NEWS

As School Building Is Repaired, Students Shuttled Uptown

East Side and Girls Prep Entrance at East 11th StreetSanna Chu East 11th Street.

After yesterday’s evacuation, the building on 12th Street that holds East Side Community High School and Girls Prep Lower East Side Middle School remains deserted, and it may stay that way for a while.

Today a general contractor at the site, who did not want to be named, told The Local that the building would most likely be off limits for at least a month as workers repair a wall that separated from the rest of the structure.

East Side students spent the day at P.S. 19, Asher Levy School, around the corner on First Avenue, and Girls Prep students were relocated to Lower East Side Elementary School on East Houston Street. But starting Thursday, they’ll have to travel farther to get to classes. Read more…


The Day | Guilty Plea in Lower East Side Stabbing

FAB! Festival 2012, Zip CarScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

The Daily News reports that Raul Barrera pleaded guilty to stabbing his girlfriend to death during an argument in their Clinton Street apartment last year.

In much happier couples news, DNA Info has the story of a local man who popped the question at a “really special” coffee shop. “Eighteen months to the day after meeting his girlfriend on a blind date at popular East Village java joint the Mudspot Café, Daniel Chan returned to the East Ninth Street coffee shop to pop the question to her Sunday morning.”

And still more romance: City Room brings a happy tale from the infamous “pepper-spray cop” incident at Occupy Wall Street. “Kaylee Dedrick, Inspector Bologna’s co-star in a viral video in which he wields his lachrymatory canister, is about to have a baby with the fellow protester who came to her aid.” Read more…


Schools Evacuated As Wall Separates From Building

photo (64)Sasha Von Oldershausen East 12th Street.

Class was dismissed early today at East Side Community High School and Girls Prep Lower East Side Middle School due to structural issues with the school building.

The schools, co-located at 420 East 12th Street, were evacuated, and entrances on East 11th and 12th Streets were cordoned off by police tape.

Marge Feinberg, a spokeswoman for the Department of Education, told The Local, “There was some structural damage to the school so we had to evacuate the building,” adding, “We saw that the east wall was separating from the building.” Read more…


Chin, Mendez Aim to Take Lowline Higher Up Political Ladder


Photos: Alexa Mae Asperin

On Saturday, City Council members Rosie Mendez and Margaret Chin threw their weight behind a plan to build a public park beneath Delancey Street, imploring local residents to demand that Governor Cuomo make the buzzy Lowline a reality.

“We need your help,” Ms. Chin told dozens gathered at “Imagining the Lowline,” a new exhibit that offers a glimpse of the project’s potential future. “You have to help us get to other elected officials, like our governor.”

The council members envision the Lowline as a place for children, seniors and lifelong East Village and Lower East Siders to enjoy. “We don’t have that much green space, so it’s much needed down here,” Ms. Chin told The Local, noting that public housing residents often have to “walk quite a long way” for recreation. Read more…


The Day | Historic District Vote Set For Next Month

Go LiteracyScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

Scott Lynch photographed a new mural outside of The Strand, where there was apparently a Morrissey sighting yesterday.

Off the Grid drops the news that the Landmarks Preservation Commission has set Oct. 9 as the date of its vote on the East Village/Lower East Side Historic District.

Gothamist reports that a 72-year-old woman was hit by an NYPD Traffic Enforcement vehicle on the Bowery Thursday night. A police spokesman said “it was an accident,” though the investigation is ongoing. Read more…


Pols Blast Housing Authority For Inadequate Safety Measures

nycha press conference 2Dana Varinsky Dereese Huff with a hammer she carries for protection.

Elected officials blasted the New York City Housing Authority this afternoon for not being quick enough to make security upgrades, citing a recent study that indicates many public housing residents don’t feel safe in their own homes. Meanwhile, the authority pointed the finger right back at local politicians.

In July and August, the offices of Borough President Scott M. Stringer, State Senator Daniel Squadron and Assemblyman Brian Kavanagh polled 520 residents at ten public housing developments, including Campos I, Jacob Riis Houses I and II, and the Lilian Wald Houses in the East Village, as well as seven others on the Lower East Side.

According to the report, which can be read below, more than 40 percent of survey respondents said they felt unsafe in staircases; only 45 percent indicated they have lobby doors with working locks; only 49 percent said their building had a working intercom; and 65 percent said not enough is done to prevent trespassing.

“The bottom line here is that even the most basic security is not happening at N.Y.C.H.A.,” Mr. Stringer said today at Seward Park Extension, later adding, “It’s time to fix the damn doors.” Read more…


The Day | ‘Pepper-Spray Cop’ Sued Again

KramScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

The Times reports that Anthony Bologna, the police commander who was sued for pepper-spraying Occupy Wall Street demonstrators on East 12th Street last year, is being sued again. “The plaintiffs in the suit filed on Thursday, Johanne Sterling and Joshua Cartagena, said that they were arrested last Sept. 24 while standing on a sidewalk on East 12th Street off Fifth Avenue. (Ms. Sterling said that she was also struck by the pepper spray blast from Inspector Bologna.)”

The Post reports that the city is being sued by the family of a Lower East Side woman who died of cardiac arrest during the blizzard of 2010 after waiting over two hours for an ambulance.

The Observer attended a City Council hearing about the Seward Park Urban Renewal Area and says. Many voiced concerns that the plan to have 50 percent affordable housing isn’t ambitious enough. “It’s a contentious point and one most heavily vocalized by the members of The Coalition to Protect Chinatown and the Lower East Side (CPC) who have moved to vote against the entire SPURA project if their isn’t a special allowance made to make all of SPURA’s units 100 percent low income housing.” DNA Info also reported from the meeting.
Read more…


Police Say This Man Punched a Woman and Grabbed Her Purse

robberyNYPD

A man punched and robbed a woman on the Lower East Side, the police said.

Around 4:20 p.m. on Tuesday, the man followed his 25-year-old victim into 50 Allen Street, where he twice punched her in the face and then swiped her purse, according to the police.

The suspect, thought to be between the age of 35 and 40, was wearing a white shirt, blue jeans and white sneakers, as shown in this surveillance camera footage. He’s wanted for robbery.


The Day | Dream Board On 12th Street

i wishPamela Inbasekaran

Good morning, East Village.

The Local spotted the above on the steps of Mary Help of Christians. This morning passersby – mostly students from neighboring East Side Community High School and Girls Prep – used chalk to request a city that was “fun,” “cleaner,” “more green,” “more like me,” and (our favorite) “dominated by Liam.” A woman sweeping the sidewalk outside of the church added that she wished the city was “full of Salesians. MHC.”

An attorney tells The Post that, in response to recent bottle brawls, nightclubs may start asking asking their patrons to sign waivers and landlords may require clubs to sign lease-termination clauses.

The Observer reports from a party for Molly Ringwold’s new book. The actress, writer and musician made an East Village appearance last weekend as part of NYC Lit Crawl. “The minute Ms. Ringwald walked in the room, everyone fell silent as camera phones were raised in a sort of luminous shrine.” Read more…


Alarm Bells at Mary Help of Christians

photo-292Daniel Maurer Sunday, workers transported items from the church
to their new home at Immaculate Conception.

The bells – alarm bells, that is – sounded at a recently shuttered church on East 12th Street.

Around 11 p.m. last night, a security alarm went off at Mary Help of Christians, seemingly in the rectory. The sirens sounded the same day acts of apparent vandalism were discovered inside of the church, but were no cause for concern: a police car pulled up in front of the church only to depart minutes later.

Jo Messina, a secretary at Immaculate Conception, told The Local there was no break-in. “Sometimes the sensors will detect if there are rats or mice,” she said.

Yesterday a source told The Local that the church’s alarm hadn’t been set when – sometime between Sunday and Monday morning – marble around the main tabernacle was smashed, a smaller tabernacle above the side altar was also damaged, and a hole was punched through the wall in the sacristy.

Suzanne Rozdeba contributed reporting.


The Day | Lower East Side Films at Anthology

EAST VILLAGE dog restingRia Chung

Good morning, East Village.

DNA Info previews the New Museum’s exhibit honoring artists of the 1970s and 80s Bowery and notes that Curt Hoppe, a painter and photographer featured in the exhibit, still lives and works at 98 Bowery. “It has been just a very cool building,” he tells the site. “There is something special about this building, but I don’t know what it is.” The piece he contributed to “Come Closer” was a collaboration with fellow 98 Bowery artists Marc Miller and Bettie Ringma.

Cinebeasts has curated a “Films of the Lower East Side” night at Anthology Film Archives. Among the films shown will be short by D.W. Griffiths that was “surreptitiously shot on the streets of the Lower East Side” and “features a combination of Biograph players and honest-to-G-d denizens of the ‘ghetto’.”

You’ve likely seen those Lost Parrot posters around the neighborhood. DNA Info reports that the bird was found on East 14th Street and returned to its owner. Read more…


Mary Help of Christians Vandalized

Mary Help of Christians A tabernacle above the side altar was vandalized.

Vandals broke into Mary Help of Christians over the weekend, though the church’s precious relics had been moved out earlier in the week.

“There was vandalism at the church, but we don’t know exactly what happened,” said a secretary speaking on behalf of John Matcovich, parish manager at Immaculate Conception. “There was nothing major stolen. We don’t know anything more than that.”

Mr. Matcovich confirmed that the marble around the main tabernacle was smashed, a smaller tabernacle above the side altar was also damaged, and a hole was punched through the wall in the sacristy, a room where sacred vessels and vestments are normally stored. A church tabernacle is a fixed box where the Eucharist is kept. Read more…


The Day | Arrests During March Down Broadway

Occupy Wall Street, One Year Anniversary Weekend, S16 - Celebration, Foley Square, Jimmy McMillan, The Rent Is Too Damn High, with Vermin SupremeScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

Protests and celebrations marked the anniversary of Occupy Wall Street over the weekend, and continue to do so today (Gothamist is liveblogging the proceedings). Above, Jimmy McMillan made an appearance in Foley Square. You can see Scott Lynch’s photos of a march down Broadway in The Local’s Flickr pool. According to The Times, it appeared that at least 15 arrests were made during the march from Washington Square Park to Zuccotti Park.

The Local spotted icons and other effects being removed from Mary Help of Christians over the weekend. A worker said they were being relocated to Immaculate Conception, where Spanish-language masses are now being held. Late Friday, we reported that the church was cleared to be sold for $41 million, and evidence points to Douglas Steiner of Steiner Studios as its mystery buyer.

The Times reports that Tony Goldman, a real estate visionary who revitalized SoHo, died at 68. Freshness Mag remembers him as the proprietor of the Bowery Mural on Bowery and East Houston Street. Read more…


The Day | Car Trashed at Broadway and Bleecker, and 12 Other Morning Reads

Good morning, East Village.

City Room reports that the police are looking for a cyclist they say incited a riot on the corner of Bowery and Bleecker on Thursday, and a woman they say jumped on a man’s car and smashed its windows.

Speaking of cyclists, East Villager Shawn Chittle has posted the above clip to YouTube, showing a frantic bike ride through the neighborhood.

The Blemish spotted Olivia Munn of “The Daily Show” and “Newsroom” at the Bowery Hotel. Read more…


Locked Out of Mary Help of Christians, Parishioners Take to the Streets

photo(359)Daniel Maurer

Parishioners locked out of Mary Help of Christians gathered in front of the church steps last night and chanted before a candlelit image of the Virgin Mary. They plan to return to the sidewalk every night, at 7 p.m., even during the cold of winter.

Josephine Messali, who attended the church’s last mass on Sunday, said she would continue to pray in front of it even as Immaculate Conception, on 14th Street, offers Sunday mass to former attendees of Mary Help of Christians.

“This is our church,” she said. “We still adhere to the Salesian spirituality and that’s not over there.”

It isn’t the first time worshipers at Mary Help of Christians have been driven to the streets. When the church ended its run as an independent parish in 2007, its congregation took to the sidewalk to continue the daily rosary chants that are customary in May. At the end of the month, they decided to continue gathering outside, to pray for the reopening of the church. Read more…


The Day | Banker Buys $6.2 Million Townhouse

@ St. Mark's ChurchJoann Jovenelly

Good morning, East Village.

The Real Deal reports that French-American banker Olivier Sarkozy has bought a $6.2 million townhome in the St. Marks historic district, at 125 East 10th Street.

According to the Post, the “White-Glove Bandit” pleaded guilty to a string of bank robberies on the Lower East Side. He could face 15-plus years in jail.

The Times has a couple of stories about the East River today: First, Verdant Power is hoping to use the river to generate electricity. “In about five years, the company hopes to have 30 turbines arrayed in the river, each capable of producing 35 kilowatts of electricity. All told, the project would produce about as much power as one wind turbine, enough to power a few hundred homes.” And second, the future of East River Ferry service is uncertain since “it is not yet apparent that the ferries can become a daily habit for enough people to keep New York Waterway, which operates the ferry, from losing money, as it has on some other routes.”

Allen Ginsberg’s former research assistant, who has published a book about the poet, tells The Awl, “He loved the East Village and Lower East Side (where his mother Naomi grew up on Orchard Street). I remember him enjoying Tompkins Square Park. He enjoyed eating at Kiev, Leshko’s and Veselka—he loved Eastern European food, also Japanese and Korean. But he had to be careful of hot spicy dishes. He didn’t hang out at bars, he mostly entertained at home, and when he did, the bodega on the northwest corner of 12th Street and Avenue B was the place to hit.”

ArtsBeat brings word of the latest production at the Public Theater, “a new musical based on Alison Bechdel’s graphic novel ‘Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic,’ with music by Jeanine Tesori (‘Shrek,’ ‘Caroline, or Change’) and book and lyrics by Lisa Kron (‘Well’).” It will open the fall season with a cast that includes Roberta Colindrez, Judy Kuhn, Beth Malone and Joel Perez.

In a roundup of new restaurants, DNA Info notes that the folks from Cacio e Pepe have opened Bocca, an Italian spot near Union Square that “serves fresh pastas made in-house and dishes such as pan-seared salmon with Italian couscous, and roasted pork shoulder, marinated for two days in fennel pollen and rosemary, served with broccoli rabe and red onion marmalade.”

Grub Street reports that Community Board 3 agreed to support a liquor license application for the new Nevada Smiths if it agreed to “a 2 a.m. closing on weeknights and 3 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, increased security and cleanup detail, and a requirement that owner Patrick McCarthy meet with residents monthly to address potential complaints.”

Blackbook speaks with Matt Levine, the owner of Sons of Essex who just opened Cocktail Bodega a block below Houston Street. He says the concept represents “a strong sense of community within the Lower East Side, and with the use of fresh fruits and fresh vegetables in the cocktail program at Cocktail Bodega, the name Bodega seemed like a natural fit.”

Eater notes that a new happy hour at Peels features “a number of cocktails for $9, canned beer for $5, and bar snacks like tasso potato chips and toasted almonds for $4 apiece.”


The Day | Nublu Celebrates 10 Years

@ Trash & VaudevilleJoann Jovinelly

Good morning, East Village.

According to the Post, a judge has tossed out a request by Lou Reed and John Cale for a court order declaring that Andy Warhol’s foundation didn’t have the right to use the iconic banana that appears on a Velvet Underground cover.

Chez Andre, the Standard East Village’s pop-up club, gets rave reviews from the Observer. Its Friday night debut was “packed with the likes of Theophilus London, Jay McInerney, Angela Lindvall, Olivier Zahm and more gorgeous people than have been assembled in one place since, well, last Fashion Week.”

Embattled Avenue C club Nublu will celebrate its 10th anniversary with a concert at Le Poisson Rouge on Thursday. According to Artist Direct, the show will feature “four great bands that regularly call Nublu home: Hess Is More, Wax Poetic, Love Trio, Clark Gayton and a new addition of Sabina Sciubba of Brazilian Girls. The evening will also include DJ sets by Greg Caz, Modest P, Alex From Tokyo and Vladimir Radojicic, and special video productions courtesy of Special K!” Read more…


Slideshow: Last Mass at Mary Help of Christians Church


Photos: Alberto Reyes

Parishioners at Mary Help of Christians celebrated mass there for the last time yesterday, many weeping over the closure of a church that some had been attending for nearly 60 years.

“It was Kleenex heaven. Everybody was crying,” Margaret Hearn, a parishioner, told The Local. About 200 people packed into the church, which is being sold by the Archdiocese. “People who had been going there for years came, people who got married there and came back with their adult children, and others who were sorry to hear of its closing. The church was packed.”

Janet Bonica, another parishioner, said, “It was like attending a funeral and being happy to see family and old friends, but then being devastated by the loss.” Read more…


The Day | Clayton Patterson’s Lower East Side, and 12 Other Morning Reads

Good morning, East Village.

Vice spends the day with documentarian, gallerist, and neighborhood historian Clayton Patterson. His tour of the Lower East Side is above. After going to an opening at a neighborhood gallery he says, “I will guarantee that none of the people that grew up around here, none of the kids from down here, none of the people like Jesus that we met will ever set foot in that gallery; they will never feel welcome, they will never be welcome, and they will never go in there. So that then means, is that really art or is that gentrification?”

The Obama fundraiser that Mickey Boardman of Paper and others threw at Eastern Bloc raised over $10,000, according to the Washington Post. “The crowd of about 150 Obama supporters was cordial and relaxed, a mix of friends and fashion types, partying alongside male dancers wearing Obama ’08 boxer briefs (or, as one did, an American flag-themed thong) stuffed with the requisite $1 bills.”

Paper has some shots from ThreeAsFour’s Fashion Week show at The Hole. The designers “decked the models out in Spock-esque unibrows and chunky shattered-glass platform shoes, giving the whole collection an alien-priestess-meets Carnaby Road feel.” Read more…


The Day | Go-Go Boys for Obama

Prince Street, NYC, fashion's night outMichelle Rick

Good morning, East Village.

The Wall Street Journal thinks Alphabet City has gone from being a “a no man’s land” to “a kind of Epcot version of the city’s coolness.” The president of DSA Realty says, “We’re seeing a lot more young women come to the neighborhood, I’d say a 70/30 split,” with new residents working in fashion, tech and media.

The co-owner of D.L. Cerney, who plans to close the 28-year-old boutique to focus on her art and writing, has noticed the changes in Alphabet City: “Back in the 1980s and into the 90s,” Linda St. John tells Jeremiah’s Vanishing NY, “this whole neighborhood was just filled with creative people. Now, nobody’s left. The way Rudy cleaned up the neighborhood was awesome, but now it’s too clean. When did those French bistros end up on Avenue D?”

According to The Times, The Stone is celebrating the centennial of composer John Cage’s birth with a “Cage100 festival” that kicked off Tuesday. “The Stone is a proudly humble space,” Anthony Tommasini writes of the venue, “just a black room with chairs for at most 50 and a big whirring air-conditioner that has to be turned off during concerts, even when the humidity is as thick as it was on Tuesday night.” Read more…