August 28, 2009, Downtown Express

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Downtown Express photo by Lorenzo Ciniglio
Souvenirs on sale at the new 9/11 Memorial Preview Site on Vesey St.
BY JULIE SHAPIRO
The vendors who circle the World Trade
Center site hawking disaster-themed souve-
nirs are getting some competition.
Joe Daniels, president of the National
September 11 Memorial & Museum, fre-
quently walked past the vendors on his way
to work and noticed that tourists who stopped
to gape at the photo flipbooks also asked the
vendors about the future of the site, and they
didn’t always get accurate answers.
“I wanted us to provide a more authentic
experience,” Daniels said Wednesday morn-
ing, standing inside the newly opened 9/11
Memorial Preview Site on Vesey St.
The 3,000-square-foot preview site, in a
former camera shop near Church St., is equal
parts museum, visitors’ center and souvenir
shop. A photo timeline around the perimeter
traces events from the 1993 bombing to the
projected opening of the 9/11 memorial on
Sept. 11, 2011. Interactive kiosks allow visi-
tors to see live footage from the construction
site — they can print a time-stamped version
and take it home in a commemorative folio for
$4.95 — and to learn about the victims and
the artifacts the future museum will hold. They
can also share their memories of the day and
learn about community service initiatives.
About half the space at the preview site is
devoted to memorabilia, including $18 Twin
Towers T-shirts, $3 F.D.N.Y. key chains and
$8.95 photo brochures that are less sen-
sational than those the vendors sell on the
street for about the same price.
All the proceeds from the preview site
merchandise will help build the future 9/11
memorial and museum, but selling sou-
venirs commemorating an event in which
nearly 3,000 people were killed can still be
a touchy subject.
A 39-year-old woman who handled
human remains after 9/11 said she was sur-
prised to see so much space at the preview
site devoted to souvenirs.
“There’s a demand for it,” the woman said
with resignation.
The woman, who did not want her name
printed, fought back tears as she described
her memories from the aftermath of 9/11,
brought to the surface by the photos and
videos at the preview site. “People need to
remember,” she said.
Of the souvenirs for sale, the woman
Vendors beware. Official W.T.C. souvenirs
for sale at new museum
Continued on page 5
downtown
express
®
VOLUME 22, NUMBER 16 THE NEWSPAPER OF LOWER MANHATTAN AUGUST 28 - SEPTEMBER 3, 2009
Downtown Express photos by Jefferson Siegel
Council Race
We take a look at three of the five Democratic City Council candidates running in
the Sept. 15 primary in this week’s issue: from left, Margaret Chin, Councilmember
Alan Gerson and Pete Gleason. Next week, we’ll profile the other two Council hope-
fuls in the Downtown race, Arthur Gregory and PJ Kim.
COVERAGE BEGINS ON PAGE 3
Ed koch
takes
on the
‘Basterds,’
p. 26
2
downtown express
FERRER FLAP
Freddy Ferrer is sticking with his endorsement of Pete
Gleason in the First District City Council race, despite some
flyer shenanigans that upset him.
Ferrer, former Bronx borough president and the
Democratic nominee for mayor in ’05, announced his sup-
port of Gleason earlier this month. But Ferrer also endorsed
some Democratic district leaders who are supporting incum-
bent Councilmember Alan Gerson, including Ferrer’s long-
time friends John Quinn and Alice Cancel, who represent
the East Side of Lower Manhattan.
The trouble started when Ferrer saw a flyer that touted
not only his endorsement of Gleason but also his purported
endorsement of Quinn and Cancel’s opponents, Norma
Ramirez and David Diaz, who are Gleason supporters.
“I was displeased, to say the least,” Ferrer told
UnderCover.
Ferrer said Gleason told him he was not responsible for
the flyers and he would have Ramirez and Diaz get them off
the streets immediately.
“I thought that was the right way to handle it,” Ferrer
said, and he still supports Gleason.
But the flyer issues may not be over yet — we hear
there’s another flyer circulating that claims the Downtown
Independent Democrats endorsed both Gleason and district
leader candidate Paul Newell. While the Gleason part is
true, D.I.D. did not endorse Newell, who was not even run-
ning yet when they made their decision.
RECESSION PRODUCT
The failure of miniMasters and other children’s programs
in Tribeca have not dissuaded Elisa Chen, 33, from launch-
ing her new parent-child center called Body & Mind Builders
at 78 Reade St. next month.
Chen is well aware of the recession — she worked in
finance before getting laid off last year — and plans to
offer discounts to get families to enroll. The idea behind
the parent-child combinations is to allow parents to get in a
pilates workout, for example, while their toddlers are learn-
ing Mandarin.
Chen, who lives in the Financial District, thought up
Body & Mind Builders after seeing that P.S. 89 did not give
as much homework or do as much test prep as she expected,
and she wanted supplementary classes for her son, who is
entering fifth grade.
She also had another motivation for starting her own
business rather than looking for a new finance job.
“My husband works in finance,” she said, and because of
the downturn, “I had no desire for both of us to be in this
industry.”
DISAPPEARING TOWERS
Most of the World Trade Center fence along Vesey St.
is now a blank blue wall after the Port Authority removed
all images related to Silverstein Properties, its nemesis in
an ongoing financing battle. Photos of work at the Port’s
Freedom Tower, One W.T.C., remain, along with close-ups
of steel workers, but images showing the full site plan with
Silverstein’s Church St. towers have disappeared, along with
those that showed the towers’ shops.
Candace McAdams, Port spokesperson, said the disap-
pearing renderings are “not at all” related to the dispute with
Silverstein. The Port is just switching the old images with
some new ones to continue showing the latest progress on
the site, she said.
SURVEY SAYS…
Gee, we hope it wasn’t anything we wrote.
A new Quinnipiac University poll says that most New
York City voters think World Trade Center development is
going “very” or “somewhat badly” (53 percent), and even
more Manhattanites, 63 percent, are pessimistic about the
situation.
By a 2-1 margin, most city voters have little faith in the
Port Authority’s ability to finish the first part of the memorial
by Sept. 11, 2011 or open the Freedom Tower by December
2013. Maybe because the projected opening of the transit
hub has been pushed back until June, 2014, optimism is
almost 50-50 about finishing that one on time.
It crossed our minds that perhaps W.T.C. developer Larry
Silverstein paid for this poll to embarrass the Port, but
Quinipiac does its surveys on its own. Quinnipiac has been
polling on W.T.C. issues for about seven years and has never
found as much pessimism about progress there.
“Do New Yorkers believe anything the Port Authority
tells them,” Maurice Carroll, Quinnipiac’s director, asked in
a statement. “The answer is ‘no.’”
August 28 - September 3, 2009
NEWS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-21
Mixed Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
EDITORIAL PAGES . . . . . . . . . . . . 22-23
YOUTH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
ARTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-30
Listings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29-30
CLASSIFIEDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Read the Archives
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downtown express
3
Pete Gleason
BY JULIE SHAPIRO
City Council candidate
Pete Gleason is so concerned
about the long-delayed 9/11
memorial at the World
Trade Center site that he
thinks most other work on
the site should wait until the
memorial is complete.
Gleason, 46, said he is
frustrated by the inaction
of the Port Authority, which
owns the site, and the
incumbent Councilmember
Alan Gerson. The lack of
even a temporary memorial
at the Trade Center site “is a
disgrace,” Gleason said dur-
ing a 45-minute interview
last week with editors and reporters of Downtown Express.
To expedite the memorial construction, Gleason suggested
delaying the building of towers along Church St. Developer
Silverstein Properties has begun building Tower 4 but would
need public subsidies to finish it and to start the other two tow-
ers. Gleason opposes granting those subsidies.
“That can be a vacant spot while the memorial is being built,”
Gleason said of the sites for the three Church St. towers. “The
locations you’re talking about can be used as construction stag-
ing areas for building this memorial…. The first and foremost
thing that should be built is the memorial.”
Gleason’s hesitancy to spend public money on private office
towers is similar to the Port Authority’s position in the dispute
with Silverstein. But Gleason made it clear that he’s no friend of
the Port Authority: Gleason also repeated his called for the Port
to be disbanded, saying, “It should get out of Dodge.”
The City Council has little control over the Port Authority,
a bi-state agency created by Congress and controlled by two
governors. When Gleason was asked how he would effect the
changes he proposed, he said he would “shine a light on the
project” to provide transparency, but he did not go into specifics.
Gleason said he could not recall ever asking an official at the Port
Authority or the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. about
W.T.C. rebuilding or demolishing the former Deutsche Bank
building at public meetings over the past six years.
Gleason has also made education a central issue of his cam-
paign, criticizing Gerson for not solving the overcrowding prob-
lem during his eight years in office. Gleason repeated that criticism
during the interview last week, saying Gerson’s efforts to bring
new school seats to the neighborhood are too little too late.
If elected, Gleason committed to opening another elementary
school to Downtown. But he was not familiar with the two K-8
schools already in the pipeline — the Spruce Street School and
P.S./I.S. 276 in Battery Park City — which are opening with just
kindergarten classes this fall.
Asked about the schools, Gleason said, “There’s one a little
east of Tribeca and there’s another one in Battery Park City…. I
understand one is a middle school.”
Gleason acknowledged that he didn’t know the specifics
on many issues and had not formed an opinion on how to
zone the schools.
“I’m out on the street,” he said. “I’m not in rooms having
meetings…. A lot of people are expecting me to do the job
before I’m elected, and you know what, that’s not the way
Margaret Chin
BY JOSH ROGERS
If Margaret Chin were
at a poker table, she
might be the type to go
“all-in” a lot. Her style
is to hold to her position
and risk the offer on the
table, trying to convince
the other player to back
down and fold.
Chin, 56, said ulti-
mately the community
can get more amenities
like affordable housing
and more school space if
it holds out before mak-
ing a deal.
When it comes to
the Seward Park Urban
Renewal Area, which has remained mostly undeveloped
for 40 years, she said she would insist that any new
development include a school and that 100 percent of
the apartments built there would be set aside for moder-
ate and low income people.
Asked if she might accept some market rate housing
there if the sites continued to languish, she said: “That’s
down the line but we got to start with the premise that
this is the kind of housing we need. If we start saying
‘oh market rate and then do subsidized [housing] or the
financing doesn’t work’ – that’s B.S.”
In an interview with Downtown Express last week,
Chin said there are many non-profit developers who
often get shut out of the process because the city looks
for the highest bidder.
Chin, who is running for the City Council fulltime,
until recently was the deputy executive director of Asian
Americans for Equality, a non-profit advocacy group
which has developed affordable housing in Chinatown
and the Lower East Side.
Some residents near Seward Park oppose any more
affordable housing in the area and many of them are also
strong supporters of Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
Chin said it won’t be hard talking with Silver about
Seward Park. “I am going to,” she said with a smile. “I
can work with him.”
Similar to her Seward Park position, Chin said she
did not like the agreement 20 years ago to build P.S. 234
in Tribeca because it included a high-rise private office
tower and she would have said no to the deal a few years
ago to build the Spruce Street School, because it came
with a condo tower.
“An 80-story tower luxury building in exchange for
just a school? I mean the havoc that’s created there with
the traffic congestion,” she said. “And who is going to
be living there? Is it going to be filled up? It’s a big
question.”
Chin was careful not to say she would have let the school
idea die, just that she thought the community could have
gotten a lower tower, some affordable housing and the
school if it held out for more.
Councilmember Alan Gerson, one of Chin’s opponents,
said affordable housing at the Spruce St. site was not pos-
sible because the developer could have built the tower as
Alan Gerson
BY JULIE SHAPIRO
City Councilmember
Alan Gerson started a
recent interview by para-
phrasing former Mayor
Ed Koch.
“For a legislator to real-
ly have completed anything
of major significance,”
Gerson said, “you really do
need three terms.”
Gerson is hoping that,
like Koch, he will win a
third term in office to fin-
ish his agenda. But first,
Gerson, 51, has to take
on four challengers in
the Democratic primary
Sept. 15.
In a wide-ranging interview with Downtown Express edi-
tors and reporters this week, Gerson talked about the race
and his hopes for the next four years.
On the oft-delayed World Trade Center site, Gerson
made several promises, including that the memorial would
open by the 10-year anniversary of 9/11 with permanent
pedestrian access. Gerson also committed to putting a bus
management plan in place and resolving the uncertainties
about the performing arts center.
Although the City Council has little control over most of
those rebuilding issues, Gerson said he would use his “bully
pulpit” to make good on the commitments, and his constitu-
ents should hold him accountable. But if that’s so, Gerson
was asked, then shouldn’t he be held accountable for the
delays at the Trade Center site over the past eight years?
“No,” Gerson said, “for two reasons.” First, he had less
influence in the past because of the high-powered politics
of the site. The delays over the past eight years were often
related to insurance and governance disputes, not actual
construction issues, he said. Second, Gerson said he had less
experience in the past.
Gerson did not promise to resolve the current dispute
over office tower financing between W.T.C. developer
Silverstein Properties and the Port Authority, which owns
the site. Gerson thinks Silverstein and the Port Authority
both need to put more money into the project.
In addition to the World Trade Center, Gerson rounded
out his third-term agenda by committing to: open the new
park on Governors Island and begin work on a science con-
ference center there; get a new K-8 school approved for North
Tribeca and Soho; and open a law-and-justice-themed high
school in the Civic Center (he said New York Law School and
all of the district attorney candidates are supportive).
During the interview, Gerson acknowledged for the first
time that disorganization is a problem for his office. This fall,
whether he wins the primary or not, Gerson plans to hire a
consultant at his own expense to review his office’s technology
and personnel, and he said he would make the results public.
“I’m always trying to do better,” Gerson said.
He also acknowledged that communication has been a
problem during the past eight years.
“Sometimes, people were not fully aware of everything
we were doing,” Gerson said. “Because we got so caught up
in the doing of it, we neglected the communication of it. And
August 28 - September 3, 2009
Council Candidates: Where Do They Stand?
This week we look at three of the five Democratic candidates in the First City Council District primary, Sept. 15. The district includes
all of Manhattan south of Canal St., Chinatown, Soho and parts of the Village and Lower East Side. Next week we’ll focus on PJ Kim and Arthur Gregory.
Downtown Express file photo
by Elisabeth Robert
Downtown Express photo
by Jefferson Siegel
Downtown Express photo
by Jefferson Siegel
Continued on page 6 Continued on page 6 Continued on page 6
August 28 - September 3, 2009 4
downtown express
Seaport murder
Police on Wednesday were still seeking
the gunman in the Aug. 22 incident in the
South Street Seaport where one man was
killed in the parking lot at Pier 17 and scores
of guests who were leaving a party aboard a
145-ft. yacht fled in panic.
The victim. Omar Trent, 31, of Brooklyn,
had been involved in a fight with anoth-
er partygoer aboard the crowded yacht
Atlantica, according to news reports. Trent’s
rival left the yacht but returned with a gun,
found the victim in the parking lot and shot
him in the head and drove off, police said.
An Emergency Medical Service team pro-
nounced the victim dead at the scene.
The event was celebrating a birthday for
a party promoter and attracted 1,000 people
at $50 per person to the yacht with a capac-
ity for 400 people, according to reports. The
victim previously was convicted of drug pos-
session and sale, larceny and criminal tres-
passing, according to a Daily News article.
Not guilty plea
Joseph Pabon, the elevator operator at 2
Rector St. charged with the July 7 murder of
Eridania Rodriquez, a cleaner in the build-
ing, pleaded not guilty Mon., Aug. 24 at his
State Supreme Court arraignment on charges
of first degree murder and kidnapping.
Pabon, 25, of Staten Island, was remand-
ed without bail pending a Sept. 16 court
appearance.
The victim was reported missing on July
8 and her body was found July 11 in a 12th
floor air duct of the Rector St. office build-
ing. Police said Pabon’s D.N.A. was found
under the victim’s fingernails and his and the
victim’s D.N.A. were found on work gloves
discovered at the scene.
Pabon’s lawyer, Mario Gallucci, said on
Monday that the evidence was circumstan-
tial and that most of the DNA under the
victim’s fingernails was from a woman.
Off-duty rescue
An off-duty firefighter from Engine 10
on Liberty St. across from the World Trade
Center site was in the Union Sq. subway sta-
tion coming home from a party at about 10
p.m. Fri., Aug. 21 when he spotted a man
lying on the tracks across from his platform.
The firefighter, Adam Rivera, 30, jumped
down, ran across the track and pulled the
victim to the platform where two bystand-
ers helped lift him to safety as a train was
pulling in. The victim, Marco Delemo, 45,
was taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital with
serious head injuries, according to a Daily
News article.
Pleads guilty to fraud
Michael Horowitz, a chiropractor whose
Wall St. Chiropractic was located at 80 Wall
St., pleaded guilty in Manhattan Federal Court
on Fri., Aug. 21 to defrauding various insurance
companies of more than $750,000 by billing for
medical services that were not performed.
Horowitz had joined another chiroprac-
tor, Christopher Green, in February 2002
at the Wall St. location and from 2003 to
Dec. 2006 they billed insurance companies
including Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield,
AETNA and CIGNA for providing treat-
ments that were in fact not provided. Green
pleaded guilty previously to the charges,
according to the office of Preet Bharara,
U.S. Attorney in Manhattan.
Horowitz is subject to a maximum prison
sentence of 20 years, a fine of twice the
amount he realized from the offense and
forfeiture of all proceeds from the crime. He
is to be sentenced Dec. 3.
— Alber t Amateau
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downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 5
New W.T.C. memorial space opens
added, “This doesn’t bother me as much as people at the site
selling photos.”
Lower Manhattan residents have long lambasted the
street vendors who sell 9/11 material. Vending is prohibited
on the blocks around the World Trade Center site, but many
of those who carry their wares are protected under the First
Amendment.
“I think it’s a disgrace,” said Paul Sipos, a Community
Board 1 member, of the lurid booklets the vendors sell.
“That’s one of the reasons I don’t go down there.”
Sipos had not seen the merchandise the preview site is
selling, so he couldn’t say if it was more appropriate.
Miguel, 32, who sells 9/11 photo booklets on Church St.,
defended his trade Wednesday afternoon, shortly after the
preview site’s opening ceremony. He carried his booklets in
a black messenger bag and moved quickly along the street,
because he said people from the museum had been stopping
him and scaring away his customers for the past week.
“We were here first,” said Miguel, who did not give his
last name. “We’re just trying to make a living…. The big fish
always eat the little fish.”
Miguel said the police know him and the other 10 or
so vendors who work the area around the site. The police
sometimes tell him to keep moving, but they don’t disrupt his
business, he said. Miguel said he and the other vendors keep
an eye on the area, calling 911 if they see suspicious behavior
or people who need medical attention.
Michelle Breslauer, spokesperson for the 9/11 memorial
foundation, said there was no organized effort to displace
the street vendors.
The souvenirs at the preview site range in price from
50-cent postcards to a $75 coffee-table book. T-shirts and
bags designed for the memorial foundation bear slogans “In
Darkness We Shine Brightest” and “United in Hope.” The
F.D.N.Y. and N.Y.P.D. memorabilia was most popular on the
first day, a cashier said.
John Cartier, 41, whose brother James was killed on 9/11
while doing electrical work in the South Tower, said the sou-
venirs are fine because their sale will help build the memorial
and museum.
“But if we could do this all without money…,” he trailed off.
Cartier donated his brother’s Harley Davidson motorcycle
to the memorial foundation, and it sits in the window draw-
ing visitors inside.
Many of the tourists who visited the preview site
Wednesday, the first day it was officially open, were glad to
have found a place to get information, not just souvenirs.
Przemek Lukasik, 19, who was visiting from Poland, said
the preview center was helpful because after walking around the
fenced-off construction, “I just wanted to see what is inside.”
The preview site, funded with a $1 million grant from the
Starr International Foundation, is free to enter. It is separate
from the Tribute WTC Visitor Center on Liberty St., which
opened in 2006 and charges adults $10 admission. Tribute
co-founders Jennifer Adams and Lee Ielpi attended the pre-
view site’s opening Wednesday and said afterward that they
did not view it as competition.
While the Tribute Center focuses on the past, the preview
site focuses on the future, so the two complement each other,
Ielpi said, echoing similar comments by the foundation’s
Daniels. Tribute also runs tours led by local residents and
relatives of victims.
Adams said that while Tribute served more than 500,000
people last year, there are still many more tourists looking for
information and a place to share their thoughts. The preview
center will be especially good for those who are just passing
through and do not have an hour or two to spend at the
Tribute Center, Adams said.
It is unclear what will happen to the Tribute Center once
the 9/11 memorial and museum open at the Trade Center
site. Daniels, president of the memorial foundation, said only
that Tribute’s programs “are incredibly important.”
Adams said Tribute is talking to the foundation about
how to share programming and content.
One thing the preview site has that Tribute does not
is a recording booth where visitors can tape three-minute
versions of their 9/11 stories, some of which will be incor-
porated into the future museum. StoryCorps will also work
with the memorial foundation to use the booth for longer
interviews.
The preview space quickly filled with tourists after an
opening ceremony on Wednesday. The dozens of people who
milled around kept their voices hushed and often left wiping
their eyes. Many stood at the back watching a four-minute
video clip from Project Rebirth, which combines footage of
World Trade Center construction progress with stories from
survivors, victims’ relatives and recovery workers.
Monica Iken, a memorial foundation board member
whose husband was killed on 9/11, said the opening of the
preview center made her feel that the construction of the
memorial was real.
“You realize that it’s going to happen,” she said.
[email protected]
The preview site (212-267-2047, national911memorial.
org) is at 20 Vesey St. between Broadway and Church Sts.
and is open Monday through Wednesday and Friday through
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Thursday from 10 a.m. to
9 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Downtown Express photos by Lorenzo Ciniglio
A motorcycle owned by an electrician killed on 9/11 has become a memorial and is now on display at the new
Memorial Preview location.
Continued from page 1
August 28 - September 3, 2009 6
downtown express
Council Candidates: Where Do They Stand?
it works.”
Gleason said his campaign was focused on
bringing problems to light, and once he was
elected he would focus on solutions.
“Once you get into the position, you
either do the job or you don’t do the job,”
Gleason said.
Returning to the topic of schools, Gleason
added that to prevent overcrowding in the
future, he would support a trigger law forcing
all residential developers to set aside resources
for infrastructure, including schools. Several
sitting councilmembers, including Gerson, have
raised the idea previously, but it would require a
revision to the city charter or the Dept. of City
Planning’s signoff.
Gleason also raised the issue of street vend-
ing, which has been a contentious one particu-
larly in Soho, where many of the vendors sell
goods protected under the First Amendment.
Gleason said the government should not wade
into the murky question of how to define art,
but the government also has to prevent vendors
from unsafely cluttering the sidewalks. After
some prodding, Gleason said that if elected, he
would limit the number of vendors per block.
Asked if he supported Gerson’s multi-
pronged vendor legislation, which would do
something similar, Gleason said he had not
read it. But he criticized Gerson for not having
passed any components of the legislation.
“What I don’t support is [Gerson’s] inability
to effectuate change,” Gleason said.
Gerson said in a subsequent interview that
the Police Dept. recently signed off on one of
his vending bills, which would redefine how to
measure sidewalk width, making the current
rules easier to enforce.
Gleason appeared more familiar with bank-
rupt developer General Growth Properties’
now-defunct plan for South Street Seaport,
which included a 500-foot tower and the move
of the historic Tin Building. Gleason opposes
G.G.P.’s plan but did not offer an alternative.
He said an open 9/11 memorial would bring in
tourists who would help small businesses across
Lower Manhattan, including in the Seaport.
As a final question, Gleason was asked if
he’d ever made a decision in his professional
career as a lawyer, firefighter and police officer
that he wished he could change, and what he
had learned from it.
“No,” Gleason said. He then added, “We’ve
all made mistakes…. When you work in the
emergency service, things happen. It’s a danger-
ous job. Sometimes there’s things outside your
control that happen.”
[email protected]
communication is important.”
It took Gerson a long time to make his
points. Forty minutes into a nearly two-hour
interview with Downtown Express, Gerson
said he had just given the short version of
his accomplishments and goals and would be
happy to “go through the long version.” In a
lengthy conclusion an hour later, Gerson rat-
tled off a dozen programs as varied as home-
less youth services, a South Street Seaport
design charette and a Chinatown school sci-
ence center with a space simulator.
Earlier, Gerson focused on the parts of
his record he is most proud of, including his
advocacy for an affordable housing fund that
has preserved units in Chinatown and on
the Lower East Side with L.M.D.C. money.
Gerson also highlighted the 2004 agreement
he secured from the city to build a new
K-8 school on the East Side, an annex for
P.S. 234 and Manhattan Youth’s Downtown
Community Center, in exchange for two
new residential towers at sites 5B and 5C
in Tribeca. Gerson called that deal “pains-
taking” and said he had “a few shouting
matches” with former Dep. Mayor Daniel
Doctoroff before it was signed.
Gerson speaks with great familiarity,
but not always clarity, on many of the dis-
trict’s complex issues. On congestion pric-
ing, the mayor’s failed plan to charge a fee
to drivers entering Lower Manhattan and
Midtown, Gerson gave more explanation
of his position.
Gerson has his own plan for congestion
pricing, which would target the minority of
drivers who are using Lower Manhattan as
a cut-through route. He also wants to focus
the fees on single drivers during rush hour.
But if it came down to either the mayor’s
plan or nothing, “I would vote for congestion
pricing,” Gerson said. Last week, during the
“lightning round” of a debate sponsored by
Downtown Express, Gerson said he would
not support congestion pricing on most
drivers.
While acknowledging a few shortcomings
during this week’s interview, Gerson said his
office has achieved results.
“We have prioritized real pressing human
needs,” he said, referring to tenants facing
eviction and seniors with medical issues.
Gerson also defended his vote to extend
term limits for the mayor and other city
officials, including himself, a decision his
opponents have criticized.
Unlike Mayor Michael Bloomberg and
Council Speaker Christine Quinn, Gerson
did not cite the poor economy as the reason
for his vote. Rather, Gerson said he tried to
return the question of term limits to voters
for a referendum, as it should have been, but
once that failed, he wanted to give voters as
many choices on the ballot as possible.
“It was a terrible position,” he said of the
choice he had to make.
[email protected]
Continued from page 3
Continued from page 3
Pete Gleason
Alan Gerson
Margaret Chin
of right” within existing zoning law, so the
community had no leverage.
Chin also wants to see affordable hous-
ing, schools and more open space built at the
World Trade Center, but she seemed ready to
accept that the plans are not likely to change
at this point.
“This is what we can hope for,” she said.
Chin, who lost to Gerson in 2001 and
also ran for Council in 1991 and 1993, said
she is confident she’ll be successful this
time. This is the first time she is the only
woman and the only Chinese person in the
race. In 2001, she came in fourth in a seven-
candidate race, but she got the most votes
in Chinatown despite running against two
Chinese opponents.
She wants to continue her fight to build
and preserve more affordable housing, pro-
tect tenants, increase traffic safety, but she
also fights for quality of life issues such as
noise complaints and fixing street lights.
She uses her campaign office on Saturdays
to help solve people’s problems and plans to
continue that kind of service if she wins.
“I would have an office that would be
open in the evenings, on weekends, provide
different languages, and people could come
in and get help,” she said.
Chin, who speaks three Chinese dialects,
said Gerson has not done well with con-
stituent services. She also criticized Gerson
for not holding the required number of
hearings of the Council’s Lower Manhattan
Redevelopment Committee.
Gerson said there have been times this
year in which different parties in the W.T.C.
talks have asked him to postpone a meeting
so as not to jeopardize a sensitive point in
the negotiations, but he planned to make up
the missed meetings in the coming months.
But Gotham Gazette reported earlier this
year that the problem is not new and that
Gerson did not hold the required number of
hearings over the last three years.
Chin also wants to continue to promote
voter registration and involvement, some-
thing she has worked on for many years with
AAFE.
The First Council District is one of the
most economically diverse in the city and
Chin wants to hold regular meetings with
neighborhood leaders.
“I want to get the neighborhoods in
District 1 working together,” she said. “Yes
there is rich and poor but we can coexist and
work together.”
[email protected]
Continued from page 3
Downtown Express photo by Jefferson Siegel
Councilmember Alan Gerson, left, Pete Gleason and Margaret Chin at a candidates’ forum organized by Downtown Express and
The Villager last week. Audio and video recordings of the forum are available at downtownexpress.com.
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 7
BY ALBERT AMATEAU
Village neighbors, postal union representa-
tives and elected officials rallied in front of the
West Village post office last week to protest the
U.S. Postal Service’s plan to close the station
in October.
The full-service post office at 527 Hudson
St. is one of five stations in Manhattan, includ-
ing the Pitt St. post office next to the Seward
Park Co-op on the Lower East Side, and 14
total in all five boroughs proposed for closing
because of decreased mail volume and a corre-
sponding decline in revenue for U.S.P.S.
It is the second time in two years that the
West Village station has been threatened. In
2007 the full-service post office was scheduled
for conversion to an automated center that
would not be able to issue postal money orders.
After protests led by elected officials, full ser-
vice remained with automatic machines added.
About a year ago, the station was closed for
several months for a $250,000 renovation.
Congressmember Jerrold Nadler and
Clarence Wall, executive vice president of the
postal workers union in the New York metro
area, told the Aug. 20 rally at the Hudson St.
post office that the union believes there is no
economic justification for closing the station.
“I’m not convinced that these closures
would create real relief from the Postal Service’s
budget crisis,” said Nadler, adding, “As far as I
can see, the cuts are akin to moving furniture
around on the Titanic.”
Nadler announced that he was sponsoring
two bills in Congress. The intention of one bill
would be to save U.S.P.S. $3.5 billion per year
in operating expenses. The other bill would
require U.S.P.S. to fully justify station closings
and service consolidations, and would require
hearings and a public assessment of the need
for a station closure or consolidation.
Wall said that if it were not for $2 billion
that Congress last year forced U.S.P.S. to
prepay into its employee health insurance, the
Postal Service would have shown a surplus
this year.
City Council Speaker Christine Quinn,
whose district includes the West Village, told
the rally that revenues alone couldn’t measure
the importance of local post offices.
“Local post offices keep us in touch with
our friends and families,” she said. “Can you
imagine what Christmas would be like without
a post office near where people live? They are a
necessity. A post office is like a community cen-
ter where people meet their neighbors. Closing
post offices needs to be done with a scalpel, not
a machete,” Quinn said.
State Senator Tom Duane, whose district
includes the West Village, Assemblymember
Linda Rosenthal, representing Clinton and
the Upper West Side, and State Senator
Daniel Squadron, whose district includes
the Lower East Side and most of the East
Village, also spoke at the rally. Staff members
for Assemblymembers Deborah Glick and
Richard Gottfried were also at the rally.
Nadler said the privatization of the U.S.
Postal Service a decade ago into a private
public-benefit organization that receives no
subsidy from federal tax funds was a big
mistake.
“Mail service is a public good. It’s as old
as the United States — started by Benjamin
Franklin,” he said, adding, “It was an illusion
to believe that the Postal Service could sustain
itself.” He acknowledged, however, that there
does not appear to be support in Congress to
reverse the privatization. “That may change if
there are many more station closings,” he said.
At the end of last month, representa-
tives from Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver’s
Office led a rally in front of the Pitt St. post
office protesting the station’s planned closing.
The Pitt St. station, at 185 Clinton St., leases it
premises from the Seward Park Co-op.
The West Village station in July began
distributing questionnaires to its patrons as
part of the review of the potential closing. But
many Villagers felt the questions were rigged
to show that the nearby post office at 201
Varick St. could serve West Village residents.
Steve Gould, a staff member of Visiting
Neighbors, which serves elderly Village resi-
dents, said the organization has many clients in
the West Village who are older than 80.
“They can’t be asked to walk to Varick St.,
more than seven blocks further away,” he said
at the Aug. 20 rally.
Harry Malakoff, a real estate broker and W.
12th St. resident, recalled that when he was
a college student 40 years ago, his political-
science professor told the class that one of the
duties of a congressmember was to make sure
the district had a post office.
Albert Bennett, a Morton St. resident and
member of his block association, said the West
Village station is necessary for the association
to send its monthly newsletter to residents.
“Closing the station would be the death of
the Morton St. Block Association,” he said.
Jo Hamilton, chairperson of Community
Board 2, said, “We fought the battle two
years ago to save the West Village post office.
Community Board 2 is very, very strongly
behind our congressman’s calls to save that
post office. Whenever I go there, it’s always
crowded, which shows how heavily it’s used.”
A U.S.P.S. spokesperson said none of the
city’s 14 threatened stations would be closed
until after a review of the situation is com-
pleted Sept. 30 and hearings are held for each
closing.
Neighbors go postal over threatened station closings
Downtown Express photo by Monica Schipper
Residents say saving local post offices, like the Hudson St. station, above, as well
as the Pitt St. station, is a priority.
Congressmember
Jerrold Nadler said the
privatization of the U.S.
Postal Service a decade
ago into a private public-
benefit organization that
receives no subsidy from
federal tax funds was
a big mistake.
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downtown express
Fiterman demo delayed briefly,
after violations
BY JULIE SHAPIRO
A series of safety violations at Fiterman
Hall stopped work on the demolition site
twice in the past month.
The Dept. of Buildings issued violations
Aug. 8 for piled-up debris and Aug. 3 for
falling sparks, a standpipe problem and
cigarette butts found on the no-smoking
site. A few stop work orders were issued
but most of the work was able to resume
within several days.
The violations at first appeared remi-
niscent of the dangerous conditions at the
former Deutsche Bank building prior to
the fatal 2007 fire there. Both buildings
were damaged on 9/11 and they sit on
either side of the Trade Center site.
“It does give a moment’s pause,” said
Rob Spencer, director of media services
at the Organization of Staff Analysts
union, and one of the closest watchdogs
of the Fiterman and Deutsche projects.
The cigarette butts found at Fiterman,
in particular, are “not encouraging,”
Spencer said.
Richard Dalessio, Fiterman project
manager for the Dormitory Authority of
the State of New York, said the project is
safe and the violations reflect the intense
scrutiny of the project by the government
regulators, including the Buildings Dept.,
which visits the site daily.
“The fact that violations were issued is
a good thing,” Dalessio said. “It shows that
the process is working.”
Fiterman Hall, a Borough of Manhattan
Community College classroom building,
and the Deutsche Bank building both
needed to be cleaned and demolished after
9/11. The 2007 fire at the Deutsche Bank
building, sparked by a worker’s discarded
cigarette, was made more dangerous by the
flammable debris in the building, a broken
standpipe and the fact that the building
was being cleaned and demolished simul-
taneously.
Since the fire, abatement and demoli-
tion projects, including Fiterman, have
been subject to much stricter oversight to
make them safe.
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver,
who convened a taskforce to monitor the
Fiterman project, said in a statement that
he would continue working with D.O.B. to
ensure the site’s safety.
“I am pleased that there has been no
recurrence of these violations nor have any
new violations been issued,” Silver said
this week..
Fiterman was entirely decontaminated
before demolition began, which means
that there is very little flammable material
in the building. The excessive debris vio-
lation referred to accumulated concrete,
Dalessio said, and he is working with sub-
contractor Waldorf Exteriors on keeping
the floors clean.
The Aug. 3 standpipe violation came dur-
ing a routine test after the pipe was cut and
capped at a lower floor, so an upper floor
could be demolished. The pipe did not hold
air pressure, and workers discovered a worn
rubber gasket was responsible for the leak.
They replaced the gasket and the standpipe
passed a test the next day, Dalessio said.
The sparks, also noticed Aug. 3, are a
natural part of demolition work, as torches
cut the building’s steel beams, but workers
are now using fire-retardant blankets to
prevent the sparks from falling to lower
levels, Dalessio said.
After finding the cigarette butts,
Dalessio said he reemphasized to the
workers that smoking is not allowed on the
site. He said he had no hesitations about
Waldorf’s fitness for the job. The same
company also demolished 99 Church St.
nearby. A Waldorf manager did not return
a call for comment.
Workers started demolishing Fiterman
Hall in July, and the 15-story building
has since lost its roof structures and its
top two-and-a-half floors. Dalessio expects
the building to be down by the end
of November. Workers will then begin
rebuilding it a week later, he said.
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Residents will be able to discuss plans for
the West Thames Park construction with the
park’s project team this weekend, as part of
a daylong event held in the current park.
Officials from the Community Board 1
Battery Park City Working Group and the
state Dept. of Transportation’s Route 9A
project team will be available for questions
in the park at W. Thames and West Sts.
on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., rain
or shine. The park’s design has received
overwhelming support from Community
Board 1.
Construction is expected to begin in
October and the playground will be closed
until about May, when the project is sched-
uled to be finished. Half the dog run will be
able to remain open. There will be another
question-and-answer meeting in the park on
September 26, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
West Thames playground meet
Read the Archives
www.DOWNTOWNEXPRESS.com
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 9
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downtown express
Gerson says bike lane sped through without input
BY LINCOLN ANDERSON
Charging the Grand St. bicycle lane is endangering
both seniors’ safety and stores’ survival, Chinatown
residents and merchants joined Councilmember Alan
Gerson at Mott and Grand Sts. last Friday, calling for
modifications to the new-style lane. Gerson also said
the Department of Transportation must do more com-
munity outreach and consultation before installing new
bike lanes.
According to Gerson and Project Open Door, which
provides social services at 168 Grand St. for Chinatown
seniors, about two months ago a senior was knocked
unconscious on Grand St. by a cyclist who didn’t stop
for a red light.
On the other hand, the lane’s critics also contend it is
underused. One local merchant claimed he had stood at the
intersection for two hours but seen only five bikes go by on
the bike lane. Yet right as he said this, one bicycle was pass-
ing by and within 30 seconds, another two came along.
Gerson said the seniors dislike that the parking lane
on the street’s south side has been moved several feet out
into the street to create a protected bike lane by the curb.
Having the parking by the curb provided a protected area
for seniors, he said.
Gerson accused D.O.T. of “pitting local residents
against bicyclists — and this is so unnecessary,” adding,
“There’s no question there’s been an increase in crashes
between people and bikes since the lane came in.”
The lane should detour onto Kenmare St. between
Lafayette St. and Bowery, as proposed by the Little Italy
Merchants Association,” Gerson said.
However, the councilmember was challenged at the
press conference by several young bike-friendly jour-
nalists, one of whom was reporting for Streetsblog.
Caroline Samponaro, director of bicycle advocacy for
Transportation Alternatives, also pulled up on her bike
and debated the councilmember. The pro-bike bloggers
and Samponaro said that, according to D.O.T., accidents
have decreased on the street by 30 percent since the pro-
tected lane’s installation.
Samponaro added that she had attended four Community
Board 3 meetings at which the bike lane had been discussed
prior to its implementation, and that residents’ and mer-
chants’ suggestions had been incorporated into the design.
She demanded to know why Gerson didn’t think the com-
munity board process was a sufficient community process.
“The community board supports this project,” she
stated.
Gerson countered, “They support it with modifica-
tions.” He said he intends to introduce a bill to require
greater community involvement before any streetscape
changes, such as adding bike lanes — or “what happened
on Broadway with the bump-outs and the Rutgers St. con-
figuration.”
Gerson said the bill would require “adequate notice,
a comment period and a post-implementation review
period.”
Afterward Samponaro said of Gerson, “He should
be called out for using community process as a front.
Ultimately, this is a safer street because of what they’ve
done here.”
Grand St. in Chinatown and Little Italy has traditionally
been a “market street,” Gerson noted. After the press con-
ference, a Little Italy merchant who didn’t give his name
said he supports the bike lane, but changes are needed to
help local merchants. Noting that the parked cars in the
buffer lane currently can stay there 18 hours a day, he said
there should be a two-hour limit. Also, parking should be
allowed on Grand St.’s north side at night instead of having
no parking there, he said.
“You can’t ‘X’ cars out of the city,” he said. “You need
cars for people to come in.”
The lane traverses C.B. 2 as well as C.B. 3. Jo Hamilton,
C.B. 2 chairperson, said she looks forward to having a dia-
logue with Gerson about the issue.
“In general, Community Board 2 has been very support-
ive of D.O.T.’s efforts to create a safe biking culture in the
city,” she said.
Elementary and Middle School
Register at your zoned school
starting Wednesday, September 9.
If you don’t know your zoned
school, visit www.nyc.gov/schools
or call 311.
If there is no zoned school for
your home address, visit a
Student Registration Center.
High School
New students must register at a
Student Registration Center.
BACK TO SCHOOL!
Registration
for New
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The first day of
school is Wednesday,
September 9, 2009
Student Registration Centers
Hours: Monday – Friday,
8 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Dates: August 31 – September 18
Translated materials and
interpretation services will be
available at all centers.
For center locations and other
registration information, call 311
or visit www.nyc.gov/schools/
enrollment
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Downtown Express photo by Lincoln Anderson
During a press conference at Mott and Grand Sts. at
which critics of the new bike lane said it is underused,
a number of cyclists passed by, including the woman
above. A motorized hand truck, at left, was also using
the lane, easing sidewalk congestion.
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 11
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FREE LIVE MUSIC
IN CITY HALL PARK
Park Performances followed by In-Store Autograph Signing
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or log onto www.jr.com/musicfest
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AUGUST 28 – 30
J&R Downtown MusicFest/Tech Expo 2009 brought to you by
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August 28 - September 3, 2009 12
downtown express
Front St. restaurants say recession missed this block
BY HELAINA N. HOVITZ
It’s not just happy hour that’s keeping
proprietors and customers of the Front St.
restaurants smiling.
Eateries in Lower Manhattan have
been suffering ever since the Sept.11
attack, and coupled with the more recent
problem of various construction projects
driving business away, the recession was
the final blow that caused many small
businesses to close up shop for good.
But paradoxically, many of the relatively
new restaurants on Front St. between
Peck Slip and Beekman St. say business
is great.
Almost every restaurant on the cobble-
stone Seaport street is nearly packed by
8 p.m., and while patrons may have to
hang at the bar for a few minutes on a
particularly busy night, there’s almost
never a wait. Weekends bring crowds in
their evening best to special events or pri-
vate parties, and as the crowds spill out
onto the sidewalk, a passerby would think
they had stumbled upon some sort of chic
communal block party.
The Peck Slip proprietors attribute
their success to the fact that their restau-
rants are less expensive and more casual.
Many emphasize that their fare is top qual-
ity and that their tables are kid friendly.
Whatever the reason, customers come out
on top each week while restaurants all over
the city are going bankrupt.
Adin Buhalis, who has lived on Front
St. for two years and on Water St. for 10,
says that the neighborhood has become
the new Soho.
“It used to be all bugs and bums walk-
ing around,” he said as he ordered cheese
at Barbarini. “Now there are places like
this, which remind me of LA…stylish,
with good food.”
ONDA, a Latin/South American res-
taurant, has a live band playing Spanish
music and the atmosphere of a trendy des-
tination spot, but it also attracts families.
“The kids love the cheesy bread sticks
and fries,” said Alessandro Passante, gen-
eral manager and partner. He said they
don’t get many tourists, but the locals
come back again and again.
Passante and his partners had already
invested their money in the restaurant
before the recession hit. He said they had
a slow start when they opened in January,
but have seen a 35 percent increase since
the weather began warming up in May.
Passante is unconcerned about the near-
ing winter months, because he feels that
they have established a strong rapport with
their customers. “I trust that it will be a
decent winter, and the regulars will be in,”
he says. “We just have to keep building the
reputation of a fun place where anything
can happen on a given night.”
Il Brigante opened in February 2007,
when the area was just picking up.
“The neighborhood was lacking good
restaurants,” said Nicolas Berti, Brigante’s
general manager. “The restaurants on
Fulton St. don’t need to have good fare
because tourists don’t come back.”
“We have exclusive rights on the lease
to be the only wood burning pizza restau-
rant on the block. We’re doing very well,”
says Berti as he knocks on the wooden
table.
Il Brigante serves traditional Italian
fare to Wall St. regulars for lunch and
neighborhood regulars for dinner. Because
they also deliver, the restaurant even saw
an increase of 20 percent this past winter,
which Berti attributes to the fact that
“many people don’t go to the steakhouse
anymore because its so expensive.”
Children are invited to stand over the
counter and help make their pizza. “The
chef is like a big kid, so they make a mess
together,” laughs Berti.
Surprisingly, the summer months have
been a bit slower, but Berti attributes
this to the fact that many regulars are on
vacation.
Calli Lerner and Sandy Tedesco, who
live nearby in Southbridge Towers, opened
cozy and casual Bin 220 three years ago
and say business has always been good.
Unlike many wine bars, which can feel
pretentious and intimidating, the wine list
is split up into two clear, reader-friendly
sections, “wines Calli likes and the wines
Sandy likes.”
”We all opened around the same time,
so we all help each other out,” Calli said
of the other restaurants on the block.
Claudio Marini, co-owner of Barbarini,
explained why he opened five months ago
in the middle of a recession.
“The market space was the last space
left on the block. We looked at each
other and said, ‘let’s take a chance on
this.” Plus, ”we got a good deal from the
landlord.”
Wall Streeters order lunch and dinner
regularly and still continue to book the
room in the back for their private events.
As “gourmet aficionado’” Jesse Torres
eagerly cut off slabs of cheese and salami
for tasting, he said actress Eva Mendes
loved his dinner at the restaurant the
week before. “She was raving about how
gorgeous it was,” he said.
Nelson Blue seems to be the only place
on the block affected by the recession.
Diane Honeywell, general manager, says
that they lost 10 percent of their clientele
when the recession hit because many of
their customers had corporate accounts and
were not allowed to use them anymore.
So what’s the secret to staying a cut
above the rest?
“Our restaurants depend on their
neighbors, so the customers are loyal.
When given a choice, they’ll come back
here,” says Sandy Tedesco of Bin 220.
“I guess we’re doing something right….
Maybe we’re just lucky.”
Downtown Express photos by Elisabeth Robert
Il Brigante is one of several restaurants on Front St. that is reporting that business is up. Below, Josefa Rubio and Maria
Domingez enjoy wine bar Bin 220, which is also doing well.
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 13
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Stay Safe
If you smell gas, leave
the area at once, and
call 1-800-75-CONED.
Don’t light matches or
use any electrical device.
Timing Is Everything
Open windows in the
morning and evening
to cross-ventilate
when temperatures
are cooler.
We Can Do It
Together, Americans
saved about $19 billion
on their utility bills in
2008 with the help of
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and programs.
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See and pay your bills
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Set your air conditioner
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Lower settings can
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SMART WAYS
TO USE LESS
August 28 - September 3, 2009 14
downtown express
Move now, buy later, condo building owners say
BY CHELSEA-LYN RUDDER
In an effort to generate short-term cash
flow in otherwise vacant apartments, devel-
opers are attracting new attention to several
Lower Manhattan buildings by telling ten-
ants that they can rent now and buy later.
Ellen Sharon, a 37-year-old Financial District
resident who is thinking about buying an apart-
ment, said she might be interested in a rent-to-
own program in the future. “Considering the
market, it is best to learn as much as possible
about all of the options,” she said.
A producer and project manager in the
entertainment industry, Sharon moved into
a rental building with her husband a few
months ago. She likes that the rent-to-own
programs allow the opportunity to get to
know the atmosphere of a building before
making a full commitment.
Prospective buyers at 75 Wall St. have
the chance to try out their luxury apart-
ments before they buy and apply the first 12
months of rent toward the purchase price of
a condo in the posh building.
Bill Robertson, the broker in charge of 75
Wall St.’s program, said that only half of the
300 apartments in the building have been
sold. He approached the building’s devel-
oper, The Hakimian Organization, about
instituting the rent-to-own program, which
will allow buyers to test drive the condo
before fully committing.
“This is really a good idea for those
who thought they could not afford to buy
and were waiting,” said Robertson. Those
who decide to invest in an apartment essen-
tially live rent-free for a year. To sweeten the
deal, 75 Wall St. is a part of the 421-G tax
abatement plan. The tax program is specifi-
cally for Lower Manhattan, which allows for
effectively zero tax payments for the first
nine years after the purchase of the condo.
Like many buildings in Lower Manhattan
with similar amenities, one-bedroom apart-
ments at 75 Wall start at about $1 million.
The rent on a one bedroom, works out to
about $4,000 per month.
Other condominium buildings in Lower
Manhattan, including 99 John St., are also
utilizing rent-to-own programs in light of the
economic climate.
“If you are looking at a million-dollar
apartment, renting for one year is not that
meaningful,” said Sharon, the Financial
District resident. “If there was an option
to rent for two or three years then the rent
would accumulate and become a decent
down payment.” Rent-to-own programs
that only allow potential buyers to rent for
one year cater to those who can afford the
apartment under traditional circumstances.
The incentive lies in the opportunity to have
additional time to commit to the purchase
while actually living in the apartment.
While Sharon sees some perks in a rent-
to-own agreement she expressed some con-
cerns. “I think I would prefer to buy in a
building where the majority of people who
lived there owned their apartment,” she said.
“Tenants will care differently for the com-
mon areas of the building. The owners will
consider it their own and are more likely to
take better care of the spaces. On the other
hand if a developer would consider extend-
ing the rental period beyond one year I might
be very interested in rent to own.”
Rent-to-own was last seen in New York
City with some regularity in the late ’80s
and early ‘90s. Those who stand to benefit
include recent immigrants, who might not
have an established credit history in this
country, and self-employed individuals with
earnings that fluctuate.
Aysaac Allen, the founder and president
of Aysaac.com, an online real estate maga-
zine, said buyers and owners both benefit
from rent to own.
“These programs can be beneficial for buy-
ers who need to stay within a certain budget,
and for those who for one reason or another
can not get a loan from a conventional insti-
tution,” he said. “The developer widens the
market by bringing in temporary renters who
are likely to buy into the program.”
Rent-to-own agreements provide a win-
dow of time for consumers to establish credit
worthiness and to save for a down payment.
Their rental payments generate immediate
income for the owner of the development.
Rent-to-own can even be a good option for
those who have the money to buy now.
“Considering the current market you could
utilize that money and purchase another apart-
ment as an investment property, while living in
the rent-to-ownapartment,” Allen said.
Seventy-five Wall’s rent-to-own program
was established to encourage sales, but that
will not prevent the developer from renting to
those who do not initially express an interest in
buying an apartment. Everyone who signs up
for the program will be given a 14-month lease,
with a fixed price for the home in the contract.
By month nine, the tenant is expected to indi-
cate if he or she will purchase the home. The
developer will automatically lower the purchase
price indicated in the lease by 5% but is open to
further negotiations if the buyer insists upon a
lower price. As for those who would like to con-
tinue to rent after the initial lease is up. Broker,
Bill Robertson said, “That will depend upon
what is going on in the market at that time.”

PACKER
Open Houses
Fall 2009

Packer cordially invites you to attend an Open House for the 2010-2011
academic school year, on one of the following mornings:

Upper School - Grades 9-12
Tuesday, October 6
th

Tuesday, October 13
th

Thursday, October 15
th

Wednesday, October 21
st
(6:30pm)*

Wednesday, October 28
th
(6:30pm)*
Tuesday, November
10
th

Middle School - Grades 5-
8
Thursday, October 8
th

Thursday, November 22
nd


At each Open House, you will have an opportunity to tour the school, and meet with
Packer faculty, administrators, and current students. Open Houses are held from 8:45-
11:00 a.m. To attend, please call us in the Admissions Office at (718) 250-0385 or e-
mail [email protected]
*Please note the Open Houses on Wednesday, October 21
st
and 28
th
will take place from 6:30-8:30pm.
______________________________________________________________________________

Preschool & Lower School - PreK 3/4's – Grade 4
Wednesday, September 30, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, October 7, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 - Pre-Kindergarten
Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, October 28, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, November 4, 2009 - Pre-Kindergarten
Wednesday, November 11, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, November 18, 2009 – Kindergarten
Wednesday, December 2, 2009 - Kindergarten
Wednesday, December 9, 2009 - First - Fourth Grade

At each Open House, you will have an opportunity to tour the school and meet with
Packer faculty and administrators. Open Houses begin promptly at 9:00 a.m. To
attend, please call us in the Admissions Office at (718) 250-0254 or e-mail
[email protected]
______________________________________________________________________________

THE PACKER COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE
170 Joralemon Street Brooklyn, NY 11201
www.packer.edu
Ellen Sharon, a Financial District resident,
said she would consider moving into a
condo with a rent-to-own program.
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 15
Homeland Security officers detained a
photographer for six hours last week after he
refused to explain why he was shooting video
of the federal building at 26 Federal Plaza.
Officers asked Randall Thomas, a
43-year-old professional photographer,
why he was panning up and down the
building with his handheld video camera,
to which he responded “none of your
business,” before responding a second
time with profanity. He was asked to
give up the camera and memory card,
and detained in a holding cell six hours
at the Downtown location as officers
obtained search warrants for the devices.
He was accused of videotaping security
countermeasures, according to the Dept.
of Homeland Security, and received three
tickets—for disorderly conduct, failure
to comply with directions and impeding
duties of a federal officer.
“I’m a bit distraught that they would
do that, that they would take it as far as
they did,” said Thomas, who said he was
operating within his First Amendment
rights. He said he was “not photograph-
ing anything in particular,” having been
out that day to promote his wedding
photography.
Thomas said authorities have stopped
him before while he is working, though
when he explains that he understands his
rights, they often leave him alone. He
was previously arrested for taking a still
photograph of the same building, though
he has yet to hear the outcome of his “not
guilty” plea.
“There are certain things that the press
cannot do when it comes to national
security, and filming federal buildings
is one of them,” said Luis Martinez, a
spokesperson for the Dept. of Homeland
Security. While federally outlined rules
about permission and usage can be vague,
Martinez likened the situation to pho-
tographing Port Authority property. He
said the organization often posts signs
outside the tunnels under their control
that prohibit photography, with the threat
of fines and arrest clearly visible.
The investigation is still ongoing,
Martinez said. When Thomas left at 9
p.m. that night, his equipment was not
returned to him.
— Jared T. Miller
Feds detain photographer
TRIBECA DENTAL
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For an appointment, call 212-941-9095
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Visit chelseapiers.com for a complete listing of sports classes available for both kids and adults.
The Downtown Little School
15 Dutch Street (2 blocks east of B’way, off Fulton)
Offering: Nursery School & Kindergarten (ages 2-5)
Parent/Caregiver Workshop Series
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS
The Downtown Little School does not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, ethnicity or
gender. We actively seek a population that reflects the cultural diversity of our neighborhood.
For tours and info call 212-791-1300
or visit www.downtownlittleschool.org
www.DOWNTOWNEXPRESS.com
August 28 - September 3, 2009 16
downtown express
Social Media: Strategies for Marketing
Success X59.9200

Making Sense of the Global Markets
X12.9429

Te Art Scene: Fall 2009 X03.9062

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NYU’S
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downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 17
We have
Downtown
Covered
Neighbors say Seaport crossings are not safe
BY HELAINA N. HOVITZ
Looking both ways before you cross the street does not
help much if you’re trying to cross Gold St.
Five-year-old Samara Glazer always pulls her mother Irene
a little bit ahead of her when they walk out of their 77 Fulton
St. building. Irene now holds on tighter when they get to the
corner of Gold crossing over to Ann St.
“I try to hold her back, because the cars just zip around,”
she said. “What they’re doing is disgusting. Nobody abides by
the stop sign at Fulton St. and Gold St., either, and the way the
fence and the blockades are set up, you’re right at the edge of
the traffic by the time you get to the stop sign anyway. If you’re
not looking, you’re dead.”
Downtown residents, workers, and tourists sometimes look
shaken after they try to cross Gold St., either at Ann or at
Fulton St. The new traffic pattern created by the DeLury Park
construction has cars careening around turns. There is no traf-
fic signal and residents say the stop sign is difficult to see.
Gold at Ann St. had been a two-way street, divided by
the original DeLury Park, which has been torn up and is now
under construction. Once this construction began, it was
changed to a one-way street. In recent weeks it has once again
been made two-way, and the way the construction blockades
are arranged blocks views of the cars zipping along from
Fulton St. toward Gold and Ann Sts. There is a part-time
traffic agent near the intersection, but he sometimes stares at
the ground and does not always notice people trying to cross
the street.
The city Dept. of Transportation declined to comment.
Lucy D’Ippolito, 92, who’s lived at Southbridge Towers for
30 years, said she is scared of crossing the street by herself.
“When I had to go across the street to the hospital last
week, I was shaking, I was already in bad shape, and those cars
speed around that corner like crazy,” she said. “Sometimes I
think it’s a miracle that I make it across. When I get across the
street, I say, ‘Thank you God.’”
Technically one of the problem areas is no longer a
crosswalk, but many Southbridge residents still cross there
because it used to be an official crosswalk and it leads right
into the complex.
Arthur Gregory, a City Council candidate who lives near-
by, said “a lot of people on walkers and canes like me have
a hard time….I’m younger though. When people cross the
street, we have to put our hands up to act as traffic cops….
“The stop sign is in a position where it’s not where a
normal stop sign would be, even I went through it the first
couple of times…if you don’t spot it out of the corner of your
eye, you don’t see it…you’re used to signs being where they
are supposed to be.”
Erik Ayala, 28, who lives at 77 Fulton St. with his wife
and their son Lucien, thinks a blinking light would be a bet-
ter option than a stop sign.
He and his wife are expecting another baby in October, and
they’re worried about his safety. “When you push a stroller, the
stroller goes out first,” he said. “With those cars zipping around
like that, anything could happen.”
Downtown Express photos by Jefferson Siegel
Residents say crossing at Fulton, Gold and Ann Sts. has gotten more hazardous in recent weeks with the nearby
construction.
We Know Our Community
Like No One Else
August 28 - September 3, 2009 18
downtown express
Lucie, 101, B.M.C.C. jazzman
who played with the greats
BY JARED T. MILLER
Lawrence Lucie, a guitarist who played
with many of the legends of jazz and taught
music for several decades at Downtown’s
Borough of Manhattan Community College,
died last Friday at the age of 101.
He was living at the Kateri Residence, a
nursing home on the Upper West Side, at the
time of his death.
Born in Emporia, Virginia on December
18, 1907, Lucie began his jazz career at age
19 when he moved to New York to study
banjo at the Brooklyn-Queens Conservatory.
One of his first gigs was with Duke Ellington,
filling in for the jazz legend’s banjo player
for a week at the Cotton Club, according
to The New York Times. Ellington hired
him as a temporary replacement, though
he quickly became renowned for his guitar
playing as swing bands began to incorporate
the instrument into the music of the day. He
went on to play with several other greats:
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, he played
guitar for Benny Carter, Fletcher Henderson
and Coleman Hawkins. He also played with
jazz greats Billie Holliday, Jelly Roll Morton
and Louis Armstrong, and was Armstrong’s
best man at one of his weddings.
“He was a wonderful gem of a person,
absolutely,” Laurence Wilson, who chaired
the B.M.C.C.’s music department during
Lucie’s tenure there, said in a phone inter-
view. “I’ve never heard anyone say a bad
word about him, and for someone [who’s
been] in the business for so long, that’s not
something to be taken lightly.”
Lucie had been on B.M.C.C.’s faculty for 30
years until he retired a few years ago at the age
of 97. Throughout his career he became known
for his skills as a rhythm guitarist, holding a
steady beat rather than stealing the spotlight
with soloing. Most recently, Lucie performed
solo shows at Arturo’s, a Greenwich Village
restaurant that offered him a regular slot on
Sundays until he left in 2005.
“He was just a wonderful man,” said Lisa
Giunta, co-owner of Arturo’s and daughter
of the restaurant’s namesake founder. When
asked how she felt about Lucie ending his
career at Arturo’s, she commented simply,
“We’re very blessed.”
Lucie was married to Nora Lee King,
a jazz guitarist and singer with whom he
recorded later in his career. The couple also
had a show on public-access cable television
in New York City for a number of years. In
the 1980s the two opened Toy Records, a
record label for which they recorded several
easy listening albums.
Though no information about any survi-
vors was available, Lucie and his wife did
not have children.
She died in the 1990s.
On Lucie’s 100th birthday, Lucie told a
New York Times reporter the advice that he
said accounted for his longevity and success
in jazz: “I didn’t have but one woman at a
time. I didn’t drink a lot of whiskey. I did
what my father told me to do.”
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Speaker Sheldon Silver
Celebrates the Groundbreaking of the Highly Anticipated East River
Waterfront Esplanade


























As the Assemblyman who has long fought for a redeveloped waterfront
and more green, recreational space for Lower Manhattan’s residents, families
and children, I know precisely how much this project is going to improve the
quality of life in our community. This amenity will reconnect Lower
Manhattan to the waterfront and provide residents of the Financial District,
Chinatown and the Lower East Side with vital open space, renovated piers, a
new esplanade and paths for biking and rollerblading.

For more information,
please call Speaker Sheldon Silver’s Office at 212-312-1420
August 28 - September 3, 2009 20
downtown express
BY PATRICK HEDLUND
43 MACDOUGAL SQUATTERS
As the city begins to take action on an
abandoned Soho property that has been left
to deteriorate for decades on MacDougal
St., squatters and vandals have allegedly
returned despite efforts to prevent access to
three-story structure.
The property, at 43 MacDougal St. at
the corner of King St. in the Charlton-King-
Vandam Historic District, had been left to
rot for years before the city finally began
fining the owners and pursued a lawsuit to
compel them to make repairs.
The city responded by boarding up the
building’s broken windows and installing
scaffolding around the structure, but the lat-
ter apparently has only helped squatters set
up camp inside the hollowed-out townhouse.
“The sidewalk shed, which was built
one year ago by the Department of Housing
Preservation to protect passersby, has allowed
ease of access for squatters and vandals
into and out of the building,” read a letter
from Andrew Berman, executive director
of the Greenwich Village Society of Historic
Preservation, to several city agencies. He
explained in a separate note that the squatters
— who neighbors and G.V.S.H.P. staff have
seen living inside the property — face “very
real health and safety dangers, including the
very real possibility of accidental fires.”
Additionally, new graffiti recently appeared
near the building’s third-floor fire escape,
and a pool of water has built up on the roof
that could cause structural damage.
“I was grateful to learn in June that the
Landmarks Preservation Commission had
finally begun initiating a Demolition by
Neglect case against the building’s owners,”
Berman added in his letter, describing the
action taken by L.PC. that includes levying
substantial fines against the owners, site
visits, evaluation and a lengthy legal process.
“However, the beginning stages of this pro-
cess have been slow,” Berman added, “and
we are concerned that the building will con-
tinue to deteriorate and pose an increasing
health and safety threat to neighbors while
we wait for the case to take shape.”
CHAIN GANGS
For customers looking to grab a quick
bite at Dunkin’ Donuts, Subway or
McDonald’s, the Financial District is not
a neighborhood to indulge their fast-food
lust.
According to the Center for an Urban
Future’s “Return of the Chains” report, an
analysis of the spread of national retailers
throughout the city, Lower Manhattan’s
10006 zip code counts only seven chain
stores, ranking it the third-lowest for such
retailers in Manhattan.
However, Downtown’s 10038 zip code
contains 80 chains, ranking it 17th citywide
for the amount of national retailers.
The 10012 zip code covering the Village
and Soho came in at No. 12 citywide with
94 chain stores, while the East Village’s
10003 took third overall with 151 chains.
Dunkin’ Donuts had the most outlets
of all chains citywide with 429 (up from
341 last year) and Subway came in second
with a staggering 361 locations, outdoing
McDonald’s 258.
VESUVIO 2.0
The next chapter in the Vesuvio Bakery
saga is probably the best Soho preservation-
ists could have asked for: Another bakery
committed to continuing the diminutive
Prince St. store’s legacy will take over at the
landmark location.
The eco-friendly Birdbath bakery, which
has two locations in the Village, recently
negotiated to lease the nearly 90-year-old
Vesuvio space after a series of unrelated
reopenings failed and the store stayed empty
for more than a year.
The new bakery will debut in October,
according to New York magazine, which
interviewed Birdbath proprietor Maury
Rubin on the planned move.
“It’s an heirloom, it’s a treasure, it
means the world,” he told the magazine.
“That I have a chance to have my bakery
be in it is a gift.”
Rubin will reportedly remove Vesuvio’s
historic, coal-burning ovens to ease the
landlord’s fire concerns, but otherwise plans
to keep as much of the old shop intact as
possible — one of the main reasons he was
chosen as the next tenant.
The bakery was owned and operated by
the “Mayor of Greenwich Village,” Tony
Dapolito, until his death in 2003.
&
MIXED USE
Rock and Roll Hall of Famer John Fogerty
will perform a free concert at South Street
Seaport next Wednesday, in support of his
new album that hit stores this weekend.
The former lead singer of Creedence
Clearwater Revival will perform songs from
“The Blue Ridge Rangers Ride Again” at
Pier 17 on Sept. 2. The concert is scheduled
to begin at 7 p.m.
The new album features several of
Fogerty’s favorite classic songs as well
as a single of his own, “When Will I Be
Loved.” His album includes John Denver’s
“Back Home Again” among other covers,
and Bruce Springsteen sings on one of the
tracks.
Fogerty at the Seaport
Read the Archives
www.DOWNTOWNEXPRESS.com
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 21
BY ALBERT AMATEAU
Anti-noise and air-traffic safety advo-
cates joined elected officials at a Tuesday
hearing by the City Council Transportation
Committee on improving air safety following
the Aug. 8 helicopter crash with a private
airplane over the Hudson River in which
nine people were killed.
The crash involving a sightseeing helicopter
from the W. 30th St. heliport in Hudson River
Park provoked repeated demands Tuesday
for banning such tourist flights, and inspired
more demands for closer Federal Aviation
Administration control over chopper and pri-
vate planes flying beneath 1,100 feet.
Manhattan Borough President Scott
Stringer proposed separate altitudes —
1,100 feet for small planes and 500 feet
for helicopters — which prompted boos
and jeers from audience members long con-
cerned about helicopter noise.
Stringer, however, also proposed a morato-
rium on sightseeing flights.
Assemblymember Richard Gottfried sub-
mitted a statement that said, in part, “We do not
need sightseeing helicopter rides. … [W]hatever
sightseers spend on a helicopter ride they would
eagerly spend on some other activity.”
Under the settlement of a 2008 lawsuit
by Friends of Hudson River Park, sightseeing
flights from the 30th St. heliport will cease as of
April 1, 2010, and the number of tourist flights
from W. 30th St. was reduced to 25,000 flights
in the year that ended May 31 and to 12,500 for
the coming year. Matthew Washington, Friends
deputy director, told the committee the lawsuit
was filed to eliminate the noise that disturbs
park users.
“While our suit was not based on specific air-
traffic concerns, we hope these efforts will aid in
a reduction of potential dangers,” he said.
Ken Paskar, a Lower East Side resident
and a general aviation pilot for 30 years, told
the committee that the F.A.A. has rules for
flights at all altitudes, but at 1,100 feet and
below, the agency does not require private
pilots or helicopter pilots to file flight plans
or be in radio contact with flight control-
lers. The “see and avoid” rule governs low-
altitude air traffic.
Paskar, a volunteer representative with the
F.A.A. Safety Team but testifying as a private
citizen, said rules for the Hudson River cor-
ridor could be improved. He noted that in the
Washington, D.C., area the F.A.A. requires
general aviation pilots to take a course on “see
and avoid” rules. Paskar said a similar course
should be required of pilots flying the Hudson
River corridor.
Congressmember Jerrold Nadler submit-
ted a statement calling on the F.A.A. to use its
authority to control airspace below 1,100 feet.
Nadler repeated his demand that small air-
craft must install a Traffic Collision Avoidance
System and a Mode C transponder, which make
low-altitude aircraft aware of each other.
Joy Held, president of the Helicopter Noise
Coalition, said sightseeing copters are “utterly
unnecessary, dangerous, noisy, a serious security
risk and they cause pollution.”
Copters take flak at a hearing
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Contact Allison Greaker for advertising opportunities at 646-452-2485
Downtown Express photo by JB Nicholas
N.Y.P.D. scuba divers and harbor unit officers recovering a body from the Hudson
River after the fatal midair collision on Aug. 8.
22
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009
EDITORIAL
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Safer demolitions
For many of us, the vivid memories of the 9/11
attack will always be there. As we approach the
eight-year anniversary, there are also still physical
reminders of the tragedy hovering over the World
Trade Center. The two remaining buildings that
were damaged on that day — the former Deutsche
Bank building and the City University of New
York’s Fiterman Hall — are literally the biggest
reminders.
Demolition of Fiterman began about a month
ago and deconstruction at the trouble-plagued
Deutsche Bank building could finally be resuming
next month. Since two firefighters were killed bat-
tling a blaze at the Deutsche Bank building more
than two years ago, we’ve learned to be skeptical
about any claims about bringing this dangerous
hulk down. But we’re pleased that preparatory
demolition work began this week.
More important, some of the long-overdue
safety improvements for demolition and construc-
tion projects appear to be working effectively, but
more needs to be done. There was, of course, no
need to wait for the tragic deaths of Firefighters
Robert Beddia and Joseph Graffagnino, Jr. to begin
taking safety more seriously — we and community
leaders warned about safety problems before the
deadly fire — but any time safety is increased, it
potentially saves lives.
There were many preventable reasons for the
firefighters’ deaths, but at the top of the list was
the broken standpipe that was never inspected or
repaired. Firefighters were sent into a “death trap”
without a water source, according to Manhattan
District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, who is still
investigating the case.
At Fiterman Hall, work was stopped a few
weeks ago when the standpipe failed a test. That’s
how things are supposed to work. As a building
is being dismantled, the standpipe must be cut
repeatedly and, in turn, tested repeatedly.
More troubling are the cigarette butts recently
found at Fiterman. Smoking was prohibited at the
Deutsche Bank building because of the flammable
materials, but workers typically smoked there and
a cigarette started the blaze, according to investiga-
tors. Fiterman no longer has flammable materials
needed for the abatement of toxic materials because
demolition did not begin until the abatement in the
building was finished — another post-Deutsche
reform. Smoking may not be as hazardous there as
it was a few months ago, but it is still dangerous
and is prohibited for a reason. Last year, inspectors
found cigarette butts at the Deutsche Bank build-
ing, and one of our photographers got a photo of
a construction worker smoking while working on
One World Trade Center, even though smoking is
prohibited throughout the site.
If no-smoking rules are flouted at high-profile
sites at and near the W.T.C. where inspectors are
on site, it seems likely that there are more viola-
tions elsewhere around the city.
Building safety appears to be getting better,
but clearly more vigilance and enforcement are
needed. Construction work is dangerous enough.
Lax enforcement only increases the risks.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
McCourt memories
To The Editor:
Re “My brother Frank: The teacher who
walked beside me” (Downtown Notebook
by Alphie McCourt, Aug. 21 - 27):
Alphie, thank you for writing something
so real. Thank you for bringing us into the
room with you and into your thoughts and
memories around Frank. It is these things
that are of real value. I breathe a deep
breath of fresh air. It is such a pleasure to
be free of cloying sentimentality.
Marta Szabo
City problems
To The Editor:
Would someone please explain to me
how Mayor Bloomberg creates these oxy-
moronic catchy titles for himself?
First, he is the “Education Mayor”
— for kids without schools. Then, he is
The “Good-For-Business Mayor” — and
I just see more and more empty store
windows.
What about that plant-a-million-trees
for PlaNYC? Guess what? I just noticed
today that no one in his administration
seems to know that once the trees are
planted they need watering. The trees on
Eighth Ave. in my neighborhood around
12th St. seem to be dying.
Now he is going to be tough on the
M.T.A., just after a ceiling on the 181st
St. I.R.T. station collapses. Has he been
dong anything regarding the M.T.A. dur-
ing his reign?
Please, I need help, I just have a gradu-
ate degree. Anyone out there?
Pamela L. La Bonne
POSTED
ON DOWNTOWNEXPRESS.COM
“Gleason spars with Gerson at candi-
dates’ forum” (News article, posted August
18)
Having attended the August 17 debate,
I commend the Downtown Express and
The Villager for having convened and man-
aged such an orderly forum. That said,
as a voter, I found the questions very
disappointing, playing more to headlines
and soundbites than substance. With so
many new candidates of such variety in
experience, I was hopeful that the modera-
tors would query far more about HOW a
candidate would set about ensuring their
platform’s success. Additionally the “bullet
rounds” requiring one word answers were
no help at all. I look forward to better ques-
tions, next time.
Council District 1 Voter
IRA BLUTREICH
It would be funny — if it wasn’t so sad.
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downtown express
23 August 28 - September 3, 2009
TALKING POINT
What’s the matter with Downtown’s candidates?
BY CHARLES KOMANOFF
Downtown is closer to Kansas than you think.
And judging from the campaign for the City Council
seat held by Alan Gerson, it’s about to get even closer.
The surprise bestseller of 2004 was “What’s The
Matter With Kansas? How Conservatives Won the Heart
of America.” The book explained how the U.S. heartland
forsook its populist roots and became a red-state strong-
hold. According to author Thomas Frank, the Republican
Party used hot-button “social issues” like abortion and gay
rights to build electoral majorities for economic policies
that enriched the country-club set at the expense of work-
ing families.
Something similar seems to be happening in the
Democratic primary race in the First Council District, albe-
it with a different set of issues. For the most part, incum-
bent Gerson and his rivals are defending a transportation
status quo that privileges a relative handful of drivers at
everyone’s expense. None of the candidates are clamoring
for new policies that would make Lower Manhattan — and
all of New York City — a better place to live and work.
Take traffic pricing. At the Downtown Express candi-
dates forum on Aug. 17, only two candidates Margaret
Chin and PJ Kim evinced any appetite for asking drivers
to offset even a fraction of the cost of the traffic delays
they cause, via a toll. Gerson and Pete Gleason denigrated
the idea and sealed their opposition with a handshake.
(Gerson later told the Downtown Express that he
might support a toll on through-traffic an empty gesture
since it would exempt most vehicle trips and might be
impossible to administer in any event. Residential exemp-
tions, as required by another candidate, Arthur Gregory,
would fatally undermine traffic pricing as well.)
Traffic pricing is central to reducing gridlock, and enthu-
siasm for it should be a given for any Downtown legislator.
The city’s worst traffic congestion occurs here, yet our
network of subways, buses and sidewalks is resilient and
efficient. Just 21 percent of Council District 1 households
own a car, and many of these are driven only on weekends
or other special occasions. It’s hard to imagine a traffic toll
that wouldn’t benefit the vast majority of Downtowners.
It gets worse. Not a single Council candidate spoke
up for the Grand St. bike lane, whose innovative design
provides a safe cycling connection between Hudson
Square and the Lower East Side and has reduced traffic
injuries nearly 30 percent, according to the N.Y.C. Dept.
of Transportation. And no candidate has reproached
Councilmember Gerson for his demagogic attacks on the
D.O.T., such as branding it a “Department of Tyranny”
for striving to undo decades of Robert Moses policies
that have made our streets inhospitable to everything but
cars.
Instead, the contenders demanded “more community
consultation” — i.e., doing nothing — ignoring the fact
that D.O.T. had secured Community Board 2’s near-
unanimous approval for the lane. Only Kim cautioned
against “demonizing cyclists” — in a Council district
whose short distances and quirky streets make it ideal
for cycling, and whose chronic gridlock makes bicycling a
rare “positive externality” — a private action that confers
public benefits.
What’s going on here? Is a bum roll of the dice to
blame, or is something deeper at work?
Probably some of each. What Frank’s “Kansas” book
taught us is that most politicians will push whatever cul-
tural buttons will get them elected. In the heartland, it’s
“partial-birth” abortion and same-sex marriage. Here, in
the first Council District, evidently it’s Americans’ right to
drive anywhere, anytime, and pay nothing for the damage.
And, for good measure, to turn up one’s nose at bicycle-
riders — as if “those cyclists” couldn’t be “us cyclists” too,
with the right street configuration.
Is Lower Manhattan, like Kansas, fated to vote against
its self-interest? Let’s hope not.
While it’s too late to put an avowed transportation
reformer on the ballot, it’s not too late to let the candi-
dates know where you stand. Use these final weeks to tell
Councilmember Gerson and his rivals that you want traf-
fic pricing and safe bicycle lanes. Tell them that on Sept.
15 you intend to pull the lever for the candidate who will
help, not hinder, the movement to repurpose our streets
to broader, gentler uses.
Charles Komanoff, a Tribeca resident since 1994, is
working with labor lawyer Ted Kheel to advance traffic
pricing and free transit.
Traffic pricing would benefit most
Downtowners, yet the Council
hopefuls care more about the few
who own cars.
City Council
Race Turns
Nasty
BY JERE HESTER
Sept 2, 1991
The City Council open primary between
Kathryn Freed and Margaret Chin got nasty
with the brief, surprise entry of Mee Ying
Chan into the race. After Chan was beaten
up by a homeless person, she claimed that
Chin was responsible, but the Manhattan
district attorney’s office said it was a com-
mon street mugging without political
motives. Chin’s campaign manager, Chris
Kui, said Chan, who dropped out of the
race, was put up to run by Freed -- a charge
that Freed denied.
In the same issue, the Express endorsed
Freed (under a former publisher and edi-
tor-in-chief, Robert Trentlyon). The paper
did not criticize Chin and praised her
voter registration and advocacy efforts,
but said Freed had the superior record of
accomplishments. Freed went on to win
the primary and general election.
Vendors Come Early
BY GLENN THRUSH
AND MATT HAWKINS
August 31, 1992
Less than a month after Community Board
1 nixed the proposal to find a Downtown
home for disabled veteran vendors, four
canopied retail carts rolled right into City
Hall Park. The plan was a stepchild of a 1991
agreement between New York State and the
Fifth Ave. Association, which made it illegal
for disabled vets to sell their wares in parts of
Midtown. The city promised to find the 176
vendors a new home, but after a year Gov.
Cuomo was fed up that no action was taken,
and threatened to send them back Uptown if
Mayor Dinkins didn’t act soon. The plan was
passed over to the city activists who opposed
commercialization of city parkland.
Once the vendors moved in, local busi-
ness owners didn’t foresee a problem, but
C.B. 1 District Manager Paul Goldstein
disapproved, and said he had never before
seen the city move so fast on an issue. The
city planned to place the vendors next to the
fountain, which Goldstein resented.
“It’s the worst place in the park to put
these guys. It shows a total disregard for
the community and our opinions,” he said.
Still, the city felt that the vendors had every
right to sit peacefully under their tents, and
were much more favorable incumbents than
the illegal vendors in Battery Park. The city
considered moving the plan to other parks
as well, but Parks Concessions Director Matt
McElroy said, “Before we decide on other
locations, we need a few weeks to look at the
operation in City Hall Park to iron out any
glitches that might develop there.”
The vendors got a slow start, and longed
for their places at the center of the action,
anticipating they would only be successful on
Thursdays and Fridays. Still, they were the
lucky few — at the time of the article, only
four of the 176 disabled veteran vendors had
been allotted a space to sell their wares.
— Prepared
by Helaina N. Hovitz
RIPPED FROM OUR HEADLINES
August 28 - September 3, 2009 24
downtown express
ARTS +GAMES This project, designed by an art specialist
for school age children, includes clay, painting and jewelry
design. Free. Thursdays, through Oct 29, 3:30-5:30pm. Nel-
son A. Rockefeller Park, Battery Park City (access: Chambers).
Call 212-267-9700, or visit bpcparks.org.
BEGINNER TENNIS LESSONS Group sessions with an
experienced instructor will emphasize the fundamentals of
the game of tennis. Lessons are held for beginner kids ages
6-12 and beginner teens/adults over 13. Community Center
at Stuyvesant High School, 345 Chambers St. To register, call
646-210-4292. Visit ccshs.org.
CHILDREN’S BASKETBALL Children can play with adjust-
able height hoops, and participate in fun drills to improve
their skills. Free. Mon and Fri through Oct 30 (except holiday
weekends), 3:30-4:30pm for 5-6 year olds; 4:30-5:30pm for 7
& older. Nelson A. Rockefeller Park, Battery Park City (access:
Chambers Street). Call 212-267-9700, or visit bpcparks.org.
CHILDREN’S MUSEUM OF THE ARTS (CMA) Explore
painting, collage, and sculpture through self-guided art proj-
ects. Open art stations are ongoing throughout the afternoon,
giving children the opportunity to experiment with materials
such as paint, clay, fabric, paper, and found objects. Admis-
sion $10. Wed-Sun, 12-5pm; Thurs, 12-6pm. Children’s
Museum of the Arts, 182 Lafayette Stret. Call 212- 274-0986
or visit cmany.org.
DOWNTOWN SUMMER DAY CAMP Enjoy the same
enriching activities that country day camps offer without
the stress of traveling out of the city every day on a bus. The
camp combines a daily program with special events to give
children an exciting and varied camp experience. Kids K-6th
grade. For rates and to register, go to downtowndaycamp.
com or call 212-766-1104, x250.
GLOBAL STORY HOUR Through weekly stories, partici-
pants learn about new countries and cultures, participate in
interactive activities, and learn how to make a difference.
Every Fri at 3:30pm. Action Center to End World Hunger,
6 River Terr, Battery Park City. Call 212-537-0511 or visit
actioncenter.org.
KIDS STORYTIME Storyteller Yvonne Brooks leads a sto-
rytime with arts and crafts for kids ages 3-7, every Sat at
12pm in the children’s section. Baby storytime with story-
teller Stewart Dawes takes place on Fri at 4:00pm for ages
younger than 2. McNally Jackson Booksellers, 52 Prince St,
(between Lafayette and Mulberry). Call 212-274-1160 or visit
mcnallyjackson.com.
KIDS PROGRAMS Put your children’s energy to good use
through art, basketball, chess, cycling, exploration, garden-
ing, and music among other activities. Days, materials fees,
and park locations vary. Battery Park City Parks Conservancy,
Two South End Ave. Call 212-262-9700 or visit bcparks.org.
MOVIES FOR KIDS AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF
THE AMERICAN INDIAN Special screenings for the kids
are shown through Aug 30 at 10:30 and 11:45am, daily. Films
include “The Legend of Quillwork Girl and her Seven Star
Brothers” and “Letter from an Apache.” National Museum of
the American Indian, One Bowling Green. Call 212-514-3700
or visit nmai.si.edu.
PLAYDATE AND NEW PARENT DROP IN The Playdate
“Drop-In” is a great place to bring toddlers. While the chil-
dren play together, parents can socialize in the Parenting
Center. The New Parent “Drop-In” gives new parents the
chance to discuss their concerns and ask questions. Topics
include feeding, sleeping, creating support networks. Punch
card for 10 sessions is $100. Summer Special: $90 punch
card if purchased before Aug 31. Playdate Drop-Ins are Mon
& Thurs, 10-11:30am and Tues 3-4:30pm. New Parent Drop-
Ins are Mon 1:30-3:30pm. Educational Alliance Downtown
Parenting Center,197 East Broadway (between Jefferson &
Clinton St). Visit edalliance.org.
TEEN PROGRAMS Save teenagers from the boredom
blues through classes on art, babysitter training, CPR, and
environmental activism. Days, materials fees, and park loca-
tions vary. Battery Park City Parks Conservancy, Two South
End Ave. For more information call, 212-262-9700 or visit
bcparks.org.
PRESCHOOL PLAY AND ART Join other toddlers, par-
ents and caregivers for interactive play on a grassy lawn.
Toys, books and equipment provided. Free. Mon, Tue and
Wed, through Oct 27 (except Sept 7 and Oct 12) 10am- 12pm.
Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park. Call 212-267-9700 or visit bpc-
parks.org.
SUMMER ART COLONIES The Children’s Museum of the
Arts will run a Summer Art Colony on Governors Island and
the CMA facility at 182 Lafayette Street in Soho for chil-
dren ages 6 to 14. The two-week day camp sessions, led
by professional artists, will run though September 4. CMA’s
Summer Art Colonies allow children to spend their summers
exploring nearly every art form in the fine, performing and
media arts. The classes are structured to allow full immer-
sion into art. For more information, call 212-627-5766 or visit
cmany.org.
STORIES AND SONGS Created especially for infants,
toddlers and preschoolers, this event will bring together
both the children and their parents. $210 for 4 forty-minute
sessions; pre-registration required. Mon or Wed, from Sept
14. 9:30am to 10:10am – 6 to 12 months old. 10:20am to
11:00am – 15 months to 2 years old. 11:10am to 11:50am – 2
years old and up. 12 to 12:4pm – mixed ages. BPCPC Meeting
Room at The Verdesian. Enter at door north of main entrance
(access: Murray St or Warren St). Call 212-267-9700 or visit
bpcparks.org.
STORYTIME AT BABYLICIOUS Children ages 3 to 4 are
welcome to participate in free storytime with songs, stories
and lots of fun. Free. Every Tue, 9:30am. At Babylicious, 51
Hudson St (between Duane and Jay St). Call 212-406-7440,
or visit babyliciousnyc.com.
TOUR DE PARC Tricyclists, bicyclists and scooter riders 9
years old and younger show their pedal power in a cycling
tour of the parks. Helmets required. Sept 19, 10am. Espla-
nade Plaza. Call 212-267-9700 ext 348,or visit bpcparks.org.
TODDLER PLAY GROUP Story time, play time and fun edu-
cational activities are all part of the Community Toddler Play
Group for parents with their children. Foster your toddler’s
imagination through history, science and maritime-themed
activities using interactive materials and engaging book
readings.$7 per child, free to family members, Every Wed,
1-2:30pm, South Street Seaport Museum, 12 Fulton Street.
Call 212-748-8786 or visit southstreetseaportmuseum.org.
TEEN ENTREPRENEUR BOOT CAMP This program gives
teens the exciting learning experience that they need to suc-
ceed later in life. For more information, visit teenentrepre-
neurbootcamp.org.
TEEN VOLLEYBALL All teens are welcome and no previ-
ous experience necessary; referee/scorekeeper and ball pro-
vided. Presented by the Battery Park City Parks Conservancy.
Sat, 4:30-6:30pm. Community Center at Stuyvesant High
School, 345 Chambers Street. Call 646-210-4292.
YOUNG SPROUTS GARDENING This gardening program
is for children 3-5 years old. It includes simple gardening
projects appropriate for preschoolers. Free. Tue, through Oct
27. 3:15-3:45pm. Space limited-first come, first served. The
Children’s Garden, Nelson A. Rockefeller Park, Battery Park
City (access: Chambers St). Call 212-267-9700 ext 348 or
visit bpcparks.org.
WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE YOUR EVENT IN THE DOWN-
TOWN EXPRESS KIDS LISTINGS? Listings requests may
be e-mailed to [email protected]. Please provide the
date, time, location, price and a description of the event.
Information may also be mailed to 145 Avenue of the Ameri-
cas, New York, NY 10013-1548. Requests must be received
two weeks before the event is to be published. Questions?
Call 646-452-2507.
Moving Visions’ Murray Street Studio
A Wise Choice for your child’s dance education!
Dance for Children and Teens
• Modern Ballet (ages 5-18) • Choreography (ages 8 & up)
• Creative Movement/Pre-Ballet (ages 3-5)
19 Murray St., 3rd Fl.
(Bet. Broadway and Church)
212-608-7681 (day)
www.murraystreetdance.com
ADULT CLASSES Yoga - Tai Chi • Chi/Dance/Exercise for Women
19 years connectìng famìlìes wìth musìc and art
Ready for
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For catalogue: FF
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SUMMER ARTS MEDLEY
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downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 25
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A Strong Voice
The Downtown Express Difference
CELEBRATING 20 YEARS OF PUBLISHING
THE NEWS OF DOWNTOWN.
We believe that a good
community newspaper
does make a difference.
August 28 - September 3, 2009 26
downtown express
BY ELENA MANCINI
P-Star Rising is the story of a second
chance that emerged from a Harlem hous-
ing shelter, “a rose in concrete,” as director
Gabriel Noble refers to the character and
talent of child rapper P-Star (on which his
feature documentary is based).
When Noble met Priscilla “P-Star” Diaz
and her father/manager/former hip-hop
hopeful Jesse Diaz at a rapper debut dance
party in NYC, he knew immediately that
P-Star was not just a kid with a lot of spunk
— she had a story that was worth telling.
At the time, she was all of nine years old.
What struck Noble about P-Star (apart from
her tender age and the fact that she was out
at a party past midnight on a school night)
was “the aggressiveness of her flow, charis-
ma, her street smarts and her fire.” As Noble
describes it, he wanted to learn “where
that cadence was coming from.” Coupled
with P-Star’s precociousness and passion for
performing was also the consciousness of
wanting to bring forward the dream that had
seemingly eluded her father.
Five years have passed since Noble’s first
encounter with the Diaz family. During that
five year period, Noble (with the help of pro-
ducer Marjhan Tehrani) has spent four years
getting to know the family intimately and film-
ing them for this tour-de-force feature docu-
mentary. The process of filming brought Noble
and the Diaz to form a close bond. Noble
described it as feeling like a member of their
family. The comfortable rapport between the
director and the family certainly comes across
in watching the documentary. All of the family
members seemed at ease playing themselves.
Their interactions with one another appeared
natural and candid throughout. This sense also
remained strong in moments that highlighted
character weaknesses, poor judgment, disap-
pointments and defeats.
Particularly noteworthy in this regard
was Jesse Diaz. Armed with scant resources
and cast in an emotionally challenging famil-
ial situation, this single father did not have
an easy time at bringing up two young
daughters who longed for their absentee,
crack-addled mother. Jesse’s parenting style
might be unorthodox, but his straight talk
and refusal to whitewash his checkered past
for their benefit is a testament to his love and
unwavering devotion.
As much as the story depicts the perks
and pitfalls of launching and managing a
career in the New York City hip-hop scene,
it’s even more a story about a family’s strug-
gles to fulfill a dream without present for
one another and sticking together. The Diaz
family brings its both its love for one another
and its baggage to the well documented risks
and gains of child stardom. It learns many
lessons along the way.
P-Star must learn to temper her pluck
and talent with her need to just be a kid.
Jesse must come to accept that despite his
commitment to confronting the pressures
and responsibilities that come with dual role
of manager/father, the intervention of hum-
bling realities cannot be prevented. Solsky
must learn the importance of self-expression
in a shadow role. While this is in many ways
a distinctly New York story, its disarming
authenticity and emotional rawness give
it universal appeal. Noble, whose future
projects include a documentary on gypsy
children in Romania, tells P-Star’s story with
sensitivity and respect.
Rooftop Films presents P-Star, under starry sky
2009 Tribeca Film Festival flick gets Brooklyn premiere
Photo courtesy of Rooftop Films & the filmmaker
P-Star dancing in foreground, looming large in background
P-STAR RISING
2009; 83 minutes; feature documentary
Directed by Gabriel Noble
Free; Thursday, September 3 (rain date,
September 10) Live 8:30 p.m. music perfor-
mance by P-Star; 9:00 p.m. screening, fol-
lowed by Q&A with the filmmaker
At the lawn of Ft Greene Park, North Portland
and Myrtle Avenue, Ft. Greene, Brooklyn (G
train to Fulton)
For information, www.rooftopfilms.com
“INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS” (+)
I thought this flick was based on some historical facts. It
is not. It’s a spoof. If you view it as such and don’t get super-
sensitive thinking one should be extremely careful when
engaging in a spoof that involves elements of the Holocaust,
you will enjoy this film.
Interestingly, Brad Pitt’s performance does little to height-
en the enjoyment. He portrays Lt. Aldo Raine, a Tennessee
hillbilly in charge of eight Jews. The performance of
Christoph Waltz, playing the Nazi Gestapo figure Col. Hans
Landa, is the highlight of the film. His ability to convey
courtliness and sympathy and then go to commit the cruelest
of horrors is simply superb.
The plot is simple. The U.S. Army authorizes Lt. Raine
(Brad Pitt) to take eight Jews with him, parachute into
Germany and then simply kill Nazis. He states that each of
them owes him 100 Nazi scalps before they are through with
their campaign. They proceed to kill their share of Nazis and
literally scalp them.
The Jew hunter, Col. Hans Landa, pursues Jews in occu-
pied France. There is an enormously touching scene show-
ing a French farmer giving up the Jews he had hidden in his
house out of fear that he and his three daughters would be
killed. The heroine is a Jewish woman, Shosanna Dreyfus
(Melanie Laurent), who does us all proud. A fictional
finale involves an apparently successful effort to kill Hitler,
Bormann, Goering and Goebbels at a French theater. The
film at that point becomes a rollicking musical without
the music. All I could do was hum “Springtime for Hitler,”
which I liked immensely.
Quentin Tarantino, writer and director, did it again.
PT said: “I didn’t really enjoy the film, although it was
very well produced and quite realistic except for the outra-
geous bits: Brad Pitt as a hillbilly, Jewish soldiers trying to
pass themselves off as Italian filmmakers, and other unreal-
istic flights of the filmmaker’s fancy. I just couldn’t reconcile
the serious parts of the film such as the giving up of the hid-
den Jews with the comedic elements.”
1 hour, 52 minutes; Rated R.
At the Regal Union Square Stadium 14 (850 Broadway).
For screening times, call 1-800-326-3264 x628. For the Box
Office, 212-253-6266. Also at, among other places, Chelsea
Clearview Cinema (260 West 23rd Street). For screening
times, call 212-777-3456 x597. For the Box Office, call 212-
691-5519.
“DISTRICT 9” (-)
This horror/sci-fi film received kudos from the critics,
some giving it four stars. Ridiculous. Stay away.
The picture reminded me of the serials or chapters that I
watched as a child every Saturday afternoon. For one dime I
saw two films and also received a free soda and a comic book.
Of course, “District 9” cost a lot more to make because of the
technology involved.
A spaceship, unable to move from its position in the sky,
appears over Johannesburg, South Africa, in the 1980s. The
alien craft is invaded by members of the South African
military and police force who find a million or so creatures
onboard that look like insects and to some like crustaceans.
The extraterrestrials are initially treated humanely and
placed in a refugee camp known as District 9. Relations
deteriorate and they are soon viewed as social outcasts and
referred to as prawns, a slur. In an apparent allegory, the
treatment toward the aliens by the blacks and whites of
South Africa, with their history of Apartheid, becomes bru-
tal. A war is declared to get rid of them and they are moved
to an undesirable slum area.
I frankly thought it was all ridiculous, particularly so when
an attempt to add a “buddy” component was introduced. One
of the aliens, Christopher Johnson (Jason Cope), tries to help
Wikus (Sharlto Copley) who was in charge of the aliens’ care.
After accidentally becoming infected, Wilkus starts to turn into
an alien and Johnson promises to cure him.
I repeat. Stay away. This movie is an enormous waste of
time and they don’t hand out free sodas or comic books.
1 hour, 53 minutes; Rated R .
At the Regal Union Square Stadium 14 (850 Broadway).
For screening times, call 1-800-326-3264 x628. For the Box
Office, 212-253-6266. Also at, among other places, Chelsea
Clearview Cinema (260 West 23rd Street). For screening
times, call 212-777-3456 x597. For the Box Office, call 212-
691-5519.
KOCH
ON FILM
FILM
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 27
Last call for FringeNYC
Two to see, one to miss
BY SCOTT HARRAH
This provocative show, based on a true
story about “two days in the last years of
the life of playwright Tennessee Williams,”
is one of the undisputed highlights of the
13th Annual New York International Fringe
Festival.
Canadian playwright Daniel MacIvor’s
brilliant script, the stellar performances of
the three cast members and Tom Gualtieri’s
tight direction create a top-notch bio-drama
about one of America’s most celebrated,
controversial theater icons.
“His Greatness” is not officially about
Williams. The Broadway/Hollywood legend’s
name and play titles are never mentioned,
and the lead character is simply called
The Playwright (Peter Goldfarb). However,
Daniel MacIvor covers all the notorious ter-
ritory about Williams’s private life — from
his alleged problems with alcohol and drugs
to his failed attempts at writing in his later
years.
The story takes place in a Vancouver hotel
room circa 1980, as The Playwright prepares
for the opening of a new, updated version of
an old play. “His Greatness” focuses on the
complicated symbiotic relationship between
the writer and his high-strung, devoted
assistant/lover (played with aplomb by Dan
Domingues). Troubles abound when a cal-
culating hustler (the superb Michael Busillo)
is hired to escort the old man to the gala
opening.
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The Winter Garden
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Photo by Neilson Barnard
Tennessee Williams, sorta, center, in “His Greatness”
HIS GREATNESS
Written by Daniel MacIvor
Directed by Tom Gualtieri
A 2009 New York International Fringe Festival
presentation
Presented by Adam Blanshay and Lyric
Productions, in association with The Present
Company
At the Cherry Lane Theater (38 Commerce
Street)
Aug 27, at 3:45 p.m.; Aug 29, at Noon
For tickets ($15), visit www.fringenyc.org or
call 866-468-7619.
Visit www.HisGreatnessPlay.com
THEATER
REVIEWS
Continued on page 28
August 28 - September 3, 2009 28
downtown express
Last call for FringeNYC
Goldfarb is first-rate as The Playwright — playing him
as a lovable yet sad person on a path of self-destruction.
Dan Domingues is totally incandescent as The Assistant.
He brings down the house with his manic mannerisms as he
delivers MacIvor’s beautifully written dialogue. When The
Playwright complains about pain in his soul, The Assistant
quips, “That’s not your soul — it’s your hangover.” The
Assistant is the only one who can get The Playwright out
of bed and keep him sober enough to get through a radio
interview and the opening of the play. Domingues portrays
The Assistant as a compassionate but frustrated man who
tries desperately to help the egotistical, deluded author over-
come his battle with alcoholism and drug addiction so he can
maintain both his career and dignity.
“His Greatness” doesn’t solely rely on the sordid
aspects of Williams and his personal problems. There’s
also great detail on why critics were so fascinated with
his female characters, and what he really thought of such
theatrical peers as Arthur Miller. Ultimately, however, “His
Greatness” is a portrait of a once-great writer’s decline and
why so many people turned on him in the end — showing
exactly why the real life of Tennessee Williams was every
bit as tragic as his plays.
SCATTERED LIVES
Written, directed and choreographed by Yoshihisa Kuwayama
A 2009 New York International Fringe Festival presentation
A presentation of Samurai Sword Soul, in association with The
Present Company
At the Robert Moss Theater, 440 Lafayette Street, third floor
Aug 28, 9:30 p.m.; Aug 29, 4:30 p.m.
For tickets ($15), visit www.fringenyc.org or
call 866-468-7619.
Visit www.HisGreatnessPlay.com
BY SCOTT STIFFLER
They drink! They fight! They repeat that process all day
and all night!
Occasionally, the good, bad and conflicted Samurai pause
long enough to experience fleeting moments of moral and
philosophical clarity amidst the relentless bloodshed and
power grabs. In the end, only a disembodied spirit and the
drunken shell of a former great fighter remain to survey the
damage and vow that their swords will only be used improve
life rather than reign destruction upon the land.
That’s the fascinatingly complex moral drawn at the end
of the simple story to be found in Samurai Sword Soul’s pro-
duction of “Scattered Lives” — a fine example of minimalist
technique made to serve the telling of an epic tale.
The bare, black box stage is filled only with three musi-
cians, a nine-member cast and their swords. They swords
aren’t real, though; but the well-constructed props glisten
with deadly implications and the resulting sound when blade
meets blade, although not that of metal, lets you know in no
uncertain terms that a battle is taking place.
The fight choreography, by writer/director Yoshihisa
Kuwayama, is relentless, imaginative and effective in its impli-
cation of drawn blood and death (of which there is much!).
But along with all the violence you’d expect from a
Samauri tale comes a thoughtful plot which sees two war-
ring factions duel to the death and a drunken clown achieve
redemption. By the time the rival clan has been permanently
dispatched in a climactic battle, only the reformed drunk and
the ghost of the good-guy master remain on stage to con-
template the way of the warrior and the responsibility that
comes with the power to take a life with relative ease. That’s
the unique, unexpected ingredient which makes “Scattered
Lives” more than just a series of violent encounters.
UNION SQUARED
Written by David S. Singer
Directed by Diana Basmajian
A 2009 New York International Fringe Festival production of the
Present Company
At The Players Theatre (115 MacDougal Street)
For tickets ($15), visit www.fringenyc.org or call
(866) 468-7619. Visit www.UnionSquaredTheComedy.com
Aug 26, 3:15 p.m.; Aug 27, 10:15 p.m.; Aug 30, 1:15 p.m.
BY SCOTT HARRAH
Everything about David S. Singer’s Fringe Festival pro-
duction of “Union Squared” reeks of mediocrity — from
the half-baked, formulaic “romantic comedy” plot to the
one-dimensional characters (all of whom are absurd ste-
reotypes).
This tale of “sex, money and massage therapy” has all
the elements of a traditional comedy of errors, but ulti-
mately falls flat due to trite dialogue, silly plot twists, and
uneven performances from the cast.
Spoiled Wall Street stockbroker Brad (Levi Sochet)
must deal with his meddling Jewish mother, Sophie (Anita
Keal), when she informs him he’s going to inherit several
million dollars that his late father socked away illegally
in a Swiss bank account. Trouble arises when we learn
that Brad is cheating on his devoted wife Rachel (Annie
Meisels) with sexy blonde massage therapist, Shannon
(Carlina Ferrari).
As Sophie, Anita Keal does her best to bring badly
needed depth to the character; a warmhearted woman
who wants the best for her son — and nothing to do with
the money his father made through unethical business
practices. The problem is, as written by playwright David
S. Singer, Sophie is a mere caricature of every Jewish
mother; but not in a positive way. From her endless use
of Yiddish words to her exaggerated mannerisms, she
comes across as a cartoon rather than a believable lead
character.
Levi Sochet is totally miscast in the role of Brad. He
has zero chemistry with the rest of the actors, and is far
from plausible as a greedy, oversexed, unfaithful husband.
It’s a shame that Sochet’s comic timing is so off — because
Meisels as Rachel and Ferrari as Brad’s mistress Shannon
are far more competent actors. Unfortunately, the playwright
has written their characters as oversimplified ethnic clichés.
Rachel is a nagging Jewish-American princess wife, and
Shannon is an Irish-American with a drinking problem.
Director Diana Basmajian fails to make the cast gel as
a cohesive unit. Even with more rehearsal time and better
casting, it would likely be impossible to add much to this
flimsily-written play. Nothing in the hackneyed narrative is
original. Everything about the show — from the opening
when Brad learns about his father’s secret Swiss cash stash
to the unfolding, unfunny marital infidelities of the couple
— is predictable. “Union Squared” tries to be an intelligent
adult comedy, but is in fact nothing but an amateurish
string of moments about uninteresting people and their
supposedly humorous daily lives.
Photo by Aaron Epstein
The hardworking, but doomed cast, of “Union Squared”
Continued from page 27
Photo by Motoyuki Ishibashi
The Samurai storytellers of “Scattered Lives”
downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 29
CLASSES
I NTRODUCTORY ART WORK-
SHOPS Are you thinking about taking
an art class, but not sure what you want?
Come to these art workshops and try out
a class before committing to a full course.
Class subjects include pottery, cartoon-
ing, drawing and photographs. $15 per
workshop. The Educational Alliance Art
School, 197 East Broadway. Call 212-
780-2300, x428; or, visit edalliance.org/
artschool.
DANCE AND PILATES Ballet, jazz,
tango, hip-hop, and modern dance class-
es are offered for all levels. $16/class,
discounts available. Ongoing. Dance New
Amsterdam, 280 Broadway (entrance at
53 Chambers St) 2nd Floor. Call 212-279-
4200, or visit dnadance.org.
TABLE TENNIS TRAINING PRO-
GRAM Table tennis training is offered
for players of all ages and skill levels. It’s
a great opportunity for all to come togeth-
er, enjoy the sport, and build new friend-
ships. Mon-Fri, 10am to 1pm, $100 a year
for ages 6-15 and 50 and older; $200 for
others. American Asian Cultural Center of
Tribeca, 384 Broadway, lower level. Call
646-772-2922.
NE W B E G I NNI NG S C H A I R
YOGA Trinity Church’s seniors group
meets for one hour of gentle yoga while
seated. 10-11am. Ongoing. Trinity Church,
Broadway at Wall Street. Call 212-602-
0747, or visit trinitywallstreet.org.
SUPPORT GROUP FOR FIRST-TIME
MOTHERS Join parenting experts Drs.
Ann Chandler and Nancy Carroll-Freeman
and new mothers to voice your thoughts
and feelings and find support and encour-
agement. $25 per group. Every Thurs,10-
11am. Tribeca Pediatrics, 46 Warren
Street. Call 212-219-9984.
EVENTS
HARMONY ON THE HUDSON: THE
FAMILY MUSIC FESTIVAL AT BAT-
TERY PARK CITY. Participants will
enjoy music, food, games and art activi-
ties. Free. Sept 13, 1-6pm. Robert F. Wag-
ner Jr. Park, (access: Battery Place). Call
212-267-9700 or visit bpcparks.org.
SUNSET JAM ON THE HUDSON Par-
ticipants will improvise on African, Latin
and Caribbean rhythms in a drumming
circle led by master drummers. Instru-
ments provided, or bring your own. Every
Friday, through Aug 28, 6:30-8:30pm. Rob-
ert F. Wagner, Jr. Park. Call 212-267-9700,
or visit bpcparks.org.
FREE HEARING SCREENINGS AT THE
LEAGUE FOR THE HARD OF HEAR-
ING Every Wed, 12 –2pm, and every
Thurs 4-6pm. Call or email to schedule
an appointment. 50 Broadway, 6th Fl. Call
917-305-7766, or visit appointments@llh.
org.
PUBLIC SAILS ABOARD 1885 SCHOO-
NER PIONEER Enjoy spectacular views
of the New York Harbor from the deck of
the historic ship. Tues-Fri: 3-5pm, 4-6pm
and 7-9pm. Sat-Sun: 1-3pm, 4-6pm,
7-9pm. Prices: 4-6pm and 7-9pm sails:
Adults $35, Student/Seniors $30. Chil-
dren 12 and under, $25. 1-3pm and 3-5pm
sails: Adults $25, Student/Seniors $20,
Children 12 and under $15. Members
receive $5 discount. Reservations sug-
gested. South Street Seaport. Pier 16.
Call 212-748-8786, or visit southstree-
tseaportmuseum.org.
EXHIBITS
IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK Visit
Manhattan’s oldest surviving building,
54 Pearl Street which has witnessed
nearly 300 years of the city’s history.
Ongoing. $4, $3 seniors and children
under 18, and free to children under
six. Fraunces Tavern Museum, 54 Pearl
Street. Call 212-425-1776, or visit
frauncestavernmuseum.com.
MARINE ECOLOGY ABOARD 1885
SCHOONER PIONEER Learn about
the creatures that inhabit the local
harbor estuary, harbor water quality,
and what is being done to maintain
this valuable ecosystem. $30 adults /
$25 students & seniors / $20 children
12 and under / Members receive a $5
discount. South Street Seaport, Pier 16
(Programs Afloat). Call 212-748-8786,
or visit southstreetseaportmuseum.
org.
WOMAN OF LETTERS: I RÈNE
NÉMIROVSKY AND SUITE FRAN-
ÇAISE The exhibit examines the life,
work, and legacy of this enthralling,
often controversial, literary figure.
Thr ough Aug 30. $12 adul t s, $10
seniors, $7 students, children under
12 free. Museum of Jewish Heritage,
36 Battery Place. Call 646-437-4202,or
visit mjhnyc.org.
WOMEN OF WALL STREET Thi s
exhibition showcases notable women
in the world of finance and Wall Street.
Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall
St. Call 212-908-4110, or visit finan-
cialhistory.org.
MUSIC
CLARK/HUDSON MOHAWKE AND
MORE To celebrate its twentieth year,
Warp Records and Warp Films is bringing
together artists to create unique perfor-
mances. Free. Sept 5, 8pm. World Finan-
cial Center Winter Garden, 200 Vesey
Street. Visit worldfinancialcenter.com.
SUMMER SOUNDS AT TRINITY-YES-
TERDAY AND TODAY BAND A tribute
THE LISTINGS
Listings
continued on page 30
August 28 - September 3, 2009 30
downtown express
to the music of the legendary Beatles will
be a treat for the listeners at the Trinity
Church. Free. Aug 26, 12:30 and 2:30pm.
Trinity Church Broadway at Wall Street.
Call 212-602-0800, or visit trinitywall-
street.org.
SUPERFROG A Los Angeles band with
an original, yet sought after, sound. $10.
Aug 27, 7:30. Sullivan Hall, 214 Sullivan
St (between Bleecker and W 3rd St). Visit
sullivanhallnyc.com.
BADFISH A concert of from the sublime
tribute band (with special guests). The
Beach will open at noon and concertgoers
are encouraged to arrive early to enjoy
the sun, food, drink, and all the amenities
The Beach has to offer. $30.Aug 29, 4pm
doors, 6pm show. The Beach at Gover-
nor’s Island. Visit thebeachconcerts.com.
TOURS
FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF NEW
YORK TOUR Visitors will be able to
tour the Fed’s gold vault and learn about
the Federal Reserve’s central banking
functions. Free. Federal Reserve Bank
of NY, 33 Liberty Street. Call 212-720-
6130, or visit newyorkfed.org.
1625: DUTCH NEW YORK Wal k
along the shoreline of 1625 as the tour
visits sites – and some extant remains
– of the original Dutch settlement of
New Amsterdam, now New York. Visit
architectural digs, Stone Street, the
shortest lane in Manhattan, the edge
of Fort Amsterdam, and more. $20;
$15 seniors and students. Sept 5. Runs
approx. 90 mins. Meet at One Bowling
Green, on steps of National Museum
of the American Indian. Call 646-573-
9509.
SOHO ARTS WALK Exper i ence
SoHo’s art scene like never before
with a walk down famous cobblestone
streets that were once the stomping
grounds of such greats as Andy Warhol
and Jean-Michel Basquiat. Free admis-
sion into galleries. The third Thursday
of every month, through September.
Visit sohoartswalk.com.
GANGSTER, WRITER, RABBI Par-
ticipants of this Lower East Side Walk-
ing Tour will learn about the common
ground between gangster Jack Zelig,
writer Sholem Aleichem & rabbi Jacob
Joseph. Aug 23, 11am.The walking
tour will begin at the Eldridge Street
Synagogue (12 Eldridge St, between
Canal and Division). Call 212-219-0888
or visit eldridgestreet.org.
LOVE AND COURTSHIP WALKING
TOUR This unique Lower East Side
walking tour explores love at the turn
of the century. $15 ($12 for students
and seniors) Sept 6, 2pm. The walking
tour will begin at the Eldridge Street
Synagogue at 12 Eldridge St, between
Canal and Division Sts. Call 212-219-
0888 or visit eldridgestreet.org.
M U S E U M A T E L D R I D G E
STREET These guided tours, led by
historian-trained docents tell the story
of the 1887 landmark synagogue, and
illuminate the experience of the East
European Jewish immigrants who set-
tled on the LES in the late 19th century.
Sun.-Thurs, 10am-4pm. $10 adults,
$8 seniors, $6 children. Museum at
Eldridge Street, 12 Eldridge St. Call
212-219-0888, or visit eldridgestreet.
org.
LISTINGS REQUESTS for the Down-
town Express may be mailed to Listings
Editor at 145 Avenue of the Americas,
New York, NY 10013-1548 or e-mailed
to [email protected]. Please
include listings in the subject line of
the e-mail and provide the date, time,
location, price and a description of the
event. Information must be received
two weeks before the event is to be
published. Questions? Call 646-452-
2507.
THE LISTINGS
Listings
continued from page 29
5ince 1985
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2 1 2 . 2 2 7 . 4 1 5 0 www. | a n c e | a p p | n . c o m
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in residential studies evaluating drug effects. Live on a research unit
at the NYS Psychiatric Institute for 22 days.
You can earn approximately $1479.
For more information (212) 543-6743.
Do you use uppers?
DOWNTOWN DI ALOGUE
CANYON OF HEROES
BY LIZ BERGER
I
n Lower Manhattan, we can walk and chew gum at the same time, a fact that helps
make the mile-long stroll up Broadway through the Canyon of Heroes a mobile
history lesson. Because embedded in the sidewalk along this route are more than
200 black granite strips that tell the story—in chronological order—of each ticker-tape
parade the city has held.
When we glance down to read the names of recipients etched into the strips, a
popular history of the United States, and a time line for Lower Manhattan, begins to
emerge—20 feet at a time.
Some of the names, titles and events inscribed in the Canyon of Heroes remain iconic
to this day. Some have grown obscure, and the significance of still others has changed
since the crowds gathered and the ticker-tape floated to the street.
Yet every citation for this distinctive New York honor offers a snapshot of the city
once upon a time. It’s hard to believe, for example, that Richard Nixon was once an
American hero, but indeed he was, in 1960, when he made his way up Broadway with
President Eisenhower.
Who gets a ticker-tape parade? There are no set criteria, but there are certain themes.
Triumph against all odds has often been rewarded—from 23-year old Van Cliburn’s 1958
victory at the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Cold War Moscow to the Amazing
Mets of 1969. A World Series win in general will do it, as with the Mets of 1986 and the
Yankees of 1978, 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000.
Sports heroes abound, such as Althea Gibson, 1957 Wimbledon women’s tennis
champion. So do war heroes like General John J. Pershing in 1919 and General Dwight
Eisenhower in 1945. There are leaders like Winston Churchill in 1946 and Nelson Man-
dela in 1990, and heads of state like David Ben-Gurion in 1951. There is also plenty of
royalty, from Queen Elizabeth II of Britain in 1957, to King Baudouin I of Belgium in
1959, to Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia in 1954 and 1963.
The successful conclusion to an extraordinary journey has often been celebrated.
Former President Theodore Roosevelt got a parade after his 1910 African safari. The
Apollo 11 astronauts got one after their return from the moon in 1969, and the Ameri-
can hostages in Tehran were cheered after their release in 1981.
Ambitious and courageous undertakings—no matter the resolution—have also been
commemorated, like Ruth Elder’s 1927 attempt to become the first woman to fly across
the Atlantic (she crashed in the Azores) and Genevieve de Galard-Terraube’s refusal—as
“the angel of Dien Bien Phu”—to leave wounded French soldiers in Vietnam.
One of my favorite parades was the 1984 salute to the more than 200 American medal
winners in the Los Angeles Olympic Games. The commemorative strip is in front of St.
Paul’s Chapel, between Fulton and Vesey. I was a marshal, escorting the Men’s Water
Polo team and their gold medals up Broadway to City Hall. More than 2 million people
came to Lower Manhattan that day to welcome the athletes, led by gymnast Mary Lou
Retton
The Canyon of Heroes was born in 1886 amid festivities for the unveiling of the Stat-
ue of Liberty. The parade during that extravaganza was marred by gray skies and drizzle,
but office boys brightened the celebration when they dumped huge bins of ticker-tape
out the windows of Broadway brokerage houses.
The latest parade celebrated the New York Giants’ stunning 2008 Super Bowl win,
this time with tons of paper supplied in advance. But the volume of confetti for that
one was low—36.5 tons, according to the New York Times— compared with 5,438 tons
tossed in the 1945 celebration of victory over Japan.
Joe Timpone, senior vice president for operations at the Downtown Alliance, says
part of the reason is windows in newer buildings that often don’t open, and building
owners who reduced access to rooftops and ledges after 9/11.
Though ticker-tape is gone in the computer age, I always look forward to a ticker-
tape parade, a chance to wave from a window or lamp post or street corner and to wit-
ness and celebrate the hopes and aspirations of our nation in a signature Lower Manhat-
tan way. Who knows who’s next?
- Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance
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downtown express
August 28 - September 3, 2009 31
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