October 2012

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T RIBECATRIB

Call for artificial turf on City Hall Park’s Tweed playground

Pier 40 given five years to live by Hudson River Park Trust What does it really take to be a magician for kids?

THE

Vol. 19 No. 2

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www.tribecatrib.com

OCTOBER 2012

HUNGRY EYES Tribeca artist Ken Brown seeks out the visual quirks of the city

Amour on Allen by Ken Brown

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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB M A N H AT TA N | B R O O K LY N | Q U E E N S | L O N G I S L A N D | T H E H A M P T O N S | T H E N O R T H F O R K | R I V E R D A L E | W E S T C H E S T E R / P U T N A M | F L O R I D A © 2012 BRER Affiliates Inc. An independently owned and operated broker member of BRER Affiliates Inc. Prudential, the Prudential logo and the Rock symbol are registered service marks of Prudential Financial, Inc. and its related entities, registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Used under license with no other affiliation with Prudential. Equal Housing Opportunity. All material presented herein is intended for information purposes only. While, this information is believed to be correct, it is represented subject to errors, omissions, changes or withdrawal without notice. All property information, including, but not limited to square footage, room count, number of bedrooms and the school district in property listings are deemed reliable, but should be verified by your own attorney, architect or zoning expert.

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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

TRIBECA TRIB

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Time to reconsider Otterness’s offer of sculpture at BPC library

THE

VOLUME 19 ISSUE 2 OCTOBER 2012

Winner National Newspaper Association First Place, Feature Photo, 2012 First Place, Feature Photo, 2011 Second Place, Local News Coverage, 2011 First Place, Breaking News Story, 2010 New York Press Association First Place, Sports Action Photo, 2012 Second Place, Special Section, 2012 First Place, Education Coverage, 2011 First Place, Photographic Excellence, 2011 Second Place, News Story, 2011 CUNY IPPIE AWARDS Second Place, Best Photograph, 2012

Publisher A PRIL K ORAL

Editor C ARL G LASSMAN

Associate Editor J ESSICA T ERRELL

Editorial Assistant E LIZABETH M ILLER

Contributors O LIVER E. A LLEN J ULIET HINDELL FAITH PARIS C ONNIE S CHRAFT J IM S TRATTON A LLAN TANNENBAUM Copy Editor J ESSICA R AIMI

Advertising Director D ANA S EMAN The Tribeca Trib

Published monthly (except Aug.) by The Tribeca Trib, Inc. 401 Broadway, 5th fl. New York, N.Y. 10013 212-219-9709 editor@tribecatrib.com Subscriptions : $50 for 11 issues The Trib welcomes letters. When necessary, we edit them for length and clarity.

TRIBECA

A PICTORIAL HISTORY BY OLIVER E. ALLEN

TRIBECAPICTORIALHISTORY.COM

To the Editor: Re: the Tribeca Trib’s article “Battery Park City President Gayle Horwitz to Resign Her Post” in your online edition. Less than two years ago, when Horwitz took over as the Authority’s President, the area was already known as the home of the art of sculptor Tom Otterness, whose work has delighted thousands of residents and passersby. In the spring of 2011, a community board 1 committee voted 5-to-1 to approve the donation by Tom Otterness of a group of lion sculptures for the entrance of the Battery Park City Library. The Battery Park City Authority, which had just been turned over to Ms. Horwitz, passed on the donation. Although she denied it, Ms. Horwitz might have been influenced by something horrible the artist had done in the 1970s: he had shot a dog in a short film as a form of war protest.

I cannot imagine banning art in our town due to an immoral past deed of an artist. Under such scrutiny, our libraries and museums would be nearly empty. Imagine if those who opposed abortion removed all museum art by women who had abortions? I love “Naked Lunch” by William Burroughs—didn’t he shoot and kill his wife? The Battery Park City and other local libraries have copies of “Naked Lunch.” Does this send a message that Otterness next time should kill his wife and not shoot a dog? The banned art should be revisited with Ms. Horwitz’s resignation. I strongly advise those at the Battery Park City Authority to accept this gift of community art, which has been thoroughly vetted and is from an artist whose work already adorns and is loved by our neighborhood. Tom Goodkind CB1 BPC Committee member

Food cart vendors don’t belong in City Hall Park

School waitlist situation is painted too rosy

To the Editor: What’s with the food carts in City Hall Park’s northeast plaza? It’s another case of the New York City Parks Department and Mayor Mike Bloomberg going back on their word. When the Friends of City Hall Park were asked in 2006, we said “absolutely no food carts,” and the Department of Parks and Recreation Commissioner Castro agreed. Within a half block of City Hall Park there are plentiful restaurants and food stores as well as other food carts. We don’t need the noise, smells, commerce, and tumult surrounding these carts (and the ice cream truck for that matter). Our rapidly growing neighborhood is desperate for calm green space, yet the mayor is taking away our quality of life right outside his window. Keep the park a park, and keep the vendors out. Skip Blumberg Founder/President Friends of City Hall Park

To the Editor: I read Connie Schraft’s article on P.S. 89 (September Trib), and am pleased that the school absorbed the remaining waitlisted children. But I was concerned with the tone of the article, which gave entirely too rosy a picture of our need for school seats and what it means to parents to have their child waitlisted. Certainly, there are families that dropped off the list as it was too disconcerting to wait until September for a possible seat. The column also failed to mention that this was only because P.S. 234 opened a 6th kindergarten (not possible next year, and accomplished by underserving special education kids) and because P.S. 276 took five kindergartens when its capacity is three. The fallout is that the school will have 29 students in its 1st grade this year and will not be able to admit a 5th grade or kindergarten in Fall 2013. Things will only get worse. We need the Trib to help us get the message out as you have in the past. Paul Hovitz Co-chair, CB1 Youth Committee

Jackie Robinson should be a role model for today’s athletes

To the Editor: Reading about the Jackie Robinson Museum planned for Varick and Canal streets in the September Trib reminded me that, sadly, most Americans— including many athletes—have forgotten the man who was not simply “The First Black MLB Player.” Born to a sharecropper family, and raised with his siblings by a single mother, he became an All-American athlete at UCLA. Forced to leave 6 8 14

T RIBECATRIB

Landmarks officials split over “green” roofs in Seaport

Pier 40 fate up for discussion by Hudson River Park Trust A Tribeca doorman takes the oath of a lifetime

THE

Vol. 19 No. 1

www.tribecatrib.com

SEPTEMBER 2012

STILL ON DECK Plans and pitfalls for the long-delayed

JACKIE ROBINSON MUSEUM [PAGE 4]

school for financial reasons, he enlisted in the Army and rose to rank of second lieutenant. Court-martialed for fighting racial discrimination—a charge later dropped—his greatest battle soon followed. When Dodger president Branch Rickey chose Robinson, a man of immense pride and self-respect, to break the color barrier, he told him he would face virulent hate and threats of violence, but that he could not resort to either physical or verbal retaliation. The inhuman stress Robinson endured for a great cause, his years of diabetes and its consequences undoubtedly led to his premature death at 53. Some of today’s athletes, bedecked in “bling” and tattoos, and always ready to fight anyone who contacts them too hard or “disses them,” should be ashamed at their concept of manhood compared to what Jackie Robinson endured for all people inside and outside the arena. John Brindisi

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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Artificial Turf at City Hall Playground? Peck Slip School principal lobbies for cleaner, healthier recess in historic park BY CARL GLASSMAN

Peck Slip is a new school inheriting a messy problem. The issue is the mostly dirt field in the northeast portion of City Hall Park that serves as the playground for the school, which opened last month in temporary quarters at Tweed Courthouse. Not that the school’s 46 kindergartners, who eagerly play on the sandy surface, pay it any mind. Outdoor recess among trees, squirrels, sticks and dirt is a luxury in the city. But Principal Maggie Siena says there’s a downside to this bit of nature and it calls for a solution: artificial turf. “We’re enjoying the results of a soak so it’s not so dusty today,” the principal told a visitor as she watched kids scamper about the grassless patch of park. “But [usually] when children are running across here you’d see dust kicked up and it’s not great to breathe in clouds of dust. It gets in your eyes, it is really dirty, and if it rains in the morning then it’s mud. So we’re tracking it into the building.” Artificial turf, she said, would provide 10 years of good use. “It would be cleaner for the kids and for the building. It’s just healthier generally and we wouldn’t be dealing with the dust and the mud.” The area has been resodded at least three times in the six years that various new schools have occupied classrooms on the first floor of Tweed. “We’ve seeded it and sodded it over the years and we’re going to have to do that again,” Bill Castro, the Parks Department's Manhattan Commissioner, told Community Board 1’s Seaport/Civic Center Committee last month. Castro said children would have to stay off the grounds for a month this year and again in late May to let the compacted soil aerate and the two applications of sod, at a cost of about $25,000, to knit. Siena, who attended the meeting, said she was glad the city wants to improve the space but was dismayed that

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

Above: Peck Slip kindergartners play next to Tweed Courthouse. Far left: Parks Manhattan Commissioner Bill Castro speaks at CB1 meeting. Left: Principal Maggie Siena.

students would lose the outdoor play. To the suggestion by community board members as well as the principal that artificial turf could be the solution, Castro said there are obstacles. At an estimated cost of $100,000 it may be too expensive, and it would not be appropriate in the historic park. He also referred to “what lies underneath that we don’t want to disturb.” That is, the sensitive issue that the area is a burial ground.

“I’m not saying no, but for the immediate future it’s not feasible,” he said. Nancy Harris, the principal of the Spruce Street School, which spent its first two years in Tweed, said the sod that was installed when she was there lasted about one calendar year and was “gorgeous” in the spring but not after children’s feet wore it down. “It obviously lends itself to mud when it’s wet and when it’s dry it’s a lit-

tle bit like a dust bowl situation. Dust flies up and the kids cough.” She said she was told artificial turf was not feasible because of the park’s landmark status. A request for comment from the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission was returned by the Parks Department. “We generally don’t install turf at historic parks but we will be installing new sod soon,” Parks spokesman Philip Abramson wrote in an email. Later, Siena said she was encouraged by a meeting with Namshik Yoon, Parks chief of operations, who she said told her that artificial turf remains a possibility. “They really want to work with us to find a long-term solution,” she said. The school will stay at Tweed until it opens in its own building in 2015 (see page 30). Siena said that gives her more time than previous principals had to lobby for funding for the turf. “This will be my project for three years,” she said, “and hopefully it will get done.”


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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

Standing before CB1’s Tribeca Committee, Matt Abramcyk pleads in vain for approval of a change to his Smith & Mills liquor license so he can serve alcohol to the additional eight seats.

Owner Rebuffed on Outdoor Liquor Citing outdoor alcohol service, CB1 may move to end seating at two Tribeca venues BY CARL GLASSMAN

Matt Abramcyk, co-owner of four bar-restaurants in Tribeca, got more than he bargained for when he went before Community Board 1 last month. What began as a routine request to alter two liquor licenses ended with the board threatening to end outdoor seating at the two establishments. Abramcyk’s tussle with the board began in March, when he applied for sidewalk cafe licenses for Smith & Mills, 71 North Moore St., and Tiny’s, 135 West Broadway. CB1’s Tribeca Committee gave its advisory approval for Tiny’s but, despite the owner’s pleas, rejected the 400-square-foot Smith & Mills, with its proposed four tables and eight chairs. The board has a policy: No sidewalk seating on “side streets.” The city’s Department of Consumer Affairs granted both licenses anyway— but Abramcyk and the Tribeca Committee were destined to meet again, this time over a required approval to amend his liquor license so that he could serve alcohol to the outdoor customers (up to eight for each of the establishments). In a rancorous exchange with the committee last month, Abramcyk argued that he needed the seating at Smith & Mills to survive the impact of street work on North Moore. Months of scaffolding had also hurt his business, he said.

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

Smith & Mills, where CB1 opposes the serving of alcohol at these four outdoor tables.

“Since I got the sidewalk café license I could make money. Nobody’s bothered by it that I’ve spoken with,” he said. Abramcyk claimed unfair treatment, citing the outdoor seats across the street at Locanda Verde and next door at Ivy’s. “I understand. You want to stand on precedent. I can’t do anything about it,” he told the committee. “I’m just telling you in this case there’s a sidewalk café right next door to me.” (Both of these restaurants are on corners, with seating wrapping around to the side street, for which CB1 usually makes an exception.) “We have some principled concerns that have been applied to dozens of cases,” committee member Mark Costello told Abramcyk. “And it’s not something

that’s made out of thin air. It’s a response from what we hear from our neighbors.” Only committee member Adam Malitz called for a reconsideration of the board’s blanket rejection of all applications for sidewalk cafes on side streets. “I really think we need to discuss this policy on a merit basis,” he said. (The same issue arose in June when the committee infuriated Luigi Iasilli over its denial of two outdoor tables for his bar/restaurant Max on Duane Street.) Abramcyk left the meeting visibly angry at the committee’s vote against his request for Smith & Mills. And then it only got worse for him. At the full board meeting, where the committee’s decision needed to be rati-

fied, committee member Roger Byrom stood to make an announcement. “I passed Tiny’s tonight and there were four tables and eight seats and they were serving liquor,” he said. The assertion that alcohol was being served before the license had been amended set the board off. They reversed their prior decision that would have allowed Tiny’s to serve alcohol outside and now voted against outdoor alcohol service at both restaurants. Michael Levine, the board’s director of planning and land use, suggested that Councilwoman Margaret Chin, through the City Council, could take away his outdoor seating licenses. “With all these outdoor cafes it’s a privilege and not a right, and we look for restaurant and bar owners to respect that privilege,” Byrom later told the Trib. “Step one in being a good neighbor is to follow the law.” Chin’s spokeswoman, Kelly Magee, said in an email that her office is looking into any history of complaints or violations involving Abramcyk’s restaurants. “If an operator consistently violates their sidewalk cafe license, it is likely that the City Council member will call the operator in for a hearing and potentially not renew their permit to operate,” she said. The Council does not have the power to revoke a license, she said, only to block its renewal. Abramcyk did not attend the full board meeting and learned of its decision in a call from the Trib. “Unbelievable,” he said, audibly stunned, and declined further comment.


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From left: Abraham De Peyster, mayor of New York from 1691 to 1694, is credited with promoting the use of public money to aid the poor; De Peyster’s statue in Bowling Green, photographed about 1940; and in its most recent public home, Hanover Square.

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

CHARLES W. CUSHMAN PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION / INDIANA STATE UNIVERSITY

NYC DEPT. OF PARKS AND RECREATION

New Home for an Old City Mayor City looks to relocate homeless 17th-century statue of mayor to park in Civic Center

BY JESSICA TERRELL Homeless and unwanted, a 355-yearold former mayor of New York City is finally returning to a place of distinction. Rising 15 feet atop his pedestal, the bronze statue of Abraham De Peyster, Dutch-born mayor of New York City during the late 1600s, has been bounced from park to park over the years and languished in storage since 2004. Now, it appears, he has found a home. “We’ve looked at about 30 locations for Mr. De Peyster over the past dozen years or so and for whatever reason every one has been eliminated because of location or interference with utilities,” George Bloomer, a Parks Department design supervisor, told Community Board 1’s Seaport Committee last month. The proposed new location is in the northwest section of Thomas Paine Park, at Worth and Lafayette streets. CB1 voted unanimously in favor of the location, though given De Peyster’s history, some wondered how long he would stay. “This poor guy has been evicted from [so many] places,” said board member John Fratta. The move was scheduled to be considered by the city’s Art Commission on Oct. 1. De Peyster was a man generous with both his money and his land. He pushed for the city to care for its paupers and donated space for a new city hall on Wall Street, the site of Federal Hall. In addition to serving as mayor, he was also a city comptroller, alderman and judge. “Quite aside from any family pride, I think it’s just a good idea to get it back on view,” William Ambler, an art historian and direct descendent of De Peyster, told the Trib in a phone interview. “He is most famous for being mayor but he was also the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in what was then the colony of New York. So putting him in front of the courthouse is also an appropriate spot.

A photo rendering of the statue in its proposed new location, on the north end of Thomas Paine Park in Foley Square. Community Board 1 endorsed the new location for the statue, which has been in storage for eight years. Thomas Paine Friends, Inc., said it would prefer to see a statue of Paine in the park because it is named after him.

And he did live on Pearl, then Queen Street, so it’s nearby there as well.” Commissioned in the late 1800s by one of De Peyster’s great-great-greatgrandsons, the seated solemn figure was created by the sculptor George Edwin Bissell. But no sooner had work begun on a foundation for the statue in Battery Park than it became the target of criticism and the city had to look for a new location. “The sentiment which promotes the erection of the statue to Abraham De Peyster is altogether commendable,” the New York Times wrote in spring of 1895. “But Battery Park is not the place for the effigy. There is no room for it. We have gone too far in the park statuary already.” Over yet other objections, the statue went to Bowling Green in 1896. (“Bowling Green is such a historic spot,” the president of the National Sculpture Society told the Times, “that the question naturally arises why it is not reserved for some artistic group, rather than merely a portrait statue.”) But after only a short time in

NYC DEPT. OF PARKS AND RECREATION

Bowling Green, De Peyster was donated to Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania. (According to the school’s website, it was a controversy over the scale and location of the statue that forced the move.) A slightly smaller replica was fabricated and placed back in the park. There it stayed for 76 years. But in 1972, Bowling Green underwent a major renovation and it was decided that De Peyster had to go. Next stop: Hanover Square. Atop a new pedestal, he stood there until 2004, when the Parks Department turned the site into the British Memorial Garden. This time, he had no place to go but storage. But Jonathan Kuhn, the Parks Department’s director of Landmarks and Relics, was determined to find him a home. One of the sites he selected was Tribeca’s Bogardus Garden, at Reade and Hudson streets. The community group that oversees the planted triangle said no. “It’s the James Bogardus Garden and having another person in there is confusing,” said Victoria Weil, president of Friends of Bogardus Garden. “We have a

vision for the future of the space and a large sculpture of an early mayor is not part of that vision.” It could be said that similar confusion may lie ahead when De Peyster resides in a park named for a different historical figure, Thomas Paine. “Our view would be that the city ought to put a statue of Thomas Paine in Thomas Paine Park,” said Martha Spiegelman, treasurer of Thomas Paine Friends, Inc., a group that worked with the Parks Department to have a plaque about Thomas Paine placed in the park in 2009. A statue of someone other than Paine, Spiegelman said, may diminish the park’s identification with the man it honors. But De Peyster descendant William Ambler defends the decision, partly for its recognition of the Dutch, who established the city as a center of commerce and, for its time, a place of tolerance. “It’s appropriate to have at least one or two of these old Dutch boys commemorated somewhere,” he said. —Additional reporting by Carl Glassman


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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Pier 40 Is Given Five Years to Live Hudson River Park Trust study details plan for closing down the structure in phases

BY JESSICA TERRELL The phased shutdown of Hudson River Park’s popular but crumbling Pier 40 has begun. In a newly completed study on the cost of repairing the mixed-use pier at Houston Street, the Hudson River Park Trust found it could afford to fix only the bare essentials for “life and safety” over the next five years. That is how long the pilings that support the structure are expected to last before they need to be overhauled, at a cost well beyond what the Trust can afford. “Essentially we will be operating Pier 40 in a liquidation mode from here forward,” Trust president Madelyn Wils told her board last month. “Areas not deemed to be essential will be shut down,” she later added. Pier 40, which serves as playing fields for Lower Manhattan leagues and a parking lot for many Downtown residents, was once meant to make money to help run the rest of Hudson River Park. But with some $30 million needed in roof repairs and $90 million to stabilize the weathered pilings, the Trust can afford to do little more than keep the building on temporary life support, Wils said. “After that, the cost of keeping this open will be far beyond anything we can possibly do,” she told the board, adding, “The best we can do is come up with a five-year plan.” The first area to close will probably be a southwest portion of the roof—as early as next year. Other rooftop parking areas, and perhaps office space below, could follow. Wils said the Trust believes it can maintain the athletic field and current 1,700 parking spaces for the duration of the five years. But the board’s chair, Diana Taylor, questioned whether it makes sense to put money into the pier if the Trust’s proposed legislation, allowing a variety of commercial uses, including residential, fails to pass. “If we’re shot down I say we don’t

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

Above: The Pier 40 playing field is partly ringed with parking, a major source of revenue for Hudson River Park. Right: Trust president Madelyn Wils presents the “managed” shutdown plan for the pier at last month’s HRPT board meeting.

put in another dime,” she said, “because we’re not going to get it back.” Changes to the Hudson River Park Act were introduced during the last legislative session, but were not acted on. Assemblywoman Deborah Glick, whose support is crucial to the amendments, is vehemently against residential buildings on the pier, saying the fields would become staging areas for construction and playing time would be curtailed if residential buildings occupy part of the site.

“Their approach up to now has been that residential is a silver bullet, and it’s an unacceptable approach,” Glick said. “It’s not the best use or the best thing for the pier.” Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said there will be no legislation until he has agreement among all the Assembly members who represent the park, which along with Glick includes Richard Gott-

fried, a strong proponent of the amended park act. “When we get a consensus from them we’ll move a bill,” he told the Trib. “Plain and simple.” For now the Trust is only making repairs deemed essential for safety. Moving forward, it plans to patch or shore up the roof instead of replacing it, and close off other areas once they are deemed unstable. In total, the Trust expects to spend about $14 million over the next five years to maintain its $25 million of income from the parking. Wils told the board that the Trust recently had to shut down the ground floor bathrooms that serve the ball fields and replace them with porta-potties after discovering that the plumbing system was in need of substantial repair. “It’s a grim picture,” said board member Franz Leichter, a former state senator and co-sponsor of the Hudson River Park Act. Following Wils’s presentation, Taylor echoed the sentiment. “Thank you for an excellent report,” she said. “I’m ready for a drink.”

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9

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

Work Goes On to Replace All of Walkways on Pier 25

BY JESSICA TERRELL from appearing—contractors must reLast month, less than two years after place all the material, several feet of it in the new, $40-million Pier 25 reopened to some places, before pavers are reinthe public, workers already began a stalled. The cost of the repairs is being major repair job—digging up and replac- absorbed by the contractors who did the ing all the pavers on original work, Wils the pier, as well as said. much of the materiThe disruption al beneath the pink to the pier has been and grey squares. a problem for the The work, Lilac, the historic which has first lighthouse tender closed off a large berthed on the section of the pier’s north side of the north side, will be pier. completed in the The Trust has “next couple of arranged for the months,” according Lilac to be accessito Hudson River ble for three Park Trust presiplanned events in dent Madelyn Wils, October, including who said the work Open House New will be done in York on Oct. 6 and stages and without 7. But the boat othclosing off the erwise remains off entire pier. limits to the public According to Work to replace the pavers on Pier 25 bethrough October, gan on the pier’s north side. the Trust, the probthe final month of lem occurred as a result of damaged its season. An exhibit of World War II material that prevented proper drainage. photographs, planned to open this The water turned to ice with the first month, was cancelled. But it may be the freeze, then contracted when it became first show in the spring, said Mary warm, causing the cracking. Habstritt, museum director of the Lilac To fix the cracks—and prevent more Preservation Project.

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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Dispute Behind Stalled BPC Center Authority admits to contract talks as future of community center remains in question BY JESSICA TERRELL

First it was a problem with boiler inspections. Then it was fire safety permits and sprinkler drawings and plumbing sign-offs. For nearly a year the Battery Park City Authority told increasingly frustrated residents that the repeated delays in opening its new $55-million community center were largely bureaucratic. Then last month, the BPCA finally confirmed what it had maintained was a community rumor: The Authority was indeed engaged in a contract dispute with the community center’s intended operator, Asphalt Green. “We have encountered difficulties in preparing to implement our contract with Asphalt Green, primarily because of the differing requirements for transparency and community participation BPCA must comply with in spending public money, as compared to a private organization,” recently appointed BPCA chairman Dennis Mehiel said in a statement on Sept. 12. “We are actively pursuing a solution that will allow the Center to open under terms and conditions that protect the assets we are charged with administering.” The Authority has been working with litigator Randy Mastro to see how the contract might be amended, Mehiel said in the statement, which was released just hours after Authority president Gayle Horwitz tendered her resignation. Neither Asphalt Green’s spokeswoman nor its executive director responded to multiple requests for comment, and both the Authority and Asphalt Green have declined to publicly reveal the substance of the dispute. Under the terms of the management contract, negotiated in 2009 by its previous administration, the Authority would pay for the center’s construction, equipment and furnishings, and all utilities and repairs as well as its annual operating budget, management fees and a portion of “corporate overhead expenses.” Any profit would be split between the Authority and Asphalt Green 60-40. But

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

Top: Exercise equipment stands unused in the completed Battery Park City community center. Above: Authority chair Dennis Mehiel and now-former president Gayle Horwitz.

the Authority could also face steep losses. The contract estimates a first-year deficit of $1.2 million. Former board member Charles Urstadt, who cast the sole vote against awarding the contract to Asphalt Green, said the Authority would have been better off leasing the space to a commercial gym that would have brought in rental income for the state agency. Money spent by the Authority subsidizing a community center detracts from the Authority’s original purpose of financing affordable housing across the city, said Urstadt, who was the Authority’s founding chairman.

“You’re simply taking money out of the hands and lives of people who need housing elsewhere in the city and can’t afford it,” he said, “and putting it in the hands of, first, the people who run Asphalt Green and, secondly, the people who use the facilities who may or may not live in Battery Park City.” According to the 2009 management agreement obtained by the Trib, delays in opening the center may be costing the Authority, too. According to the contract, once the pre-opening period extended past June, Asphalt Green can bill the Authority for management fees at the rate of $80 an hour.

The Authority has not responded to a request from the Trib to see those invoices or to be told whether they exist. “Somebody has got to sit down and treat this as a business investment and say, ‘How much is the Authority losing because of this contract?’” Urstadt said. “And then you’ve got to say, ‘What are the legalities of the contract? Can the Authority get out from under it?’ That’s a lot of homework that needs to be done.” Not so, says James Cavanaugh, the former Authority president who oversaw the contract negotiations. He said too much has been made of projected losses at the community center. “There ought not to be losses. This whole process was designed to provide an operating surplus,” Cavanaugh said, adding that he still believes that Asphalt Green will turn a profit within a few years of opening, while meeting the community needs. “You look at what someone has done and it’s a pretty good indicator of what someone will do,” Cavanaugh said of the Upper East Side sports and fitness center. “They are there to provide cultural betterment, fitness, community improvement. They are not really there to serve shareholders because they don’t have any.” Whatever the sources of the dispute, rescinding a contract is difficult, said James J. Terry, a government contract lawyer and partner at Zetlin & De Chiara LLP. (Terry did not review the Asphalt Green contract and was not commenting on it specifically.) Terry said it takes a “mutual mistake or a material misrepresentation by one of the parties” to cancel a contract. It also might be possible if circumstances have changed so dramatically that it is not possible or practical to carry out the contract. “Those are tough standards to meet,” he said. In the meantime, residents, some who signed up for memberships as early as last fall, remain dismayed. “The [residents] are the people who are being hurt by this,” said Erica Teresko, a mother of two who believes the center would have had a better chance of making a profit for the Authority if it had not been delayed so long. “[The Authority] is setting them up for failure.”


11

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

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13

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

Luis Cabezas

Daniel Murphy

CARL GLASSMAN

Capture of Rape Suspect Recalled by Park Officers BY CARL GLASSMAN Days after the rape of a 21-year-old woman in Hudson River Park near Harrison Street, Parks Enforcement Patrol officers gave their own account of how they helped capture the paroled suspect Sept. 23 in the normally tranquil park. Officers Daniel Murphy and Luis Cabezas said they had just come on duty in the park around 5 a.m. when the victim came running toward them almost immediately after the attack, screaming that she had been raped. “She ran towards us completely naked,” Murphy told the Trib following a press conference near the site of the attack. “My partner [Cabezas] saw the suspect and took off after him. I put her in the back seat, covered her with a blanket and took off.” “She was distraught, very distraught,” he said. Murphy said the suspect, Jonathan Stewart, 25, was shirtless and silent when he was cornered about a block away, lying down in the West Street median at North Moore Street. “NYPD got him but we were in pursuit of him and we cornered him onto the median,” Murphy said. “He had nowhere to go.” Murphy said only about three minutes elapsed between the attack and the suspect’s capture. “You were here when we really need-

ed you,” said City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who stood with the officers at a news conference in the park. “And thank God for that.” Madelyn Wils, president of Hudson River Park Trust, said this was the first incident of violent crime in the park. “We’re very grateful that we have our PEP officers here,” said Wils, who called Hudson River Park one of the best protected in the city. “The park opens at 6 a.m. and yet we do have our officers here all day and all night long and it was because of that the victim was taken care of right away and the perpetrator was apprehended very quickly.” Police say the victim was sitting on a park bench when Stewart sat down beside her and engaged her in conversation. Stewart then hit the woman in the face, tried to strangle her and then dragged her into the bushes and sexually assaulted her, according to police. Stewart is a registered sex offender who was released from prison in July for a parole violation. He had served five years for sexual assault in 2004. After his arrest, Stewart was taken to Bellevue Hospital for evaluation and stayed there for his video arraignment on Sept. 26 while recovering from a suicide attempt. He is charged with first degree rape and first degree sexual misconduct. The victim was treated at Beth Israel Hospital and released.

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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

POLICE BEAT

REPORTED FROM THE 1ST PRECINCT

89 SOUTH

387 BROADWAY

Sept. 1...3:50 a.m. A man was attacked by a group of men who punched his face repeatedly and stole his iPhone and $250. He was taken to the hospital with injuries.

Sept. 15...5:15 p.m. An Occupy Wall Street protester attempted to punch an officer clearing the sidewalk. He then resisted arrest.

FULTON & PEARL Sept. 1...noon A thief stole a wallet from a woman’s stroller and used her credit card to purchase sunglasses.

Sept. 15...7:14 p.m. Also during an Occupy Wall Street demonstration, police arrested a 42-year old man who assaulted a police officer, throwing him to the ground and punching him.

35 MURRAY Sept. 12...7:30 p.m. Thieves snatched a purse hanging off the back of a diner’s chair. It contained an iPhone and $100.

FRONT & WALL Sept. 14...11:50 p.m. A tourist from Mexico who was staying at a nearby hostel was approached from behind by two men who brandished a handgun and demanded his belongings. The tourist handed over his wallet, which contained a driver’s license and several credit cards. 111 SOUTH Sept. 14...11:55 p.m. Police arrested a 23-year-old woman and two 24-year-old men for assault. The victim, 22, was standing outside the bar smoking when the woman approached and asked him for a cigarette. When he said no, the woman punched him and ripped off his earring. Two men then joined in the fray, kicking and punching him.

11 PARK PLACE Sept. 15...2:30 a.m. What started out as a verbal argument between two strangers turned into a robbery, when one of the women ripped a gold necklace valued at $600 off the other and threw it on the ground. The woman who snatched the necklace told a friend to pick it up, and the two ran off together.

300 ALBANY Sept. 15...2 p.m. A thief stole a 2007 Honda motorcycle that had been parked without a lock or alarm.

287 BROADWAY

GOUVERNEUR & SOUTH Sept. 16...7 p.m. A woman was talking on her cell phone when a man came up from behind her and snatched it.

15

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PINE & NASSAU Sept. 17...8:05 a.m. During Occupy Wall Street, police arrested a protester who struck three officers, flailing his arms and legs while being subdued.

30 NEW Sept. 19...1 p.m. A customer placed her wallet on the counter and left without it. By the time she realized her mistake, the wallet had been stolen.

89 SOUTH Sept. 20...9:49 a.m. Police arrested one suspected thief and searched unsuccessfully for a second, after two young men attacked a 69year-old man, putting him in a hold and stealing his camera. 217 BROADWAY Sept. 20...2 p.m. A thief removed a lock from a gym locker and took a man’s wallet. BROAD & BEAVER Sept. 21...9:15 a.m. Police arrested a 73-year-old man whom witnesses observed breaking into a car and stealing a $300 bag, $575 in cash, $400 eyeglasses and an iPod.

119 CHAMBERS

70 GREENWICH

Sept. 21...4:30 p.m. A woman was bumped on the street by a pickpocket who stole her wallet, which contained $600.

Sept. 15...4 p.m. A thief broke the rear window of a car in a garage, and took an iPad, an iPod and two digital cameras.

Sept. 22...12:47 a.m. Two thieves jostled a woman and stole her iPhone.

SOUTH & BEEKMAN

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OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Tribeca Loft Tour

Friends of Duane Park will be hosting the 13th annual Tribeca loft tour on Sunday, Oct. 14, from 1 to 5 p.m. Advance tickets for the self-guided tour are available online for $60 or can be purchased for $65 (subject to availability) starting at 12:30 p.m. on the day of the tour in Duane Park, at Hudson and Duane streets. Proceeds from sales go to the upkeep and improvement of the park. Tickets at duanepark.org.

Halloween Help Wanted

The Friends of Washington Market Park are seeking volunteers for their annual Halloween parade and party, which will take place on Sunday, Oct. 28. Volunteers will be needed at the park from 11 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. for event setup, from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. for the event, and from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. for cleanup. Volunteer groups are welcome. Email HalloweenWMP@gmail.com.

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Radio Jarocho, a musical group that plays son jarocho music from the countryside of Veracruz, Mexico, will lead a fandango celebration in honor of the Mexican holiday honoring the dead (Dia de los Muertos) on Monday, Oct. 29, at 6:30 p.m. There will be a dance lesson, followed by a party. The free event is at the World Financial Center Winter Garden. worldfinancialcenter.com.

At African Burial Ground

This is Tribeca, like you never saw it.

The African Burial Ground, at 290 Broadway, will be hosting numerous free activities for adults and young people from Tuesday, Oct. 2 to Sunday, Oct. 7, from 10 a.m. to mid-afternoon. Events include talks on African musical traditions and culture, dance performances, tours of the outdoor memorial, a choral performance, documentary film screenings, African drumming and more. For a detailed schedule and more events go to nps.gov/afbg.

Etty’s Diaries

“Etty,” a one-woman performance about Esther “Etty” Hillesum, a young Dutch Jewish woman who died at Auschwitz in 1943, will be performed by Susan Stein at the Anne Frank Center at 44 Park Pl. The play, adapted from Hillesum’s letters and diaries written during the Nazi occupation, will be shown on Wednesday, Oct. 17, at 6 p.m. Tickets; $12, $8 students and seniors. Reservations at annefrank.com.

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Bogardus Garden Fest

Friends of Bogardus Garden’s second annual Harvest Festival will take place on Saturday, Oct. 27, from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. There will be autumninspired arts and crafts activities, children’s face painting, and cookie and cupcake decorating. The Jordan Young Trio will perform upbeat tunes, and complimentary mini-cupcakes as well as hot coffee and apple cider will be available. Bogardus Garden and Plaza is at Reade and Hudson streets. bogardusgarden.org.

Free Plants and More

The Downtown Alliance is sponsoring two events this month as part of its “Green Around Downtown” program. On Wednesday, Oct. 10, from 10 a.m. to noon, the Alliance is giving away 4,000 geraniums during its “Adopt-A-Geranium” day. The “Fall Community Planting” is on Saturday, Oct. 20, from 10 a.m. to noon. Volunteers are invited to help plant thousands of tulip bulbs that will bloom next spring. There will also be complimentary snacks and family activities. Both events are at Bowling Green Park at Broadway and Whitehall Street. DowntownNY.com.

Insider Look at Bailout

Neil Barofsky, who was in charge of protecting against abuse and fraud in the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), a $700-million program to prop up the nation’s banks after the 2008 financial crisis, will speak about his newly published book, “Bailout: An Inside Account of How Washington Abandoned Main Street While Rescuing Wall Street,” at a talk at the Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall St., on Thursday, Oct. 25, from 5:30 to 7 p.m. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A, book signing and reception. Tickets, which may be purchased in advance, are $15 at moaf.org.

Embedded Journalism

The role of embedded journalists, the risks they face, and the ethical implications of their presence as civilians in military units will be explored in a discussion at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Place, on Sunday, Oct. 14, at 2:30 p.m. The panel will include Judith Matloff of the Columbia Journalism School; Santiago Lyon, director of photography, Associated Press; Quil Lawrence of NPR; and Los Angeles Times photographer Carolyn Cole. Tickets can be purchased at mjhnyc.org or at the museum. $10, $7 students/seniors.

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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

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SECOND FLOOR

ListingID: 937191

Stunning 4 bedroom / 3.5 bath loft features 13+ foot ceilings with interiors by world-renowned designer Leopoldo Rosati, in c o l l a b o r a t i o n w i t h O C V A rc h i t e c t s . F e a t u r i n g t h e f i n e s t finishes and craftsmanship, each bespoke condominium PGGFST UIF IJHIFTU MFWFM PG QSJWBDZ BT B GVMM n PPS SFTJEFODF BOE is complemented by a part-time doorman / concierge, 24-hour Virtual Doorman, private g y m , l a r g e p r i v a t e s t o r a g e u n i t f o r e a c h h o m e a n d bicycle storage.

ROBERT DVORIN Senior Vice President, Associate Broker (917) 365-0040 rdvorin@townrealestate.com

IAN WOLF Representative, Licensed Salesperson (646) 269-7236 iwolf@townrealestate.com

EBEN MACNEILLE Representative, Licensed Salesperson (646) 738-6941 emacneille@townrealestate.com

TOWN Residential, LLC is a licensed real estate broker and proud member of REBNY. Town Residential LLC is a partnership with Thor Equities LLC. We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Nation. We encourage and support an affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. All information is from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, prior sale or withdrawal without notice. No representation is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. Exact dimensions can be obtained by retaining the services of an architect or engineer. Sponsor: 334 Canal Realty Corp. The complete offering terms are in an offering plan available from the sponsor. File Number: CD-090376


Tokyo Bay

18

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Elegant Sushi & Japanese Dishes in an Intimate Setting

autentica cucina italiana 181 duane street (greenwich & hudson)

TR IB E C A 212.966.5939

Our fish comes from South America, California, New Zealand, Canada and Norway—and some special fish from Japan. “Tokyo Bay looks like most other sushi dens in the city, but the fish is better. The sushi and sashimi options are extensive...and the rolls are creative.” — Metro NY

Party Trays of sushi, sashimi & special rolls available for large or small events. FOR ONLINE ORDERING, CATERING, RESERVATIONS AND GIFT CERTIFICATES VISIT MAX-NY.COM

183 Duane Street 212.431.8666 LUNCH Mon–Fri: 11:30am–3pm DINNER Mon–Thu 5–10:45pm; Fri 5–11:15pm; Sat 5–11pm; Sun 5–10:15pm

Free Delivery

Open 7 Days a Week Lunch 12–5pm Mon-Sat Dinner 6pm–12am Mon–Sat Dinner 5–11pm Sun Brunch 12–5pm Sun Happy Hour 4–7pm Mon–Fri

273 Church Street bet. Franklin & White 212.219.0640


19

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012 Thinking of entertaining or just dining out? Come join us at Ecco Restaurant! Serving Tribeca for almost three decades has earned us our reputation for being consistently one of the finest eateries in the neighborhood.

g Prix Fixe Menu available for Lunch & Dinner g Please inquire for private events.

Sushi of Gari Tribeca is now open. Experience the innovative

Sushi of Gari Signature Omakase or

124 Chambers St.

(bet. W. B’way & Church)

our exceptional

a la carte sushi

eccorestaurantny.com

212.227.7074 Mon-Fri 11:45am-11pm Sat 5-11pm

Buon Appetito!

130 WEST BROADWAY 212-285-0130 5:30-11:30 PM OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

$30 BRUNCH MENU SPECIAL Unlimited...Bellini, Mimosa, Bloody Mary and a Main Course from the Brunch Menu.

Unlimited...CHAMPAGNE VEUVE CLIQUOT at the bar area 363 Greenwich Street 212.965.0555 trattoriacinquenyc.com


20

1calendar

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Serving your Real Estate needs for the last 25 years. Custombrokersnyc.com

CUSTOM BROKERS REAL PROPERTY - REAL PEOPLE

Greenwich Street Doorman Two Bedroom Condo

Community Board 10/1 HOUSING 6 PM

10/9 YOUTH & EDUCATION 6 PM

1) Stabilization efforts in FiDi. Update by Paul Newell, Save FiDi Alliance 2) Independence Plaza North. Update by Diane Lapson, President, IPN Tenants Association 3) Unit ownership and delegation of tasks to complete newest guide. Discussion 4) Lower Manhattan Senior Business Plan. Discussion of next steps

1) WTC health update by Terry Miles of the WTC Environmental Health Center, NYC Health and Hospitals Corp., and Dr. Dori Reissman of National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (invited) 2) School overcrowding. Semi-annual update by Professor Eric Greenleaf 3) Permit process for ball fields. Update by Mark Costello, CB 1 Board Member

10/2 SEAPORT/CIVIC CENTER 6 PM 1) South Street Seaport Museum’s future. Discussion with Susan Henshaw Jones, President. 2) Community facilities on the east side of CB1. Report by Diana Switaj, CB1 Urban Fellow 3) Pier 17 Update. Discussion The following notices for applications have been received: 229 Front St., application for renewal of liquor license for K229 87 Baxter St., application for renewal of wine and beer license for Nha Trang

10/2 BATTERY PARK CITY 6 PM

Gorgeous Corner Unit Two Bedroom / Two Bathroom home in a full service condo building. Sprawling layout with loft-like feel. Second Bedroom has sliding doors adding even more flow to Living Room Area...or could be closed for Bedroom use. Dramatic full wall of custom made Poliform closets in Master Bedroom. Light filled Living Room with floor to ceiling windows facing South and West!! Tom Bohan Associate Broker Common Roof Deck. Pet Friendly building. 917 992 3050

Listed at $1,295,000

COMING THIS FALL

Tribeca’s premier Personal Training Studio since 2003 is EXPANDING!

Location: BPC Library, 175 North End Ave. 1) BPC Authority. Update (tentative) 2) NY Waterways Ferry Re-powering Program. Update by CEO Paul Goodman (tentative) 3) BPCA Special Event permit application procedure. Discussion 4) BPC committee goals. Discussion The following notice for applications has been received: 200 Vesey St., application for renewal of wine and beer license for Au Mandarin

10/3 FINANCIAL DISTRICT 6 PM

Gym Membership OPTION 4,000-SQUARE-FOOT Functional Fitness Facility We look forward to you being part of our family

THELIVEWELLCOMPANY.COM

212.431.5752 256 WEST STREET BET. LAIGHT & VESTRY Like to join our team? Call us. We’re now interviewing talented trainers!

1) 56 Leonard St. project. Introduction by Lend Lease US Construction Co. 2) Sidewalk cafe regulations. Presentation by City Council staff 3) 2 Sixth Ave., application for alteration of liquor license for Tribeca Grand Hotel. Resolution 4) 165 Church St., application for wine and beer license for Sole Di Capri. Resolution 5) 33 Leonard St., application for renewal of sidewalk license for Square Diner. Resolution 6) Newsstand application for the SW corner West Broadway and Leonard. Resolution The following notices for applications have been received: 159 Duane St., renewal of liquor license for Weatherup 130 Franklin St., renewal of wine and beer license for Pecan 90 Chambers St., renewal of liquor license for Jerry’s Cafe

10/11 LANDMARKS, SEAPORT/CIVIC CENTER, PLANNING & WATERFRONT 6 PM

1) MTA Fulton Street Transit Center. Update by Uday Durg, program executive for Lower Manhattan projects 2) Application for newsstand at Wall Street and Pearl, SE corner. Resolution 3) 79 Pearl St. a/k/a 46 Stone St., application for restaurant liquor license for Smoke House 4) 123 Washington St. W Hotel Plaza Café. Discussion 5) New York Stock Exchange security plan on Broad Street and rotating bollards. Update The following notices for applications have been received: 54 Pearl St., renewal of restaurant liquor license for Fraunces Tavern 76 Pearl St., renewal of restaurant wine and beer license for Excel Food Corp. 104 John St., renewal of liquor license for Bonchon Chicken 79 Pearl St., renewal of liquor license for Smoke House

1) Pier 17, application for new signage. Resolution

10/4 PLANNING, SEAPORT/CIVIC CENTER/WATERFRONT & LANDMARKS 6 PM

10/18 QUALITY OF LIFE 6 PM

Location: NYS Assembly Hearing Room, 250 Broadway, 19th Floor 1) South Street Seaport Pier 17 Land Use Review application. Resolution

ONE ON ONE Personal Training

10/10 TRIBECA 6 PM

10/11 LANDMARKS COMMITTEE 6:30 PM 1) 272 Water St., application for bulkhead and window replacement. Resolution 2) 2 North Moore St., application for alteration of existing rooftop pergola. Resolution

10/15 WATERFRONT & TRIBECA 6 PM 1) Neighborhood Improvement District proposal by Friends of Hudson River Park. Resolution 2) Hudson River Park Trust. Discussion with Madelyn Wils, President 3) Hudson River Park State Legislation. Discussion with Assemblymember Deborah Glick

10/15 WATERFRONT 7 PM 1) East River Esplanade. Update by NYC Economic Development Corporation 2) Maintenance of Route 9A. Report 3) Crime prevention on the waterfront. Resolution 1) Rules for delivery bicycles. Presentation by NYC DOT

10/23 CB MONTHLY MEETING 6 PM Location: South Street Seaport Museum, 12 Fulton St., 5th floor


21

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

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22

23

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

On Moore Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Ken Brown stops to photograph one of the many street murals in the neighborhood. Each day he rides his bike to a graphicsrich destination in the city, then takes the subway home.

MAN STREET

Umbrella Woman, South Street Seaport

CARL GLASSMAN

ON THE

R

Shipping Department, Bushwick

Tribeca artist Ken Brown has turned his lifelong passion for quirky graphics into a daily prowling amid the “visual vitality” of the city. BY CARL GLASSMAN iding his bike down a Bushwick backstreet, Ken Brown stopped beside a half-block-long stretch of wall, masterfully covered with graffiti. First he photographed a colorful slice of pizza riding a bicycle, then leaned in close to document just one small detail, a rabbit. “I’ve always found rabbit images kind of fun,” he said, taking a few more snaps. “I have a whole file on animals in street art.” Animals, old storefronts, hand-painted signs, words on walls, stenciled graffiti, tourists photographing tourists in front of graffiti. These are just a few of the 40 files of street photos into which are digitally tucked more than 60,000 pictures. They are the products of years of nearly daily forays by bike into the farthest reaches of the city. “I have hungry eyes,” he said. “They like to be fed.” Most often his pictures incorporate the fleeting treasures of street art, or the fast-disappearing graphics of hand-painted signs, or some odd juxtaposition of person and graphic. “I see myself as artist and archivist,” he

said. “I wear both hats.” “When I record it,” he added, “I’m hoping in some way to further its life and celebrate it. What I really do is celebrate the visual vitality of New York City.” Brown, 68, calls himself a “filmmaker/photographer/cartoonist/designer,” which only partially describes the eclectic scope of his creative life. In the early 1970s, he was a filmmaker and film teacher in Boston who also liked to draw. He began selling his cartoon graphics on postcards in 1975 and they were a hit. Then he expanded: coffee mugs, T-shirts, rubber stamps, calendars, temporary tattoos, refrigerator magnets, hats were all sold bearing his creations. With success came the purchase in 1985 of a fourth-floor former cheese warehouse on Harrison Street, where he moved with his wife, the animator Lisa Crafts. “Lisa once described my business as a lemonade stand that got out of control,” he said with pride. The loft is a testament to the kind of visual delight that sparked his success as a maker

Skateboarder with Woody, Bushwick

CARL GLASSMAN

Brown in the Harrison Street apartment where he has lived with his wife, Lisa Crafts, since 1985 and where they raised their daughter, Jemma, in a funhouse of ephemera from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. He says he has run out of room to collect any more pieces. “I’ve basically curtailed my tchotchke accumulation to almost zero,” he says.

of pop fun. No surface is lacking kitschy ephemera, mostly small figures from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s: Humpty Dumpties and sumo wrestlers, anthropomorphic salt and pepper shakers and miniature Shriners. “My daughter, Jemma, used to be embarrassed by my bunny collection,” he said. Showing a visitor around the loft, Brown paused at a collection of vintage Christmas figurines. “These are plastic snowmen and Santa Clauses that I actually could justify because I used them for wrapping paper designs.” Some of the “oddabilia,” as Brown calls it, also had starring roles on “Sesame Street” during the 12 years that he and crafts created animated segments for the show. While the cultural and commercial changes brought by the Internet slowed the demand for his quirky style of graphics, it did nothing to diminish his output of visual surprises. Seven years ago, with more time on his hands and “just to keep the synapses snapping,” he began creating a political cartoon, a collage or other graphic that he emailed them to family and friends.

PHOTOS BY KEN BROWN

Over time Brown turned to photography, and for the past three years he’s been “publishing” his weekly “PixPop” photos to an email list that has grown to nearly a thousand. Each week he culls 300 to 400 images from recent bike trips to Williamsburg or Harlem or Coney Island—anywhere that could yield the assorted riches of street art that he is committed to preserving. “The not so nice part of street art is that it’s ephemeral,” he said. “And the nice part is that it changes all the time.” Even along the familiar paths of Bushwick recently, there were freshly painted possibilities that kept the artist excited anew. “I see some stuff I haven’t seen before,” he announced suddenly. “I think I’ll take a left here.” Brown stopped his bike in front of the graffitied aluminum facade of a warehouse and aimed his camera at a stubbly cartoon face, its pupilless eyes staring back at him. “I have a file of about 1,500 heads,” he said gleefully. “I have to get this!” See more from Ken Brown at kenbrownpixpop.blogspot.com.

Frankenghost, Flatbush Avenue

Ivy, Eyes, Red Hook


22

23

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

On Moore Street in Bushwick, Brooklyn, Ken Brown stops to photograph one of the many street murals in the neighborhood. Each day he rides his bike to a graphicsrich destination in the city, then takes the subway home.

MAN STREET

Umbrella Woman, South Street Seaport

CARL GLASSMAN

ON THE

R

Shipping Department, Bushwick

Tribeca artist Ken Brown has turned his lifelong passion for quirky graphics into a daily prowling amid the “visual vitality” of the city. BY CARL GLASSMAN iding his bike down a Bushwick backstreet, Ken Brown stopped beside a half-block-long stretch of wall, masterfully covered with graffiti. First he photographed a colorful slice of pizza riding a bicycle, then leaned in close to document just one small detail, a rabbit. “I’ve always found rabbit images kind of fun,” he said, taking a few more snaps. “I have a whole file on animals in street art.” Animals, old storefronts, hand-painted signs, words on walls, stenciled graffiti, tourists photographing tourists in front of graffiti. These are just a few of the 40 files of street photos into which are digitally tucked more than 60,000 pictures. They are the products of years of nearly daily forays by bike into the farthest reaches of the city. “I have hungry eyes,” he said. “They like to be fed.” Most often his pictures incorporate the fleeting treasures of street art, or the fast-disappearing graphics of hand-painted signs, or some odd juxtaposition of person and graphic. “I see myself as artist and archivist,” he

said. “I wear both hats.” “When I record it,” he added, “I’m hoping in some way to further its life and celebrate it. What I really do is celebrate the visual vitality of New York City.” Brown, 68, calls himself a “filmmaker/photographer/cartoonist/designer,” which only partially describes the eclectic scope of his creative life. In the early 1970s, he was a filmmaker and film teacher in Boston who also liked to draw. He began selling his cartoon graphics on postcards in 1975 and they were a hit. Then he expanded: coffee mugs, T-shirts, rubber stamps, calendars, temporary tattoos, refrigerator magnets, hats were all sold bearing his creations. With success came the purchase in 1985 of a fourth-floor former cheese warehouse on Harrison Street, where he moved with his wife, the animator Lisa Crafts. “Lisa once described my business as a lemonade stand that got out of control,” he said with pride. The loft is a testament to the kind of visual delight that sparked his success as a maker

Skateboarder with Woody, Bushwick

CARL GLASSMAN

Brown in the Harrison Street apartment where he has lived with his wife, Lisa Crafts, since 1985 and where they raised their daughter, Jemma, in a funhouse of ephemera from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. He says he has run out of room to collect any more pieces. “I’ve basically curtailed my tchotchke accumulation to almost zero,” he says.

of pop fun. No surface is lacking kitschy ephemera, mostly small figures from the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s: Humpty Dumpties and sumo wrestlers, anthropomorphic salt and pepper shakers and miniature Shriners. “My daughter, Jemma, used to be embarrassed by my bunny collection,” he said. Showing a visitor around the loft, Brown paused at a collection of vintage Christmas figurines. “These are plastic snowmen and Santa Clauses that I actually could justify because I used them for wrapping paper designs.” Some of the “oddabilia,” as Brown calls it, also had starring roles on “Sesame Street” during the 12 years that he and crafts created animated segments for the show. While the cultural and commercial changes brought by the Internet slowed the demand for his quirky style of graphics, it did nothing to diminish his output of visual surprises. Seven years ago, with more time on his hands and “just to keep the synapses snapping,” he began creating a political cartoon, a collage or other graphic that he emailed them to family and friends.

PHOTOS BY KEN BROWN

Over time Brown turned to photography, and for the past three years he’s been “publishing” his weekly “PixPop” photos to an email list that has grown to nearly a thousand. Each week he culls 300 to 400 images from recent bike trips to Williamsburg or Harlem or Coney Island—anywhere that could yield the assorted riches of street art that he is committed to preserving. “The not so nice part of street art is that it’s ephemeral,” he said. “And the nice part is that it changes all the time.” Even along the familiar paths of Bushwick recently, there were freshly painted possibilities that kept the artist excited anew. “I see some stuff I haven’t seen before,” he announced suddenly. “I think I’ll take a left here.” Brown stopped his bike in front of the graffitied aluminum facade of a warehouse and aimed his camera at a stubbly cartoon face, its pupilless eyes staring back at him. “I have a file of about 1,500 heads,” he said gleefully. “I have to get this!” See more from Ken Brown at kenbrownpixpop.blogspot.com.

Frankenghost, Flatbush Avenue

Ivy, Eyes, Red Hook


24

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

It’s Time We Gave City Dogs Their Due

We are open on Sundays!

We now offer

MONTHLY “PAY-AS-YOU-GO”

MAILBOX RENTAL. ASK US ABOUT IT!

Complete line of boxes & moving/packaging supplies We ship via Air, Ground or International, using DHL, FedEx, UPS & Postal Service Ask about our freight service Pick-up and delivery of boxes (when available) Ask about our packaging Service & Moving Services We pack & ship antiques & art 295 GREENWICH ST. • 212.964.5528

mbetribeca.com Mon-Fri 8-7 Sat 10-5

Sun 11-4

WE DO PASSPORT PHOTOS!

Let us do your shredding!

When I was a teenager we had a dog, Daffy, a cocker spaniel who had left another owner and adopted us, because we were a family with three active boys. Through more than a few years of family stress, that little dog was a powerful emotional medicine for all of us. It wasn’t for another half-century that I realized again how strong a friendship can be between a person and a dog. Eloise was a mini-Schnauzer owned by friends who lived on Hudson Street. She was 14 pounds of love and attitude who quickly adopted me and my family into her pack. My wife, who is allergic to animal fur, discovered that the hypoallergenic breed did not affect her. JIM Entranced STRATTON’S by the tiny personality of our new canine friend, we soon obtained our own miniSchnauzer in 2004. He was a tiny, very affectionate puppy who chose us CITY as much as we CHARRETTE chose him. We named him Aengus, after the Gaelic god of love. Aengus and Eloise became reluctant playmates, overseeing their territories as their humans interacted. And as much as I loved Aengus, Eloise and I remained an item whenever our interspecies paths crossed. She would run the length of a sidewalk if she caught sight of me, and I would do the same for her. It can be difficult to keep dogs in the city, but doing so helps maintain some stability in a hyperactive metropolitan world. We see to their needs, they see to our emotional well-being. And there is nothing like spending an hour or two walking the streets with a puppy, or watching the wildness of a dog run, to distract a person from the responsibilities of humdrum life. As to dog runs, Aengus likes the northern one in Battery Park City, a

great place for smaller dogs that offers a long space ideal for chasing. The Leroy Street run adjacent to Pier 40 is better for nice-day outings, because it takes a long walk along the beautiful riverfront to get there. Aengus’s favorite had been the run fenced into the city-owned space behind P.S. 234, which now, unfortunately, has become privatized. While this has caused a stir among some dog owners, there is some justification. High costs of cleanup and problems with kids invading the space had to be handled, with its leadership deciding that it should be kept locked and its costs passed on to users. My view is that dog owners should again descend upon the community board, ring up the councilmember, and this time bring along canine picketers. There is no reason the city can’t provide the pittance needed to support this dog run. Especially in a time of economic troubles, puppies are an aid to emotional health. We should treat them right. On a picket line, however, my Aengus might not be a best in show. Like many of his breed, Aengus is intelligent but quirky. He knows many commands, but evaluates them like a driver approaching a stop sign. Yes, he will stay and sit, but only for as long as he deems necessary. Yes, he will stop barking at a stranger, but only after the tithe of a treat has been paid. Aengus is very different from the more docile Eloise, his friend and playmate for much too short a time. Eloise died in 2006, one of the many unreported victims of 9/11. Walked several times a day on pavement made poisonous by the toxic winds, her entire body became riddled by cancer. Eloise died in the arms of her owner, who could not bear to have her tiny friend put down. Many dogs, smaller of body and lower to the ground than their humans, died horrible, painful deaths in the years that followed 9/11, even as the people in charge were denying that an environmental problem existed. Nearly every day when we pass Eloise’s former door, Aengus will stop and sniff. He still remembers his friend Eloise, and so do I.

Don’t forget the online

TRIB

TRIBECATRIB.COM


25

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

The New

TRIBECA

Our Halloween Treats are

wickedly

de l icious

If Sarabeth was your mother, you’d be coming home for dinner.

Order online!! 179 Duane St. • 212.274.8447 • Mon-Sat 8am-7pm • Sun 9am-5pm

339 Greenwich Street (bet. Harrison & Jay Sts.) New York, NY 10013 Special Events: Call Mini 212.966.0421

From the finest vineyards of Italy

BRITE BUY WINE & SPIRITS INVITES YOU TO A TASTING

OF THE AWARD-WINNING WINES OF TENUTA SANTA MARIA ALLA PIEVE. HOSTED BY GIOVANNI BERTANI, PROPRIETOR

Friday, October 26, 4 to 7 pm, at our new store at 68 Franklin St. Featuring: Torre Pieve Chardonnay, Decima Aurea (Merlot Ripasso), Valpolicella Ripasso Superiore and Amarone della Valpolicella 212.226.4993 y M-W 8-9 y T-F 8-10 y Sat 10-10 y Sun 12-8


26

TRAINS ON

OLD TRIBECA

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

HUDSON A photo reveals the busy, freight-filled life of a street that time, long ago, erased.

CARL GLASSMAN

Right: Hudson Street, about 1910, looking south from Laight Street. The New York Central Railroad’s freight terminal is at left, now the site of the Holland Tunnel rotary. Above: Hudson Street today. At right, 161 and 157 Hudson still remain.

H

BY OLIVER E. ALLEN ow would you like it if a freight train came rumbling across your front yard several times a day? You probably would not like it a bit. Yet that was just what confronted anyone living on Hudson Street between Beach and Laight streets a century ago, as shown in this marvelous photo (above right) taken around 1910. The photograph looks south on Hudson from a point just north of Laight Street, the street onto which some wagons are turning at center left. (In the distance, is the yet-to-be-completed Woolworth Building.) Beyond the turning wagons is the New York Central Rail-

road’s freight terminal, which Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt had erected in 1868, destroying a once-upscale residential neighborhood. A glance at the photo, indeed, can hardly indicate that this area was once the polite, well-to-do center of what is now Tribeca. The huge, gaunt freight terminal occupied the land that in the 1820s and 1830s had been St. John’s Park, an exclusive retreat to which only nearby residents had access and which was tightly controlled by members of the graceful church on Varick Street, St. John’s Chapel. But New York City’s rapid growth was sweeping all before it and, as the city expanded, the forces of industry and

Live Music Thursday & Saturday Nights

READE STREET PUB & KITCHEN We have every NFL Game Direct TV Package!

commerce took over. Polite society moved out of the handsome houses surrounding St. John’s Park and gradually the houses themselves were torn down and replaced by commercial structures. In 1868 the park’s owner, Trinity Church, which for some contorted reason saw no future in it, sold it to Vanderbilt, who put up the massive three-story freight station as the southern terminus of his railroad’s vital line delivering goods to the city. So this was the scene decade after decade as trains rumbled back and forth on the Central’s tracks, which came down West Street, turned southeast on Canal and then south on Hudson, clanging and screeching at all hours of day and

THE MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK / ART RESOURCE, NY

night as they delivered their goods to the terminal. Only in the 1930s did the city and the railroad finally decide a change was needed. The tracks were torn up and a new terminus was built at Houston and West streets to handle incoming freight (and named St. John’s Terminal as a remembrance of the old days in Tribeca). The railroad line was rebuilt as an elevated structure that traversed Chelsea and the West Village; it is today’s High Line, the new delightful park that is so popular. As for the old St. John’s Park that for so long held the noisy and disagreeable freight building, it is today filled with exit roads from the Holland Tunnel.

EDWARD’S 1 3 6 W . B R O A D W AY IN TRIBECA FOR 10 YEARS!

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135 Reade St. 212-227-2295 Call 212-227-0404 for delivery! (3 block radius) Mon-Sat 11am-4am • Sun noon-4am

We Deliver • edwardsnyc.com


27

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

In Tribeca forever

Murray’s Naturally Raised Chicken Niman Ranch 100% USDA Choice Beef No antibiotics or hormones

100% Organic Colombian Coffee Rain Forest Alliance Fair Trade

Create Your Own Salads

Paninis & Wraps g Burgers (16 varieties!) Specialty Salads g Sandwiches from the Grill

C ity H all W ines & S pirits 108 Chambers Street 212-227-3385 bet. West Broadway & Church

Hot Entrees g Soups Pastas g Eggs & Omelettes g Bagels Pancakes & French Toast g Low-fat Treats

Smoothies g Create Your Own Juice Mixes & MUCH MORE! • LET US CATER YOUR PARTY OR MEETING! • 369 Greenwich St.

corner of Franklin

212-219-2373

Mon-Fri 6am-11pm Sat & Sun 7am-10pm Free Delivery

An Affordable Downtown Hotel with Style 10% off with this ad... (must be booked in advance and based on availability)

Contemporary Irish Bar

Fine Ales, Lagers and Stouts We have access to a wide range of sports channels, including RTE and BBC plus Genuine Irish Food from Delicious Shepherd’s Pie and Bangers & Mash to Malt Whiskey & Butter Pudding!

COSMOPOLITAN HOTEL - TRIBECA

67 Murray Street

Sun-Wed 8 am-2 am • Thu-Sat 8 am-4 am

FREE Delivery Go online to lillyobriensbar.com or call 212-732-1592 Free Party Room Available

95 WEST BROADWAY at Chambers Street in Tribeca

Toll-free reservations 888-895-9400 212-566-1900 • www.cosmohotel.com


28

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

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TriBeCa Kid Coach

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• individualized family and parenting coaching • short term, intensive and effective education • manage family conflict and kid behavior • two to teens

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free consultation 646.723.4589

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email: drpeter@tribecakidcoach.com

How a child learns to learn will impact his or her life forever. Progressive Education for Two-Year-Olds – 8th Grade

Open House | City and Country Wednesday, 7, 9, 2012 from 6-8 6-8pm pm Wednesday,November November 2011 from

Please visit www.cityandcountry.org for information and application materials. 146 West 13th Street, New York, NY 10011 Tel: 212.242.7802


Magician

KIDS

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

Mario

29

When he performs for kids, the real magic is in their faces

the

he first show I ever performed was at a funeral. Yes, it’s true. I was living with my girlfriend’s family and there was a wake at their house for a relative. Her father said to me, “You have to do something because everyone is going to be so sad and it would raise people’s spirits.” I was like, “What? Like, are you serious?” So I just did a bit where I have a coin in a handkerchief and I keep putting it in my pocket and then it reappears in the handkerchief. It’s from a beginner’s magic book I was studying. I couldn’t believe it, the audience went crazy.

APRIL KORAL

An “assistant” from the audience joins Mario the Magician at a performance last month at Space on White.

It was such a high that I decided this was what I should do with my life. Then I did the same bit at a show at a coffee house a month later and it was the exact opposite. I failed miserably to the point where I left the stage in the middle of the performance and put my stuff in a dumpster. That’s how embarrassed I was. But I kept practicing and then I met a retired firefighter who did magic tricks for tips at a Chinese restaurant. He said, “You take one half of the room, I’ll take the other.” That was the first time I made money from magic. Eventually, the girl and I broke up and I came back home with my head down to live with my parents. I didn’t know what to do. I had tried to make a living doing woodwork, making marionettes, music, art and nothing had worked. I was 25, everyone else had grown up, graduated college. But I had a dream one night that I was doing magic for disabled kids and I was glowing and happy. I took that as an omen and I went to college to be a teacher’s aide for disabled kids. On weekends I did kids’ magic shows through an agency and they took half the money. Then I met Katie, who’s now my wife, and she saw something in me—a little spark. She said, “We

could develop something here and maybe we could do this full time.” So I left college and we quit our jobs and we just made cold calls every day for a month. We were freaking out, but the first month we were able to pay our rent by just doing magic. Katie was a master with marketing and she rocked it all out. That was six years ago, and now we just had our first baby and bought our first house. All because of magic. It’s insane. I can’t believe it. The first year and a half was like walking through thorn bushes. It was so painful. I made a lot of mistakes. But after I learned all the classics, I started to want to use my own tricks. It’s always risky to try out a new trick. Even now, I’ll spend the whole show thinking about that one trick that I’m trying out for the first time. I don’t want the room to be dead for even one second. I’m hypersensitive to that stuff. Every second has to be leading somewhere. To me, magic is an art. It’s not this weird thing where you go buy props and do tricks. I try to look at children’s performances like a

CARL GLASSMAN (2)

T

Mario Marchese, also known as Mario the Magician, performs his family magic show once a month at Space on White, 81 White St. (mariothemagician.com). He also teaches magic at afterschool programs. Here, he tells his story to April Koral.

science. What makes a kid laugh? Kids in general are always being told what to do and how to act and yes and no and what’s right and what’s wrong. In my routines I often have a problem and I try to solve it but it’s the kids who solve it. They love seeing an adult mess up and be a fool. My sign says “World’s Greatest Magician,” and then all of a sudden my sign falls off the suitcase and I fix it and I’m trying to be serious and say things like, “We have a great show here,” and then the flags break and the flowers fall to the floor. They can’t stop laughing at seeing a grown man who is supposed to have it together and actually has nothing at all together. It really gets them going. That’s different from adults. Adults want the opposite. They want to be impressed. If I levitated four feet off the floor, an adult would think, “Wow, that’s amazing. I can’t see scientifically how that’s possible.” But kids couldn’t care less. They want to be entertained. They want to laugh. They want to join in the fun, to come up and help me. When a child comes up in front of a whole group to be my assistant, I can see a little fear in their eyes. They’re always very serious. Then I give them one of my wands and it falls apart in their hands. And I give them another one, and that one breaks. Or I give them a bell that I ring and when they try to ring it, it doesn’t ring. Then they realize that it’s just all a big game of fun. I always make sure that at the end of the routine it’s the kid who does the magic and that all the applause goes to them. For a moment, this kid thinks he really has coins coming out of his ears and his nose and that he can really make anything appear. I can see it in their eyes. They’re thinking, “This is awesome!” “I can do anything!” And who doesn’t want that?


30

Coming in 2015, the Peck Slip School KIDS

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

It will be another three years before the Peck Slip School’s building opens. But, published here for the first time, School Construction Authority (SCA) officials are showing what the finished structure will look like. Most notable are the two floors added to the four-story former post office, vacated this year. The top, sixth floor will be an enclosed rooftop playground with metal fabric to keep balls from sailing onto Peck Slip. A “gymatorium,” combination of gym and auditorium, with stage and removable seats, occupies the fifth floor. “It’s not necessarily what we would have liked but as you can see we maxed out every floor,” the SCA’s Michael Mirisola told Assemblyman Sheldon Silver’s School Task Force last month during a presentation on the school’s layout. The plan for five sections per grade and 712 students precludes room for a separate gym and auditorium, he said. The school entrance will be on Peck Slip, with lobby, exercise and lunch rooms on the first floor. Offices will be on the second floor, music and library on the fourth and art and science on the fifth. Classrooms will occupy the second through fifth floors. A chorus of approval from the group followed the presentation. “Nice design,” they said. “It’s a beautiful building.”

But Stately Tweed Is Not Bad for Now

NYC SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION AUTHORITY VIA THE TRIBECA TRIB

Above: In their lunchroom in Tweed Courthouse, Peck Slip students eat at tables on each side of the huge room. Right: Karl Smith gives a lesson before sending his students off to work at tables placed around the vast classroom. Far right: Students wait to go inside the building after recess.

Like the first students of P.S. 276 and P.S. 397 before them, the 46 children filling two kindergarten classes of the Peck Slip School are getting their start in the palatial first-floor quarters of Tweed Courthouse. “The school and the building are such a part of New York City,” said Paul Lopez, holding the hand of his grinning five-year-old, Maxwell, on the first day of school. “It’s pretty cool.” A challenge, Principal Maggie Siena said, was figuring out how to set up the large rooms. “It’s so big you want to make sure you don’t have a natural running track.”

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

TRIBECA

A PICTORIAL HISTORY BY OLIVER E. ALLEN

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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

31


32

h al l o w ee n happ e n in gs ...

From bobbing for apples to carnival games and spooky stories, there’s Halloween fun Downtown for kids of every age. Celebrations begin on Friday, Oct. 26 with a Halloween movie classic at Trinity Church and continue through Wednesday, Oct. 31, with a kids party at the offices of Warburg Realty on Hudson Street.

A screening of the Halloween children’s movie, “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown,” begins at 5:30 p.m. followed by an organ demonstration for kids at 6 pm. At 7:30 pm, there is a showing of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” (1920) starring John Barrymore, with accompaniment by the church organist Julian Wachner. Friday, Oct. 26. Free. Trinity Church, Broadway at Wall St., trinitywallstreet.org.

A HALLOWEEN FILM

KIDS CALENDAR

Stories with a Touch of Spooky” in Teardrop Park, Battery Park City. Saturday, Oct 27, 11 am. Free. bpcparks.org.

12. Saturday, Oct. 27, 11 am–2 pm. $8; $5 children. Under 2 free. New York City Police Museum, 100 Old Slip, nycpm.org.

HALLOWEEN AT POLICE MUSEUM

SCREAMIN’ GREEN HALLOWEEN

Kids make “slime,” decorate trickor-treat bags and collect treats and give-aways. Also lessons on Halloween safety for parents. Ages 3 to

... a n d m o r e

Julie Storyteller Pasqual performs “Halloween Tales: Fun

STORIES FOR ALL AGES

ARTS, CRAFTS & PLAY ART OF THE PLAINS: LEDGERS Ledger art-making activity. Mondays– Saturdays, 10 am. Free. National Museum of the American Indian, 1 Bowling Green, nmai.si.edu. PRESCHOOL PLAY For toddlers. Mondays–Wednesdays (except 10/8), 10 am. Free. Wagner Park near Battery Pl., bpcparks.org. GAMES AND CRAFTS Ages 5 and up. Wednesdays, 3:30 pm at Teardrop Park.; Thursdays, 3:30 pm at Rockefeller Park near Warren Street. Free. bpcparks.org. PRESCHOOL ART Projects using clay, wood, paint and paper. Thursdays, 10:30 am. Free. Rockefeller Park near Warren Street, bpcparks.org. SO SEW TALL Use various materials to build an urban factory. Ages 7 and up. Sat, 10/6, 10:30 am. $5. Skyscraper Museum, 39 Battery Pl., skyscraper.org. MODEL BOATS Visit the Seaport’s tall ships, then make and decorate a model ship. Ages 5–12. Sat, 10/27, 10:30 am. $15. South Street Seaport Museum, Pier 16, seany.org. KA-BOOM! INSIDE OUT & UNMASKED Learn about comic books’ depictions of Asian-Americans, followed by an art project. Sat, 10/27, 1 pm. Museum of Chinese in America, 215 Centre St., mocanyc.org.

DANCE MODERN DANCE-FREE FIRST CLASS Free trial class of eight-week training

This year’s annual event offers bobbing for apples, games (including “Toss a Spider in the Brew,” “Pin a Face on the Pumpkin” and “Gourd Roll”), art projects, a costume swap center (kids exchange last year’s costume), a giant scarecrow and witch and a marching band. Throughout the afternoon, Poets House Children’s Room Director Mike Romanos reads his favorite scary verses by such poets as Robert Louis Stevenson and Jack Prelutsky. Kids then write their own Pooh meets a clown at last year’s Halloween party at Warburg Realty on Hudson Street.

program for boys and girls, ages 8 to 14, under direction of Catherine Gallant. Techniques of Isadora Duncan, Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham. Sat, 10/13, 11 am. Moving Visions Dance Studio, 19 Murray St., dancesbyisadora.com.

FILM EVERYBODY DANCE! Short children’s films about Native American dance. Daily. Free. National Museum of the American Indian, 1 Bowling Green, nmai.si.edu. MONSTERS, INC. Children’s feature film and pizza. Fri, 10/19, 6 pm. Free. Charlotte’s Place, 109 Greenwich St., trinitywallstreet.org.

MUSIC RANDY KAPLAN Country, blues and stories. Sun, 10/7, 11 am. $15; free under 2. 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. ASTROGRASS Bluegrass, folk and humor with dance contests, poetry and plenty of audience participation. Sun, 10/14, 11 am. $15; free under 2. 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. SCIENCE FAIR Science-themed musical extravaganza. Sun, 10/21, 11 am. $15; free under 2. 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org.

SCIENCE & NATURE FALL PLANTING Plant tulips in the park, plus snacks and related kids’ activities. Sat, 10/20, 10 am. Free. Bowling Green, Broadway at Beaver Street, downtownny.com.

SPECIAL PROGRAMS

STUDIO TOURS Visit a studio that produces kids’ films and TV fare. Reservations are required. Tuesdays & Thursdays, 11 am & 4 pm. $10. Little Airplane Studio, 207 Front St., littleairplane.com. HARMONY ON THE HUDSON Circus puppet theater, food, doubledutch jump-roping, art activities and more. Sun, 10/14, 1–5 pm. Free. Wagner Park near Battery Pl., bpcparks.org. GO FISH Catch-and-release fishing, nature education, art projects and live music. Sat. 10/20, 10 am–2 pm. Free. Wagner Park near Battery Place, bpcparks.org.

STORIES & POETRY CHILDREN’S STORYTIME An hour of stories for all ages. Saturdays, 11 am. Free. Barnes & Noble, 97 Warren St., bn.com. GIVING THANKS Hear Indian stories, then make a ALATAIR MOOCK Singer and songwriter performs folk music for kids on Sunday, Oct. 28, 11 a.m. at 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St. $15; free under 2. 92ytribeca.org.

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Halloween poems. The costume parade starts at 3 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 27, 12–3 pm. Free. World Financial Center, 220 Vesey St., worldfinancialcenter.com.

Washington Market Park’s annual Halloween Party and Parade begins at 12:45 p.m. at Beach and Greenwich streets with the lineup for the parade down Greenwich Street. Park games include Monster Toss, Hay Maze, Penny in a Haystack, Bone Dig in the Sandbox. Singers Princess Katie and Racer Steve will entertain. Sunday, Oct. 28, 1–3 pm. Rain or shine. Free. Greenwich Street at Duane, washingtonmarketpark.org. Sponsored by the Friends of Washington Market Park.

PARK PARTY AND PARADE

“Super Heroes and Super Villains” is the theme for the annual kids’ party at Warburg Realty office. There will be games and prizes from local vendors and Halloween treats. Wednesday, Oct. 31, 3–6 pm. Free. Warburg Realty, 100 Hudson St., 212-380-2415.

SUPER HEROES AND VILLAINS

corn husk doll. Sat, 10/13, 1 pm. Free. National Museum of the American Indian, 1 Bowling Green, nmai.si.edu. DANIEL THE MIRACLE BEAGLE Daniel the miracle beagle and his two human friends share an amazing story of survival. Sat, 10/27, 11 am. Free. Barnes & Noble, 97 Warren St., bn.com.

THEATER CONVERSATIONS WITH ANNE Performance by actress Christina Rosse about Anne Frank, followed by a Q&A about Frank’s life. Reservations required. Sat, 10/6, 1 pm. $8; $5 students, seniors, ages 9–16; free under 8. Anne Frank Center, 44 Park Pl., annefrank.com. MARIO THE MAGICIAN Magic, tricks and humor (see page 29). Sun, 10/7, 2:30 pm. $20; $10 kids. Space on White, 81 White St., mariothemagician.com.


33

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

COMMUNITY CENTER at Stuyvesant High School 345 Chambers Street, NY www.ccshs.org

FALL Programs Classes starting soon!

yoga zumba tai chi tennis

e a F s s la C World

Mondays

Wednesdays

Thursdays

Fridays/Saturdays

Register Now! Call 646-210-4292 www.ccshs.org www.bpcparks.org Managed by Battery Park City Parks Conservancy

Best Birthday, Ever! Fun-Filled Sports Birthday Parties When planning a birthday party, the most important thing to consider is fun. Chelsea Piers offers a variety of exciting activities for kids of all ages. Planning is a breeze with our expert party planners and all-inclusive packages. The Field House • 212.336.6518 Soccer | Gymnastics | Rock Climbing Ultimate Challenge | Baseball Sky Rink • 212.336.6100 • Ice Skating The Golf Club • 212.336.6400 • Golf 300 New York • 212.835.2695 • Bowling

Birthday Parties at

23rd Street & Hudson River Park www.chelseapiers.com/birthday ADULT BIRTHDAY PARTIES ALSO AVAILABLE! Please call 212.336.6777 for more information.


34

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

104 Reade Street

One Great Preschool in two DOWNTOWN locations!

ss Fa

World-Cla

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theparkpreschool.org Openings for 4-year-olds

The Best Place To Skate. Sky Rink has been New York’s favorite place to skate since 1969. Bring friends and family to Chelsea Piers for:

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music&art for the 2012-13 school year

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JOIN US for a Night of Music & Wine at Maslow 6, on October 17th

212-571-7290 74 Warren Street

www.churchstreetschool.org


KIDS

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

35

Middle School Choice Can Be a Quandary Everywhere they meet these days, parents of 5th graders are beginning to commiserate with one another over how to squeeze middle school tours into their busy schedules. More important, they wonder how to decide which school is the best fit for their children. For many, the search begins this month with the District 2 Middle School Fair on Wednesday, Oct. 10, at P.S. 40 (320 East 20th CONNIE St.), when famSCHRAFT ilies can learn about all the schools at once, and speak to principals, parent coordinators, and, sometimes, students. Reactions to this fair range “Infrom SCHOOL credible!” to TALK “Mayhem!” With 16 District 2 middle schools, plus several citywide programs to which any city student can apply, the search can seem daunting. It hasn’t always been that way. The only public junior high for Lower Manhattan children was once I.S. 70 on West 17th Street (now home to the NYC Lab School). But in the 1980s, Downtown parents, uneasy with IS 70’s reputation for large classes and rough students,

wanted more options. District 2 began opening small, themed middle schools and the choice process was born. A look at District 2’s directory of middle schools, which 5th grade parents received in September, shows how far that choice has come in the last 20 years. In addition to details about the application process, the directory outlines the schools’ programs and specialties, as well as what they consider for admission. (Yes, many parents compare this process to a college search.) The Salk School of Science, for instance, has a partnership with the NYU School of Medicine, and

cess, and PPAS (Professional Performing Arts School) on West 48th Street, which requires an audition. Learning the acronyms alone can be a challenge. With so many schools to choose from, parents sometimes wish that 5th graders moved en masse from elementary school to junior high, the way it worked when they were growing up. But choice, the cornerstone of educational initiatives these days, means you can consider a school on East 91st Street (East Side Middle) as well as neighborhood schools. In recent years with I.S. 276 (in Battery Park City) and the Lower

In the months after 5th grade graduation ceremonies, the invisible thread connecting parent and child stretches and strains. gives its own assessment to students who put it first on their application. Quest to Learn, whose theme is “Systems-Thinking/21st Century Skills” works with Parsons and admits students by lottery. After checking out the directory or attending the middle school fair, parents are ready to sign up for tours, which begin this month and continue throughout the fall. Some look at citywide schools such as NEST + m (New Explorations in Science, Technology and Math) on the Lower East Side, which has its own application and admissions pro-

Manhattan Community Middle School (in the Financial District) joining I.S. 289 on Warren Street, Downtown parents who don’t want their children far from home have additional options. Of P.S. 89’s June 2012 graduates, more than half are attending one of those local schools. For some families, the middle school process is an adventure—a chance to tour different schools, hear principals present their programs and see teachers and students in action. For others, it is an ordeal that adds to the pressures of raising children, and offers only the illusion

of choice. Those parents argue that in fact the more popular middle schools pick the students they want. Others consider many of the schools simply too far away. After years of walking their children to school or seeing them off on a yellow bus, parents have strong feelings about sending their 11year-olds to distant schools, imagining all sorts of horrors awaiting them as they negotiate street corners, traffic lights and, worst of all, the subway system. But in the months after 5th grade graduation ceremonies, those 11-yearolds go to sleep-away camp, grow a few inches, and wander the neighborhood with friends. The invisible thread connecting parent and child stretches and strains. “I wish I had expanded my middle school search,” one parent told me when her child was in 7th grade. “He’s all over the city now.” At a middle school tour I once attended, the principal said something I have always remembered: There is nothing taught in middle school, he said, that will not be taught again in high school. Parents looked puzzled. What middle school teaches, he went on to say, is how to take notes, do homework efficiently and become organized, key skills needed for their success as students—and, someday, as adults. Connie Schraft is the P.S. 89 parent coordinator. For questions about Downtown schools, write connie@tribecatrib.com.

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COMPLIMENTARY REFRESHMENTS AND ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS


36

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

We’ll Clear Things Up

Tribeca Broadway Dental Care

Come visit our newly renovated office at 37 Murray Street. Dr. Harry Koster, our Harvard-trained, board certified corneal specialist, has performed over 15,000 LASIK procedures, and he and his staff of doctors are focused on clearing up your vision. We provide comprehensive eye care from contact lens fittings to all vision corrective procedures. Your vision is our focus.

Cary John Cunningham, DDS, MS Fellow, International Congress of Oral Implantologists . General Dentistry Intravenous Moderate Sedation available Implants

Call 212-243-2300 to make an eye appointment or schedule a free LASIK screening. Our office is conveniently located at the corner of Church and Murray Streets.

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Hirshel Kahn, MD Helen Radoszycki, MD Terry Raymond, PA-C

KINGS PHARMACY 5 Hudson St. 212-791-3100 (corner of Reade)

Free Pickup and Delivery of Prescriptions! • Open Mon–Fri 8–8 Sat 9–7 Sun 10–6 Computerized scanning for drug interactions • Custom flavoring for all liquid medication

Medela Breastfeeding Center and Rental Station We carry a full line of Medela breastpumps, parts, supplies and accessories. Rent by the day, week or month.

,

Visit us at our beautiful new sister store! Hudson Square Pharmacy

345 Hudson St. (corner of King St.) 212-289-1400

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KIDS

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

37

Kids (and some adults) followed the dancing, jumping, gyrating lead of an Asphalt Green performer on stage, below.

PHOTOS BY CARL GLASSMAN

BLOCK BASH The BPC party returns, bigger and better than ever

I thought last year was big. This year is bigger,” said Anthony Notaro, standing amid the swirl of activity at the 11th annual Battery Park City Block Party last month. Notaro and Rosalie Joseph, the duo that has put on the ever-expanding event from the beginning, swore that the 10th year would be their last. As it turned out, they managed to recruit more volunteers, but remained in charge. “We were able to give a lot of guidance and support,” Joseph said. And it paid off, with new activities such as boat rides and wine tastings, plus awards to community leader Kathleen Gupte and dance teacher Elizabeth Flores and more vendors and organizations participating than ever. “The spirit was so high,” Joseph said, “and people felt like they were really celebrating Battery Park City.”

“I

From top left: Mike Cavataio, representing a party planning service, one of more than 60 businesses and organizations at the party; Boris the Bull, from Léman Prep, entertained kids; stiltwalking student Evie Doan, from Children’s Tumbling, as a giraffe.

Lois A. Jackson, D.D.S. B. Oldak, D.D.S. Stanley D.D.S. A. Jackson, Lois Gelman, D.M.D. Ruby A. & Associates Diane Wong, D.D.S.

Pediatric Dentistry 505 LaGuardia Place Manhattan 212-995-8888 62 2nd Place Brooklyn 718-855-8833

Chambers StreetOrthodontics Kenneth B. Cooperman D.M.D. Maggie R. Mintzberg D.D.S.

for Children and Adults 88 Chambers St. Suite 101 212.233.8320 TribecaTeeth.com


ARTS, ETC.

38

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

Visit the ‘Real World’

THE BREAD AND PUPPET THEATER performs at Harmony on the Hudson: The Family Festival on Oct. 14, 1 to 5 p.m., at Wagner Park in Battery Park City.

BPC Parks: So Much Going On

Although we are less than three months away from winter, the 37 acres of Battery Park City’s parks still beckon with blooming flowers, nesting birds and a slew of outdoor activities sponsored by the park’s Conservancy. There is still time, for example, to join an al fresco ART CLASS with a live model (Wednesdays, 2:30 p.m. at South Cove), sketch the Hudson (Saturdays, 10 a.m. at South Cove) or be inspired by the park’s lush gardens (Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m.) in Wagner Park. If you’d like to draw and listen to poetry at the same time, join the POETRY WALK (Sunday, Oct. 14, 2 p.m.) in Rockefeller Park, led by a poet who also provides sketchbooks. The park’s horticulturists shun the use of toxic pest control, and you can find the secret to their success on a horticulturist-led GARDEN TOUR (Wednesday, Oct. 17, 11 a.m.) of Wagner Park’s so-called “hot” gardens, with their bright red-and-orange flowers, and “cool” gardens, heavy on blue and purple hues. The park is an excellent place for a BIRD WATCHING tour (Saturday, Oct. 20, 11 a.m.). There have been past sightings of migrating warblers, finches, Brant geese and even hummingbirds, hawks and herons. Binoculars and field guides are available to borrow. At twilight, Wagner Park reveals itself, quieter and more mysterious. Hidden in the bushes as darkness falls

are many birds, insects, and other wildlife, just becoming active. A Conservancy naturalist points them out on his NATURE OBSERVATIONS walk (Friday, Oct. 12, 6 p.m.) . At Wagner Park at HARMONY ON

More than 30 species of fish have been caught off Battery Park City. If you don’t believe that, cast a line during GO FISH (Saturday, Oct. 20, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.) at Wagner Park In addition to catch-and-release fishing (poles are pro-

CARL GLASSMAN

A young angler waits for a catch at last month’s Go Fish, taking place again on Oct. 20

THE HUDSON: THE FAMILY FESTIVAL (Sunday, Oct. 14, 1 to 5 p.m.), the Bread and Puppet Theater will present “The Complete Everything Everywhere Dance Circus,” with its giant puppets. There will also be double-Dutch rope-jumping, three-legged races and potato sack relays. Tom Chapin will perform.

vided), and art projects, at 12:30 p.m., STORYTELLER Perry Ground, a member of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy, will weave indigenous tales about the importance of water, starring mythological characters and humorous animals. For more events, go to bpcp.org.

Sculptor Tom Otterness, whose work Downtown can be seen in front of P.S. 234 (a frog snapping up an insect with its outstretched tongue) and in the northwest corner of Rockefeller Park (the sculpture garden called “The Real World”) believes in the “power” of public art. “‘The Real World’ is not like in a gallery,” he has said. “Here, people can start talking about sex, death, class, race, money—all the subjects we don’t usually talk about—with their kids and strangers.” On Sunday, Oct. 7, at 2 p.m., Dorothea Basile, a contemporary art historian, will lead a tour of Otterness’s “world,” a place where children climb the bronze figures or crouch to converse with them and where adults relish the work’s humor, playfulness and political commentary. The inspiration for Otterness’s animal figures, he has said, comes from the five years he worked as a

night watchman at the Museum of Natural History, as well as the many hours he spent as a boy catching frogs, turtles and snakes in his boyhood home in Kansas. The tour is free but space is limited; admission is first come, first served. Meet at “The Real World.”

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THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012

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LISTINGS

40 DANCE g RAW Material Six choreographers perform original pieces. Discussion following Thursday’s performance. Thu, 10/4 & Fri, 10/5, 7:30 pm. LateNite Performance art, burlesque and experimental theater. Fri, 10/5 & Sat, 10/6, 10 pm.

Sunhwa Chung/Ko-Ryo Dance Theater Dance about immigration and simultaneously adjusting to a new culture while maintaining one’s own. Discussion following Friday’s performance. Wed, 10/17–Fri, 10/19, 7:30 pm; Sat, 10/20, 3 & 7:30 pm. Opening reception: Wed, 10/17, 6:30 pm. All performances: $17; $14 students, seniors. Dance New Amsterdam, 53 Chambers St., dnadance.org. g Women and Dabkeh Panel discussion featuring female Levant dance experts addressing issues of gender in performance, followed by dance demonstrations featuring styles ranging from Syrian to Palestinian to the wedding “dabkeh niswaneyyah.” Thu, 10/11, 6:30 pm. $5. Dabkeh-Off Dabkeh dance demonstrations, a lecture on the meaning behind Lebanese and Syrian dance, dabkeh competition and a concert by Palestinian singer Anas Tabash. Sat, 10/13, 3:30 pm. $20; $5–$15 for individual events. Alwan for the Arts, 16 Beaver St. 4th fl., alwanforthearts.org. g Hava Nagila Hoedown Lessons on how to dance the hora and other Israeli-style dances. Sun, 10/28, 2:30 pm. $10; $7 students, seniors. Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Pl., mjhnyc.org. g Dia de los Muertos Fandango Mexican music group Radio Jarocho demonstrates the traditional way to dance the fandango, followed by a dance party with Mexican music, moves and costumes. Mon, 10/29, 6:30 pm. Free. World Financial Center Winter Garden, worldfinancialcenter.com.

g Urban Fabric: Building New York’s Garment District Exploration of the 18 blocks

in Midtown that once produced three-fourths of all women’s and children’s apparel in vertical factories, and how those buildings were built and operated. To Sun, 1/20/13. $5; $2.50 students, seniors. Wed–Sun, 12–6 pm. Skyscraper Museum, 39 Battery Pl., skyscraper.org. g

Marvels and Monsters: Unmasking Asian Images in U.S. Comics, 1942–1986

Exploration of America’s evolving racial and cultural perceptions and ideas, as depicted by racist and xenophobic images of Asian-Americans and incoming migrants. Alt. Comics: Asian-

American Artists Reinvent the Comic Book Works by Asian-American comic artists. To Sun, 2/24/13. $10; $5 students, seniors; free

and enslaved men, women and children who lived Downtown. Ongoing. Free. Tue–Sat, 9 am– 4 pm. African Burial Ground Center and National Monument, 290 Broadway, africanburialground.gov. g Dialog in the Dark Experience the New York City environment, including getting on and off a subway and crossing the street at Times Square, relying only on guides for the blind and visually impaired. Ongoing. $23.50; $20.50 children, students; $21.50 seniors. 11 Fulton St., dialognyc.com. g Soul Seekers: Interpreting the Icon A reconsideration of the form, status and relevance of iconography through a collection of works by contemporary artists and designers. Ongoing. Mon–Fri, 9 am–5:30 pm; Sat–Sun, 9

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB pm. $12. Ghost Supernatural romance in which a murder/robbery victim tries to reach his living girlfriend. Fri, 10/12, 7:30 pm. $13. Laia Laia Documentary traces the transformation of Brazilian music from the 1930s to today. Thu, 10/18, 7 pm. $12. The Quiet Earth The world ends and only three people survive. Sun, 10/21, 6 pm. $12. Labyrinth Screening of the film, plus a singalong and costume party. Wed, 10/31, 9 pm. $13. See website for more films. 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. g The Big Red One Semi-autobiographical film that follows the U.S. Army’s 1st Infantry Division from Africa to Europe during WWII. Wed, 10/10, 7 pm. $5. Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Pl., mjhnyc.org. g

Shellshocked: Saving Oysters to Save Ourselves Documentary following efforts to prevent the extinction of oyster reefs, which serve as natural water filters. Thu, 10/18, 6 pm. $20. South Street Seaport Museum, 12 Fulton St., seany.org. g

Forgotten Laughter: Comedy from the Silent Era Clips from films

featuring Charlie Chaplin, Harold Lloyd, Bert Williams and Charlie Chase. Tue, 10/23, 7:30 pm. Free. Tribeca Performing Arts Center, 199 Chambers St., tribecapac.org. g Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Screening of the 1920 silent film with live musical accompaniment. Fri, 10/26, 5:30 pm. Free. Trinity Church, Broadway at Wall Street, trinitywallstreet.org.

GALLERIES g Post Natural Group exhibition of fellows’ works. To Sun, 10/7. Daily 2– 8 pm. New York Academy of Art, 111 Franklin St., nyaa.edu. g Rachel Mouial and Shie COCO144+SHIEONE+P.H.A.S.E. Works on paper, canvas and wood, plus an installation incorporating crystals and organic material. To Wed, 10/10. Salomon Arts Gallery, 83 Leonard St. 4th fl., salomonarts.com. g Jason Craighead, Hyunmee Lee, Doug Stone and Tad Lauritzen Wright Undertone. Group show. To Sat, 10/13. Mon–Fri, 11 am–6 pm; Sat, 12–6 pm; Sun, 12–5 pm. Cheryl Hazan Mosaic Studio, 35 N. Moore St., cherylhazan.com. g Konstantin Bokov 27 years of work, including sculptures made from recycled materials commemorating the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic. To Wed, 10/17. Van Der Plas Gallery, 89 South St. 2nd fl., vanderplasgallery.com.

EXHIBITIONS g

Andrew Carnegie: Forging Philanthropy

Display on Carnegie’s life and work, with a spotlight on his love of Scotland, his business life and his philanthropic activities. To October.

Checks and Balances: Presidents and American Finance Financial challenges faced by American presidents. To November. Tue–Sat, 10 am–4 pm. Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall St., moaf.org. g Founding Friendships: Celebrating the Legacies of Elizabeth Kray and Stanley Kunitz Artworks and archival material by lead-

ing postwar artists and poets. To Sat, 10/6. Free. Tue–Fri, 11 am–7 pm; Sat, 11 am–6 pm. Poets House, 10 River Terrace, poetshouse.org. g The Sweet LIFE Photographs of 1950s Italian actors, actresses and directors from the pages of LIFE Magazine. To Fri, 10/12. Free. World Financial Center, worldfinancialcenter.com.

g

Wolfgang Ellenrieder and Myeongsoo Kim Hunting and

g

A Stately Presence: The NYPD’s Mounted Unit Exploration of the history, which dates to 1858, and day-to-day operations of the police department’s mounted unit, including saddles, photographs, harnesses and other artifacts. To Sun, 11/4. $8; $5 students, seniors, children; free under 2 and service members. Mon–Sat, 10 am–5 pm; Sun, 12–5 pm. New York City Police Museum, 100 Old Slip, nycpm.org. g Emma Lazarus: Poet of Exiles Rare artifacts about the poet/writer/immigrant advocate, the importance of religious freedom and the struggles that immigrants past and present face. To December. Hava Nagila: A Song for the People Images, video and music tell the story of the wordless melody from Ukraine that became the theme song for Jewish celebrations everywhere. To May 2013. $10; $7 seniors; $5 students; free under 12. Free Wed, 4–8 pm. Sun–Tue, Thu, 10 am–5:45 pm; Wed, 10 am–8 pm; Fri, 10 am–5 pm. Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Pl., mjhnyc.org. g The Stilled Passage: A Photographic Journey through Ellis Island’s Unrestored Buildings Photographs by Philip Calabria. To

Sun, 1/6/13. $13; $10 seniors, $5 ages 4–12; free under 4. Daily, 8:30 am–6:15 pm. Ellis Island Museum. Ferry leaves from Battery Park, nps.org/elis.

EXHIBITION Steven Amadee Framing 41 North Moore St., is celebrating its 10th anniversary with an exhibition of new paintings by Rick Lewis, including reflection_II (above). Mon–Fri, 11 am– 7 pm; Sat , 11 am–6 pm stevenamedee.com

children under 12 and on Thursdays. Mon & Fri, 11 am–5 pm; Thu, 11 am–9 pm; Sat & Sun, 10 am–5 pm. Museum of Chinese in America, 215 Centre St., mocanyc.org. g Up Where We Belong: Native Musicians in Popular Culture Exploration of Native

Americans who have had successful careers in the music industry over the past century. To Sun, 8/11/13. Free. Fri–Wed, 10 am–5 pm; Thu, 10 am–8 pm. National Museum of the American Indian, 1 Bowling Green, nmai.si.edu. g Selected exhibits: Made In New York Spotlight on designers and manufacturers working and producing in New York City. Coffee, Tea, Fish and the Tattooed Man A historical look at the Seaport. Occupy Wall Street Photographs by more than 70 photojournalists who documented the movement and its clashes. To 10/30. $10; $6 students, seniors; Free under 9. Daily, 10 am–6 pm. South Street Seaport Museum, 12 Fulton St., seany.org. g African Burial Ground The story of the free

am–3:45 pm. The Trinity Museum, Broadway at Wall Street, trinitywallstreet.org.

FILM g El Futuro Mas Aca: Vintage Mexican Science Fiction Film series featuring some of

the most iconic Mexican sci-fi movies made from the 1940s through the 1960s. Daily Mon, 10/1–Wed, 10/31. See website for schedule. Free. World Financial Center Winter Garden, worldfinancialcenter.com. g Selection of upcoming films: Debt Begins at 20 Docufiction about working-class Pittsburgh punk rockers in 1980. Post-screening discussion with director Stephanie Beroes. Wed, 10/3, 7:30 pm. $12. Savage Beach Female agent duo is sent on an emergency mission to recover medical supplies on an uninhabited island. Sat, 10/6, 10 pm. $12. Pola X Interpretation of the Herman Melville novel “Pierre,” about a successful writer who abandons his life to take care of his sister. Sat, 10/13, 6 pm & Mon, 10/15, 7

Gathering. Reflection on the process of seeking and collecting data to fuel the artistic process. The Savage Detectives Group show. To Thu, 10/25. Tue–Sat, 11 am–7 pm; Sun by appointment. RH Gallery, 137 Duane St., rhgallery.com. g Brendan Cass 7 North. Darkly chromatic acrylic paintings of New England landscapes. To Sat, 10/27. Tue–Sat, 11 am–6 pm and by appointment. KANSAS Gallery, 59 Franklin St., kansasgallery.com. g UNREST: Revolt Against Reason Eight artists tackle issues of inequality, conflict and instability in recent history, including the Arab Spring and Occupy Wall Street movements. To Sat, 10/27. Tue–Sat, 11 am–6 pm. apexart, 291 Church St., apexart.org. g Seokmin Ko The Square. Archival pigment prints of a square mirror in various landscapes. To Sat, 10/27. Tue–Fri, 11 am–5 pm. Art Projects International, 429 Greenwich St. Suite 5B, artprojects.com. g Jin Shan There Is No End to This Road. Art that critiques authority and responds to how China is being thrust into a global context. To Sat, 10/27. Tue–Sat, 11 am–6 pm. Masters & Pelavin, 13 Jay St., masterspelavin.com.


THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012 g robbinschilds I Came Here On My Own. Sitespecific performance art incorporating video, soundscapes and dance. Jong Oh Position, Reposition. Site-specific installation. Christopher Duffy I Think I Want My Energy In All Colors. Installation in the gallery storefront. To Sat, 12/15. Tue–Sat, 12–6 pm. Art In General, 79 Walker St., artingeneral.org. g

Abstract Realities: Trends & New Directions in Contemporary Art Group show

with more than a dozen artists. To Fri, 12/21. On view by appointment. Hal Bromm, 90 W. Broadway, halbromm@gmail.com. g Alex Katz Hard Days Ahead. Prints of blackand-white figure paintings. To Mon, 12/31. Tue– Fri, 12–5 pm. The Clocktower, 108 Leonard St., 13th Fl., artonair.org.

LISTINGS ical-action 1964 pipe organ. Wednesdays, 1 pm. Free. St. Paul’s Chapel, Broadway at Fulton St., trinitywallstreet.org. g North Sky Cello Ensemble Original compositions and arrangements for cello. Thu, 10/4, 1 pm. Chicago Symphony Orchestra String Trio Fri, 10/5, 11 am. West Point Woodwind Quintet Works by Bermel, Previn and Harbison. Thu, 10/11, 1 pm. The Choristers of St. Thomas Church Handel, Bach, Scott and more. Thu, 10/18, 1 pm. Hugo Wolf Quartet Works for strings. Thu, 10/25, 1 pm. Trinity Youth Chorus American and folk songs. Sun, 10/28, 3 pm. All concerts: free. Trinity Wall Street, Broadway at Wall Street, trinitywallstreet.org. g Selection of upcoming concerts: Silver

10/19, 7:30 pm. $30–$55. Ramsey Lewis and His Electric Band Jazz, R&B and pop. Sat, 10/20, 7:30 pm. $30–$55. Justin Townes Earle, John McCauley and Joe Pug Americana. Fri, 10/26, 7:30 pm. $25–$55; $5 students. Justin Townes Earle, The Low Anthem and Joe Pug Americana. Sat, 10/27, 7:30 pm. $25–$55; $5 students. Béla Fleck Bluegrass, jazz, rock and country on the banjo. Sun, 10/28, 7:30 pm. $30–$55. Schimmel Center for the Arts., 3 Spruce St., pace.edu. g Eli Yamin Blues Band Blues mixed with classical, bebop and folk sounds. Fri, 10/26, 8 pm. $15. Tribeca Performing Arts Center, 199 Chambers St., tribecapac.org.

41 g Richard Belzer “Dead Wrong: Straight Facts on the Country’s Most Controversial Cover-ups.” Wed, 10/3. D.L. Hughley “I Want You to Shut the F#ck Up: How the Audacity of Dopes Is Ruining America.” Wed, 10/10. Kirk Hammett “Too Much Horror Business: The Kirk Hammett Collection.” Thu, 10/11. Uggie “Uggie: My Story.” Mon, 10/15. Justin Cronin “The Twelve: Book Two of the Passage Trilogy.” Tue, 10/16. Chris Elliott “The Guy Under the Sheets: An Unauthorized Autobiography.” Wed, 10/17. Frederick Kaufman “Bet the Farm: How Food Stopped Being Food.” Wed, 10/24. All readings: 6 pm, free. See website for more readings. Barnes & Noble, 97 Warren St., bn.com. g

Wheel with a Single Spoke: The Life and Work of Romanian Poet Nichita Stancescu Reading of Stanescu’s works by translator Sean Cotter. Wed, 10/3, 7 pm. $10; $7 students, seniors. Omnidawn’s Celebration and Reading More than a dozen poets read their poetry. Fri, 10/5, 6 pm. Free. The Collected Poems of Stanley Kunitz Reading of the volume from start to finish, plus a gallery tour. Sat, 10/6, 12 pm. Free. Beyond the Margins Contributors read from June S. Gould’s new volume. Fri, 10/12, 7 pm. $5. An Evening

in Honor of Taha Muhammad Ali Reading of the late poet’s direct, humorous and devastating poems about political conflict. Tue, 10/16, 7 pm. $10; $7 students, seniors. Page Meets Stage Joseph O. Legaspi and Cheryl Boyce-Taylor read. Wed, 10/17, 8 pm. $12; $6 students. L.S. Asekcoff Poet reads his work, followed by a discussion with former U.S. Poet Laureate Philip Levine. Tue, 10/23, 7 pm. Free. Poets House, 10 River Terrace, poetshouse.org. g Andrew Nagorski “Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power.” Wed, 10/3, 7 pm. Rich Cohen “The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America’s Banana King.” Wed, 10/17, 7 pm. All readings: $10. Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery Pl., mjhnyc.org. g

Susan Tunick and Andrew S. Dolkart

“Almost Anonymous & Ubiquitous: George & Edward Blum’s Speculative Architecture.” Tue, 10/9, 6:30 pm. Free. Skyscraper Museum, 39 Battery Pl., skyscraper.org. g Lucy Lang and Amor Towles Writers CARL GLASSMAN INSIDE TRIBECA LOFT TOUR The 13th annual Tribeca loft tour takes place Sunday, Oct. 14, from 1 to 5 p.m. The 10 lofts open to the public range read their poetry and prose. Tue, 10/9, 7 from a Watts Street eight-room triplex (see above) to an artist’s loft with his work-filled studio to an apartment with a three-story climbing wall that pm. Free. Pen Parentis, 75 Wall St., penparhas appeared in many movie and tv shoots, including “White Collar.” Tickets are $60 in advance at duanepark.org; $65 beginning at 12:30 p.m. on entis.org. the day of the event in Duane Park, at Hudson and Duane streets, subject to availability. There is a separate $25 ticket for the tour of a four-floor g Odes to Autumn Poetry Walk Poet penthouse in the Financial District ($30 day of tour). Proceeds go to Friends of Duane Park, which organizes the event, for the upkeep and improve- reads in the park. Sketching materials provided. Free. Sun, 10/14, 2 pm. Rockefeller ment of Duane Park as well as the restoration of other public areas in Tribeca. Park near Warren Street, bpcparks.org. g Marcia Reiss “Lost New York.” Thu, 10/25, 6:30 pm. $10. Fraunces Tavern Apples, CFCF and Win Win Psychedelic and Museum, 54 Pearl St., g Lynda Capse: Landscapes for Every electronica. Fri, 10/5, 8:30 pm. $12. The Lisps frauncestavernmuseum.org. Season. To Tue, 1/1/13. Sovereign Bank, 110 Indie rock album release party and concert. Sat, g Peter Lippman “Evidence-Based Design of Hudson St. 10/6, 8:30 pm. $15. I Feel So Good: A Elementary and Secondary Schools: A Respong Photographs: Marky Kauffmann Prayer Celebration of Big Bill Broonzy, featuring sive Approach to Creating Learning Envig Taino Culture Discussion of Taino culture Images. Susan Bowen Streets of Cuba: Billy Boy Arnold Talk on the 1940s Chicago ronments.” Tue, 10/2, 6 pm. Carrie Lobman past and present, including traditional objects Overlapping Exposure Panoramas. Jean blues world followed by a performance by “Unscripted Learning: Using Improvisation and their uses. Mondays, 2 pm. Tainos Nestares Multiplex. Karen St. John Vincent Arnold of Broonzy’s works. Thu, 10/11, 6:30 pm. across the K–8 Curriculum.” Tue, 10/16, 6 pm. Encounter Columbus Talk on the history and Vacancy: Film Stills. Arnie Kastenbaum $15. BETTY Pop rock singer/songwriters. Fri, All talks: free. City College Center for Worker culture of the Taino people of the Caribbean and Polemics. Ruth Ruskin Las Vegas City Center. 10/12, 9 pm. $10. Emily Warren & the Education, 25 Broadway, 7th fl., how the arrival of the Spanish changed that way Susan Keiser After the Fall. Wed, 10/3–Sat, Betters, Mandy Lee, Alison Valentine and downtownny.com. of life. Thu, 10/11, 6 pm. Teaching about 11/3. Opening reception: Tue, 10/2, 6 pm. Phoebe Ryan Teen pop singers. Sat, 10/13, 8 g Christopher Buehlman “Between Two Native People from New York Educator Wed–Sun, 1–6 pm and by appointment. Soho pm. $10. See website for more concerts. Fires.” Tue, 10/2, 6 pm. Eric Stebbins “The workshop on new ways to teach the history, culPhoto, 15 White St., sohophoto.com. 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. Ragnorak Conspiracy.” Tue, 10/9, 6 pm. Joelle ture and contemporary stories of Native g Art for Animals Artwork by eight artists, g Monk at 95: Countdown to 100 Pianists Charbonneau “Skating on the Edge.” Mon, Americans. Registration required. Thu, 10/18, with profits to benefit Rescuzilla Animal Rescue perform various bebop and jazz pieces in com10/15, 6 pm. Karen Engelmann “The 3:45 pm. All events: free. National Museum of of NYC. Wed, 10/3–Wed, 10/31. Opening memoration of Thelonious Monk’s birthday. Stockholm Octavo.” Wed, 10/24, 6 pm. the American Indian, 1 Bowling Green, reception: Wed, 10/3, 6 pm. Bond New York, 25 Wed, 10/10, 12–3 pm. Antibalas 12-piece William Heffernan “When Johnny Came nmai.si.edu. Hudson St., bondnewyork.com. Afrobeat ensemble. Tue, 10/23, 8 pm. Vijay Marching Home” and Patricia Smith Editor of g Selection of upcoming talks: Jack Black: In g Clara Désiré While Dreaming, Sounds My Iyer Jazz pianist. Wed, 10/24, 8 pm. Brooklyn “Staten Island Noir,” with contributor readings. Conversation with Peter Travers Actor and Loud and Wild Cry. Thu, 10/4–Sat, 10/27. Philharmonic Celebration of the variety of Tue, 10/30, time TBA. All readings: free. musician discusses his professional work, Hionas Gallery, 89 Franklin St., music that permeates the borough, including Mysterious Bookshop, 58 Warren St., mysteriincluding his new film, “Bernie.” Tue, 10/2, 8:15 hionasgallery.com. steel drum music. Thu, 10/25, 8 pm. All conousbookshop.com. pm. $34. Baked Elements Owners of g Robert and Lynn Bianchi The Body and certs: free. World Financial Center, worldfinang John Staddon “The Malign Hand of the Brooklyn’s Baked bakery talk about how they Beyond. Digital chromatic prints. Thu, 10/4– cialcenter.com. Markets.” Wed, 10/3, 12:30 pm. $5. Neil quit their day jobs to pursue their passion for Sat, 10/27. Opening reception: Thu, 10/4, 6 pm. g Zakir Hussain Tabla percussionist performs Barofsky “Bailout: An Inside Account of How sweets. Thu, 10/4, 6:30 pm. $28. Emerging One Art Space, 23 Warren St., oneartspace.com. classical Indian music. Sat, 10/13, 7:30 pm. Washington Abandoned Main Street While Metropolis Talk on New York’s transformation $30–$55. American Showstoppers Rescuing Wall Street.” Thu, 10/25, 5:30 pm. into a Jewish city at the turn of the 20th centuBroadway, American songbook and Hollywood Free. Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall St., songs accompanied by a 12-piece orchestra. Fri, g Pipes at One Performances on the mechan(CONTINUED ON PAGE 42) moaf.org.

READINGS

TALKS

MUSIC


42

LISTINGS

OCTOBER 2012 THE TRIBECA TRIB

(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 49)

ry. Tue, 10/9, 12 pm. $21. On Ernest Hemingway Exploration of the writer’s public image and how it has influenced later generations. Mon, 10/15, 12 pm. $21. Edible Selby Panel discussion on popular New York City eateries. Wed, 10/17, 7 pm. $15. Person Place Thing Live! with Brandi Carlile Musician Carlile in conversation with Randy Cohen. Wed, 10/31, 7 pm. $18. See website for more talks. 92Y Tribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. g Photo slideshow talks: Vienna, Austria 10/2. Indonesia 10/9. Morocco and Andalusia 10/16. New York City Farmlands 10/23.

The Five Dutch Days of New York 10/30. All talks: Tuesdays, 6 pm, $2. Tuesday Evening Hour, 49 Fulton St., tuesdayeveninghour.com. g Art and Culture Lecture Series: Adam Gopnick Writer and cultural critic for the New Yorker. 10/3. Jocelyn Hobbie Artist. 10/17. Michele C. Cone Writer, art critic and historian. 10/24. Walton Ford Artist. 10/31. All talks: Wednesdays, 7:30 pm. Free. New York Academy of Art, 111 Franklin St., nyaa.edu. g The Craft of Poetry Talk on what new elements are at work in contemporary poetry, including collage and sonic play. Thu, 10/4, 7 pm. Poetry PHOTOFEST Slam? Or Slam Poetry? Discussion and demonstration of the poetry slam FILM A screening of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” (1920) starring John Barrymore will be shown in Trinity and what makes a poem come alive Church on Friday, Oct. 26, at 7:30 p.m. The silent movie will be accompanied by music played by church through performance. Wed, 10/10, 7 organist Julian Wachner. Free. Trinity Church is at Broadway and Wall Street. trinitywallstreet.org. pm. The Poetics of Kitsch Panel explores the trivial material objects Immigration, An American Debate Historians at Auschwitz. Wed, 10/17, 8 pm. $12; $8 stuand poetry that play a crucial role in our culture. explore immigrants’ positions within American dents, seniors. Anne Frank Center, 44 Park Pl., Sat, 10/20, 3 pm. All talks, $10; $7 students, sen- public discourse as either a resource or a burden. annefrank.com. iors. Poets House, 10 River Terrace, Sun, 10/21, 2:30 pm. All talks: $10; $7 students, poetshouse.org. seniors. Museum of Jewish Heritage, 36 Battery g Careers in the Arts: Opportunities in Pl., mjhnyc.org. g Tribute WTC 9/11 Tours of Ground Zero. Public Arts Panel discussion with experts in Daily, hourly 11 am–3 pm; Sat, hourly 11 am–4 nonprofit and local government. Tue, 10/9, 6:15 pm. $10; $5 ages 6–12. Visitors Center, 120 pm. Free. Pace University, 1 Pace Plaza, Room g Job A dark comedy in which Satan makes a bet Liberty St., tributewtc.org. W614, pace.edu. with God that he can make a Job, wise judge of g Tribeca: New Diversity from an Industrial g Selection of upcoming talks: The Thinking an Israelite tribe, blaspheme against God. Past Learn about the neighborhood’s transformaApe: The Enigma of Human Consciousness Thursdays–Sundays to Sun, 10/7, 7 pm. $20. tion from food center to residential use. Meet at Panel discussion on the similarities and differHeresy The story of Christ, taking place in mod- 200 Hudson St. Tue, 10/2, 10:30 am. $28. Civic ences between human and animal consciousern times in which Mary and Joseph go to Center and Historic City Hall Focus on ness. Wed, 10/10, 7 pm. $15; $10 students. Homeland Security because their protesting son, Downtown government buildings, plus a tour of Black Holes and Astrobiology Talk on the Chris, has been arrested in the latest crackdown. City Hall’s interior. Meet at Foley Square. Thu, study of non-earthling life. Tue, 10/23, 7:30 pm. Tuesdays–Sundays, 7:30 pm & Saturdays & 10/18, 10 am. $30. 92YTribeca, 92ytribeca.org. $10; $5 students. See website for more talks. Sundays, 3 pm to Sun, 11/4. $10–$50. The Flea g Immigrant New York Visit sites associated New York Academy of Sciences, 250 Greenwich Theater, 41 White St., theflea.org. with various immigrants. Meet at City Hall Park, St. 40th fl., nyas.org. g Hamlet A production from the London’s Globe Broadway at Chambers. Tue, 10/2, 2 pm; Sat, g The Richest Woman in America: Hetty Theatre. Co-directed by Dominic Dromgoole, 10/6, 1 pm; Mon, 10/8 & Wed, 10/17, 11 am; Green in the Gilded Age Biographer Janet artistic director of Shakespeare’s Globe, and Thu, 10/25, 2 pm. The Financial District Meet Wallach discusses the life of Green, whose forGlobe regular Bill Buckhurst. Tue, 10/2–Sun, at Broadway and Wall, Trinity Church. Fri, 10/5, tune was worth the contemporary equivalent of 10/7. See website for times. $30–$55. Schimmel Wed, 10/24 & Tue, 10/30, 11 am. Gangs of more than $2 billion when she died in 1916. Thu, Center for the Arts, 3 Spruce St., pace.edu. New York The Five Points. Meet at SE corner of 10/11, 5:30 pm. Free. Andrew Carnegie and g Hooray for the Hypocrites Reunion Show! Carnegie Hall Gino Francesconi, Director of Comedians Elliott Kalan and Brock Mahan, plus Broadway and Chambers. Sun, 10/7, 11 am; Tue, Archives and Rose Museum at Carnegie Hall, dis- guests from “The Daily Show” perform sketch 10/9 & Wed, 10/24, 2 pm. Revolutionary New cusses its founding by Andrew Carnegie. Wed, comedies. Thu, 10/4, 10/11 & 10/18, 9 pm. $10. York Meet on Broadway at Murray. Mon, 10/8, 2 pm. Historic Lower Manhattan Meet at the 10/24, 12:30 pm. $5. Museum of American Gorgeous Ladies of Comedy Standup comedy U.S. Custom House, 1 Bowling Green. Wed, Finance, 48 Wall St., moaf.org. by female comics. Wed, 10/17, 9 pm. $10. 10/10, 11 am; Tue, 10/16, 2 pm. Irish New g Ethics of Embedded Journalism Reporters 92YTribeca, 200 Hudson St., 92ytribeca.org. York Meet at St. Paul’s Chapel, Broadway and and photographers discuss the risks and ethical g ETTY One-woman play adapted from the Fulton. Sat, 10/13, 12 pm. Seaport Historic implications of embedded journalism in military diaries and letters by Esther “Etty” Hillesum, a District Meet at Broadway and Fulton. Sat, units. Sun, 10/14, 2:30 pm. Huddled Masses: young Jewish woman who was deported and died

WALKING TOURS

THEATER

TRIBECA: A PICTORIAL HISTORY BY OLIVER E. ALLEN

PUBLISHED BY THE TRIBECA TRIB TRIBECAPICTORIALHISTORY.COM

10/20, 12 pm. All tours: $15; $12 students, seniors. New York City Walking Tours, bigonion.com. g Ninety-minute tours of the Financial District: History of Wall Street Sat, 10/6, 1 pm. Titans of Industry Emphasis on Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, J.P. Morgan and others. Wed, 10/24, 11 am. Great Crash Anniversary Tour Sat, 10/27, 1 pm. All tours: $15. Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall St., moaf.org. g Chinatown: A Walk Through History Tour of the contemporary neighborhood and explanation of how it has evolved over 400 years to become one of the fastest-growing immigrant communities in New York. 10/6, 10/13 & 10/20. From Coffeehouses to Banquet Halls Tour of Chinatown eateries that highlights their evolution and influence on the community. 10/27. All tours: Sat, 1 pm, $15; $12 students, seniors, free under 5. Museum of Chinese in America, 215 Centre St., mocanyc.org. g Twilight Nature Observations: Fall With a naturalist, observe the birds, insects and other wildlife that become active at dusk in Battery Park. Fri, 10/12, 6 pm. Garden Tour Horticulturlist explains the organic gardening methods used in the Wagner Park gardens. Wed, 10/17, 11 am. All tours: free. Meet at Wagner Park near Battery Place. Sponsored by the Battery Park City Parks Conservancy. bpcparks.org.

ET CETERA g Walk NYC Instructors lead fitness walks. Mondays, 12 pm. Free. Meet at flagpole in Battery Park, downtownny.com. g Trinity Knitters Knit or crochet items for shutins and others. Yarn, needles and instruction provided. Tue, 10/2, 5 pm. Free. Charlotte’s Place, 109 Greenwich St., trinitywallstreet.org. g Adopt-A-Geranium The Downtown Alliance will be giving away 4,000 geraniums. Wed, 10/10, 10 am. Fall Planting Plant tulips in the park. Gardening supplies and refreshments provided. Sat, 10/20, 10 am. All events: free. Bowling Green, Broadway at Beaver, downtownny.com. g Generating, Revising, Polishing: The Practice of Poetry Writing Workshop to work

on unfinished poems, focusing on language, rhythm and form. Thursdays, 10/11–11/15, 6 pm. $295/6 classes. Begin to Build a Poem Poetry introductory class. Fridays, 10/12–11/16, 2 pm. $225/6 classes. Poets House, 10 River Terrace, poetshouse.org. g Wall Street Collectors Bourse Show and auction for financial history enthusiasts, with financial collectibles related to historical events. Thu, 10/18, 12–8 pm; Fri, 10/19, 10 am–4 pm; Sat, 10/20, 10 am–3 pm. Free. Museum of American Finance, 48 Wall St., moaf.org. g In the Loop Knit and crochet items for families in Habitat for Humanity homes in Brownsville, Brooklyn. Fri, 10/19, 12 pm. Free. World Financial Center, worldfinancialcenter.com. ∆g Bird Watching A birder/naturalist identifies some of the many varieties of birds that live in and pass through Battery Park City. Binoculars provided. Sat, 10/20, 11 am. Free. Wagner Park near Battery Pl., bpcparks.org. g Blake Ian Limited edition release of 7” copies of his record “Play the King,” Original artwork signed by artist Peter Tunney. Wed, 10/24, 7 pm. Peter Tunney Art, 73 Franklin St., tunneyart.com.


43

THE TRIBECA TRIB OCTOBER 2012 TRADITION. EXPRESSION. REFLECTION.

THIS IS

Jewish Culture Downtown

NOW ON STAGE

ON VIEW

The Big Red One (1980, 113 min.) WED | OCT 10 | 7 P.M. Samuel Fuller’s semi-autobiographical film follows the U.S. Army's 1st Infantry Division from Africa to Europe during WWII. Stars Lee Marvin, Mark Hamill, and Robert Carradine.

$5, free for members

Discover the history of the melody that became a worldwide theme song. mjhnyc.org/hava

Ethics of Embedded Journalism SUN | OCT 14 | 2:30 P.M. Judith Matloff (Columbia Journalism School), Santiago Lyon (AP), Quil Lawrence (NPR), and Carolyn Cole (LA Times) explore the role of embedded journalists and the ethical implications of their presence in military units.

We rent instruments

$10, $7 students/seniors, $5 members

violins, violas, cellos, and basses to both students and professionals. Call us now to reserve an instrument for the fall semester.

The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America’s Banana King WED | OCT 17 | 7 P.M. Rich Cohen discusses his latest work with David Lipsky (Rolling Stone) about Samuel Zemurray, the poor Russian immigrant who became head of the United Fruit Company, was involved in the creation of Israel, and helped topple Central American governments.

$10, $5 members

Experience an inspiring soundscape and incomparable view of the Statue of Liberty. mjhnyc.org/khc/voices

CLOSES OCTOBER 14

Huddled Masses: Immigration, An American Debate

36 Walker Street, open Mon.–Sat. 212-274-1322

SUN | OCT 21 | 2:30 P.M. Whether seen as resource or burden, immigrants figure centrally in America's public discourse. A distinguished panel examines historic perspectives and contemporary debates regarding immigration policies.

Documenting how Hollywood directors John Ford, Samuel Fuller, and George Stevens filmed the concentration camps. mjhnyc.org/ftc

$10, $7 students/seniors, $5 members

DavidGage.com

NEW YORK MIS21201

Learn about the poet who gave voice to the Statue of Liberty. mjhnyc.org/emma

Public programs are made possible through a generous gift from Mrs. Lily Safra.

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THE MUSEUM WILL BE CLOSED ON OCTOBER 1, 2, 8 AND 9.

COMPLETE LIST OF PROGRAMS AT MJHNYC.ORG

LOWER MANHATTAN | 646.437.4202 | WWW.MJHNYC.ORG | OPEN SUN–FRI

PLEASE CLIP AND MAIL WITH YOUR GIFT TODAY

Complete Thanksgiving Dinner–$2.14

WORLD PREMIERE! SEPTEMBER 30 through NOVEMBER 4 ONLY! In a parade of government imprisonment, immaculate conception, religion, politics, cocktails and one articulate working girl, Heresy views the not-so-distant-future through the satiric and hilarious lens of A.R.Gurney. Just in time for the 2012 elections. Only at The Flea.

You can feed a homeless person at Thanksgiving, and change a life forever! □ $19.26 helps 9 people □ $38.52 helps 18 people □ $57.78 helps 27 people

NEWSPRINT

Name

Email

Please make your check payable to: New York City Rescue Mission P.O. Box 275, Canal St. Station Dept. Trib 1 New York, NY 10013-0275

Tickets: $45 Tues-Thurs, Sun / $50 Fri & Sat / $10 Sat Matinee / PWYC Tues door only. 212-352-3101 www.theflea.org Telephone and internet orders are subject to service fees.

@ THE FLEA 41 WHITE STREET between BROADWAY and CHURCH STREET

Costs are used to care for hungry, homeless and hurting people throughout the year. We never sell or rent our supporters’ names.

average

and

include

Raising “a joyful hell in a small space” since 1996, the award-winning Flea Theater is your Tribeca neighbor!

OUR 140th YEAR OF PROVIDING HOPE TO NEW YORK CITY MIS21201_AD_A_NY_4-688x6-625.indd 1

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□ $77.04 helps 36 people

9/17/12 1:02 PM


TriBeCa PRIME CONDO WITH TERRACE 4RI"E#A 4OP mR "2 BATH DPLX loft w/private 360SF terr. Possible 3rd BR. Mint renov w/open kit. 1,615SF. ,OW ## 2%4 07 BLDG in prime loc. $2.25M. WEB# 3310779. William Grant 212-906-0518 Jill Mangone 212-452-4478

Village

GOLD COAST GEM Central Village. Gracious 1BR w/XL foyer/ dining gallery, mint renov kit, wndwd BATH LARGE CLOSETS 3 EXPOS &3 #O OP off Univ Pl. $825K. WEB# 3311421. William Grant 212-906-0518 Jill Mangone 212-452-4478

SoHo/NoHo NYC’S LARGEST SIMPLEX SoHo. 9,423SF gross. 200’ long loft, 70’ of windows over Mercer, 12’ ceiling, 19 Yellowpine columns, 21 huge windows with S,E,W exposures, 2 elevators. $7.95M. WEB# 1557362. Siim Hanja 212-317-3670 Rudi Hanja 212-317-3675 SOHO POWER CORNER 3O(O 4OP mOOR LOFT WITH CEILING Glorious light, 16 huge windows.100’ on Greene/50’ on Grand. 50’ x 50’ LR, 3BR, 3 baths, large full-height mezz, 5,000SF+. $6.95M. WEB# 1753156. Siim Hanja 212-317-3670 Rudi Hanja 212-317-3675

CAST IRON SOHO SoHo. Corner cast-iron building on Broadway and Prince, 11’10� ceils, presently 2BR, 2 bath true loft in elegant key-lock elevator coop. $2.1M. WEB# 3235710. Paula Del Nunzio 212-906-9207 Shirley A. Mueller 212-906-0561 INVESTOR OPPORTUNITY SoHo. Loft like 2BR, 2.5 baths, 11’ ceilings in new condo construction, top location. Unit is now rented till Sept 2013. $1.995M. WEB# 1748595. Silvana Mander 212-317-7706

BRAND NEW FULL FLR PH Nolita. Penthouse with 11’ beamed ceilings, exposed brick, wall of South facing windows and quiet North facing bedroom. Private roof terrace w/ 360 degree view. $9,000/month. WEB# 3387014. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461

Gramercy/Chelsea

VISIONARY’S LOFT COMBO West Chelsea. Opportunity to create 2,392SF south facing duplex in historical loft in bldg that put art district on map. Expsd brick, beams, 12’ ceil, High Line blk. $3.95M. WEB# 3250473. Nancy Candib 212-906-9302 Dominic R. Paolillo 212-906-9307 CHELSEA SURPRISE Chelsea. 2-3BR, 2.5 bath condo loft w/14 wndws, E/W/S expos. 11’4� ceils, updated kit, W/D, CAC, excellent live/work potential. Comm roof deck. $1.95M. WEB# 3300882. Siim Hanja 212-317-3670 Rudi Hanja 212-317-3675 GARDEN DUPLEX CONV 2 Downtown. Stunning mint conv 2BR, 1.5 bath, soaring 16’ ceils, expsd brick walls, chef’s kit, home OFlCE SPECTACULAR 3& PRVT GRDN low mt. $1.245M. WEB# 1740330. Benjamin Morales 212-588-5637

Seaport SEAPORT CHARMER Seaport. !PPROX 3& LOFT "2 OFlCE new wndws, orig details, vintage manual elev, small Co-op bldg, wonderful neighborhood, grt charm. $1.45M. WEB# 3337596. Liz Dworkin 212-906-0509

WALL ST HONCHO? BUY NOW FiDi. 5,362SF condo. Mint 5BR, 6 bath. Huge entertaining space. Spectacular state-of-the-art renov. 0RVT TH mR - 7%"Â? Diana Benzaquen 212 317-7720 Vince Mauro 212-371-7721

LIGHTS, GLAMOUR, ACTION FiDi. Gorgeously renov masterpiece with 2.5 custom baths and 13’ ceilings. Very bright home with huge N/W windows, Poggen Pohl kitchen w/top applncs, laundry. $2M. WEB# 3167994. Penny Toepfer 212-906-9250 BEST DEAL AT 75 WALL ST Wall St. For investors only. Priced lower than sponsor units. Buyer saves transfer tax. Loft studio with home OFlCE 3& OPEN KIT 4AX ABATE WEB# 3170603 Danielle Grossenbacher 212-906-9303 Holly Shamask 212-906-9272 THIS WON’T LAST BPC. 1BR condo, 603SF, huge windows with N expos, open SS kitchen, hdwd mRS COURTYARD WITH ""1 GRILLS hr DM. $395K. WEB# 3230172. Richard N. Rothbloom 212-452-4485

Rentals

Union Square PH, SPRAWLING TERRACE Union Sq. Triple mint 3,118SF 3BR, 3.5 bath PH w/panoramic views, prvt entry, 2,000SF wrap landscaped terr in boutique DM condo. $9.7M. WEB# 1750739. Shlomi Reuveni 212-396-5801 Karin Rathje-Posthuma 212-396-5805

Financial District PURE MINT LOFT FiDi. Pristine stylish 2BR, 2 bath, 1,376SF. Great Layout, 10 Windows, N/S expos, open chef’s kit, Miele W/D, HDWD mRS PANORAMIC ROOF DECK boutique luxury condo. $1.552M. WEB# 3241333. Richard N. Rothbloom 212-452-4485

MASSIVE TRIBECA LOFT TriBeCa. Huge corner loft, approx. 2,500SF with sunshine, views, top lNISHES TIN CEILINGS CAST IRON COLUMNS ON . -OORE (UDSON $10,500. WEB# 3225828. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461 ARTFULLY FURNISHED LOFT TriBeCa. Boutique condo with BEAUTIFUL MID CENTURY "RAZILIAN walnut furnishings. Peaceful glass enclosed media room / library and master bedroom overlooking garden. $10,000/month. WEB# 3415867. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461

Frans Preidel

Laura Moss

BRIGHT LOFT TriBeCa. Spacious and serene 1,750SF loft with balcony, high beamed ceilings, exposed brick walls and stone kitchen/bath. All on a quaint cobblestone street. $8,500/month. WEB# 3235752. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461 EXPANSIVE OFFICE SPACE 4RI"E#A /PEN AND AIRY OFlCE space with beamed ceiling, exposed brick and south facing city views. /FFERS OFlCES FULLY WIRED reception and kitchenette. $6,500/ month. WEB# 1560535. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461 LUXURY AT THE ZINC TriBeCa. Beautiful 1BR, 1.5 bath at The Zinc includes high-end kitchen, tons of closets, W/D, private storage. Attended lobby, gym and bike rm. $5,900/month. WEB# 3359855. 3USAN 'REENlELD SUNNY WEST VILLAGE GEM West Village. Beautifully renovated 2BR condo in boutique prewar building. State of the art kitchen with luxury appliances and elegant marble bathroom. $5,500/month. WEB# 3296290. Filipacchi Foussard Team 212-452-4468 Iestyn L. Jones 212-452-4461 2BR PLUS ON THE PARK BPC. Comfortable 2BR, 2 bath, sunny N/W exposures, gourmet SS kitchen, 1 year lease available 10/1. FS building, 24-hr DM, gym, pool. $4,100/month. WEB# 3337560. Richard N. Rothbloom 212-452-4485 GREENWICH PL CONDO FiDi. Stunning 1BR, 1 bath at Greenwich Place Condo features gorgeous views, skylight, great closets, doorman, gym, and storage. Come see it today. $3,600/month. WEB# 1750214. 3USAN 'REENlELD

Richard N. Rothbloom

William Grant

Craig Filipacchi

Jacques Foussard

Shirley A. Mueller

Rudi Hanja

Siim Hanja

Susan Greenfield

NEW YORK CITY

THE HAMPTONS

PA L M B E A C H

All information is from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, prior sale or withdrawal without notice. All rights to content, photographs and graphics reserved to Broker. Equal Housing Opportunity Broker.


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