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New After-School Program Has One Student, and is Looking for 29 More

University Settlement 4Jessica Bell Yingling Chen and Gerard Gomez, a program leader at University Settlement.

The Houston Street Center of University Settlement, which has provided community services to the East Village and Lower East Side since 1886, has started a new after-school program for high school students – an extension of the center’s three-year-old STRIDE program for middle schoolers.

“There already isn’t that much option out there for middle schoolers after school, and it’s even worse for high school students,” said Susan Haskell, director of the Houston Street Center.

Compared to the recreation-focused middle school program, the high school offshoot is more academically oriented: from 3:30 p.m. until 5:30 p.m., a participant’s time is divided between tutoring or homework help as well as activities like swimming, film club and BookUp NYC – a book club organized by the National Book Foundation. Read more…


Squadron Backs St. Mark’s Bookshop

According to a rep of Daniel Squadron, the senator has sent a letter to Cooper Union President Jamshed Bharucha seconding Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer’s earlier call for a rent decrease for St. Mark’s Bookshop. You can read the letter, which warns that the store’s closing would be “a significant loss for the East Village community,” here.


One-Cent Cones at Van Leeuwen

tshirt

GrubHub just set up outside of Van Leeuwen Artisan Ice Cream at 48 1/2 East Seventh Street, near Second Avenue – from now till 10 p.m., an ice cream cone is just one cent if you order it through the site and pick it up at the store before the supply of 2,000 runs out. Plus, they’re handing out these free t-shirts. More info at GrubHub’s Facebook page.


The Day | More Details on Eighth Street Rape

The Bean on BroadwayScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

Some new details about the rape that occurred on East Eighth Street on Saturday morning: DNAinfo finds out that the victim didn’t know her alleged attacker, 51-year-old Neal Essex, and the Post discovers he was previously arrested for allegedly killing his mother in 1984.

Jeremiah’s Vanishing notices a “for sale” sign indicating that playwright, poet and performance artist Edgar Oliver no longer lives at the townhouse at 104 East 10th Street that inspired his one-man show, “East 10th Street: Self Portrait With Empty House.”

Off The Grid takes a look at the history of Third Avenue between 10th and 11th Streets. The block was once home to Sig Klein’s Fat Men’s Shop, which counted Babe Ruth as a customer, and is still home to New York Central Art Supply, which opened in 1905. Read more…


Street Scenes | Grinding at a Halt

KnifeSharpeningVanLauren Carol Smith

Bob’s Grinding Service made a stop on the corner of 10th Street and Fourth Avenue yesterday evening. Should you find yourself charmed by a similar scene, add your sepia-toned photo to The Local’s Flickr Group.


IHOP Opens on 14th Street, and East Villagers React

If the air smelled a little different today, it wasn’t a recurrence of the maple syrup incident. It’s because Manhattan’s second IHOP finally opened at 235 East 14th Street. Yesterday, The Local hit the streets to find out how Villagers felt about the dawn of the 24-hour Rooty Tooty Fresh ‘N Fruity (available for takeout!). Watch the video and tell us how you feel.


CB3 Committee Recommends That Heathers Bar Go Dry

heathersNick DeSantis

Before André Balazs and his Cooper Square Hotel associates breezed through Community Board 3’s SLA Licensing Committee meeting last night, the committee members heard vocal complaints from neighbors about Heathers Bar on East 13th Street. Members of the East 13th Street Residents’ Association accused Heathers of repeatedly violating numerous stipulations of its Sept. 2009 liquor license renewal.

After a long debate, the committee voted to recommend a denial of the bar’s application to renew its license. Read more…


Zaragoza, a Hideaway for Cheap Beer and Burritos, Loses Its Beer

zaragozaDaniel Maurer

The price hike at Café Zaiya wasn’t the only surprise The Local got while stopping into a zed-happy cheap-eats standby yesterday – upon squeezing into the narrow Zaragoza Mexican Deli and Grocery for a spicy beef tongue burrito, we were dismayed to see empty boxes in the coolers where six packs of Estrella Damm beer had recently beckoned. The tables packed near the jukebox in the grocery’s back corner were empty. We were told the taqueria’s beer license had lapsed and a new one was expected shortly. A look at the State Liquor Authority’s Website confirms that the old license expired at the end of July, however a SLA spokesman told The Local that Zaragoza “did not send in for a renewal,” and there is no new license application pending at its address, 215 Avenue A. Which means it may be some time before you can enjoy your carnitas tacos with an ice-cold Negra Modelo again.

This isn’t the only liquor license hiccup the family-operated canteen has faced of late. Read more…


As City Marshal Visits Shuttered Storefront, The Bean Revs Up a Truck

cupcakeDaniel Maurer “Mosaic Man” Jim Power visits the Bean’s new truck.

About an hour ago this morning, a city marshal entered the storefront that until yesterday was home to The Bean. It will soon be occupied by a Starbucks. Across the way, on Third Street near First Avenue, the Bean’s manager Guy Puglia was selling drip coffee out of a rented cupcake truck that had been found on Craigslist. Mr. Puglia said the truck will stay here, or at least nearby (“it’s hard getting a parking spot in the same place every day in this neighborhood”) from about 7 a.m. till 7 p.m. daily, until the Bean’s new store opens a block south in about a month.

“We’re not doing this to make money,” said Mr. Puglia. “We’re getting killed.” Mr. Puglia would not disclose the price of the truck rental, but indicated it was “a good amount of money.” Still, by moving four wooden benches across the street and eventually setting up a wireless hotspot, he and owners Ike Escava and Sammy Cohen hope to remind customers that they’re still in the espresso business. Read more…


Heralding a ‘New Wave,’ a Gallery Opens in Cooper Union’s New Academic Building


From first to last: Gallery exterior, Nikki Milavec, Karen Hakimi, cafe, and art.

The New Museum recently announced a spin-off gallery at 231 Bowery, and now a pair of pop-up curators have opened the strip’s latest – just a little above the Bowery, actually, in the iconic Cooper Union New Academic Building at 41 Cooper Square. The Milavec Hakimi Gallery opened with a group show, “Hello World!” last Thursday. In two or three weeks, it will be joined by an adjacent cafe selling espresso, pastries, and tea.

The gallery’s founders, Nikki Milavec and Karen Hakimi, both 29, previously worked together at a pop-up gallery, Volume Black (before that, Ms. Milavec, a graduate of the Sotheby’s Institute of Art in London, ran another pop-up, Milavec Green, with a partner Adam Green). During the course of their two-plus years as colleagues, they decided to collaborate on a permanent space – preferably on the Bowery. Read more…


The Day | Trane Rescheduled

Endless summerScott Lynch

Good morning, East Village.

André Balazs’s takeover of the Cooper Square Hotel isn’t the only news today.

DNAinfo has more on the rape that occurred on East Eighth Street Saturday morning. The victim’s attacker is described as “choking her so viciously that she lost consciousness.”

Elsewhere in Alphabet City, Off the Grid takes note of the Bullet Space gallery at 292 East Third Street – one of eleven buildings (this one dating back to 1867) that the city turned over to squatters for $1 each. Read more…


Balazs Gets Nod for Liquor Transfer at Cooper Square Hotel

balazsNick DeSantis

Famed hotelier André Balazs was rewarded for his cameo at Community Board 3’s SLA Committee meeting last night, as the group voted unanimously to support his application to transfer the Cooper Square Hotel’s liquor license to his name.

Mr. Balazs’s high-profile establishments – the Mercer Hotel in Soho and the Standard in the meatpacking district – are magnets for celebrities. His Cooper Square Hotel takeover raised questions that the party atmosphere of the Boom Boom Room (his nightclub in the Standard) could soon migrate to the East Village. But Mr. Balazs ameliorated those fears by addressing residents directly. Read more…


Street Scenes | Back-in-the-Day Boys


Tonight, Saxon + Parole Replaces Double Crown on the Bowery

saxonDaniel Maurer

Saxon + Parole, the restaurant from design firm AvroKO that replaces their earlier effort at Bleecker Street and the Bowery, Double Crown, is open as of tonight. Check out the interior shots posted by Eater, and the menu on the restaurant’s Website. For what it’s worth, a letter to friends and family – intercepted by The Local – brags that “early tastings have garnered glowing praises for dishes like the Portabello mushroom mousse pots with whiskey & truffle jelly (DO NOT MISS THESE), and ‘the best we’ve ever had’ Berkshire pork chops topped with a touch of quince and apple sauce.” The cocktail and dessert menus are not yet on S+P’s site, but you can see them below. Read more…


A Glimpse Inside of Indochine’s Latest

Indochine010Christine Jenkins

Here’s a shot of construction inside 9 Great Jones Street, where a restaurant from the trio behind Indochine and Kittichai (who also own Bondst with Jonathan Morr) will soon replace Acme Bar & Grill (you’ll recall that Acme closed after 25 years back in March). We have a call in to find out the latest – while we await details, file this away as a future dinner option before drinks over at Andre Balazs’s Cooper Square Hotel. Balazs is expected to plead his case for a liquor license transfer at tonight’s meeting of Community Board 3’s SLA & DCA Licensing Committee.


Scent of East Village, 1985

Screen shot 2011-09-19 at 4.24.33 PM

As if Blind Barber’s “Tompkins” candle weren’t enough, Runnin’ Scared points out that Oak has introduced a “St. Marks+First 85” candle. According to Oak’s promo copy, “the East Village candle is inspired by… metallic, trash & vaudeville, incense, sweat, concrete, booze, and vintage clothing stores.” If the $68 price tag is too steep, a new scratch-n-sniff book, “New York, Phew York,” reproduces the smells of a Lower East Side subway station for half the price.


The Bean Transforms Into Truck

DNAinfo reports from the scene of the Bean, where after ten years on First Avenue, owners Ike Escava and Sammy Cohen were packing up this morning to make way for a Starbucks. While the shop prepares to reopen a block south, it’s launching a food truck, according to its Twitter feed: “Starting Tuesday, the EV Bean food truck will be parked at 49 1/2 1st Ave. instead of the storefront being open. Check us out!”


Cruising for Star Cars

Cow Car with "moo2u2" license plate

Just a reminder, folks: We’re still looking for the sweetest ride in the East Village. Contributors Scott Lynch and Susan Keyloun have added their nominees to the Local’s Flickr Group, and we’ve slotted them into our growing slideshow. If you see others, upload them to the pool before we start taking votes later this week.


Street Scenes | On Top of Mars

257/365 - Mars Bar, Mural by Terry Galmitz, East Village.Gina Herold

The Day | A Setback in the Fight for 316 East Third

Mars BarRachel Citron

Good morning, East Village.

According to the Greenwich Village Society for Historical Preservation, the Landmarks Preservation Commission has rejected a hearing about 316 East Third Street, the 177-year-old rowhouse the GVSHP has been fighting to save from demolition. In a letter to the preservation group, the LPC writes, “The changes to the building are too numerous and from many different periods, resulting in a lack of architectural significance necessary to be considered an individual landmark.”

Preservationists, take comfort: To celebrate its 160th birthday, Kiehl’s is introducing a “Limited Edition New York Heritage Collection” of scents that date back over fifty years. The Star, out of Malaysia, has a Kiehl’s history lesson.

EV Grieve sneaks a peek inside Tompkins Square Bagels. Still no sign of the Mosaic Man’s artwork.

Read more…