Daniel Maurer Police loaded a man into this van.
Multiple people were apprehended by police during a May Day Anti-Capitalism March that started at Tompkins Square Park this afternoon.
At East 14th Street and Second Avenue, The Local arrived on the scene to see officers loading a young man wearing a black hood into a van.
A friend of the individual who at first identified himself as Etan and then asked to be called Gristle said, “They grabbed somebody from the sidewalk and pulled him down and arrested him,” adding that the man, who he declined to identify by name, was standing up against a wall doing nothing when he was taken into custody.
Gristle said he and an indeterminate number of people were protesting capitalism and oppression during a march to Union Square when the apprehension occurred. “They don’t want anyone who’s protesting to even exist,” he said of the many police officers stationed in the middle of the intersection, bringing crosstown traffic to a halt.
Read more…
Kelsey Kudak
Today, Department of Transportation employees were once again out in full force, scolding cycling scofflaws.
Last week, as bike-share stations were installed, we noticed the swarm of yellow-jackets handing out bike-law pamphlets and chatting up cyclists as they waited at red lights. Were these bike-lane babysitters actually a deterrent to “Premium Rush” types? Well, one cyclist peddling the wrong way dismounted his bike and walked it across the intersection, and another turned off the avenue after a DOT worker blew her whistle at him.
Brothers Jessie and Robert Nelson both received pamphlets. The avid cyclists dismissed the idea, floated by the Post, that the workers might be a poor use of tax dollars. “I don’t think it’s a waste of money at all,” said Robert, 31. “Pedestrian safety as well as driver safety is pertinent and a very appropriate way to spend taxpayer money.”
In fact, Robert thought the pamphlets should be more widely available. “I’ve lived here since 2004 and have never seen this,” he said after receiving one. Read more…
A couple of weeks ago Amman Badlani, an East Village resident and reader of The Local, let us in on a secret. He was planning to propose to his girlfriend of over three and a half years, and he was planning to do it on the F train. We’ll let the young romantic explain why exactly he busted out a Victorian ring from 1900 (“just as old as the building we live in, coincidentally,” he told us) while deep in the bowels of the earth Sunday. When you’re done reading, have a look at our video of the big moment.
Monique and I met on August 14, 2009 – I know the exact date because I had gone to see Animal Collective play at the Prospect Park bandshell that evening. She was at the Tribeca Grand and somehow we both ended up on the F train afterwards. I had been in NYC for about eight months up to that point and hadn’t taken the F train too many times.
So I was heading back into the city, and I missed my stop at Second Avenue. Realizing that right as the doors were closing, I looked to the left to ask the person next to me a few feet away what stop we were coming up to next — and that person happened to be Monique. She told me West Fourth was the next stop, and I stood up to look at the subway map and figured I could just get out at 14th and Sixth off of the F and take the L over to my place (my apartment was off of First Avenue). Read more…
Gloria Chung
Good morning, East Village.
Rents at Jupiter 21 will range from $3,000 to $10,000 a month. A resident of the building it replaced, which held Mars Bar, says that during the 1980s she could look out her window and see the glow of “60 crack pipes.” [Wall Street Journal]
In an opinion piece that’s getting a good deal of pick-up, Felix Salmon slams Cooper Union for pursuing an overly ambitious growth strategy in the face of debt. [Reuters]
The rooftop of a five story building on East Seventh near Avenue C is caught on film Sunday afternoon, serving a cautionary tale for summer barbecues. [City Room]
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Jonathan Krohn Smoking a hookah in Kurdistan
It’s hard to know what opinions a well-spoken, slightly ridiculous thirteen-year old Jonathan Krohn had on the War in Iraq and Middle Eastern politics when he gave his now infamous speech about the “four pillars of conservatism” at the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2009. Mr. Krohn insists that it didn’t matter then, and doesn’t now.
“We went to war in Iraq in 2003 — I was eight years old!” he told The Local last week. For the past several months, Mr. Krohn, now 18, has been living in the East Village (and occasionally contributing to The Local) as an N.Y.U. freshman. But now it’s upward and onward: last week, after being interviewed for a profile in The Times’s Style section, he left the country for a four-month stay in Iraqi Kurdistan, where he will report full-time for Rudaw, a Kurdish newspaper with an English-language Website.
Mr. Krohn is now on sabbatical at N.Y.U., and he doesn’t believe that he will be returning. “At this point, here’s my philosophy,” he said. “I’m doing the same jobs that I was planning on doing when I graduated, and I’m going to be in less debt.”
It’s hard to argue with him: the Times profile has already sparked interest from high-profile agent David Kuhn, according to Ray LeMoine, who threw a going-away party for Mr. Krohn at Heathers last week. After the sendoff, the two friends slipped into Chelsea hotspot Electric Room to party with Nur Khan and fellow Style subject Domingo Zapata.
Not surprisingly, the Times profile also prompted some Internet snark, thanks to a line about Mr. Krohn’s personal life: “In the midst of all the upheaval in his life,” wrote Susan Chumsky, “the one thing that has remained constant (‘unfortunately,’ he said) is his virginity.” Today, Mr. Krohn told The Local he is not in fact a virgin; he decided not to ask for a correction because he didn’t want the matter to overshadow the rest of the piece.
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Iggy Pop — the man, the legend, the former East Villager — is suddenly everywhere: in a new Chrysler ad filmed with John Varvatos on the Bowery, in a new Criterion Collection video in which he recounts his involvement in “Repo Man,” and in a funny ad for his new album, “Ready to Die.” (Oh, and being played by Taylor Hawkins of the Foo Fighters in a new poster for the CBGBs movie.)
Not only is the new album streaming on NPR.org, but yesterday NPR Music put on a concert at Le Poisson Rouge that’s posted online as well. Watch as The Stooges play songs off the new album and then invite everyone onto the stage for “Fun House.” And when you’re done with that, have another look at Iggy doing Sinatra.
“Mosaic Man” Jim Power, last seen selling belt buckles and creating colorful mosaics for The Bean, Porchetta and other local businesses is turning his attention back to the light poles for which he’s best known. The local legend just launched an Indie GoGo campaign in hopes of raising $80,000, so he can restore poles that have been damaged over the years. Contribute $100 and you get your likeness on one of them; chip in $2,500 and you get your own pole.
Check out the promotional video, featuring Clayton Patterson’s early photos of Mr. Power; look closely and you’ll even see The Local’s light pole.
Steven Matthews
Good morning, East Village.
A fire broke out at 230 East 7th Street, near Avenue C, yesterday afternoon. Michael Natale posted photos at Gog in NYC and in The Local’s Flickr pool.
“Anthony Davis, 24, was arrested around 10:55 p.m. Saturday after carrying a toolbox into the Waterfront Spa on First Avenue near Second Street and trying to push in several doors inside the business, sources said. He was charged with third-degree burglary.” [NY Post]
“15 artists have been commissioned to paint murals on storefront shutters along the Bowery. And the results are inspiring.” [ArtInfo]
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Chelsia Rose Marcius
A plan to demolish Mary Help of Christians has been approved despite preservationists’ efforts to keep the century-old church standing.
“It’s really a terrible loss for the East Village,” said Richard Moses, president of the Lower East Side Preservation Initiative. Mr. Moses said his preservation group and others requested a meeting with Douglas Steiner, the developer who bought the church property for $41 million last November, but never heard back. Now the groups are planning a rally for next month.
The application for full demolition was approved by the Department of Buildings yesterday, documents show. Mr. Steiner’s plans call for an 80/20-percent mix of market-rate and affordable housing. Read more…
Fatima Malik
The East Village, home to a wine bar called Winebar, just got a wine shop named wineshop.
Aaron Thorp, an East Village resident and the wine director at The Standard in the meatpacking district, quietly opened the store a couple of weeks ago on East Ninth Street. It focuses on “smaller production wines” and “stuff that isn’t readily available in retail,” operations manager Michael Sullivan told The Local. “We have one local wine, out of Red Hook. We’ll be getting more as our inventory grows.”
Prices range from $11 a bottle to about $150. “We didn’t want to be the expensive wine shop,” said Mr. Sullivan, whose current favorites include a pair of $27 reds: Agnes and Rene Mosse Anjou 2011 is an unfiltered natural red wine; La Clarine Farm Piedi Grandi 2011 is also a natural wine.
The storefront near Avenue A, which briefly housed a Turkish fast food joint, has been renovated to feature exposed brick walls and furniture from The Upper Rust across the street.
wineshop, 438 East Ninth Street (between 1st Avenue and Avenue A); (646) 249-3290.
Paul O. Boisvert for The New York Times
Dick Gregory and Ed Asner have joined thousands of online petitioners in calling for the release of Lynne F. Stewart now that her family has announced that she is suffering from stage-4 breast cancer.
Ralph Poynter, the husband of the onetime Lower East side lawyer, said he learned that his wife has two to three years to live from a warden at the Carswell, Texas prison where she is serving a ten-year sentence for aiding terrorism.
Mr. Poynter said their daughter, Dr. Zenobia Brown, diagnosed her with Stage 4 breast cancer. He added that his wife, who is 73, has undergone chemotherapy at a Fort Worth hospital while “shackled” to a bed and that she has already written a letter to her warden requesting a compassionate release. He told The Local today that her application is being considered by prison authorities in Texas. Read more…
Daniel Maurer
Looks like the police department is taking that plague of thefts at local hotspots seriously: we spotted a new sign on the window of Solas, which is no stranger to such incidents.
Definitely more sobering than what was previously in the window, below.
Daniel Maurer
Scott Lynch
Good morning, East Village.
It’s official: Lower East Side institution Max Fish will move to Williamsburg, next to Nitehawk Cinema. “It remains to be seen whether the bar’s success can be replicated in Williamsburg, a neighborhood in the grips of the same rampant development that is chasing Ms. Rimkus now. The new site’s listing price earlier this year was $14,000 a month.” [NY Times]
And another institution is in danger: “Ray of Ray’s Candy Store, at Avenue A and Seventh St., who just turned 80, tells us his lease is up for renewal July 15, and that it’s likely his rent — now $4,100 — will double. But he can’t afford to pay that without doubling his prices, and is now wondering if, after 40 years, he’ll have to ‘give up the business.'” [East Villager]
More about the dorm that’s going into the former P.S. 64 building: “The basement — formerly home to a 400-seat auditorium where F.D.R. once riled the masses, and where the Fringe Festival was staged — would now house a bike room, fitness center, TV lounge and game rooms outfitted with pool, ping-pong and foosball tables, along with Xbox and PlayStation consoles.” [East Villager]
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Samantha Balaban Left to right: Johnny Marines, Jose Rodriguez, Enrique Cruz
At age 11, Enrique Cruz worked at his father’s grocery store on East Houston Street. Jose Rodriguez grew up on the same block of Suffolk Street as Mr. Cruz, and now owns a deli on Cherry Street. Johnny Marines, a retired police sergeant, grew up in the Jacob Riis Houses on Avenue D. The trio recently created the Association of Latino Business Owners and Residents, an advocacy group for the neighborhood’s declining Latino population that already counts 50 business owners as members.
“We’ve all come across situations where we feel like we had limited resources,” explained Mr. Marines. “And basically that’s why we formed the association, because we want to give everybody a fair chance.”
Last week, The Local sat down with the association’s founders to talk bodegas, 7-Elevens, and opportunity. Read more…
Frank Mastropolo
Looks like somebody managed to leave a three-story tag on the side of the East Houston Hotel, on the corner of Houston and Eldridge Streets. They don’t call the Lower East Side “vibrant and eclectic” for nothing.
Tim Schreier
“Homecoming: A Community Art Show” opened today at East Side Community High School. As noted yesterday, art teachers Desiree Borrero and Leigh Klonsky (shown in the last slide, above) asked students, parents, and staffers of the school to reflect on four months spent in exile while their East 12th Street building was repaired. Here’s a look at some of the 800-plus tiles they created.
Kavitha Surana
It’s official: security cameras are now trained on all 12 buildings of the Alfred E. Smith Houses. The New York City Public Housing authority announced today that it had added 78 new cameras across seven buildings, bringing full coverage to the Lower East Side housing development.
“It already changed the pissing in the elevators, I’m not going to lie,” said William Green, a 60-year resident of the complex.
Members of the Smith Houses tenants association, politicians, and housing authority officials celebrated the long sought-after security upgrade today, coming together in a rare show of unity during a time of walkouts and boycotts over the agency’s hotly contested land-lease infill proposal.
According to housing authority’s chairman, John B. Rhea, three people have been arrested in the past week because of the cameras. One incident involved vandalism, another was an apparent assault, and the third involved someone trying unsuccessfully to break the cameras in the lobby, a spokesperson for the housing authority later told The Local. Read more…
A Spanish fast-food chain is bound for the Lower East Side and an Italian risotteria is headed for the East Village, by the looks of Community Board 3’s newly released May calendar of meetings.
100 Montaditos — a Spanish chain serving mini sandwiches and sangria that plans to bring 20 locations to New York City, according to DNA Info — will plead its case for a beer-and-wine license at 177 Ludlow Street during the May 20 meeting of C.B. 3’s liquor licensing committee.
Meanwhile, Risotteria Melotti, a restaurant near the Italian city of Romeo and Juliet, intends to open its first U.S. outpost at 309 East Fifth Street. The eatery, operated by a Verona-based family of risotto producers, will feature “a wide range of risotto prepared according to typical Italian techniques and methods, using authentic and genuine ingredients only,” according to its Website. You can see the preview menu here.
These aren’t the only newcomers that will ask the committee to bless their booze bids. Hop over to C.B. 3’s Website for the full run-down, including Papaya King’s application for beer, Heart n’ Soul’s plea for a sidewalk cafe and oh, so much more.