lounge, concierge, squash courts, bowling and more. Two bedroom, two bath. $1.9 million. In West Chelsea, at the Soori High Line, at 522 W. 29th St., a five-bedroom, with five-and-a-half baths, sports an “Augsburg oak paneled private elevator” and “Bavarian Spessart oak” in the kitchen. (I’ll take, “Obscure German Oaks” for $1,000, Alex.) Amenities include a “lifestyle concierge” and private parking spaces. $22.5 million. Schneps Media
Dr. Nicole Carreau Joins NYCBS’ Central Park Oncology Team Studying medicine has been Dr. Carreau’s passion and she was inspired to pursue it. “I was always interested in science and I wanted to build a career in which I could make a difference in people’s lives every day.” Dr. Carreau’s research in both Hodgkin’s and Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma patients included leading a team of investigators across 17 centers in the US and Canada. Her research could allow patients who were previously considered transplant-ineligible to become candidates for the procedure, resulting in longer-lasting remissions. “There are so many subtypes of lymphoma, each of which behaves differently. It affects people of all ages and both genders,” said Dr. Carreau. She credits her experience from practicing at three locations: Perlmutter Cancer Center, Bellevue Hospital, and the Manhattan “VA” Medical Center. Dr. Carreau also credits her skills and expertise during college and medical school. At the University of Connecticut School of Medicine, she attained several honors, being the recipient of the Carl F. Hinz Jrs. Scholars in Medicine Award. During her residency at Mount Sinai Hospital, Dr. Carreau was the recipient of the Student Teaching Award and the Arnold P. Gold Foundation’s Humanism and Excellence in Teaching Award. As Chief Fellow at New York University, Dr. Carreau received the ASH Abstract Achievement Award.
Dr. Carreau will be accepting new patients at our: Central Park Location at: 12 East 86th Street, New York, NY 10028 To make an appointment with Dr. Carreau, please call 212-861-6660
NEW YORK CANCER & BLOOD SPECIALISTS 1-833-CANCER9 Schneps Media
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