PATROL BOROUGH MANHATTAN SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 1 ZUCCOTTI PARK 1St Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Liberty Street Betw. Broa

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PATROL BOROUGH MANHATTAN SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 1 ZUCCOTTI PARK 1St Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Liberty Street Betw. Broa PATROL BOROUGH MANHATTAN SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 1 ZUCCOTTI PARK 1st Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Liberty Street betw. Broadway to & Church St. 2000 5 COLUMBUS PARK 5 Pct. Comm. Council 1600 betw. Baxter/Mulberry Sts. HealthPlus to Worth/Mosco Sts. 2000 6 FATHER DEMO SQUARE 6 Pct. Comm. Council 1830 6th Avenue betw. Bleecker & to Carmine Streets 2200 7 HENRY STREET 7 Precinct Comm. Council 1600 from Pike to Jefferson Streets to East B'dway/Madison/Rutgers St. 2200 9 Schoolyard across street 9th Pct. Comm. Council 1400 from Precinct to Note: 9th Precinct moved to: 2000 321 E. 5th Street betw. 1st & 2nd Avenues 10 FULTON HOUSES PARK 10th Pct. Comm. Council 1700 W. 16th Street to betw. 9th & 10th Avenues 2030 13 PETERSFIELD (behind the 13 Precinct Comm. Council 1700 high school) 2nd Avenue betw. to 20th & 21st Streets 2000 MT So. (SEE 17TH PCT.) 17 DAG HAMMERSKJOLD PLZ. 17 Precinct Comm. Council 1600 PARK to East 47th St., betw. 1st & 2100 2nd Aves. MTN HELL'S KITCHEN PARK Mid-Town No. Precinct 1700 10th Avenue betw. Comm. Council to W. 47th & W. 48th Streets 2000 19 East 77th Street & Lexington 19 Pct. Comm.Council 1700 Avenue to 1900 20 VERDI SQUARE PARK 20 Pct. Comm. Council. 1800 W. 72nd to W.73rd Streets to betw. Broadway & Amsterdam 2000 Ave. CPP Maine Monument (Columbus Central Park Precinct 1600 Circle) inside of Centr. Park Community Council to at 60th Street & Centr.Pk.W. NY Road Runners Club 2000 23 East 114th Street betw. 23 & 25 Precinct Comm. 1700 East 116th & Pleasant Avenue Councils to 2100 PATROL BOROUGH MANHATTAN NORTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 24 HAPPY WARRIOR PARK 24 Precinct Community 1800 Amsterdam Avenue betw. Council to West 98th & West 99th Sts. 2100 25 (See 23 Pct.) 26 SHELTERING ARMS PARK 26 Pct. Comm. Council 1600 521 W. 126th Street to Amsterdam Avenue & 2000 Old Broadway 28 HARLEM P.A.L. 28 Pct. Comm. Council 1730 West 119th Street from to Manhattan to Morningside 2130 Avenues 30 Edgecombe Avenue from 30 Pct. Comm. Council 1200 West 141st - 145th Streets Target to 2000 PATROL BOROUGH MANHATTAN NORTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 32 West 135th Street betw. 32 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. to & Frederick Douglas Blvd. 2100 33 JAY HOODWRIGHT REC.CTR.33 Pct. Comm.Council 1500 351 Ft. Washington Ave. betw. Health Plus, Columbia Univ. to 173rd to 176th St. Access Safety City, Children's 1900 Aid Society 34 RAOUL WALLENBERG 34 Pct. Comm. Council 1500 PLAYGROUND Health Plus, Lemle & Wolfe, to Amsterdam Avenue betw. McDonald's 1900 West 188th & West 189th Sts. PATROL BOROUGH BRONX 40 E. 141st Street betw. 40 Pct. Comm. Council 1400 St. Anns Ave. & Brook Ave. to 1900 41 LONGWOOD AVE. PAL 41 Pct. Comm. Council 1600 991 Longwood Avenue Community Planning Bd. to betw. Beck & Fox Streets Boro.Pres. Councilw.Arroyo 2000 42 CROTONA PARK 42 Pct. Comm. Council 1400 Clermont Ave. & Crotona Park Health Plus, Parks Dept. to East 2000 43 PARCHESTER OVAL betw. N.E.T.S. Parkchester Recre- 1500 Unionport & Metropolitan ation, HealthPlus, N.A.A.C.P. to Avenues (Parkchester branch) 1900 Weed & Seed 44 East 169th Street Affinity Health Care 1500 from Jerome to Walton Aves. to 2000 PATROL BOROUGH BRONX PCT. Location Sponsors Time 45 Greenway from 45 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Baychester Ave. to Asch Loop Riverbay Corp to Co-op City Co-op City Public Safety 2130 46 Site 1-Roberto Clemente St.Park 1500 W.Tremont Ave. betw. Cedar & to Cedric Aves. 2000 Site 2- Tiebout Avenue from all sites East 182nd St. to E. 183rd St. Site 3-East 175th Street to Townsend Ave. 47 RIENZI PLAYGROUND/PARK 47th Pct. Comm. Council 1700 from E. 225th to E. 226th Sts to & White Plains Rd to Barnes 2100 Ave. 48 Lambert/Phipps Houses Phipps Development 1700 East 178th Street betw. Vyse C-Town to & Honeywell Aves. 2100 49 Great Lawn of Pelham 49 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Pkwy. North betw. Wallace Neighborhood Initiatives to & Barnes Avenues Development Corp. 2100 50 Marble Hill Avenue from 50 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 West 228 to West 230 Streets Marble Hill Tenants Assoc. to 2100 52 MOSHULU PKWY. 52 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 betw. Poll & Bainbridge Aves. Health Plus, 52 Pct. Comm. to Csl. & Monroe College 2100 PATROL BOROUGH BROOKLYN SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 60 KEYSPAN PARK 60 Precinct Comm. Council 1700 rear of Stadium Brooklyn Cyclones, CB#13 to Surf & W. 19th Street Health Plus 2000 61 2575 Coney Island Ave. 61 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 betw. Ave. W & Gravesend to Neck Road 2100 62 Bay 22nd Street betw. 62 Precinct Comm. Council 1800 Bath to Benson Avenues to 2100 63 East 69th Street betw. 63 Precinct Comm. Council 1700 Avenue U and Veterans Ave. to 2200 66 Precinct house on 66 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 16th Avenue from 57th to 60th Community Board 12 to Streets. Maimonides Hospital 2100 67 Troy Avenue(900 Block Assoc.) 67 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 betw. Snyder & Church Ave. to Juliet Arrindell-718 282-0793 2200 68 SHORE ROAD PARK 68 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 79th Street & Shore Road, x betw. 78th & 80th Streets 2100 69 Rockaway Avenue 69 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 betw. Foster Ave. & Ave. D to 2100 70 PARADE GROUNDS 70 Pct. Comm. Council 1830 Parkside & Caton Avenues Local mercants, Target to 2100 71 Rutland Road betw. Flatbush 71 Pct. Comm. Council 1600 to & Bedford Avenues HealthPlus 2200 PATROL BOROUGH BROOKLYN SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 72 East 5th Street Playground 72 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 c/o E. 5th Street & Greenwood Lutheran Medical Center to Ave. HealthPlus, US Chocolate, 2000 Costco, HealthPlus 76 COFFEY PARK Red Hook Community 1600 Richard Street from Pioneer Justice Center to to Verona Streets Red Hook Public Safety 2000 Corps 78 Start: 5thAve. & St. John's 78 Precinct Comm. Council 1800 Place Craig Hammerman-District to End: Grand Army Plaza Arch Mgr. CB6 2100 PATROL BOROUGH BROOKLYN NORTH 73 BETSY HEAD PLAYGROUND 73 Pct. Comm. Council 1400 Thomas Boyland Street betw. to Blake & Dumont Avenues 2200 75 LINDEN PARK 75th Pct. Comm. Council 1900 Vermont Street & Linden to Blvd. 2300 77 BROWER PARK 77 Precinct Comm. Council 1100 Park Place betw. Kingston to & Brooklyn Avenues 2100 79 HERBERT VON KING PARK 79 Pct. Comm. Council 1500 Lafayette Ave. betw. to Tomkins & Marcy Aves. 2030 81 Rear of schoolyard of PS 81 81 Pct. Comm.Council 1600 DeKalb Avenue betw. Target, various local business to Stuyvesant & Lewis Avenues owners 2100 83 MARIA HERNANDEZ PK. 83 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Knickerbocker Avenue betw. Party Fair, Food Bazaar to Starr & Suydam Streets Health Plus, Kraupner Pharm. 2100 PATROL BOROUGH BROOKLYN NORTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 84 Brooklyn Borough Hall Plaza 84 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 c/o Cadman Plaza West & to Montague St. 2100 88 FORT GREENE PARK 88 Pct. Comm. Council 1200 DeKalb Ave & Washington Sq. to Park 2000 90 STERNBERG PARK 90 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Montrose Ave betw. Lorimer to & Leonard Streets 2200 94 Messerole Avenue betw. 94 Pct. Comm. Council 1900 Manhattan Avenue & to Lorimer St. 2100 PATROL BOROUGH QUEENS SOUTH 100 Beach Channel High School 100 Precinct Comm. Council 1600 Athletic Field to 100-00 Beach Channel Drive 2000 betw. 101 St. & Cross Bay Blvd. 101 At precinct- 16-12 Mott Ave. 101 Pct. Comm. Council 1400 betw. Cornaga Ave. & Beach Weed & Seed, HealthPlus to 18th Street 2000 102 Site 1 -Jamaica Ave. from Richmond Hill East 1800 121st to 124th Streets to Site 2 - Forest Pk. Bandshell Woodhaven Residents Block 2100 Picnic Area, Woodhaven Blvd Assoc. & Forest Pk Dr. 103 RUFUS KING PARK 103 Pct. Comm. Council 1830 150th St. betw. Jamaica & Elmhurst Dairy, MIH to 89th Ave. Hospital 2130 PATROL BOROUGH QUEENS SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 105 CABBELL PARK 105 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Cambria Playground - Community Board 13 Q to 120th Avenue & Francis 2100 Lewis Blvd. 106 PO EDWARD BYRNE PARK 106 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 North Conduit Ave. betw. to 134 St./135 Ave./130 Place 2100 107 ELECTCHESTER SHOPPING 107 Pct. Comm. Council 1900 MALL - Parsons Blvd. betw. to 71st & Jewel Aves. 2200 113 BAISLEY POND PARK 113 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Baisley Blvd. betw. 155th & to 156th Streets 2200 PATROL BOROUGH QUEENS NORTH 104 Precinct 64-02 Catalpa 104 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Ave. betw. 64th Street & 64 YMCA to Place. 2100 108 JOHN ANDREWS PLAYGR. 108 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 49th Avenue betw. Vernon & to 5th Street 2100 109 Pct. Comm. Council 1700 109 PS 20 PLAYGROUND ConEd, Target, Jetro, Chase to from Barclay Avenue to Bank, Ameri Group 2100 Union Street Flushing Hosps. Flushing 110 HOFFMAN PARK 110 Precinct Community 1800 Hoffman Drive & Woodhaven Council to Blvd. St. John's Hospital 2100 111 DOUGLASTON SHOPPING 111 Pct. Comm. Council 1900 CTR -upper level i/f/o Modells. Modells, Little Neck Lions to 6100 Douglaston Pkwy. Club, Dunkin Donuts, 2100 Starbucks, Whitecastle etc. PATROL BOROUGH QUEENS SOUTH PCT. Location Sponsors Time 112 MACDONALD PARK 112 Pct. Comm. Council 1800 Intersection of Queens Blvd. to & Yellowstone Blvd. 2100 114 ASTORIA PARK(Great Lawn) 114th Pct. Comm. Council 1700 Shore Blvd. to Ditmas Blvd. 114th Pct. Civilian Patrol to Astoria Park So. 2000 115 NORTHERN PARK 115 Pct. Comm. Council 1900 Northern Blvd. betw. 93rd & to 94th Streets 2100 PATROL BOROUGH STATEN ISLAND 120 (SEE 122 PCT.) 120 Precinct Community Council 122 MIDLAND BEACH 122 Precinct Community 1700 PROMENADE Council to Father Capodanno Blvd & 2100 Hunter Ave. 123 ( SEE 122 PCT.) 123 Precinct Community Council HOUSING BUREAU PSA Location Sponsors Time PSA1 COFFEY PARK NYCHA 1100 Dwight & West 9th Streets Fairway to 2000 PSA 2 Loring Avenue betw.
Recommended publications
  • A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG NEW YORK OFFICE by Ethan Earle Table of Contents
    A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street ROSA LUXEMBURG STIFTUNG NEW YORK OFFICE By Ethan Earle Table of Contents Spontaneity and Organization. By the Editors................................................................................1 A Brief History of Occupy Wall Street....................................................2 By Ethan Earle The Beginnings..............................................................................................................................2 Occupy Wall Street Goes Viral.....................................................................................................4 Inside the Occupation..................................................................................................................7 Police Evictions and a Winter of Discontent..............................................................................9 How to Occupy Without an Occupation...................................................................................10 How and Why It Happened........................................................................................................12 The Impact of Occupy.................................................................................................................15 The Future of OWS.....................................................................................................................16 Published by the Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung, New York Office, November 2012 Editors: Stefanie Ehmsen and Albert Scharenberg Address: 275 Madison Avenue, Suite 2114,
    [Show full text]
  • The Occupy Wall Street Movement's Struggle Over Privately Owned
    International Journal of Communication 11(2017), 3162–3181 1932–8036/20170005 A Noneventful Social Movement: The Occupy Wall Street Movement’s Struggle Over Privately Owned Public Space HAO CAO The University of Texas at Austin, USA Why did the Occupy Wall Street movement settle in Zuccotti Park, a privately owned public space? Why did the movement get evicted after a two-month occupation? To answer these questions, this study offers a new tentative framework, spatial opportunity structure, to understand spatial politics in social movements as the interaction of spatial structure and agency. Drawing on opportunity structure models, Sewell’s dual concept of spatial structure and agency, and his concept of event, I analyze how the Occupy activists took over and repurposed Zuccotti Park from a site of consumption and leisure to a space of political claim making. Yet, with unsympathetic public opinion, intensifying policing and surveillance, and unfavorable court rulings privileging property rights over speech rights, the temporary success did not stabilize into a durable transformation of spatial structure. My study not only explains the Occupy movement’s spatial politics but also offers a novel framework to understand the struggle over privatization of public space for future social movements and public speech and assembly in general. Keywords: Occupy Wall Street movement, privately owned public space (POPS), spatial opportunity structure, spatial agency, spatial structure, event Collective actions presuppose the copresence of “large numbers of people into limited spaces” (Sewell, 2001, p. 58). To hold many people, such spaces should, in principle, be public sites that permit free access to everyone. The Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, targeting the engulfing inequality in the age of financialization and neoliberalization, used occupation of symbolic sites to convey its message.
    [Show full text]
  • “We Just Need to Go Egypt on Their Ass!” the Articulation of Labor and Community Organizing in New York City with Occupy Wall Street
    “We just need to go Egypt on their ass!” The Articulation of Labor and Community Organizing in New York City with Occupy Wall Street John Krinsky and Paul Getsos DRAFT: PLEASE DO NOT CIRCULATE BEYOND THE WORKSHOP b/c no citations Introduction Most of the people who marched down Broadway on the afternoon of September 17, eventually claiming Zuccotti Park and renaming it Liberty Square, practice activism as opposed to base- building campaign organizing. The difference between these two approaches to social justice work is a crucial one for understanding the tensions and potentials in Occupy Wall Street, and for distinguishing the core of Occupy from the more institutional left, comprised of established labor unions and community-based economic justice organizations. Occupiers focus on direct action and tactics whose aim is to raise awareness about an issue, or to challenge the state and corporate power (most usually by challenging the police or by claiming and occupying both public and private space). The institutional left focuses on building issue-oriented campaigns and leadership development among communities directly and adversely impacted by economic inequality in order to deliver tangible results. One of the things that makes Occupy unusual is that it is one of the few times outside of the global justice demonstrations in Seattle and work around the party conventions, that groups which practice the discipline of organizing worked with activists. Even more unusual is that organizers and activists have worked together over a sustained period of time and have moved from issue to issue and campaign to campaign. Some are very localized, such as work against stop-and-frisk policing in the South Bronx where Occupy Wall Street works with local neighborhood activists, to the Bank of America Campaign, where Occupy Wall Street activists are part of a national campaign where partners include the community organizing network National People’s Action and the faith-based federation of community organizations, PICO.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Town Hall Constituent Questions & Answers
    Council Member Helen Rosenthal’s Town Hall 2018 April 26, 2018 6pm-9pm Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan 334 Amsterdam Avenue YOU ASK, THE AGENCIES ANSWER! HelenRosenthal.com District Office: (212) 873-0282 Legislative Office: (212) 788-6975 HelenRosenthal.com District Office: (212) 873-0282 Legislative Office: (212) 788-6975 3 Contents Tonight’s Program …….. Agencies in Attendance ….. Special Thanks…. Contact Information…. Notes for Readers …. Constituent Questions for Agencies …. Transportation…. Small Businesses…. Neighborhood…. Schools…. Environmental Issues…. Parks… Sanitation…. Bikes/Pedestrian Safety…. Housing…. Buildings… Homelessness…. Policing… Miscellaneous….. Utilities…… HelenRosenthal.com District Office: (212) 873-0282 Legislative Office: (212) 788-6975 4 Town Hall Program Opening Remarks by Council Member Helen Rosenthal Announcement of Winning Projects in District 6 Participatory Budgeting Introduction of Panelists Responses from City Agencies to Submitted Questions Questions from the Audience HelenRosenthal.com District Office: (212) 873-0282 Legislative Office: (212) 788-6975 5 Agencies in Attendance Community Board 7 (CB7) ……………..….....…………………………. 212-362-4008 (Roberta Semer, Board Chair) Con Edison ……………………....................................................................... 800-752-6633 (Kimberly Williams, Director of Manhattan Public Affairs) Department of Buildings (DOB) ………………………………............ 212-566-5000 (Byron Munoz, Intergovernmental & Community Affairs) Department of Education (DOE) ….................................................
    [Show full text]
  • L-G-0002797438-0004475364.Pdf
    Place Place An Introduction Second Edition Tim Cresswell This edition first published 2015 © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Edition history: Blackwell Publishing Ltd (1e, 2004) Registered Office John Wiley & Sons Ltd, The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK Editorial Offices 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148-5020, USA 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford, OX4 2DQ, UK The Atrium, Southern Gate, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 8SQ, UK For details of our global editorial offices, for customer services, and for information about how to apply for permission to reuse the copyright material in this book please see our website at www.wiley.com/wiley-blackwell. The right of Tim Cresswell to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, except as permitted by the UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, without the prior permission of the publisher. Wiley also publishes its books in a variety of electronic formats. Some content that appears in print may not be available in electronic books. Designations used by companies to distinguish their products are often claimed as trademarks. All brand names and product names used in this book are trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners. The publisher is not associated with any product or vendor mentioned in this book. Limit of Liability/Disclaimer of Warranty: While the publisher and author have used their best efforts in preparing this book, they make no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this book and specifically disclaim any implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
    [Show full text]
  • Notes CHAPTER 1 6
    notes CHAPTER 1 6. The concept of the settlement house 1. Mario Maffi, Gateway to the Promised originated in England with the still extant Land: Ethnic Cultures in New York’s Lower East Tonybee Hall (1884) in East London. The Side (New York: New York University Press, movement was tremendously influential in 1995), 50. the United States, and by 1910 there were 2. For an account of the cyclical nature of well over four hundred settlement houses real estate speculation in the Lower East Side in the United States. Most of these were in see Neil Smith, Betsy Duncan, and Laura major cities along the east and west coasts— Reid, “From Disinvestment to Reinvestment: targeting immigrant populations. For an over- Mapping the Urban ‘Frontier’ in the Lower view of the settlement house movement, see East Side,” in From Urban Village to East Vil- Allen F. Davis, Spearheads for Reform: The lage: The Battle for New York’s Lower East Side, Social Settlements and the Progressive Movement, ed. Janet L. Abu-Lughod, (Cambridge, Mass.: 1890–1914 (New York: Oxford University Blackwell Publishers, 1994), 149–167. Press, 1967). 3. James F. Richardson, “Wards,” in The 7. The chapter “Jewtown,” by Riis, Encyclopedia of New York City, ed. Kenneth T. focuses on the dismal living conditions in this Jackson (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University ward. The need to not merely aid the impover- Press, 1995), 1237. The description of wards in ished community but to transform the physi- the Encyclopedia of New York City establishes cal city became a part of the settlement work.
    [Show full text]
  • Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens
    CONGRATULATIONS OCTOBER 2018 CAPACITY FUND GRANTEES BRONX Concrete Friends – Concrete Plant Park Friends of Pelham Parkway Jackson Forest Community Garden Jardín de las Rosas Morrisania Band Project – Reverend Lena Irons Unity Park Rainbow Garden of Life and Health – Rainbow Garden Stewards of Upper Brust Park – Brust Park Survivor I Am – Bufano Park Teddy Bear Project – Street Trees, West Farms/Crotona Woodlawn Heights Taxpayers Association – Van Cortlandt Park BROOKLYN 57 Old Timers, Inc. – Jesse Owens Playground Creating Legacies – Umma Park Imani II Community Garden NYSoM Group – Martinez Playground Prephoopers Events – Bildersee Playground MANHATTAN The Dog Run at St. Nicholas Park Friends of St. Nicholas Park (FOSNP) Friends of Verdi Square Muslim Volunteers for New York – Ruppert Park NWALI - No Women Are Least International – Thomas Jefferson Park Regiven Environmental Project – St. Nicholas Park Sage’s Garden QUEENS Bay 84th Street Community Garden Elmhurst Supporters for Parks – Moore Homestead Playground Forest Park Barking Lot Friends of Alley Pond Park Masai Basketball – Laurelton Playground Roy Wilkins Pickleball Club – Roy Wilkins Recreation Center STATEN ISLAND Eibs Pond Education Program, Inc. (Friends of) – Eibs Pond Park Friends of Mariners Harbor Parks – The Big Park Labyrinth Arts Collective, Inc. – Faber Pool and Park PS 57 – Street Trees, Park Hill CITYWIDE Historic House Trust of New York City Generous private support is provided by the Altman Foundation and the MJS Foundation. Public support is provided by the NYC Council under the leadership of Speaker Corey Johnson through the Parks Equity Initiative. .
    [Show full text]
  • Across the Nation, Hundreds of Thousands Join Occupy Movement
    www.peoplesworld.org November 9825, 2011 Across the nation, hundreds of thousands join Occupy movement By Gabe Falsetta cross the nation yesterday, in all 50 far bigger and broader than it had been at any states, hundreds of thousands joined time before the eviction. (story continues below Occupy Wall Street, the labor move- slide show) ment and their allies in demonstrations Billionaire Mayor Bloomberg had gone to the Ademanding jobs, taxation of the rich, curbs on the Appeals Court to overturn a Supreme Court rul- power of big finance and preservation of Social Se- ing that allowed protesters to remain in Zuccoti curity, Medicare and Medicaid. Park with their tents and tarps. If there was ever Leaving behind their tents and tarps, the any illusion that the mayor’s move would kill the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators brought their movement, it evaporated at Foley Square. message to the people by marching through the The tens of thousands gathered in the square nation’s financial districts, through the streets of heard music and they heard testimony from speak- cities and towns coast to coast, and by occupying ers who, after having lost jobs, homes and hope, everything from mass transit hubs to the bridges were fighting back. Hope for a better America, that span the nation’s rivers, canals and lakes. many said, was in the air. Coming just two days after protesters were evicted from their headquarters in many city parks and town squares, the mass demonstrations THIS WEEK: amounted to the largest public outpouring of sup- • Across the nation, hundreds of thousands join Occupy port for the movement since it began as a picket line in the financial district here on Sept.
    [Show full text]
  • SDS Columbia— Liberated Zone Zuccotti Park Foley Square Triangle
    Zuccotti Park “gentrification class war” Triangle Shirtwaist rally with banner Riverside Church at author, actor, and activist Ossie Davis’ funeral Emma Goldman speaking to a crowd SDS Columbia— Liberated Zone Foley Square Harper’s Weekly illustration of Fort Sumter rally in Union Square Flag hanging from NAACP headquarters on Fifth Avenue. gathering in support of the Occupy movement at Washington Square Park May Day/Labor Day crowd in Union Square • August 2018 40 • THE FEDERAL LAWYER ACTIVIST SITES OF NYC RYDER FLEMING-JONES s many readers of The Federal Lawyer head to the New York Marriott Hotel in downtown New York City for the 2018 Federal Bar Association Annual Convention, they will be staying only a stone’s throw from the “Freedom Tower” and newly built skyscrapers surrounding it. Visitors will be staying among the newest part of the city, next to towers Abuilt in the last few years. These visitors will not be able to see the developments that created the city, the places within it that no longer exist, and the history that can only be seen through a temporal excavation of what exists today. Movements seeking to change the world often begin by taking a look at history. Whether you want workers to go on a general strike, women to de- that the low-income tenement buildings of the East Village would mand equal rights or the control of their own bodies, or oppressed be far more profitable as luxury condominiums, the city government minorities to demand political rights—the first step is a retelling of did little to stop developers seeking exponential rent increases from their history.
    [Show full text]
  • Sounds of the Great Religions
    The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 14, NUMBER 6 JUNE 2018 $1.00 Sounds of the Great Religions By George Capsis ate—"Papadopoulos" which means “son of the father, or more accurately, son of the The dramatic, almost theatrical interior priest, for as you know, Greek priests can space of St. Veronica invites imaginative and do marry). uses and we came up with The Sounds A very young looking Panteleimon came of the Great Religions, a survey of great down for lunch in the garden and shortly it musical moments from the world’s great was like talking to a relative. That is what religions. is great about being Greek—it is really one Having been exposed to the Greek Or- big family. thodox church (my father was Greek, my I casually mentioned how long I thought mother a Lutheran German), I knew how the presentation should be and he snapped dramatic it could be so I called Archdea- "no, no, that's too long. Yah gotta make it con Panteleimon Papadopoulos who is in shorter.” charge of music at the Archdiocese. We were hours away from sending to the Archdeacon Panteleimon Papadopoulos A HUNDRED VOICES ECHO A THOUSAND YEARS: The Musical Director of the Greek Orthodox printer when I asked if he could send some (yes I know Greek names are a bit much Church offered its choir to celebrate the great moments in Orthodox history for the Sounds of thoughts about the presentation and here but in this case the last name is appropri- the Great Religions program at St.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyrighted Material
    09_573837 ch05.qxd 12/14/04 11:17 PM Page 85 5 Family-Friendly Dining In the gastronomic universe, New revolving showcase of whipped York has a fair number of star-quality cream–topped desserts. A number of restaurants, but are they worth it if trendy retro coffee shops have opened you’re eating out with your kids? in recent years, adding upscale parent- Fuhgeddaboudit. Le Bernardin and pleasing food to the traditional menu Nobu be damned—what I look for of burgers, omelets, and grilled cheese these days is a restaurant that’s noisy sandwiches. and casual, where the service is rela- I’m not a big fan of eating at side- tively speedy, and where the menu walk tables—I’d rather get away from includes at least one or two items from traffic and exhaust—but as soon as the my kids’ major food groups: chicken weather warms up, many families opt fingers, burgers, pasta, pancakes, and for restaurants with sidewalk seating. pizza, any or all of which could come The open-air arrangement minimizes with a side of fries. You can find your child’s noise, provides endless plenty of such restaurants in New distraction, and makes messes less York, and they won’t cost you an arm important (there’s always a pigeon or and a leg. two around to peck up dropped DINING OUT WITH YOUR KIDS french fries after you’ve cleared off). You know a restaurant welcomes kids Knowing how many Manhattan when they’ve printed up a place mat restaurants don’t work for smaller chil- for young customers to color and dren, for the most part I’ve tried to when you get to keep the crayons steer you towards those that do, you’re given to color it with.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyrighted Material
    INDEX ABC Television Studios 152 Chrysler Building 96, 102 Evelyn Apartments 143–4 Abyssinian Baptist Church 164 Chumley’s 66–8 Fabbri mansion 113 The Alamo 51 Church of the Ascension Fifth Avenue 56, 120, 140 B. Altman Building 96 60–1 Five Points 29–31 American Museum of Natural Church of the Incarnation 95 Flagg, Ernest 43, 55, 156 History 142–3 Church of the Most Precious Flatiron Building 93 The Ansonia 153 Blood 37 Foley Square 19 Apollo Theater 165 Church of St Ann and the Holy Forward Building 23 The Apthorp 144 Trinity 167 42nd Street 98–103 Asia Society 121 Church of St Luke in the Fields Fraunces Tavern 12–13 Astor, John Jacob 50, 55, 100 65 ‘Freedom Tower’ 15 Astor Library 55 Church of San Salvatore 39 Frick Collection 120, 121 Church of the Transfiguration Banca Stabile 37 (Mott Street) 33 Gangs of New York 30 Bayard-Condict Building 54 Church of the Transfiguration Gay Street 69 Beecher, Henry Ward 167, 170, (35th Street) 95 General Motors Building 110 171 City Beautiful movement General Slocum 70, 73, 74 Belvedere Castle 135 58–60 General Theological Seminary Bethesda Terrace 135, 138 City College 161 88–9 Boathouse, Central Park 138 City Hall 18 German American Shooting Bohemian National Hall 116 Colonnade Row 55 Society 72 Borough Hall, Brooklyn 167 Columbia University 158–9 Gilbert, Cass 9, 18, 19, 122 Bow Bridge 138–9 Columbus Circle 149 Gotti, John 40 Bowery 50, 52–4, 57 Columbus Park 29 Grace Court Alley 170 Bowling Green Park 9 Conservatory Water 138 Gracie Mansion 112, 117 Broadway 8, 92 Cooper-Hewitt National Gramercy
    [Show full text]