December 2014

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

December 2014 December 2014 E 22ND ST Gibney Dance has an exciting month ahead as we embark on the last three weeks of E 21ST ST 6 DoublePlus, our first performance series at 280 Broadway! E 20TH ST E 19TH ST Welcome To Gibney Dance Gibney Dance’s mission is to bringE 18TH the ST possibility of movement where it would otherwise not exist. At our Performing Arts Center at 280 Broadway andE 17our TH STChoreographic Center at 890 Broadway, we offer a robust roster of events designed to meet FIFTH AVE the needs of the dance field by fosteringPARK AVE Sthe creative process, encouraging dialogue, and providing professional development opportunities. L N Q R 4 5 6 UNION SQUARE IRVING PLAZA Visit Us A C FOLEY SQ WARREN ST READE ST J Z 4 5 6 CHAMBERS ST MURRAY ST 2 3 R PARK PL CHURCH AVE CITY HALL PARK BARCLAY ST PARK ROW BROOKLYN BR VESEY ST SPRUCE ST FRANKFORT ST BROADWAY BEEKMAN ST Gibney Dance at 280 Broadway Grand Opening ANN ST Highlighted Programs Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center 280 Broadway (Entrance at 53A Chambers) Sorry I Missed Your Show New York, NY 10007 EYE ON DANCE: Dance in Israel Gibney Dance at 280 Broadway is located in Lower Manhattan Wednesday, December 3 / 6:30-8:00pm across from City Hall at the nexus of Tribeca and the Financial District. Public transportation, walking, and biking are the fastest 890 Broadway and greenest ways to get to us. We are located off of the following Produced in 1991, this EYE ON DANCE episode subway stations: covers the rise of a dance company in a land of Brooklyn Bridge - City Hall/Chambers Street 4, 5, 6, J, Z constant upheaval. Celia Ipiotis invites Jeannette City Hall R Ordman to describe the path forged by artists to es- Chambers Street - World Trade Center/Park Place A, C, 2, 3 Chambers Street 1, 2, 3 tablish contemporary dance in Israel. Post-screening discussion with Ze’eva Cohen and Dana Katz. E 22ND ST 6 Exercise Exchange at the Hub E 21ST ST Tuesday, December 9 / 6:30-8:00pm E 20TH ST Community Action Hub / 280 Broadway E 19TH ST An opportunity for teachers and teaching artists to DoublePlus: swap workshop ideas with each other. Participants E 18TH ST A Series of Artists Curating Artists share their own workshop ideas, conduct exercises with the group, and receive informal feedback on E 17 TH ST November 5 - December 20 / Tickets $15-$20 FIFTH AVE their structure and facilitation. PARK AVE S Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center Limited to 5 participants. L N Q R 4 5 6 280 Broadway (Enter at 53A Chambers) UNION SQUARE IRVING PLAZA Cutting-edge performances curated by Annie-B Make it Happen: Gibney Dance Choreographic Center Parson, RoseAnne Spradlin, Jon Kinzel, Miguel Take your Project from Idea to Success 890 Broadway, 5th Floor Gutierrez, Bebe Miller, and Donna Uchizono. New York, NY 10003 Hosted by Leeanne M. G-Bowley A C Tickets at GibneyDance.org/DoublePlus FOLEY SQ Saturday, December 13 / 2:00-4:00pm / $10 Gibney Dance at 890WARREN Broadway ST is located in READEFlatiron ST close to Learning & Leadership Studio / 280 Broadway Union Square. Public transportation, walking, and bikingJ areZ 4 the5 6 CHAMBERS ST Alex Escalante + Molly Poerstel fastest and greenestMURRAY ST ways to get to us. We are located off of the Do you have a great idea for a new artistic work, following2 3 subway stations:R Curated by Donna Uchizono community program, personal project, or career PARK PL 14th Street - Union Square - 4, 5, 6, N, Q, R, L December 3 - 6 / 7:30 pm advancing endeavor? This workshop will provide CHURCH AVE BARCLAY ST CITY HALL PARK artists with the support and tools they need to 23rd Street - N,R PARK ROW A traditional Mexican deer dance as metaphor + a 23rd Street - 6 make a project happen through real time advice, BROOKLYN BR polyrhythmic score banishing superficiality. VESEY ST SPRUCE ST guidance, and skill building. FRANKFORT ST Contact UsBROADWAY BEEKMAN ST Anna Azrieli + Stuart Shugg [email protected] Workshop with David Leventhal at the Hub 280 Broadway: 646-837-6809ANN ST Curated by Jon Kinzel 890 Broadway: 212-677-8560 December 10 - 13 / 7:30 pm Monday, December 15 / 6:30-8:00pm A revelation on being average + a cinematic Community Action Hub / 280 Broadway Connect with Us approach to the dancing body. What role can dance have in the lives of people Facebook.com/GibneyDancePage with health challenges, particularly those with a Twitter.com/GibneyDance Instagram.com/GibneyDance Maree ReMalia + Abby Zbikowski movement disorder? David Leventhal, Program Youtube.com/GibneyDance280 Director for the Mark Morris Dance Group’s Curated by Bebe Miller internationally-acclaimed Dance for PD® program, December 17 - 20 / 7:30 pm will explore the program’s originals and objectives, A self-discovery full of contradictions + a revealing lessons learned and best practices that are spontaneous composition of bodies in flux. applicable to anyone working in the areas of dance, community engagement and health. Tickets and full season schedule at GibneyDance.org/DoublePlus or at the Front Desk. December 2014 Programs & Events Date Program Name Event Name Time Location Wednesday, December 3rd Sorry I Missed Your EYE ON DANCE: Dance in Israel 6:30 - 8:00 pm 890 Broadway Show Tuesday, December 9th Exercise Exchange at 6:30 - 8:00 pm 280 Broadway the Hub Saturday, December 13th Make it Happen: Workshop with Leeanne M. G-Bowley 2:00 - 4:00 pm 280 Broadway Monday, December 15th Workshop with David Leventhal at the Hub 6:30 - 8:00 pm 280 Broadway Monday, December 22nd One-on-One Consultations with David Leventhal 3:00 - 5:00 pm 280 Broadway Consultations at the Hub Performances December 3 - 6 $15 - $20 DoublePlus: Alex Escalante + Molly Poerstel 7:30 pm 280 Broadway December 10 - 13 $15 - $20 DoublePlus: Anna Azrieli + Stuart Shugg 7:30 pm 280 Broadway December 17 - 20 $15 - $20 DoublePlus: Maree ReMalia + Abby Zbikowski 7:30 pm 280 Broadway Classes access8: $8 Dance & Yoga Physical Inquiry & Somatic Practices with the goal of empowering students in their artistic pursuits. access8: $8 Dance & Yoga are Gibney Dance’s new The Physical Inquiry & Somatic Practices program affordable classes. access8: $8 dance is offered encompasses a wide range of approaches Zena Rommett Floor-Barre® Monday – Friday from 2 – 4 pm, and access8: $8 that develop one’s understanding of the body yoga Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9 - 10 am. through experiential studies with roots in various Zena Rommett Floor-Barre® Technique is designed These classes are meant to encourage students to cultures and lines of thought. The series includes to lengthen and strengthen the muscles and explore various contemporary dance styles and to classes based in Alexander Technique, Contact improve the alignment of the body. Dancers and provide teachers with a chance to dig deep into their Improvisation, Feldenkrais Method®, Qi Gong, non-dancers can benefit from the rewards of a teaching practices. Pilates and more, taught by the internationally Floor-Barre® class. The class guides you through renowned faculty of Movement Research, and is a set of exercises that help achieve proper pelvic Ballet suitable for students of all backgrounds and levels alignment, strengthen the core, and elongate muscles. Taught by multiple experienced teachers, Pro of experience with an interest in deepening their Level Ballet at Gibney Dance Center is offered relationship to an embodied practice. exclusively at our 890 Broadway location. It is aimed The Playground at professional dancers but is also suitable for any advanced-level dancer. The class provides a strong The Playground allows dancers to experience basis in classical technique for the ballet dancer various choreographic styles and ideas, engage and contemporary dancer alike. with a new community of dancers, and gather resourceful information and inspiration from Contemporary Forms the array of choreographers involved. In turn, SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR SUPPORTERS established choreographers are paid for their Contemporary Forms is Gibney Dance’s signature Foundation Support creative investigations, are given free space to series of contemporary dance classes. Featuring The Agnes Varis Trust, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Arnhold Foundation, professional-level drop-in classes with renowned explore new movement with professional dancers, Booth Ferris Foundation, Bossak/Heilbron Charitable Foundation, Dextra Baldwin and are provided with the opportunity to establish McGonagle Foundation, Engaging Dance Audiences administered by Dance/ teachers from across the field of dance, these USA and made possible with generous funding from the Doris Duke Charitable classes boast teachers from companies and relationships with new dancers and fellow Foundation, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, Eileen Fisher, Emma A. Sheafer choreographers. Charitable Trust, The Gramercy Park Foundation, The Harkness Foundation for lineages representing a wide spectrum of genres Dance, The Hyde and Watson Foundation, Jerome Robbins Foundation, Jewish including Modern, Post Modern, Dance Theatre, Communal Fund, Joseph & Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, Macy’s, Mertz Simonson Technique Gilmore Foundation, Morgan Stanley, New Music USA: Creative Connections, Contemporary and other dance traditions. The New York Community Trust – Lila Acheson Wallace Theater Fund, The New Taught by teachers trained in the Simonson York Community Trust – LuEsther T. Mertz Advised Fund, NYC Dance Response Fund, a program of Dance/NYC established by the Mertz Gilmore Foundation, Gaga Technique, these classes emphasize contemporary New York University Community Fund, O’Donnell-Green Music and Dance Gaga is a new way of gaining knowledge and self- dance, modern dance, or jazz, but all offer a safe Foundation, and The Patrina Foundation. Gibney Dance receives additional warm based on anatomical alignment and then support through the matching gift programs of Macy’s, The Moody’s Foundation, awareness through your body.
Recommended publications
  • Radiolovefest
    BAM 2017 Winter/Spring Season #RadioLoveFest Brooklyn Academy of Music New York Public Radio* Adam E. Max, Chairman of the Board Cynthia King Vance, Chair, Board of Trustees William I. Campbell, Vice Chairman of the Board John S. Rose, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Katy Clark, President Susan Rebell Solomon, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Joseph V. Melillo, Executive Producer Mayo Stuntz, Vice Chair, Board of Trustees Laura R. Walker, President & CEO *As of February 1, 2017 BAM and WNYC present RadioLoveFest Produced by BAM and WNYC February 7—11 LIVE PERFORMANCES Ira Glass, Monica Bill Barnes & Anna Bass: Three Acts, Two Dancers, One Radio Host: All the Things We Couldn’t Do on the Road Feb 7, 8pm; Feb 8, 7pm & 9:30pm, HT The Moth at BAM—Reckless: Stories of Falling Hard and Fast, Feb 9, 7:30pm, HT Wait Wait...Don’t Tell Me®, National Public Radio, Feb 9, 7:30pm, OH Jon Favreau, Jon Lovett, and Tommy Vietor, Feb 10, 7:30pm, HT Snap Judgment LIVE!, Feb 10, 7:30pm, OH Bullseye Comedy Night, Feb 11, 7:30pm, HT BAMCAFÉ LIVE Curated by Terrance McKnight Braxton Cook, Feb 10, 9:30pm, BC, free Gerardo Contino y Los Habaneros, Feb 11, 9pm, BC, free Season Sponsor: Leadership support provided by The Joseph S. and Diane H. Steinberg Charitable Trust. Delta Air Lines is the Official Airline of RadioLoveFest. Audible is a major sponsor of RadioLoveFest. VENUE KEY BC=BAMcafé Forest City Ratner Companies is a major sponsor of RadioLoveFest. BRC=BAM Rose Cinemas Williams is a major sponsor of RadioLoveFest.
    [Show full text]
  • Active Corporations: Beginning 1800
    Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 DOS ID Current Entity Name 5306 MAGNOLIA METAL COMPANY 5310 BRISTOL WAGON AND CARRIAGE WORKS 5313 DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED 5314 THE DE-LON CORP. 5316 THE MILLER COMPANY 5318 KOMPACT PRODUCTS CORPORATION 5339 METROPOLITAN CHAIN STORES, INC. 5341 N. J. HOME BUILDERS CORPORATION 5349 THE CAPITA ENDOWMENT COMPANY 5360 ECLIPSE LEATHER CORP. 6589 SHERWOOD BROS. CO. 6590 BURLINGTON VENETIAN BLIND COMPANY 6593 CAB SALES COMPANY 6600 WALDIA REALTY CORPORATION 6618 GATTI SERVICE INCORPORATED 6628 HANDI APPLIANCE CORPORATION 6642 THE M. B. PARKER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 6646 ALLIED BANKSHARES COMPANY 6651 SYRACUSE PURCHASING COMPANY, INC. Page 1 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Initial DOS Filing Date County Jurisdiction 06/08/1893 NEW YORK WEST VIRGINIA 05/16/1893 NEW YORK UNITED KINGDOM 09/17/1924 ERIE ONTARIO 09/18/1924 SARATOGA DELAWARE 09/19/1924 NEW YORK CONNECTICUT 09/12/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK DELAWARE 10/27/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 10/24/1924 ALBANY OHIO 11/18/1924 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 02/15/1895 ALBANY PENNSYLVANIA 02/16/1895 NEW YORK VERMONT 11/03/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/09/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 11/23/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/02/1927 NEW YORK DELAWARE 12/12/1927 NEW YORK OHIO 12/16/1927 NEW YORK NEW JERSEY 12/14/1927 NEW YORK GEORGIA Page 2 of 2794 09/28/2021 Active Corporations: Beginning 1800 Entity Type DOS Process Name FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION EDWARD C. MILLER FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION ALFRED HEYN FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION DUNLOP COAL COMPANY LIMITED FOREIGN BUSINESS CORPORATION THE DE-LON CORP.
    [Show full text]
  • Reinvesting in Arts Education
    President’s Committee on the Arts And the humAnities Reinvesting in Arts Education Winning America’s Future Through Creative Schools reated in 1982 under President Reagan, the President’s CCommittee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH) is an advisory committee to the White House on cultural issues. The PCAH works directly with the Administration and the three primary cultural agencies –– National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) –– as well as other federal partners and the private sector, to address policy questions in the arts and humanities, to initiate and support key programs in those disciplines and to recognize excellence in the field. Its core areas of focus are arts and humanities education, cultural exchange, and community revitalization. The First Lady serves as the Honorary Chairman of the Committee, which is composed of both private and public members. Through the efforts of its federal and private members, the PCAH has compiled an impressive legacy over its almost 30-year tenure, conducting major research and policy analysis, and catalyzing important federal cultural programs, both domestic and international. These achievements rely on the PCAH’s unique role in bringing together the White House, federal agencies, civic organizations, corporations, foundations and individuals to strengthen the United States’ national investment in its cultural life. Central to the PCAH’s mission is using the power of the arts and humanities to contribute to the vibrancy of our society, the education of our children, the creativity of our citizens and the strength of our democracy.
    [Show full text]
  • Emergency Response Incidents
    Emergency Response Incidents Incident Type Location Borough Utility-Water Main 136-17 72 Avenue Queens Structural-Sidewalk Collapse 927 Broadway Manhattan Utility-Other Manhattan Administration-Other Seagirt Blvd & Beach 9 Street Queens Law Enforcement-Other Brooklyn Utility-Water Main 2-17 54 Avenue Queens Fire-2nd Alarm 238 East 24 Street Manhattan Utility-Water Main 7th Avenue & West 27 Street Manhattan Fire-10-76 (Commercial High Rise Fire) 130 East 57 Street Manhattan Structural-Crane Brooklyn Fire-2nd Alarm 24 Charles Street Manhattan Fire-3rd Alarm 581 3 ave new york Structural-Collapse 55 Thompson St Manhattan Utility-Other Hylan Blvd & Arbutus Avenue Staten Island Fire-2nd Alarm 53-09 Beach Channel Drive Far Rockaway Fire-1st Alarm 151 West 100 Street Manhattan Fire-2nd Alarm 1747 West 6 Street Brooklyn Structural-Crane Brooklyn Structural-Crane 225 Park Avenue South Manhattan Utility-Gas Low Pressure Noble Avenue & Watson Avenue Bronx Page 1 of 478 09/30/2021 Emergency Response Incidents Creation Date Closed Date Latitude Longitude 01/16/2017 01:13:38 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 10/29/2016 12:13:31 PM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 11/22/2016 08:53:17 AM 11/14/2016 03:53:54 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 10/29/2016 05:35:28 PM 12/02/2016 04:40:13 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 11/25/2016 04:06:09 AM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 12/03/2016 04:17:30 AM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 11/26/2016 05:45:43 AM 11/18/2016 01:12:51 PM 12/14/2016 10:26:17 PM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981
    [Show full text]
  • Brooklyn College Magazine, Spring 2013, Volume 2
    BROOKLYN COLLEGE MAGAZINE | SPRING 2013 1 B Brooklyn College Magazine Volume 2 | Number 2 | Spring 2013 Brooklyn College Editor-in-Chief Art Director Advisory Committee 2900 Bedford Avenue Keisha-Gaye Anderson Lisa Panazzolo Nicole Hosten-Haas, Chief of Staff to the President Brooklyn, NY 11210-2889 Steven Schechter, Managing Editor Production Assistant Executive Director of Government and External Affairs [email protected] Audrey Peterson Mammen P. Thomas Ron Schweiger ’70, President of the Brooklyn College Alumni Association © 2013 Brooklyn College Andrew Sillen ’74, Vice President for Institutional Advancement Staff Writers Staff Photographers Jeremy A. Thompson, Executive Director of Marketing, Communications, Ernesto Mora David Rozenblyum President and Public Relations Richard Sheridan Craig Stokle Karen L. Gould Colette Wagner, Assistant Provost for Planning and Special Projects Jamilah Simmons Editorial Assistants Provost Contributing Writers Dominique Carson ‘12 William A. Tramontano James Anderson Mark Zhuravsky ‘10 Matt Fleischer-Black Joe Fodor Katti Gray Alex Lang Anthony Ramos Julie Revelant Ron Schweiger ’70 On the Scene Award-winning alumni and a new graduate school of cinema in the works make Brooklyn College a 9 prime destination for the next generation of entertainment industry game changers. Forward Momentum Leading-edge scientific research at Brooklyn College continues to 14 attract national attention, as well as prestigious awards. The Brooklyn Connection Alumni mentors with top-flight careers and talented business students form 20 professional and personal bonds that endure well past graduation. 2 From the President’s Desk 3 Snapshots 5 Notables 7 Features He’s not an 23 College News alumnus, so why is Kevin 27 Career Corner Bacon in our 28 Athletics magazine? 30 Alumni Profile Turn to page 31 Class Notes ten to find out.
    [Show full text]
  • Names and Addresses of Attorneys Practicing Before the United States Patent Office, Washington, D
    1 T 223 .N 1889 Copy 1 ^*,j ?cv '^'' 1 I LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. S^ap Snit^ris]^ la Shelf.W DNITEB STATES OF AMERICA. FAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ATTOKNEYS PRACTICING BKFORE THE UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE ^w^^sE:i2sra-To:N-, td. o. COMPILED BY V. W. kiDDLETO Waskmgton : Thomas McGill & Co. j8Hg. 4 r^ Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1889, By V. W. MIDDLBTON, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress. Si ^. .-:i ^ NAMES AND ADDRESSES ATTORNEYS PRACTICING BEFORE THE UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE. The following list embraces the names and addresses of Attorneys practicing before the United States Patent Office, and has been carefully prepared up to date. V. W. MiDDLETON. Washington, D. C, Nov. 1889. NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF ATTORNEYS. ALABAMA. Name. Residence. Local address. Bromberg, Fred'k G....i Mobile Campbell, E. K | Birmingham. Carroll & Carroll do Post-office Box 63. Hibbard, B. L do Post-office Box 492. Lane & Taliaferro do McDaniel, Jr., P. A ! Abbeville Merrell, A. H | Eufaula Ridge, L. B Birmingham. Post-office Box 169. Smith & Lowe do Sterrett, Rob't H do Taliaferro & Smithson do No. 216 One-Half street. Troy, Tompkins & Montgomery. London. i Zimmerman, Geo. P Birmingham. ; AEIZONA. Barnes, Hon. Wm. H... Tucson Lighthizer, H.B Phoenix i; Porter & Baxter do j No. Washington street. ARKANSAS. Basham, J. H Clarksville Clark S I Helena Coates, James Little Rock Davies, R. G Hot Springs Box No. 17. Davis & Baker Eureka Springs Fulkerson, J. L do Gibbon, T. E Little Rock 32 1 >^ Odd Fellows Block.
    [Show full text]
  • Download the Blood on the Fields Playbill And
    Thursday–Saturday Evening, February 21 –23, 2013, at 8:00 Wynton Marsalis, Managing & Artistic Director Greg Scholl, Executive Director Bloomberg is the Lead Corporate Sponsor of this performance. BLOOD ON THE FIELDS JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA WYNTON MARSALIS, Music Director, Trumpet RYAN KISOR, Trumpet KENNY RAMPTON, Trumpet MARCUS PRINTUP, Trumpet VINCENT GARDNER, Trombone, Tuba CHRIS CRENSHAW, Trombone ELLIOT MASON, Trombone SHERMAN IRBY, Alto & Soprano Saxophones TED NASH, Alto & Soprano Saxophones VICTOR GOINES, Tenor & Soprano Saxophones, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet WALTER BLANDING, Tenor & Soprano Saxophones CARL MARAGHI, Baritone Saxophone, Clarinet, Bass Clarinet ELI BISHOP, Guest Soloist, Violin ERIC REED, Piano CARLOS HENRIQUEZ, Bass ALI JACKSON, Drums Featuring GREGORY PORTER, Vocals KENNY WASHINGTON, Vocals PAULA WEST, Vocals There will be a 15-minute intermission for this performance. Please turn off your cell phones and other electronic devices. Jazz at Lincoln Center thanks its season sponsors: Bloomberg, Brooks Brothers, The Coca-Cola Company, Con Edison, Entergy, HSBC Bank, Qatar Airways, The Shops at Columbus Circle at Time Warner Center, and SiriusXM. MasterCard® is the Preferred Card of Jazz at Lincoln Center. Qatar Airways is a Premier Sponsor and Official Airline Partner of Jazz at Lincoln Center. This concert is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. ROSE THEATER JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER’S FREDERICK P. ROSE HALL jalc.org PROGRAM JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER 25TH ANNIVERSARY SEASON HONORS Since Jazz at Lincoln Center’s inception on August 3, 1987, when Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts initiated a three-performance summertime series called “Classical Jazz,” the organization has been steadfast in its commitment to broadening and deepening the public’s awareness of and participation in jazz.
    [Show full text]
  • SUN BUILDING, 280 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan
    Landmarks Preservation Camnission October 7, 1986; Designation List 186 LP-1439 SUN BUILDING, 280 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan. Built 1845-46, 1850-51, 1852-53, 1872, 1884; architects Joseph Trench & Co., Trench & Snook, [Frederick] Schmidt, Edward D. Harris Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 153, Lot 1 in part consisting of the land on which the described building is situated. On June 14, 1983, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Sun Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 14}. The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Two witnesses spoke in favor of designation. There were no speakers in opposition to designation. The Camnission has received l etters and other expressions of support in favor of this designation, including a letter from the Camnissioner of the Department of General Services. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS The Sun Building, originally the A.T. Stewart Store, is one of the most influential buildings erected in New York City during the 19th century. Its appearance in 1846 (Fig.1} introduced a new architectural mode based on the palaces of the Italian Renaissance. Designed by the New York architects, Joseph Trench and John B. Snook, it was built by one of the century's greatest merchants, Alexander Turney Stewart. Within its marble walls, Stewart began the city's first department store, a type of commercial enterprise which was to have a great effect on the city's economic growth and which would change the way of merchandising in this country.
    [Show full text]
  • Congressional Record United States Th of America PROCEEDINGS and DEBATES of the 112 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION
    E PL UR UM IB N U U S Congressional Record United States th of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 112 CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION Vol. 157 WASHINGTON, MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2011 No. 119 Senate The Senate met at 10:30 a.m. and was U.S. SENATE, plete change in the way we enact laws; called to order by the Honorable HERB PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE, that it just doesn’t work anymore, and KOHL, a Senator from the State of Wis- Washington, DC, August 1, 2011. what is going on is terrible, awful. consin. To the Senate: I want to take a few minutes and his- Under the provisions of rule I, paragraph 3, of the Standing Rules of the Senate, I hereby torically review what our country is all PRAYER appoint the Honorable HERB KOHL, a Senator about. The Chaplain, Dr. Barry C. Black, of- from the State of Wisconsin, to perform the In the summer of 1787, the Founding fered the following prayer: duties of the Chair. Fathers were meeting in Philadelphia, Let us pray. DANIEL K. INOUYE, and they were having a very difficult O God, how majestic is Your name in President pro tempore. time. They had tried a number of ways all the Earth. Long before the birth of Mr. KOHL thereupon assumed the in the past to keep the country to- the mountains, You have always been chair as Acting President pro tempore. gether. They had the Articles of Con- God, sustaining the universe with Your f federation. They knew it wasn’t appro- commands.
    [Show full text]
  • Golf in the Kingdom Is Not a Tries Using the Euro As a Currency in Brussels on July 21, Which Sports Movie
    O C V ΓΡΑΦΕΙ ΤΗΝ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ Bringing the news ΤΟΥ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΣΜΟΥ to generations of ΑΠΟ ΤΟ 1915 The National Herald Greek Americans c v A wEEKly GREEK AmERICAN PuBlICATION www.thenationalherald.com VOL. 14, ISSUE 722 August 13-19, 2011 $1.50 Golf in The Papandreou Tells EU to Send the Check, Some Germans Balk Kingdom: Big September Looms for Greece as the A Walk Not Pressure Builds to Push Reforms Faster ATHENS – After the unprece - calm markets. He suggested that dented downgrading of the the region should move more Spoiled American economy and reeling quickly to issue Eurobonds, to markets in Europe, Greek Prime impose a financial transaction Minister George Papandreou has tax and to strengthen the Euro - Executive Producer G. reached out to European Union pean Financial Stability Facility leaders, asking them to acceler - (EFSF) fund to prop up weak Stephanopoulos & ate the timetable for sending economies in Greece, Ireland, life-saving loans to Greece, Portugal, Spain and Italy. Papan - More than a Game scheduled for next month and dreou also urged the European beyond that. Papandreou, who leaders to ensure that there By Constantine S. Sirigos had a telephone conversation would be no complications in TNH Staff Writer with European Council President Greece receiving its next loan in - Herman Van Rompuy, also spoke stallment, which will amount to NEW YORK – What does it to European Commission Presi - $11.3 billion due in September, mean when a movie begins with dent Jose Manuel Barroso and and without which Greece can - the declaration: We must make Luxembourg’s Prime Minister not pay its bills.
    [Show full text]
  • Gansevoort Market Historic District Designation Report Part
    Gansevoort Market Historic District Designation Report New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission 2003 Cover Photo: 52-58 Gansevoort Street (c. 1939) Gansevoort Market Historic District Designation Report Report researched, written, and coordinated by Jay Shockley Edited by Mary Beth Betts, Director of Research Additional research by Gale Harris and Virginia Kurshan The three Block 738 building entries written by Gale Harris Alterations sections in building entries by Donald Presa Additional assistance by Diana Carroll and Alissa Dicker, interns Photographs by Carl Forster Maps by Kenneth Reid Commissioners Robert B . Tierney , Chairman Pablo E. Vengoechea, Vice-chairman Joan Gerner Sherida E. Paulsen Roberta B. Gratz Thomas K. Pike Meredith J. Kane Jan Hird Pokorny Christopher Moore Vicki Match Suna Richard M. Olcott Ronda Wist, Executive Director Mark Silberman, Counsel Brian Hogg, Director of Preservation Acknowledgments The research by Regina M. Kellerrnan, executive director of the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation, which culminated in the publication The Architecture of the Greenwich Village Waterfront (1989), formed a basis for the initial construction history of the building entries. The staff wishes to thank Sue Radmer, consultant to the Society, for additional building and thematic research. Additionally, the Commission wishes to thank Lynne Funk and Jo Hamilton, volunteers; and Kenneth R. Cobb, director, Municipal Archives, and Brian G. Anderson, commissioner, N.Y.C. Dept. of Records & Information Services,
    [Show full text]
  • City Record Edition
    SUPPLEMENT TO THE CITY RECORD THE CITY COUNCIL-STATED MEETING OF SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 2008 160 PAGES THE CITY RECORD THE CITY RECORD Official Journal of The City of New York U.S.P.S.0114-660 Printed on paper containing 40% post-consumer material VOLUME CXXXV NUMBER 211 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2008 PRICE $4.00 PROPERTY DISPOSITION Environmental Protection . .3485 Juvenile Justice . .3486 Citywide Administrative Services . .3484 Bureau of Wastewater Treatment . .3485 Parks and Recreation . .3486 TABLE OF CONTENTS Division of Municipal Supply Services 3484 Finance . .3485 Contract Administration . .3486 PUBLIC HEARINGS & MEETINGS Sale By Sealed Bid . .3484 Contracts . .3485 Payroll Administration . .3486 Staten Island Borough President . .3481 Police . .3484 Financial Information Services Agency .3485 Office of Contracts and Procurement . .3486 Business Integrity Commission . .3481 Auction . .3484 Office of Contracts and Procurement . .3485 City Planning Commission . .3481 School Construction Authority . .3487 Fire . .3485 Community Board . .3482 PROCUREMENT Contract Administration . .3487 Health and Hospitals Corporation . .3485 Franchise and Concession Review Buildings . .3484 Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Contract Unit . .3484 Health and Mental Hygiene . .3485 Committee . .3482 Authority . .3487 Health and Hospitals Corporation . .3482 Citywide Administrative Services . .3485 Agency Chief Contracting Officer . .3486 AGENCY RULES Landmarks Preservation Commission . .3482 Division of Municipal Supply Services 3485 Homeless Services . .3486 Transportation . .3487 Transportation . .3483 Vendor Lists . .3485 Office of Contracts and Procurement . .3486 Voter Assistance Commission . .3484 SPECIAL MATERIALS Design and Construction . .3485 Housing Preservation and Development 3486 Housing Preservation and Development 3487 COURT NOTICE Contract Section . .3485 Information Technology and Supreme Court . .3484 Education . .3485 Telecommunications . .3486 Transportation . .3487 Richmond County . .3484 Division of Contracts and Purchasing 3485 Agency Chief Contracting Officer .
    [Show full text]