Our Town - - November 17, 2016

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The local paper for the Upper East Side FINE LINES AT THE GUGGENHEIM < P. 12

WEEK OF NOVEMBER

17-23 2016

THANKSGIVING THOUGHTS: WHAT WE’RE GRATEFUL FOR On the list: community, diversity, activists and a place to feel safe Gratitude has it own national holiday. Thanksgiving’s the traditional time to take stock of appreciated gifts, and so it’s exactly the right moment to ask a few New Yorkers deeply rooted in their communities — the kind of people we cover online and in our news pages each week — to reflect on what they’re thankful for.

Rebecca Ascher-Walsh with Desi, Ascher-Walsh’s second adopted pit bull, left, and Buddy. Photo: Ellen Watson

PASSIONATE ABOUT PIT BULLS Upper East Side author Rebecca Ascher-Walsh dedicates her time to saving the lives of shelter dogs

Pauline Frommer Pauline Frommer, editorial director, Frommer Guidebooks and Frommers.com I’m grateful to live in a city where one in every three is foreign-born. That means that travel—my passion as well as my career—is part of my daily life. In the morning, I have a long talk with the Senegalese mother

CONTINUED ON PAGE 6

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BY GAIL EISENBERG

In an area populated with purebred dogs — including the most Cavalier King Charles Spaniels in the city, according to one 2015 survey — Rebecca Ascher-Walsh is passionate about pit bulls.

Crime Watch Voices Out & About City Arts

3 8 10 12

The author and Upper East Side native has opened her home and dedicated her time to championing and saving the lives of the often unloved and controversial animals. She didn’t feel one way or another about pit bulls until she met a young man at an adoption event who couldn’t keep his dog after his mother had died. Desperate to help, she took home Dino, who turned out to be one

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of the funniest and most delightful dogs of her life. Nearly a decade later, she’s three more pit bull adoptions in, an avid volunteer, and cofounder of a “scholarship” fund to help make it easier to rescue shelter dogs. As a longtime volunteer at Animal Care and Control, the city’s shelter, her work includes helping to socialize new arrivals, writing dogs’ bios to be posted

for adoption, and taking dogs on the “euth list” for what might be

CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 Jewish women and girls light up the world by lighting the Shabbat candles every Friday evening 18 minutes before sunset. Friday, November 18 – 4:17 pm. For more information visit www.chabaduppereastside.com

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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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BITING INTO THE BIG APPLE’S CORE BY MADELEINE THOMPSON

This weekend, from Saturday at 9 a.m. to Sunday at 6 p.m., the Museum of the City of New York will stay open for a non-stop celebration of the new permanent exhibit “New York at its Core.” For five years the museum has been putting together the more than 450-piece collection of New York history, which will feature famous figures from Jane Jacobs to Jay-Z and items such as a ceremonial cup from the 1900 subway groundbreaking and Milton Glaser’s original sketch for the “I heart New York” campaign. The exhibit will center around four themes: money, density, diversity and creativity. In a press release, “New York at its Core” is described as showing “how a distinctive blend of these key themes has produced a powerfully creative environment that has made New York a center of innovation in the

arts, business, science, politics, and urban development.” At a ribbon-cutting ceremony Tuesday morning, museum administrators joined elected officials in opening the exhibit. “New York’s history shows us that it wasn’t a forgone conclusion that this tiny outpost ... was destined to be one of world history’s most significant places,” Sarah Henry, one of the exhibit’s curators, said. “A laboratory, as it’s turned out, for values like tolerance, opportunity, cross-fertilization between different cultures, innovation and dense urban life.” Henry especially thanked Local Projects, the studio that designed the exhibit’s “Future City Lab” gallery, for bringing interactive technology to the museum. “Future City Lab” invites visitors to consider five major challenges — such as transportation and housing — the city will face in the years to come by playing games and engaging with maps that envision New York City as far out as 2050. Tom Finkelpearl, commissioner of

Museum of the City of New York administrators and elected officials at a Tuesday morning ribbon cutting of a permanent exhibit, “New York at its Core,” that will be open for 32 hours straight beginning Saturday morning. Photo: Madeleine Thompson the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs, zeroed in on the exhibit’s “money” theme and praised the diverse financial efforts that collaborated to make “New York at its Core” a reality. “There’s not one controlling factor,” he said. “It’s good to have a really vibrant private sector and resources.”

He then read a proclamation from Mayor Bill de Blasio designating Friday, Nov. 18, 2016 as “MCNY New York at its Core Day.” Though it opens on Friday, admission will be free for the 32-hour weekend event, which the museum is calling “Gotham Groove,” with

the exception of some specific programs. Attendees can look forward to Broadway performances, a Walt Whitman impersonator and a trivia competition. Madeleine Thompson can be reached at newsreporter@strausnews.com

My IDNYC card helps us easily access city resources, from the library to the city hospital. I can get discounts on groceries, medicine, and movie tickets.

Museum of the City of New York will “groove” for 32 hours


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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CRIME WATCH BY JERRY DANZIG

SAFETY OFFICER ADMITS BRIBING POLICE TO SPEED GUN PERMITS A volunteer safety patrol member once described as a community arms dealer who bribed police officers to speed along gun permits has pleaded guilty. Alex “Shaya” Lichtenstein entered the plea to bribery charges last week in Manhattan federal court. Lichtenstein also agreed not to appeal any sentence up to six years in prison. Sentencing was set for March 16. Prosecutors said they recorded the volunteer bragging about using bribes to get at least 150 licenses for people to carry guns. A federal prosecutor said at one court appearance that Lichtenstein was “no less than an arms dealer for the community.” The bribery scheme has also been cited in charges brought against two high-ranking NYPD commanders and two gun licensing division officers. The Associated Press

RIDING ONE, STEALING ANOTHER A bike-riding bike thief was caught in the act. At 2:55 a.m. on Nov. 8, a 30-year-old man called police to report a larceny in progress at the southeast corner of York Avenue and East 87th Street. He told police that he had seen a man in his 30s with an electric saw, cutting loose a locked-up bike. The bad guy rode off on a bike holding onto the stolen bike. Police searched the area and found the purported thief at a block away on First Avenue, where he dropped the stolen bike but was subsequently stopped by officers outside on East 88th Street. The witness identified the suspect, a 35-year-old from the Bronx, who was charged with petty larceny and possession of stolen goods and burglar tools.

LOUSE PREVENTION Two more people learned first-hand about Bloomingdale’s loss-prevention personnel and procedures. On Nov. 9, a 28-year-old man from the Bronx took some articles of clothing into a fitting room before concealing them in a shopping bag and attempting to leave without paying shortly after 3 p.m., police said. He was detained, arrested,

and charged with petty larceny and criminal possession of stolen goods. He had taken a sweatshirt, sweatpants and a sweater worth a total of $750. Just a few minutes later, a 24-yearold Brooklyn woman from Brooklyn removed items from a display and took them into a fitting room before concealing them in her bag, according to police. She also was stopped and arrested when she tried to leave the store, and charged with the same felonies. She had attempted to take a jacket, lace pajamas, leggings, T-shirts and underwear totaling $795.

SUNSPEC SUSPECTS Police also nabbed two shady individuals stealing shades from a local sunglass store. Between 7:30 and 7:35 p.m. on Nov. 8, two men in their 40s entered the Sunglass Hut location at 1023 Third Ave. and grabbed several pairs of the pricey eyewear before fleeing on foot. Police caught up with the pair, however, and arrested them on charges of grand larceny. The two had lifted 15 pairs of glasses worth nearly $3,000 in total.

GATE BAIT

STATS FOR THE WEEK Reported crimes from the 19th precinct Week to Date

Year to Date

2016 2015

% Change

2016

2015

% Change

Murder

0

0

n/a

2

1

100.0

Rape

0

0

n/a

5

8

-37.5

Robbery

2

3

-33.3

78

88

-11.4

Felony Assault

2

0

n/a

108

107

0.9

Burglary

4

6

-33.3

177

140

26.4

Grand Larceny

35

28

25.0

1,203

1,148

4.8

Grand Larceny Auto

1

3

-66.7

66

67

-1.5

with a man responsible for a burglary over the summer. Between 5 and 5:30 a.m. back on Aug. 30, a burglar had broken a glass window at the apartment of a 74-year-old man living at 419 East 93rd St. Though there was a gate on the window, the burglar was able to remove a shoulder bag containing a debit card and $50 in cash that was sitting next to the window. Fast forward to 3 p.m. on Thursday, November 10, when detectives from the 19th precinct arrested a 36-yearold man from the Bronx, charging him with that burglary.

The long arm of the law caught up

Tony Webster, via flickr

EXHIBITION OPENS NOVEMBER 18, 2016

EXHIBITION OPENS NOVEMBER 18, 2016

ONLY IN NEW YORK WOULD A TIFFANY SHOVEL BE USED TO BREAK GROUND FOR THE SUBWAY.

ONLY IN NEW YORK WOULD THIS BE CONSIDERED A TRAVEL GUIDE.

A 1900 sterling silver Tiffany shovel—just one of the many objects whose story comes to life in the first-ever exhibition on NYC’s past, present, and future.

A 1975 pamphlet for public safety in New York—just one of the many objects whose story comes to life in the first-ever exhibition on NYC’s past, present, and future.

Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street | mcny.org | #onlyinny New York at Its Core Opening Presented by Shovel, Museum of the City of New York, gift of Mrs. William Van Wyck, 54.373.

Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street | mcny.org | #onlyinny New York at Its Core Opening Presented by 1975 pamphlet, courtesy The Jack Bigel Collection, Newman Library, Baruch College.


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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

Useful Contacts POLICE NYPD 19th Precinct

153 E. 67th St.

212-452-0600

159 E. 85th St.

311

FIRE FDNY 22 Ladder Co 13 FDNY Engine 39/Ladder 16

157 E. 67th St.

311

FDNY Engine 53/Ladder 43

1836 Third Ave.

311

FDNY Engine 44

221 E. 75th St.

311

CITY COUNCIL Councilmember Daniel Garodnick

211 E. 43rd St. #1205

212-818-0580

Councilmember Ben Kallos

244 E. 93rd St.

212-860-1950

STATE LEGISLATORS State Sen. Jose M. Serrano

1916 Park Ave. #202

212-828-5829

State Senator Liz Krueger

1850 Second Ave.

212-490-9535

Assembly Member Dan Quart

360 E. 57th St.

212-605-0937

Assembly Member Rebecca Seawright

1365 First Ave.

212-288-4607

COMMUNITY BOARD 8

505 Park Ave. #620

212-758-4340

Yorkville

222 E. 79th St.

212-744-5824

96th Street

112 E. 96th St.

212-289-0908

67th Street

328 E. 67th St.

212-734-1717

Webster Library

1465 York Ave.

212-288-5049

Lenox Hill

100 E. 77th St.

212-434-2000

NY-Presbyterian / Weill Cornell

525 E. 68th St.

212-746-5454

LIBRARIES

Rao’s, at 114th Street and Pleasant Avenue, in East Harlem. Photo: H.L.I.T., via flickr

HOSPITALS

Mount Sinai

E. 99th St. & Madison Ave.

212-241-6500

NYU Langone

550 First Ave.

212-263-7300

CON EDISON

4 Irving Place

212-460-4600

THE IMPOSSIBLE TABLE Rao’s, in East Harlem, serves up classic meatballs, and intrigue BY JOCELYN NOVECK

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212-517-8361

US Post Office

1617 Third Ave.

212-369-2747

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So one night, the story goes, Justin Bieber was in town, and had a hankering for Italian food. Not just any Italian, but Rao’s, the tiny restaurant by a park in East Harlem that’s been around for 120 years — and is one of the hardest-to-get tables in the country, let alone the city. Some “serious society types” made inquiries for Bieber, according to an anecdote in the new cookbook, “Rao’s Classics.” But the place was booked with regulars, as always. Would heaven and earth be moved? The answer came crisply and succinctly: “No one gives a (blank) about Justin Bieber.” Many things are said to be impossible in Manhattan. A taxi at rush hour in the rain. A parking spot on a Saturday night. “Hamilton” tickets in the current century. But let’s be precise. Those things are difficult, but not impossible. You know what’s impossible? Getting a reservation at Rao’s. The first thing to know is that Rao’s has only 10 tables, serving 60-ish diners a night — one leisurely seating only (and no lunch.) The next is that these tables have been assigned for years. People have their regular nights. A table can be handed down in a family, or gifted to a friend for a night, or auctioned for charity at many (many!) thousands of dollars for an evening. As the Zagat guide says, it “practically takes an act of Congress” to score a table. And so, visiting Rao’s one day recently, some five hours before doors open, one of our first questions is whether there’s ever been a thought to shaking up the system — maybe getting a bunch of fresh blood into the doors.

That, says co-owner Frank Pellegrino Jr., is really missing the point. “I’ve known many of these guests since I was a kid,” says Pellegrino, 46, whose first job at Rao’s was a summer gig in 6th grade. “There’s a bond. It’s about preservation of relationships.” If you really want a table at Rao’s, probably the best place to try is in Vegas, where the 10-year-old Rao’s at Caesar’s Palace occupies 10,000 square feet — “about five New York Rao’s in one,” quips Pellegrino — serving 400-600 people a night (and 800 large meatballs a day.) There’s also been an outpost in Hollywood since 2013. Pellegrino Jr. spends most of his time out west, while his father, Frank Sr., presides over the Manhattan locale, which opened in 1896. Coming back to New York feels like a reunion, he says. Still, “I only get to eat here when I’m working or when I cook myself” — which is what he’s doing at 1 p.m. when we arrive. The place is quiet, very quiet. Lights are still off in the dining room. But in the kitchen, a huge pot of marinara sauce is being tended by Paulie Sanchez, who’s been with the restaurant some 15 years. Pellegrino, meanwhile, is whipping up some fusilli with cabbage and sausage. The recipe appears in the new book, with about 140 other favorites. On a tiny shelf — there’s not much wall space — sits a jar of the famous Rao’s sauce sold in stores by the restaurant’s specialty food business. That business — and the handling of it — is currently the subject of a lawsuit in state court that has, according to tabloid reports, caused a bitter rift between Pellegrino Sr. and his cousin and co-owner, Ron Straci, and his wife Sharon. Pellegrino Jr. will only say that the lawsuit is ongoing but he’s hopeful it will be resolved soon.

But it’s hard to say the lawsuit is the most dramatic calamity to befall the restaurant — not with the murder and all. It happened, as the book recounts (authors are the two Pellegrinos and Joseph Riccobene), around Christmas 2003, when a young actress was serenading diners with “Don’t Rain On My Parade.” A man at the bar “uttered unkind words.” An older man, a mobster nicknamed “Louie Lump Lump,” admonished him, more insults were traded, and Louie ended up pulling a gun and killing the younger man. It didn’t hurt business. “I was here that evening,” says Pellegrino Jr. “It was a very unfortunate incident — we always viewed Rao’s more like Switzerland than anything else.” He adds that rumor has it there was an earlier shooting “back in 1911 or 1912. A woman sitting here at the bar, a stray bullet from outside. I can’t confirm it.” But back to the food. Pellegrino’s favorite dishes include the pork chop with cherry peppers — a 450-year-old recipe — and the shells with ricotta. The seafood salad is very popular. But probably the one thing Rao’s is best known for is its meatball — about three times the size of a normal one. Initially, meatballs were served only on Wednesdays. But demand was too great to limit the dish. Rao’s walls are plastered with photos of the celebrities that have passed through — usually as guests of regulars. Hillary Clinton’s picture is there, from her Senate years; Donald Trump has also visited. Hollywood stars galore. And many cast members of “The Sopranos.” One regular was sportswriter Dick Schaap, who died in 2001. At his funeral, Billy Crystal noted in his eulogy that everyone was thinking the same thought. “Who’s going to get his table at Rao’s?”


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

Catherine Hughes

THANKSGIVING CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 of my daughter’s good friend about an upcoming sleepover…and the state of the world. Then I linger to chat with a Mexican porter in our building about his fears now that Trump is presidentelect. At the grocery store, I trade pleasantries with the Jamaican-born cashier, and at work I huddle over layouts with an Italian-born photo editor. Each person brings the world to me and that means the world to me. Catherine Hughes, former Community Board 1 chairwoman On Thanksgiving Day, we remember an amazing act of kindness and humanity. A tribe of Native Americans came together to rescue a starving band of illegal immigrants who fled religious persecution and washed up on these freezing shores. Those original Americans ignored enor-

Sue Susman

Betty Cooper Wallerstein

Chris Doeblin

mous differences of race, faith and national origin, and ignored their own short-term interests, to recognize the common humanity of those starving, storm-tossed Puritans – refugees rejected by the country of their birth. That founding act of compassion inspires me not just on Thanksgiving Day but every day, and never more than in these fearful times.

of the country. I am thankful for this sense of community and family.

Betty Cooper Wallerstein, president, E. 79th Street Neighborhood Association Reading daily of tragic conflict and suffering the world over, I am thankful for living in a safe city and country offering much opportunity and aiming for good quality of life for all residents. I’m grateful for civic advocates in diverse neighborhoods. They volunteer countless hours toward improving living conditions and city services. Also, very grateful to our Upper East Side elected officials, who give needed attention and necessary support. I appreciate the freedom of the public to address any government agency or elected official for a response to an issue of concern. Thanks are due to our dedicated first responders and struggling local merchants. Additional thanks to Our Town and Straus News’s other free local papers covering community news not reported elsewhere. And I am most thankful for family and friends

who share my deepest gratitude to the Hereditary Disease Foundation for its relentless research in treating incurable brain diseases.

Telly Leung, actor, currently starring on Broadway in “In Transit.” There’s the family we are born into, and then there’s the family we make. I feel a great sense of gratitude every day, when I walk to my theater. I live in Midtown and walk to work. I walk along Ninth Avenue, and run into so many people from the Broadway community – my family of artists. Hell’s Kitchen is also a thriving, diverse “gay-borhood” – a place that I feel safe holding my partner’s hand. As a traveling actor, I don’t always feel that way when I’m in other parts

Sue Susman, Upper West Side activist I’m grateful for: Larry Wood, Director of Organizing at Goddard Riverside Community Center, who educates and advocates on tenant issues. Jean Dorsey, head of the Westgate Tenant Association at Stonehenge, who fights the good fight, helping her neighbors and the neighborhood. Economist Winifred Armstrong strengthens our awareness of neighborhood history. Sharon Canns, a tenant activist and board member of the West Side Neighborhood Alliance, is an enormous moral support. Anna Gago, in Council Member Helen Rosenthal’s office, shares what she learns at every possible conference. Finally, my neighbors at Central Park Gardens, whose helping each other strengthens our tenant association.

PIT BULLS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

have

Do

Telly Leung Photo: Leon Le Photography

something

you You’d

look

?

into

like us to

Email us at news@strausnews.com

their last walks. “I just try to go there with an open heart and give everything I have, whether that’s special time and treats and tucking them in the night before not knowing what will happen, or extra time with me in the morning. I want to make their lives as comfortable as possible while they are there.” As rewarding as the work at ACC is, the city shelter is required to take in every dog surrendered — most by owners — and there can be as many as fifteen dogs between the boroughs on the euth list daily. She and some other volunteers felt like they were constantly losing ground, so, in 2012, they started Deja Foundation, a 501c3, named after Ascher-Walsh’s third adopted pit bull, a former bait dog — in essence

a punching bag for aggressive dogs training to fight. Deja offers “scholarships” to help cover costs like vet bills and training costs, encouraging rescue groups or adopters to pull dogs off the euth list by alleviating some of the financial strain. “Instead of being focused on the high cost of adopting the dog, they can focus on bonding. We want to make the transition of a potentially traumatized dog into its forever home go smoothly,” says Ascher-Walsh. “The reward is getting the “after” pictures of these dogs, many of whom I’ve known from ACC and loved, but not known whether the dog would make it out or not.” She says her affinity for pit bulls is something hard to pin down since as with people and animals and things we love, it’s something that’s largely unconscious. “Maybe it’s the way they lumber in such a goofy way,” she says. “They are the laziest dogs I’ve ever met, who want nothing more than to be on the couch with their human. And I love

Chris Doeblin, owner, Book Culture Most of all, I’m thankful to be married to the person that I love and admire and desire, for my two wonderful and beautiful 11-year-old daughters, for our home on 110th Street that is so cluttered, and needs so much work, where we love each other and share our family meals. We are all well. I am thankful for our extended family — for all of their blessings and the profound love that we all share. I am also deeply thankful, especially now, to be here in this community and to work in a bookshop that has been so challenging, but which is a bastion of civility, ideas and culture, especially now. Have a wonderful and loving thanksgiving, everyone. We are hoping for you.

how they’re big dogs with the temperament of a lap dog.” Ascher-Walsh’s affection and advocacy for pit bulls and rescues runs in the family. Her eight-year-old twin girls lecture people not to “shop” for a dog when so many in shelters need homes, and are mystified at guarded reactions to Buddy, the family’s 11-year-old rescue pit that they’ve been inseparable from since they were brought home as preemies. One of their favorite make-believe games is “shelter dog,” says AscherWalsh. “One poses as the adopter and the other acts as dogs seeing if they can charm their way into the adopter’s heart and home.” “Loyal,” the second installment of Rebecca Ascher-Walsh’s dog book trilogy, will be published in March 2017. The first volume, “Devoted,” came out in 2013. To help rescue dogs on the euth list, go to Urgent 2 on Facebook.

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GA $105 - 1st 100 receive Geoffrey Zakarian’s new Pro For Home 15-piece storage container system Join Food Network host and celebrity chef Geoffrey Zakarian and his wife Margaret Zakarian at Sotheby’s, the world’s art headquarters, to celebrate the very best of the Upper East Side’s fine cuisine and outstanding art. Top chefs from New York’s most storied establishments will each create picturesque dishes inspired by art curated by Sotheby’s. SAVOR UNIQUE DISHES. ADMIRE EXQUISITE ARTWORK. RELISH IN THE AMBIANCE OF A QUINTESSENTIAL NEW YORK EVENING. 1633 Dionisis Liakopoulos r AMERICAN CUT Daniel Eardley r ATLANTIC GRILL Joyce Rivera BOHEMIAN SPIRIT RESTAURANT Lukas Pohl r CAFE D’ALSACE Philippe Roussel r CANDLE 79 Angel Ramos CRAVE FISHBAR Todd Mitgang r EAST POLE Joseph CapozzI r EASTFIELDS KITCHEN & BAR Joseph Capozzi FREDS AT BARNEYS NEW YORK Mark Strausman r FLEX MUSSELS Rebecca Richards JONES WOOD FOUNDRY Jason Hicks r LUSARDI’S Claudio Meneghini r MAGNOLIA BAKERY Bobbie Lloyd MAYA Richard Sandoval r MIGHTY QUINN’S BARBEQUE Hugh Mangum r ORWASHERS BAKERY Keith Cohen PAOLA’S Stefano Marracino r SANT AMBROEUS MADISON AVENUE Andrea Bucciarelli SEAMSTRESS Jordy Lavenderos r SHAKE SHACK Mark Rosati r T-BAR STEAK Benjamin Zwicker THE MEATBALL SHOP Daniel Holzman r THE PENROSE Nick Testa r VAUCLUSE Michael White

A PORTION OF THE PROCEEDS WILL BE DONATED TO

Geoffrey Zakarian Star of Food Network’s Chopped, The Kitchen, Cooks vs. Cons, author of “My Perfect Pantry,� restaurateur behind The Lambs Club, The National in NYC, The National in Greenwich, The Water Club at Borgata in Atlantic City, Georgie and The Garden Bar at Montage Beverly Hills and, coming soon, Point Royal at The Diplomat Beach Resort and co-creator of Pro For Home food storage container system, Margaret Zakarian President of Zakarian Hospitality, co-author of “My Perfect Pantry� and co-creator of Pro For Home food storage container system.


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Voices

Write to us: To share your thoughts and comments go to ourtownny.com and click on submit a letter to the editor.

TALKING TURKEY, AND OTHER IDIOMS BY PETER PEREIRA

REPUBLIC OF TRANSPORTATION EAST SIDE ENCOUNTERS BY ARLENE KAYATT

No judgment, just interest — Street vendor selling watches on busy Upper East Side corner. Woman passing by looks at watches and wants three. Vendor removes them from their cardboard stands. Woman goes to her purse. Sees she has nothing smaller than a hundred-dollar bill. Asks vendor if he has change. “Oh wait, I do,” came a voice from the woman holding a cardboard sign seeking donations as she sat on the sidewalk immediately opposite the vendor and his watches. She sounded like a talking ATM. Or the start of a start-up called “Partners in Change.” Could happen. MTA bus driver has a good union — Riders were absolutely flabbergasted when the bus driver on the M15 route going north on First Avenue announced to the passengers that he wouldn’t be leaving the bus stop for another five minutes because he was “ahead of schedule.” Ahead of schedule? Is he kidding? What schedule? The one posted at the bus stop where the bus is halted? If that’s the one, then he’s about 12 hours and 20 buses behind schedule. If he’s going according to an app, he’s at least 2 hours and who knows how many buses behind. Manhattan’s MTA bus service is a 24/7 nightmare. Unabated. Unabashed. Unbelievable. Without consequence. Or impunity. Deplorable. More MTA — I’m just marveling at the newly opened “headquarters” for the bus facilitator (bus “captains” stationed at designated bus stops with whom drivers check in and out, and conduct other transit business). It’s set up in the newly opened FIKA coffee shop at 42nd and Lex. The facilitator sits front and center at the FIKA window counter facing the bus stop. All paperwork paraphernalia at the ready as well as a phone and, of course, a cup of joe. When a bus arrives at the stop, the captain goes out to meet the driver. Too bad the MTA minions don’t use their ingenuity to

STRAUS MEDIA your neighborhood news source

NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Vice President/CFO Otilia Bertolotti Vice President/CRO Vincent A. Gardino advertising@strausnews.com

Associate Publishers Seth L. Miller, Ceil Ainsworth Regional Sales Manager Tania Cade

get the buses running on time with regularity so that the public’s transportation needs are met and riders aren’t left waiting half-hours at a time, if not more, for buses, particularly during the workday when time matters. And on weekends when the ridership is going strong throughout the day. Re-framed — For several years a picture-framing shop occupied a commercial space on Third Avenue between 90/91st Streets. Within the last year, they moved out and the storefront was empty. In the last few weeks, another picture-framing tenant moved into the space. Don’t know if it’s the same owner. Doesn’t matter. Glad to see commercial occupancy picking up. A concern, however, is

and profess sympathy for them, they do nothing to lighten the burden. Instead, they undermine small businesses by encouraging the expansion of street vending. Today food carts; tomorrow who knows. The actions, advocacy and legislative intent of our representatives does not bode well for small business. Expansion of street vending is antithetical to the survival of small businesses, their owners, vendors, employees and the public. Electeds and public officials should take heed and reorder their priorities and serve the economic and public safety interests of all of their constituents. City sidewalks are now used and occupied by pedestrians, strollers, skateboards, outdoor cafes, fruit vendors, hotdog, and other food and coffee carts. Expanding use

Photo: Chris Eason, via flickr that the city’s expansion of food cart permits will invite the expansion of not only food carts but other types of street vending. Luckily, picture framing doesn’t lend itself to selling from carts but other arts and crafts may. In this climate of overreach as far as street vending, small businesses will continue to pay high, if not exorbitant, rents while vendors will pay for the privilege of a street space for the price of a permit and other costs — NOTHING compared to the cost of rent and running a small business. Some small businesses on the UES pay monthly rents in the range of $10,000. While elected and public officials give lip service to the plight and loss of small businesses

President & Publisher, Jeanne Straus nyoffice@strausnews.com Editor-In-Chief Account Executive Alexis Gelber Fred Almonte editor.ot@strausnews.com Director of Partnership Development Deputy Editor Barry Lewis Richard Khavkine editor.otdt@strausnews.com

of street space is not safe. And not in the public interest. And finally — She was there. Cindy Adams of New York Post fame was on the inside at the Hilton with President-elect Trump on election night. Both East Siders, they know each other for more than 40 years and live within blocks of each other. He on Fifth and 57th. She on Park Avenue a block north. Given the electorate’s penchant for New Yorkers and the audacity of Trump, could be that he creates a cabinet post for her — like Secretary of Gosspel — to serve the nosy needs of the spiritual, secular and religious communities? And to think she used to write for Our Town!

Staff Reporter Madeleine Thompson newsreporter@strausnews.com Director of Digital Pete Pinto

Block Mayors Ann Morris, Upper West Side Jennifer Peterson, Upper East Side Gail Dubov, Upper West Side Edith Marks, Upper West Side


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

THE HEART OF A HOME GRAYING NEW YORK BY MARCIA EPSTEIN

My partner John and I traveled last week to my hometown of Croton-on-Hudson to meet up with some high school classmates I haven’t seen in many years. In fact, the last time was at a class reunion 30 years ago and before that ... well ... high school graduation. Even though Croton is only an hour or so from Manhattan, it might as well be the Alps, because I don’t have any reason to go there. The one time we took a drive to see “my” house, I was so freaked out I promised myself never to do it again. And in fact, this time we didn’t. I had felt sad at all the changes, all the new houses on the block, even new numbering of the houses. The new playgrounds, trees, shrubbery ... I even got lost trying to find my house. It got to me emotionally; I want my memories intact. I want the streets empty and us kids playing ball well into the evening. Maybe I just want to go back in time to when things were simpler and I was young, but this time I did not go near my childhood home. Six of us met in a diner; three of us were high school classmates and three were our partners. Who did I see? I saw my high school buddies but in a different form. And yet not different. Of course we talked about old times and old friends and it was a very pleasant lunch. But as with visiting my house, it was also a bit disorienting. We are still Marcia, Erica and Joel. But we are the senior versions of Marcia, Erica and Joel. We are still us, but the us who have lived the greatest portion of our lives and now have the time to kick back and sit in a diner for two hours reminiscing. Wonderful, fun, nostalgic, scary. All the time that has passed! Is it possible? And passed in a snap. A quick snap of the fingers. It was fun, and we all looked great. Maybe another time I’ll even have the courage to go and look at my childhood home. Back in the city, our wonderful neighborhood NORC (Naturally Occurring Retirement Community), Bloomingdale Aging in Place (BAiP), was honored by Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer on October 30th. She dubbed it “BAiP Appreciation Day.”

As I’ve written before, more neighborhoods should form NORCs as wonderful as BAiP. The heart of BAiP is its corps of volunteers who build up and aid its community, particularly supporting older adults. In addition to helping seniors who may need help going to doctors’ appointments, shopping

West Side, just Google BAiP or Bloomingdale Aging in Place for more information For those who like to travel, the Freebird Club is a new short-term rental service solely for seniors. It was launched this past September as an international travel club for those 50 and older. Peter Mangan, the

Croton-on-Hudson. Photo: j4nbrajer and dealing with errands, BAiP has many activities, too many for me to list. I’ve mentioned my own ping pong group. My partner, John, walks with an early morning group, and sometimes with another, faster group at 10:00 a.m. There are book, cooking, movie and wellness groups. And BAiP runs a Resource Exchange with recommendations for everything from handymen to hairdressers. So thanks go to Gale Brewer for recognizing BAiP, and the importance of neighborhood associations that help keep the older population at home, active and connected. If you live between 96th and 110th Street on the Upper

founder of The Freebird Club, did some research among friends, neighbors and focus groups. He found that many senior citizens are healthy and still want to travel. So he founded an online peer-to-peer network, a kind of AirBnB that lets elders host travelers and travelers stay at homes in other countries. Mangan sees this as a way to mobilize older people to travel and meet new people. Eventually he may add group trips. There is a lot of vetting of those wanting to share apartments while traveling and those wanting to invite travelers into their homes. Contact hello@thefreebirdclub.com for more information.

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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Come Experience Auctions at Showplace First-Time Bidders Welcome! Sunday, November 20, 10am

Out & About More Events. Add Your Own: Go to ourtownny.com

Fine and decorative art, jewelry and furniture for a fraction of retail cost! No reserves! Preview: November 7 – 20 8:30am – 5:30pm weekends & 10am – 6pm weekdays Absentee and phone bids accepted! Complimentary lunch after the auction! View the catalogue at www.nyshowplace.com! Showplace Antique + Design Center | 40 West 25th Street 212-633-6063 ext. 808 | auctions@nyshowplace.com

We buy estates! Entire or partial contents Immediate payment Professional and discreet

ISABELLA HOUSE

Thu

HARRY POTTER CRAFT FEAST OF JERUSALEM PARTY ▲ The Met, 1000 Fifth Ave.

Independent Living for Older Adults Our amenities include: • Spacious studios starting at $2,400 per month and one-bedroom apartments starting at $2,800 per month • Complimentary Lunch and Dinner served buffet style • Cable TV – with HD channels • All utilities are included • 24-hour Security • Weekly linen service • Visitor Parking • Pastoral services • A wealth of programs and activities • Conveniently located near medical, physical therapy, occupational therapy and psychiatric services • On-site beauty salon, library, gift shop, laundry, check-cashing facilities and visitor parking • Moderately priced lodging for overnight guests

67th Street Library, 328 East 67th St. 3 p.m. Free Come out to celebrate the release of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them with this event. There will be Harry Potter crafts for children aged 5-12. 212-734-1717. www.nypl.org

‘ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS’ For more information and to schedule a private tour, please call: 212-342-9539

We’ve thought of everything to enrich and enhance your life. 525 Audubon Ave. at 191st Street New York, NY 10040

www.isabella.org

17 Fri 18

f fb.com/IsabellaOrg l twitter.com/IsabellaOrg x youtube.com/IsabellaOrg

Webster Library Auditorium, 1465 York Ave., at 78th Street 4 p.m. Free Bring the family out for this screening of Disney’s “Alice Through the Looking Glass.” 212-288-5049. www.nypl. org

7 p.m. An evening of inspired conversation and “Hafla” (family-style feast) with acclaimed chef, food writer, and restaurateur Yotam Ottolenghi and writers Laila El-Haddad and Maggie Schmitt, highlighting the food and culture of Jerusalem. 212-535-7710. www. metmuseum.org

VINCENT VAN GOGH Albertine Books, 972 Fifth Ave., at 79th Street 7 p.m. Free Join Bogomila WelshOvcharov, Bernard Comment, Franck Baille and Julian Schnabel for a conversation celebrating the international publication of Vincent van Gogh: The Lost Arles Sketchbook, a collection of previously unknown drawings by Vincent van Gogh. 212-650-0070. www. albertine.com

Sat

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BEETHOVEN’S SONATAS 92nd Street Y, Lexington Avenue at 92nd St. 8 p.m. $40 Isabelle Faust joins Alexander Melnikov in this performances of several of Beethoven’s sonatas. 212-415-5500. www.92y.org

GOTHAM GROOVE Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Ave. 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Free, general admission; prices vary for special performances Come out for the opening weekend event celebrating the landmark exhibit, “New York at It’s Core” — 32 hours of live musical and spoken word performances, films, dance and interactive experiences. 212-534-1672. www.mcny. org


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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BRONFMAN CENTER FOR JEWISH LIFE

We Need to Talk Join Rabbi Peter J. Rubinstein and the 92Y Bronfman Center team to explore the issues that really matter to Jews today.

Latkes & Learning with 92Y’s Director of Jewish Education Matt Check THU, DEC 1, 2016, 6:30 PM

Everett Institute: “Israel on the American College Campus” See David Makovsky with Rabbi Peter Rubinstein on the BDS movement and attitudes toward Israel and Palestine on American college campuses. SUN, JAN 8, 2017, 10 AM

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Sun

ALEX AND THE KALEIDOSCOPE ▲ The Jewish Museum, 1109 Fifth Ave. 11:30 a.m. $16 Bring the kids out for this family concert featuring Emmy award-winning children’s entertainer Alex Mitnick and his band Alex and the Kaleidoscope. 212-423-3200. www. thejewishmuseum.org

JUILLIARD DANCE: NEW DANCES▼ Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Ave. 7:30 p.m. $40 Excerpts of new works by four innovative choreographers are performed by Juilliard Dance students. 212-423-3575. www. guggenheim.org

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Mon

‘THE SHINING’ 92nd Street Y, Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street Noon. $30 Come out to view and discuss this screening of the celluloid thriller. 212-415-5500. www.92y. org

OPERA TALK FIAF, 55 East 59th St. 7 p.m. $25. Join FIAF for a conversation

with composer Kaija Saariaho on his opera, “L’Amour de Loin.” There will be musical excerpts performed as well. 1-800-982-2787. www.fiaf. org

Tue

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DISTINGUISHED WRITERS SERIES: ALAN SHAPIRO Hunter College, 68th Street and Lexington Avenue 7:30-8:30 p.m. Free Come out for this poetry reading with works by the award-winning poet. 212-772-4007. www.hunter. cuny.edu

HILTON ALS Shakespeare & Co, 939 Lexington Ave., at 69th Street 7 p.m. Registration requested An evening with the novelist and New Yorker theater critic. Registration & info: events@

shakeandco.com or 212-7723400

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Wed

KATHY GRIFFIN IN CONVERSATION WITH JOY REID 92nd Street Y, Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street 7 p.m. $45 The comedian talks about her new book, “Kathy Griffin’s Celebrity Run-Ins.” 212-415-5500. www.92y.org

SHOW AND TELL: STORIES IN CHINESE PAINTINGS The Met, 1000 Fifth Ave. 10:30-11:30 a.m. Free Discover how paintings that tell stories can serve as powerful vehicles to promote political agendas and cultural values as well as to express personal thoughts. 212-535-7710. www. metmuseum.org

Everett Institute: “Intermarriage, the Occupation & The Next Generation: How Courage and Imagination Can Help American Jewish Leaders” See Prof. Steven Cohen with Rabbi Peter Rubinstein on how Jewish leaders can address high intermarriage rates and the Israeli occupation. SUN, MAR 26, 2017, 10 AM

For tickets, visit 92Y.org/JewishLife or call 212.415.5500. 92nd Street Y, Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street

92Y Bronfman Center for Jewish Life receives major support from Matthew Bronfman; The Covenant Foundation; the Dorot Foundation; Friedlander Endowment for Jewish Life; the Golden Family Foundation; Harold Grinspoon Foundation and PJ Library®; Cheryl and Philip L. Milstein; May & Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, Inc.; Steve and Wendy Siegel; and UJA-Federation of New York.

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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

FINE LINES Agnes Martin’s ethereal paintings fill the Guggenheim rotunda BY MARY GREGORY

Like a clear dawn where the sky lightens imperceptibly, yet, somehow both gradually and suddenly, unfolds into a new day, Agnes Martin’s paintings reveal themselves slowly. What they reveal says a great deal about the artist as well as the viewer. Humble, gentle, calming and restorative, they give you a moment’s pause, a bit of perspective, and the long view. Life isn’t as hectic as we tell ourselves it is. It’s possible to slow things down, at least for moments. One of those moments can be found in the Guggenheim’s Agnes Martin retrospective. “For more than 40 years, Agnes Martin created serene paintings composed of grids and stripes,” explained

Tracey Bashkoff, senior curator in the museum’s Collections and Exhibitions department. “Martin’s commitment to this spare style was informed by a belief in the transformative power of art, in its ability to conjure what she termed abstract emotions — happiness, love, and experiences of innocence, freedom, beauty and perfection. For Martin, these were the only true subjects of art, and she devoted herself to conveying them through her luminous paintings, drawings and prints.” Through Jan. 11, the Guggenheim is hosting the first retrospective of Martin’s work since her death in 2004. Martin, widely regarded as one of the most important figures in late 20th century American art, could be seen, to paraphrase St. Paul, as being in the art world but not of it. After having achieved an astonishing level of

Spending time with Agnes Martin at the Guggenheim. Photo: Adel Gorgy

Agnes Martin’s spare, square canvases reward patient viewing as seen in “The Islands I–XII,” 1979, in acrylic and graphite on linen, 12 parts, each 6 square feet. Photo: Adel Gorgy gy success and recognition for a female artist in the late 1950s,, Martin left New York behind d to seek solitude and quiet and d found her voice. She traveled forr a few years across the U.S. and d Canada (where she was born),, finally settling in New Mexico,, and never leaving. There she e found what nurtured her soull and informed her work. The exhibition, co-curated d by Bashkoff and guest curatorr Tiffany Bell, includes some 115 5 works chronicling Martin’s en-tire career, and includes some e of her most famous works, ass well as drawings, sculpture e and little known early figurall abstractions. There are also o journals, notes and books off Martin’s writing on display. The show follows the course of her life, starting with early work and rising to the soaring skylight where her some of her most joyous paintings, with titles such as “Blessings,” “Gratitude,” and “Loving Love,” reside. Martin favored 6-foot square canvases and filled them with very little. Lines, washes of color, pencil markings, dots and bands seem to repeat across the surfaces and across her oeuvre — unless you take the time to look. As one stands in front of them, changes can be sensed. Hazy irregularities merge into soft horizons. Lines expand, but are contained. Is the sense of eternity an apparition born in the hand of the artist or the spirit of the viewer? Bashkoff said, “I think when you give yourself over to looking at the

Agnes Martin’s “Untitled,” from 1960, Oil on canvas. Photo: Adel Gorgy work, there’s a certain amount of acceptance when you really let it communicate with you. I think you do kind of access the way she made her work ... some of her thinking about it. The slowing down. The emptying of your mind.” Bell pointed out that while Martin may have led a spiritually driven life, she resisted associating her work with anything religious. Rather, Bell said, “Martin said that she’d like the experience to recall beauty that you might feel in a landscape ... that might trigger that kind of experience but it doesn’t represent it.” Martin’s work when encountered sporadically, one or two pieces here and there, always feel like a stopping

point, a repose. Seeing a po whole museum’s worth feels w like lik a glimpse of timelessness. ne They’re soft and gentle, yet ye powerful in their unyielding in adherence to the artist’s own ow stringent set of visual rules. ru “There was a time where “ I thought that the work was w about things that are the th same. The more time I’ve spent with them, I I’ understand that it’s more un about t h i n gs t hat a re ab different from each other,” di Bashkoff said, “the little Ba differences in syncopation di and an proportion and color that she’s sh used really take you to that th place of understanding and appreciation.” The best place to experience that is in a gallery filled with 12 enormous white canvases, each bearing lines drawn in pencil, one of the humblest of artist’s materials. The lines travel confidently across the plane, yet bear evidence of the human touch. Some are strong, some are wobbly, yet finally all do what Martin intended. “I think that everyone is on his own line,” Martin, a poet as well as a painter, once said. “I think that after you’ve made one step, the next step reveals itself. I believe that you were born on this line. I don’t say that the actual footsteps were marked before you get to them, and I don’t say that change isn’t possible in your course. But I do believe we unfold out of ourselves, and we do what we are born to do sooner or later, anyway.”


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

PIPING UP: ORGANIST LOBBIES FOR ACCESS Gail Archer, an internationally recognized concert musician, wants to open up the field to more women

BY HEATHER STEIN

Gail Archer, choral conductor, lecturer and concert organist, is advocating for women — as organists. Archer has traveled across the U.S. and abroad, and is steadfast in her belief that the profession remains a male bastion, despite the surfeit of female talent in the field. “The more highly educated and skilled a women organist is, the more likely she is to have a disappointing professional response from an employer,” said Archer, who lives on the Upper West Side. Brilliant women organists are regularly passed over in the application or promotion process, treated unkindly in the workplace or dismissed from their jobs as organists, she said. Archer, an international recording artist, said she has experienced discrimination herself and endeavored to survey women organists in North America, the results of which she published in the Journal of the International Alliance of Women in Music. “There are no women leading a conservatory organ program in North America,” she said. “There are two women serving as cathedral musicians in a major U.S. city, Seattle and Phoenix. I know the statistics because I did the research myself and published the results.” She created a women organist advocacy group, Musforum, which profiles one member each month and publishes an online magazine three times a year. The site contains a database of women organists along with information about upcoming conferences. “The network allows us to stay in touch and to support each other,” she said. “I know that our network is meaningful to our members because our numbers are few and there are great distances between us. We affirm one another when we have an open channel to com-

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Gail Archer is director of the music program at Barnard College and college organist at Vassar College. Photo: Buck Ennis municate regularly.” The group’s second-ever formal gathering, “Prairie Voices: A Musforum Conference,” will take place in Omaha, Nebraska, in June. Archer, 64, learned music by singing in church and in school choirs starting when she was 8. She also learned to play the piano. She was 13 when she discovered the organ and has pursued both ever since. “I am a practicing Roman Catholic and my faith has been an inspiration in my work,” she said. “My family attended the Union Avenue Baptist Church in Paterson, New Jersey. The organist there encouraged my interest in choir and organ from the beginning.” Archer, director of music at Barnard since 1994, earned a bachelor’s in music education from Montclair State University — “I am a first generation college graduate!” she said — and a master’s in piano from the University of Hartford. She later earned a master’s in choral conducting from the Mannes School of Music and a doctorate in organ performance from the Manhattan

School of Music. Archer began her Barnard career in 1988 as the director of the Barnard Columbia Chorus. She is also the college organist at Vassar College where, she said, she has built a strong organ program. She performs about 50 concerts a year across the country and abroad. Her New York City recital series this fall will focus on the work of Max Reger, commemorating the centenary of his death. The third concert in Ms. Archer’s fall Reger series will take place at St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Nov. 27. “Having strong piano skills helped me to transition to organ easily,” she said. “Singing in choirs gave me the ability to sight read very well and to hear all the parts clearly. One needs the theory and ear training that conservatories provide to be a professional musician and the discipline to practice long hours.” That talent and dedication has propelled her to her profession’s heights. She’s now campaigning for allies. www.musforum.org.

ART OF FOOD Our Town’s

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Saturday, February 4, 2017

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MEET THE CHEF When did you start that I was going to try my cooking? hand at New York. They I am a product of a all said I was crazy single mother. She and that Mississippi commuted for work doesn’t make it there. for an hour and a half And it was tough to each day, both ways. get people to give me a So when I was a kid, shot. Culinarily speaking, she would call me and ask New Yorkers don’t think me what was for dinner. anyone but New Yorkers I started when I was REBECCA RICHARDS can cook, unless you’re Chef at Flex Mussels three years old making from France. Fortunately 174 E. 82nd St., New York, NY 10028 macaroni and cheese— for me, I got a job as things like that. She told a fry cook here at Flex me that I was always very angry Mussels, and after pestering them when I couldn’t get to the sink to for a year, they gave me a shot at the scrub it out. chef job. So I’ve always cooked for people and How does your art degree influence my family, and as I got older I just your culinary career? kept cooking more and more: I went With plating: colors, composition, from doing part of Thanksgiving to keeping things vibrant and looking cooking all of Thanksgiving. a certain way. I use the principals of balance and harmony in visual and Where are you from? three-dimensional art in everything. The West Coast. I was born in L.A., and went to high school in Eugene, What is your favorite kind of Oregon. I played college sports in artwork? Mississippi, and lasted about a year I was actually a potter, and I studied playing sports. I started waiting under Pablo Sierra who is a famous tables in arts school—so very potter from Spain. He moved to typical. Mississippi and lived in a little shack house. He and I would go dig clay I fell in love with restaurants and and make plates, pots, teacups, and quit sports. Used my art degree things like that. I learned to recognize for culinary purposes. There was the type of earth we were using, and nothing I wanted to do more than know what color it would turn when work in restaurants, whether it was doing dishes or scrubbing the floors, we applied fire to it. waiting tables—anything. So when I became a professional chef, my mom always said: “When What brought you to New York? I was a chef at a steak house way out you open your own restaurant you can make your own plates.” in the country in Mississippi. It was awesome: bring your own alcohol, Any cooking tips? thirteen items on the menu, people Most things are going to need would wait hours for a table. I had lemon, and salt reduces heat. Most hit the top. I was running the place. I people think that you would add had relationships with all of the local sugar to take the spice away, but it’s farmers. There was really no place really salt. else for me to go, so I told everyone


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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

RESTAURANT INSPECTION RATINGS OCT 24 - NOV 09 2016

Trend Diner

1382 2 Avenue

The following listings were collected from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s website and include the most recent inspection and grade reports listed. We have included every restaurant listed during this time within the zip codes of our neighborhoods. Some reports list numbers with their explanations; these are the number of violation points a restaurant has received. To see more information on restaurant grades, visit http://www1.nyc.gov/site/doh/services/restaurant-grades.page

Grade Pending (20) Cold food item held above 41º F (smoked fish and reduced oxygen packaged foods above 38 ºF) except during necessary preparation. Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility’s food and/ or non-food areas.

Brb Cafe

413 E 69Th St

Not Yet Graded

Flora Bar

945 Madison Ave

Not Yet Graded

Laduree Paris

864 Madison Ave

Not Yet Graded (17) Cold food item held above 41º F (smoked fish and reduced oxygen packaged foods above 38 ºF) except during necessary preparation. Food not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display or service.

Vanguard Wine Bar

1372 1St Ave

Not Yet Graded

Yia Yia

404 E 69Th St

Not Yet Graded (41) Hot food item not held at or above 140º F. Food contact surface improperly constructed or located. Unacceptable material used.

The Sweet Shop Nyc

404 E 73Rd St

A

Three Guy’s Restaurant

960 Madison Avenue

A

Two Lizards Mexican Restaurant

1365 1St Avenue

A

Union Club Of City Of New York

101 East 69 Street

A

Up Thai

1411 2Nd Ave

A

Uskudar Restaurant

1405 Second Avenue

A

Gael Pub

1465 3 Avenue

A

Vegan Divas

1437 1 Avenue

A

Luna Rossa

347 East 85 Street

A

Via Quadronno

25 East 73 Street

A

Sweetgreen

1500 3Rd Ave

A

Voila 76

1452 2 Avenue

A

Eastend Bar & Grill

1664 1 Avenue

A

Zucchero E Pomodori

1435 2Nd Ave

A

Amoun

406 East 73 Street

B

Abaleh

1611 2Nd Ave

A

Beanocchios Cafe

1431 York Avenue

B

Subway

1613 2Nd Ave

A

Hotel Carlyle

35 East 76 Street

B

Asian 83

1605 2Nd Ave

Jones Wood Foundry

401 East 76 Street

B

Neil’s Cofee Shop

961 Lexington Avenue B

Tanoshi Bento

1372 York Ave

B

Vivolo

138140 East 74 Street

B

Grade Pending (17) Cold food item held above 41º F (smoked fish and reduced oxygen packaged foods above 38 ºF) except during necessary preparation. Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility’s food and/ or non-food areas. Filth flies or food/refuse/sewage-associated (FRSA) flies present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Filth flies include house flies, little house flies, blow flies, bottle flies and flesh flies. Food/ refuse/sewage-associated flies include fruit flies, drain flies and Phorid flies.

Jg Melon Restaurant

1291 3 Avenue

C

Chirping Chicken

1560 2Nd Ave

A

Alex Cafe & Deli

1018 Lexington Avenue

Grade Pending (21) Hot food item not held at or above 140º F. Food not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display or service. Wiping cloths soiled or not stored in sanitizing solution.

Mokja

1663 1St Ave

A

Metropolitan Museum Of Art

1000 5 Avenue

A

The Louise/Saloon

1584 York Avenue

1378 1 Avenue

Grade Pending (18) Hot food item not held at or above 140º F. Food not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display or service. Food contact surface not properly washed, rinsed and sanitized after each use and following any activity when contamination may have occurred.

Grade Pending (11) Filth flies or food/refuse/sewage-associated (FRSA) flies present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Filth flies include house flies, little house flies, blow flies, bottle flies and flesh flies. Food/refuse/sewage-associated flies include fruit flies, drain flies and Phorid flies.

Trinity Pub

229 East 84 Street

A

Nargila Grill

1599 York Avenue

Grade Pending (9) Live roaches present in facility’s food and/or nonfood areas.

Dunkin’ Donuts

1248 Lexington Avenue

A

Saba's Pizza

1217 Lexington Av

A

Le Pain Quotidien

1592 1St Ave

A

Munchery

435 E 86Th St

A

Starbucks Coffee

1142 Madison Ave

A

Bar Prima

331 E 81St St

Grade Pending (2)

Burger King

226 E 86Th St

A

Petite Shell

1269 Lexington Ave

A

Lake Toba

1643 2Nd Ave

A

E.A.T. Cafe

1064 Madison Avenue A

Andaz

Mo Gelato

956 Lexington Ave

Grade Pending (20) Food Protection Certificate not held by supervisor of food operations. Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas.

Per Lei

1347 2 Avenue

Grade Pending (19) Cold food item held above 41º F (smoked fish and reduced oxygen packaged foods above 38 ºF) except during necessary preparation. Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility’s food and/ or non-food areas. Filth flies or food/refuse/sewage-associated (FRSA) flies present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Filth flies include house flies, little house flies, blow flies, bottle flies and flesh flies. Food/ refuse/sewage-associated flies include fruit flies, drain flies and Phorid flies.

Pj Bernstein Deli & Restaurant

1215 Third Avenue

Grade Pending (34) Cold food item held above 41º F (smoked fish and reduced oxygen packaged foods above 38 ºF) except during necessary preparation. Food not cooled by an approved method whereby the internal product temperature is reduced from 140º F to 70º F or less within 2 hours, and from 70º F to 41º F or less within 4 additional hours. Evidence of mice or live mice present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Live roaches present in facility’s food and/or non-food areas. Food not protected from potential source of contamination during storage, preparation, transportation, display or service.


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Central Park

WHAT’S HAPPENING IN THE PARK FALL FOLIAGE The leaves are turning nicely in Central Park right now, and there are plenty of stunning photo opportunities to be had this time of year. Take a photography walking tour with citifari and brush up on your skills with a beautiful backdrop: www.centralpark.com/ guide/tours

Boathouse or the dock on the Turtle Pond, and end at the Boathouse where you can get a snack. Have a look at Bob’s weekly narrative report to predict what birds you might possibly see on this week’s walks. More info at www.birdingbob.com.

ICE SKATING SEASON IS HERE Wollman Rink is open for public session, but note that Lasker Rink is closed for repairs until further notice.

BIRDING BOB A guided bird walks each week begins at the

COMING UP THIS WEEK ICE SKATING AT WOLLMAN RINK

HOLIDAY SIGHTS WALKING TOUR

Mon/Tue: 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Wed/Thu: 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri/Sat: 10 a.m.-11 p.m. Sun: 10 a.m.-9 p.m. More information at www. centralpark.com/events

Daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. from Nov. 15 to Jan. 5 Get your cameras ready and get in the holiday spirit on this fun and festive walking tour covering Central Park, Rockefeller Center and more.

www.centralpark.com/ guide/tours

ART OF FOOD Our Town’s

Event listings and Where in Central Park? brought to you by CentralPark.com.

AT SOTHEBY’S

Answer from two weeks ago: The monument is part of the Engineers’ Gate to Central Park, at the 90th Street entrance. John Purroy Mitchel was the 95th mayor of New York. He was the second youngest elected mayor. After his failed reelection bid, Mitchel enlisted in World War I to serve in the Army aviation corps in 1918. He was killed months later when he fell 500 feet from his plane during training. Congratulations to Joe Ornstein and Gregory Holman for answering correctly! Thank you to those who have followed our Central Park column and answered the Where in Central Park quizzes. This will be our final edition of the column. Please be sure to visit our website, www.centralpark.com, for more information and happenings in Central Park!

BUY TICKETS NOW! artoffoodny.com

Presented by

ANSWER TO THE PREVIOUS QUIZ

Saturday, February 4, 2017

MEET THE CHEF Tell me a little bit about Bohemian Spirit. We do traditional Czech cuisine. We’ve been here since April. Some of our specialties include duck, dumplings, and schnitzel. We have weekly specials and use seasonal, local ingredients and try to help the local farmers.

Republic and studied in France. I also attended the Culinary Institute of America. I worked at a First Michelin Star restaurant in the Czech Republic with very seasonal menus. There were two menus—one that was strictly Czech, and one that was international. Each menu had sixteen courses and was changed every day. So, at this time, I tried a lot of techniques and worked with a lot of ingredients, which really taught me a lot.

Where are you originally from? A small, small town in the Czech Republic. Growing up there was LUKAS POHL Chef at Bohemian Spirit a little boring, but my grandma 321 East 73rd St., taught me to cook. She lived up New York, NY 10021 on a mountain, and everything I also worked Prague to work as a pastry was always homemade. We spent a lot chef. And after that, I moved to New York to of time together in the woods and fields picking herbs. We made our own tea, picked work here. mushrooms, got fresh eggs and milk on the What is one culinary tip you live by? farm. She showed me the way. Always try to use the ingredients that are How did you get started in the culinary world? I went to culinary school in the Czech

around you—what’s local is fresh, and what’s in season is least expensive.


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BUS TERMINAL PLAN STILL LACKS DETAILS Port Authority’s proposed budget contains no toll or fare hikes but no clarity on construction BY DAVID PORTER

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey’s proposed budget for 2017 contains no toll or fare increases but also no clarity on when construction on a new Manhattan bus terminal might begin, or how it will fit into the agency’s 10-year capital plan. The proposed budget released last week also anticipates higher revenue from tolls at the agency’s bridges and tunnels in 2017, despite the absence of toll hikes. Port Authority Chairman John Degnan said in May the agency was completely redoing the 10-year, $28 billion capital plan it unveiled in 2014 to include a new bus terminal as well as significant improvements at LaGuardia and Newark Liberty airports. The Port Authority had been criticized for not initially including money in the capital plan to replace its six-decade-old bus terminal, which has been a source of mounting criticism over frequent delays and crumbling infrastructure. In May, Degnan said he hoped to have a new 10-year plan ready for a vote as early as September.

CITY ON THE HILL New York’s real estate market slows, but economy, employment continue stable rise BY FREDERICK PETERS

We aren’t scared! New Yorkers have been through it all. We aren’t scared of immigration; our city has been a glorious mix of multi-ethnic neighbors and neighborhoods for over a century. We remain an open city, delighting in the to and fro of goods, people and services from all over the world; we ARE globalization. We embrace women as equal to or superior to men in life, in

Degnan couldn’t immediately be reached for comment following the meeting. The 2017 budget dedicates about $47 million for planning for a new terminal and $21 million for a continuing program to make interior repairs and improve bus traffic flow. Last month, Port Authority board members heard five proposals for a new bus terminal as part of an international design competition begun earlier this year. The designs would cost anywhere from roughly $4 billion to more than $15 billion. New Jersey lawmakers have pushed for a new facility on or near the current location at 42nd Street and Eighth Avenue on Manhattan’s west side. Some New York officials have said they’ll fight any plan that locates it a block west, saying it would displace small businesses and rent-regulated apartments in the Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood. More than 200,000 people use the terminal each weekday. For those who commute by car, the absence of toll increases at Port Authority bridges and tunnels was welcome news after five straight years of scheduled hikes, the last coming in December 2015. A report last year by Moody’s Investors Service concluded that bridge and

NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

Business

Photo: Rob Young, via Wikimedia Commons tunnel traffic had been in a slow decline over several years and, at the same time, the Port Authority was relying more heavily on toll revenue to fund its

operations. That trend appears to have been reversed. According to statistics compiled by the Port Authority, nearly 40,000

more vehicles per month used its four bridges and two tunnels in the first eight months of 2016 compared to the same period in 2015.

the workplace as well as the home. We don’t fear the LGBT community, the presence of whom has enriched and broadened all of our lives here since long before Stonewall. We aren’t scared of crime, which is so much better than it was 20 years ago that street smart New Yorkers can walk almost everywhere at any time of the day or night without fear. And we aren’t particularly fearful about terrorism, having had the worst of it, apparently unlike many Americans who have never been within a hundred miles of a terrorist attack but fear it mightily. They don’t understand that we are all more likely (literally) to die by falling out of bed. So there’s not much use TRYING to scare us about these things. We also know that we are very lucky, here on what one of my friends today referred to as “our little island off the coast of America.” The sense of economic and social disenfranchisement which seems to afflict the majority of America’s rural and exurban populations doesn’t affect our affluent client

base, for whom a studio apartment costs considerably more than the average price of a house elsewhere in the country. Nor does it affect most of us or our friends and families. That doesn’t mean that we don’t feel great compassion for the fear and anger so many of our countrymen and women feel, brought on by diminished earning power and expectations. We just don’t all agree about how best to address those issues. Our real estate marketplace, which has been slowing for months, seems likely to continue to pull back through the end of the year. Uncertainty about the future roils stock markets and property markets equally; nervous people tend not to be the most enthusiastic long term investors. Any election year creates uncertainty, and when the president-elect is a completely unknown quantity, that uncertainty counts double. But our economy feels stable, employment continues its slow upward climb, and regardless of the ascendancy of our new president in

January, the residential markets will most likely stabilize and recapture their value during the first quarter of 2017. New Yorkers possess only a limited capacity for delayed gratification. And life goes on. In the years ahead our beautiful city will only become more of a world center with some of the most desirable real estate anywhere. We will continue to embrace both current residents and new arrivals from all over the country and the world, from every religious and ethnic background, contributing to our vibrant culture in the arts, in business, in sports, in technology. We thrive on debate and the full, sometimes aggressive, exchange of ideas. In short, we don’t need to be made great again. We represent the best of American idealism, entrepreneurship, inclusivity and opportunity in all its messy glory. Nothing can take that away. Frederick Peters is a licensed real estate broker and president of Warburg Realty.


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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17


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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Photos By Ellen Dunn

860 Broadway @ E. 17th St. New York, NY SAT NOV 19 2 12 PM – 5 PM SUN NOV 20 2 12 PM – 5 PM

A NOT SO RETIRING COMMUNITY With its 150th anniversary approaching, James Lenox House keeps senior residents busy BY OLIVIA KELLEY

Luis Maza has been a resident of James Lenox House, a retirement community on the Upper East Side, for nine years. The place hasn’t slowed him down, though. On the contrary: the 78-year-old cooks and cleans, goes shopping and takes walks, and even worked at New York Presbyterian Hospital up until last year. “This is the most amazing part of my life,� he said. “My third youth. The other tenants here really keep me going.� James Lenox House has stood on 73rd Street for 150 years, but it wasn’t always a home for older adults. It was founded in 1866 by Mary Lenox Sheafe as a home for Civil War widows.

Do

In the 1970s it was rebuilt and the mission changed to what it is now — affordable independent living for older men and women. “It’s like a village,â€? said Maza. “It’s multi-cultural, multi-ethnic — we have LGBT residents. There are so many exciting things here.â€? The current 107 tenants rent either a studio apartment for $1100 a month or a one bedroom for $1300 a month. Actually getting one of the 99 apartments isn’t easy. According to executive director Joseph Girven, the waiting list is at least ďŹ ve years long right now. “It’s the best building in the city for older adults,â€? said Girven. “They can enjoy getting old here.â€? The house provides a variety of supportive services such as exercise classes, concerts, parties, and even beauty parlor services. There’s also an affiliate organization, Carnegie East

something

House, which provides a higher level of care than is provided at James Lenox. “We have some residents who need hospice service,� said Girven. With the 150th anniversary celebration approaching, Girven said they are thinking about what the future of the house looks like. There’s a possibility of adding another building as well as getting involved with advocacy in the city. “One hundred fifty years is a good time to think back and look forward,� he said. “There’s a great need right now for affordable housing for seniors.� The front of the building has been undergoing construction since September to create a community patio garden space. It’s expected to be completed by November 30th. “It better be done by then,� joked Girven. “That’s the day of the [anniversary] party.�

us to

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into

Huge Selection of

A rendering of the James Lenox House on East 73rd Street following planned renovations. Courtesy James Lenox House

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Each cremation service individually performed by fully licensed members of our staff. We use no outside agents or trade services in our cremation service. We exclusively use All Souls Chapel and Crematory at the prestigious St. Michael's Cemetery, Queens, NY for our cremations unless otherwise directed.

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Email us at news@strausnews.com


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com The local paper for the Upper East Side

The local paper for the Upper West Side

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The local paper for Chelsea

Councilwoman Margaret Chin, at the microphone, flanked by Assemblywoman Deborah Glick, left, and Manhattan Borough President Gail Brewer, right, displayed photos of a line out the door of a recently opened Nike store on Broadway. Chin, her colleagues and residents are calling on the Department of Buildings to fix the “broken” policies that allowed the 55,000-square-foot store to be built. Photo: Madeleine Thompson

RESIDENTS PROTEST SOHO NIKETOWN Elected officials join in to say Buildings Department failed in its review of developer’s application BY MADELEINE THOMPSON

On Thursday afternoon last week, a line of about 50 people snaked out the door of the new Nike retail store and onto Broadway near Spring Street. Further down Broadway, in front of the Department of Buildings at Chambers Street, about 30 elected officials and SoHo residents gathered that same afternoon to protest the store’s opening earlier this month. The officials, among them Councilwoman Margaret Chin, state Senator Daniel Squadron, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Assemblywoman Deborah Glick and Community Board 2 Chairman Tobi Bergman, contend that only a legal loophole allowed the five-story, 55,000-square-foot store to be built — despite significant community opposition. The store, which features a mini soccer field and a half-size basketball court with a 23-foot ceiling, was built on the footprint of a demolished two-story building. But the so-called “party wall” standing between what the Nike store and that of its neighboring building was left intact, which allowed representatives from developer Aurora Capital Associates to

claim they were altering existing property. That in turn allowed Aurora to avoid a more onerous permit application process for stores exceeding 10,000 square feet. Skipping that permit process allowed the project to move forward with relatively little review, which angered community members. Residents of the neighboring building to the Nike store have sued Aurora Capital, alleging their building was damaged during construction. The protesters called on the department to properly enforce existing zoning laws. But a spokesperson for the DOB said the development was thoroughly reviewed “as well as audited in April 2015 “and it was determined that the plans submitted complied with the NYC Construction Codes and Zoning Resolution.” But the group chanting “enforce the law!” outside Department of Buildings offices last week were not satisfied with the response to their nearly two years of opposition. “This neighborhood has residents,” Brewer said. “It has local businesses, it has narrow sidewalks. [The Nike store] is not just misclassified, it is illegal, period.” Her colleagues echoed the sentiment, calling the DOB’s policies “broken,” with Bergman calling on Mayor Bill de Blasio to “rescue this city” from

the department he described as impenetrable. Martin Hason, who has lived on the same SoHo block as the Nike store for 40 years, lamented the loss of what decades ago was a much more residential area. “[It’s] basically hanging on by its fingernails right now,” he said, predicting that one or two more big-box retailers like Nike’s would be the neighborhood’s downfall. While Hason said SoHo used to be comfortable, he described it now as an “outdoor shopping mall.” “It seems really unfair that commercial interests have so much sway,” he said. “Sometimes if I’m getting out of my building I have to knock on the door in order to keep the crowds that are congregating away.” Glick acknowledged that zoning and special permits have contributed to SoHo’s economic success, and argued that this was all the more reason to continue enforcing those laws. “Why we want to undermine that, I don’t know,” she said. “It is [the building department’s] obligation to respond to the tax-paying public. If we homogenize ourselves so that we look like a mall anywhere else in the country, there’s no reason to be here.” Madeleine Thompson can be reached at newsreporter@ strausnews.com

Tell us what you’re thankful for this holiday season and be automatically entered for the chance to win tickets to see NPR’s PAULA POUNDSTONE live! at the Schimmel Center

email contests@strausnews.com or submit your answers by tweeting at us at: @OurTownNYC @OTdowntown @WestsideSpirit @Chelsea_News_NY


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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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Nothing beats newspapers as the most reliable source of local news in print and online Recent studies show:

‘‘

Newspapers led online consumption for local news” Coda Ventures Survey August 18, 2016

‘‘

Local media users named newspapers as their “most relied on” source for deals across a range of goods and services.” Coda Ventures Survey August 18, 2016

‘‘

What accounts for print’s superiority? Print - particularly the newspaper - is an amazingly sophisticated technology for showing you a lot of it.”

‘‘

Local newspapers are still the top source of news about readers’ communities, including their branded Web sites and social media channels.” Publisher’s Daily - August 30, 2016

‘‘

Residents are eager for news about their own communities, which, increasingly, only local news organizations can provide” Editor & Publisher - June 1, 2016

Politico - September 10, 2016

STRAUSMEDIA your neighborhood news source 212-868-0190 | nypress.com


NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

To read about other people who have had their “15 Minutes” go to ourtownny.com/15 minutes

YOUR 15 MINUTES

A COMMUNITY’S BEACON Stephan Russo, Goddard Riverside’s executive director, is leaving after four decades with the Upper West Side institution BY ANGELA BARBUTI

When asked about his role as executive director of Goddard Community Center, Stephan Russo said, “It requires a lot of different skills and relationship building with everybody from a senior in the senior program to somebody who used to live on the streets, to dealing with the board members who live on Central Park West.” The New York native landed a job at Goddard, an Upper West Side resource that serves 17,000 people each year through 26 programs, in 1976. He was 25 years old. He has spent 40 years there working on outreach in the form of such initiatives as daycare centers, housing for the homeless and programs for seniors. Nearly 20 of those years were spent as its executive director, a role that allows him to “walk into a program and see what impact it

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Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

has and the joy on people’s faces.” With the holidays approaching, Goddard is preparing for the organization’s holiday meals program, which serves 1,000 people each on Thanksgiving and Christmas days. Volunteers assist with everything from carving turkeys to baking pies to delivering meals to the homebound.

You started at Goddard after serving in the Peace Corps in Colombia. I worked in a youth program down there in Colombia, so I came back to the city looking to do community and youth work. And somebody, somewhat serendipitously, told me that Goddard Riverside Community Center was hiring because they had gotten a grant to run, what was called in that era, a delinquency prevention program. When I tell people the story, I always say, “No way are they going to hire this white middle class kid who came into the West Side of Manhattan to work.” By lo and behold, I got hired and that’s how I got started. Those first years we had developed a youth project where we did outreach and went out to the streets to get to know young people who were everywhere from 87th

Street up to 93rd, in parks and playgrounds, a lot of kids who lived in the housing projects here on the West Side ... talking to young people and trying to get them involved in activities and programs. Some of the kids had dropped out of school and gotten into trouble. We targeted those kids who had gotten into trouble and we developed relationships and in many ways changed their lives.

What does your job as executive director entail? One of the absolute challenges as well as joys of being executive director is the diversity of what I have to do. One day I will go to a foundation to raise money for a fund. Often, I will go out and visit programs and meet with staff. I tend to go to meetings with city government officials around contracts. I do a lot of work with the board of directors. One of the interesting things about it, and people don’t realize this, is that I have the opportunity to lead and have a vision, but as executive director you’re not as powerful as sometimes people make you out to be. You’re really interdependent and I like that. And I really enjoy the challenges

One of the absolute challenges as well as joys of being executive director is the diversity of what I have to do. One day I will go to a foundation to raise money for a fund. Often, I will go out and visit programs and meet with staff. I tend to go to meetings with city government officials around contracts. I do a lot of work with the board of directors. One of the interesting things about it, and people don’t realize this, is that I have the opportunity to lead and have a vision, but as executive director you’re not as powerful as sometimes people make you out to be.” Stephan Russo

of how one builds change, particularly across staff, program participants, board members and community members.

Tell us about some of your program offerings and who takes advantage of them. What I like to say is that Goddard Riverside is a venerable settlement house with the merger of Goddard Neighborhood Center and Riverside Community Center back in 1959. Settlement houses are places in neighborhoods that are multiservice, meaning they work across generations. So at Goddard, we have programs from cradle to grave, active afterschool program for children; we work with teens out of a beacon program on 93rd Street. We have a nationally recognized college access program called Options, for first-generation kids, many of whom have to overcome a number of different obstacles, some academic, some financial. We help them get into college and make sure they’re successful because we follow up and see the kids through to graduation. We have a very active senior center. We feed a lot of seniors. We deliver 500 home-delivered meals in this Community Board 7.

Goddard has become recognized nationally for its work with homelessness. We do a lot of work with folks on the street. We’re the lead agency in a program called Manhattan Outreach Consortium, which has outreach workers that go out to where homeless people are out in the streets and we get people into housing. We have a consortium of three agencies that covers the entire borough of Manhattan. We develop a lot of permanent housing — five residences with close to 600 units. One building is primarily for low-income seniors and our other residences, called Supportive Housing, are for people are on the streets. We know, from our own experience, the answer to homelessness is permanent housing. People can live indoors with services and help, and become part of the community.

What’s an initiative you’ve put into place that you’re most proud of? Photo: Sharon Schuur

I tend not to prioritize because I don’t want to necessarily answer the

question, “What’s more important?” Creating quality early childhood education for a working family so their three-year-old can be in a safe place so they can work, or getting somebody off the street into permanent housing, or providing meals for seniors. I’m proud of the whole entity; the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. But if you really press me…One of the things that I am very proud of is Goddard Riverside Community Center has taken over and merged with two smaller community centers over my two decades as director.

Tell us about the community agencies you merged with over the years. In 2006, there was a very small community agency that ran out of the church St. Matthew and St. Timothy’s Neighborhood Center, which is on 84th Street. Some of these smaller agencies have real problems in raising money and keeping their programs going. So 10 years ago their board came to us and we actually merged with them, which really meant we were able to save daycare and afterschool programs and a really wonderful educational program called the Star Learning Center. And also that was the agency that did the home-delivered meals, so we were able to save that as well. More recently, there’s a community center down on 65th called Lincoln Square Neighborhood Center and it has a daycare program, a senior center, a teen center. ... It’s a very longstanding community center and very important to that neighborhood. And they were also having some problems and came to us and are now part of Goddard Community Center as well. For more information about Goddard and its programs, visit www.goddard.org

Know somebody who deserves their 15 Minutes of fame? Go to ourtownny.com and click on submit a press release or announcement.


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NOVEMBER 17-23,2016


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SINCE 1979

East 67th Street Market

Indoor & Outdoor FREE Admission Questions? Bob 718.897.5992 Proceeds BeneďŹ t PS 183

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REDUCE REUSE RECYCLE

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THANKSGIVING EARLY DEADLINE NOTICE DISPLAY ADVERTISING /PW r QN EDITORIAL /PW r QN CLASSIFIED /PW r QN

NEED TO RUN A LEGAL NOTICE? Quick | Easy | Economical

Call Barry Lewis Today: 212-868-0190

SOHO LT MFG

462 Broadway MFG No Retail/Food +/- 9,000 SF Ground Floor - $90 psf +/- 16,000 SF Cellar - $75 psf Divisible Call David @ Meringoff Properties 212-645-7575


24

NOVEMBER 17-23,2016

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