Our Town - February 20, 2020

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The local paper for the Upper East Side

WHITEFACE MOUNTAIN | WILMINGTON


SO MUCH TO SEE!

S O M UCH T O LOV E ! ADVENTURES IN OVERDRIVE

Enter a world of mind-boggling glass art and an opportunity to see glass in a new light at the Corning Museum of Glass. The museum features the stunning Contemporary Art + Design Wing, live hot glassmaking demos, Make Your Own Glass experiences, handson glass technology exhibits, and the world’s largest collection of contemporary and historical glass.

CORNING MUSEUM OF GLASS | CORNING

11.0 in.

THE MARVELOUS WORLD OF GLASS

Relive the glory and celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, which was also home to the games in 1932. See ski jumpers launch into thin air. Check out the Olympic Museum and ice skate on the actual Olympic Speed Skating Oval before warming up at the fire pit. Go bobsledding on an actual bobsled track with professional drivers and brakemen, or try the Lake Placid Skeleton Experience solo.

OLYMPIC SPEED SKATING OVAL | LAKE PLACID

Photo courtesy of Finger Lakes Wine Country © Stu Gallagher

FROSTED FUN IN THE FINGER LAKES

PUMPED UP RIDES The thrill of motorcycling meets winter fun at Tug Hill State Forest. Bring your own snowmobile, or rent from Flat Rock Inn at Tug Hill Plateau, and enjoy access to more than 800 miles of snowy groomed trails. Plus, after you’re happily exhausted, you can stay overnight at the Inn, or just pop in for a warm meal at the restaurant. Rentals are only for ages 18 and up.

Bristol Mountain takes you to new heights of excitement, beauty, and challenge, thanks to its 1,200 foot vertical rise — the highest between the Rocky Mountains and the Adirondacks. Views from the summit and the 34 slopes and trails are breathtaking and provide a variety of inclines for every skier and snowboarder from beginner to expert. Prefer cross-country skiing? Bristol Mountain has that too.

BRISTOL MOUNTAIN RESORT | CANANDAIGUA

PREPARE FOR TAKEOFF

THRILLS ALONG THE SLOPES

The Cradle of Aviation Museum celebrates the history of Long Island’s contributions to American aviation. Home to over 70 air and spacecraft in 8 exhibit galleries, the museum has one of the largest collections in the world. Exhibits take visitors through over 100 years of air and space history, and features a Grumman Lunar Module among other notable craft.

This winter, head to the Holiday Valley Ski Resort to ride their unique Sky Flyer Mountain Coaster. You’ll ride over waves and curves, one jump, and a large spiral. You can control the speed by pulling levers in the car or just enjoy the ride. Afterward, check out Holiday Valley’s amazing ski slopes and warm up with hot chocolate in one of its several lodges.

CRADLE OF AVIATION MUSEUM | GARDEN CITY Photo courtesy of Cradle of Aviation Museum

Find what you love in New York State. Plan your winter getaway at iloveny.com/winter

TUG HILL STATE FOREST | COPENHAGEN

HOLIDAY VALLEY RESORT | ELLICOTTVILLE Photo courtesy of Windham Mountain Resort

Find what you love in New York State. Plan your winter getaway at iloveny.com/winter



The local paper for the Upper East Side ONE WOMAN’S VISION OF WOMEN ◄ CITY ARTS, P.12

NEW LENOX HILL TASK FORCE GETS RESULTS

NEIGHBORHOOD

Gift box from Nuts Factory. Photo: Jennifer Doherty

NUTS FOR NEW YORK

The machinery is a particular point of pride for store manager Din Allall. His grandfather developed the store’s roasting ovens, kicking off three generations of growth and entrepreneurship that reached

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An Israeli market staple plants itself on the Upper East Side with plans to grow

You come; you fill yourself. Everything is in bulk. You can bring your own container. You see what you get, you can taste what you get. You see how it’s made.”

BY JENNIFER DOHERTY

Store manager Din Allall

OURTOWNNY.COM @OurTownNYC

INSIDE

14-YEAR-OLD CHARGED IN BARNARD STUDENT DEATH

“This arrest is a major milestone on the path to justice for Tessa Majors,‘’ said District Attorney Cy Vance. p. 7

WOMEN’S MUSEUM

Congress takes the next step by voting to authorize the site. p.6

NEWBIES OF NEW YORK

City life on the big and small screens. p. 8

An architect’s rendering shows the hospital tower, left, and the residential tower, right, that were part of the original proposal for the redevelopment of Lenox Hill Hospital. A new, alternative proposal does not include the residential tower. Rendering: Courtesy of Lenox Hill Hospital / Northwell Health

WEEK OF AUGUST

08-14

Your personal edition of Our Town Eastsider Since 1972

OurTownEastSide

20-26 2020

BY DAVID NOONAN

“Everybody was upset about everything,” Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer said, describing the months of turmoil that followed Northwell Health’s announcement early last year of plans for the multi-billion dollar redevelopment of Lenox Hill Hospital. Community leaders and neighbors of the hospital, whose ten buildings occupy the block between 76th and 77th Streets, from Lexington to Park Avenue, were appalled at the scale of the project, estimated to take as long as nine years to complete. Among other things, the massive undertaking, first described in an exclusive Our Town story, included a land sale to facilitate the construction of a 41story luxury residential tower at the corner of 76th Street and Park Avenue.

BUSINESS

Nuts Factory opened its first U.S. location at 1030 Third Ave. with a drive to create a sensory experience for its shoppers. Aromas provided by three stainless steel roasting ovens greet customers at the entrance. On a recent Thursday, the smell was cinnamon, courtesy of a batch of house-made granola toasting at the front of the store. Nearby, a conveyor belt shuttled almonds into another oven for roasting, while behind them an industrial mixer folded pecans into a sugary glaze.

Alternative plan for the redevelopment of the hospital is presented after group led by Brewer and Powers asks for changes

WEEK OF FEBRUARY

Crime Watch Voices NYC Now City Arts

3 8 10 12

Restaurant Ratings 14 Business 16 Real Estate 17 15 Minutes 21

2019

‘MY HANDS ARE OUTSTRETCHED’ P. 19

f d h e s, p gs ng st ts alng ish ass eel

◄ 15 MINUTES,

Eastsider INSIDE

SUTTON PARK,

AT LAST

just For East Side residents, major having access is a accomplishment. p.5

chair of the City Ydanis Rodriguez, committee, Council’s transportation street s afety on speaks at a rally for steps of City Hall legislation on the McCarten/NYC May 8. Photo: John Council

IS VISION ZERO WORKING? SAFETY

has seen a surge Five years in, NYC fluctuating and in cyclist deaths – and motorist numbers of pedestrian fatalities BY EMILY HIGGINBOTHAM

year that saw 299 In 2014, after a traffic-related incipeople killed in Mayor Bill de Bladents in the city, eliminate all traffic sio set out to

CONTINUED ON PAGE

6

WOODSTOCK SOJOURN an NYPD judge recommend at City Hall after Photography Office holds a press conference Appleton/Mayoral Mayor Bill de Blasio 2019. Photo: Michael Friday, August 2,

firing Officer Daniel

Pantaleo on

THE BILLY AND GILLY SHOW

Kamala HarWarren, Cory Booker, and Bernie debates,” longris, Amy Klobuchar for the September Pete strategist George Sanders, South Bend Mayor time Democratic doesn’t have former Texas Rep. Artz says. “De Blasioare way down Buttigieg and both Beto O’Rourke. the donors, and close, but none of A few others are in the polls.” Hank Sheinde Blasio or GilliPolitical consultant that either them are named kopf says it’s “50-50” “Any- brand. returned reBY STUART MARQUES will make the next round: Neither campaign but they’re not quests for comment. thing can happen, agree that Warde Blasio faced to qualify.” Pundits generally When Mayor Bill held off the more Gillibrand – likely a minimum of Candidates need to ren and Sanderson the first night. off with Sen. Kirsten Democratic presi- 130,000 unique donors and have moderate field and eight other in four qualigot high marks on – on July 31, it Booker and Yang and hit at least 2 percent dential hopefuls the last Billy candidates have the second night, but Biden a might have marked presidential fying polls. Eight the polls. and are assured at the are still ahead in hit those marks and Gilly Show largely igon Sept. 12 Harris Gillibrand Houston and in De Blasio debates. ei- spot onstage Presiawful tough for are former Vice 18 “It’s going to be and and 13. They Senators Elizabeth CONTINUED ON PAGE get the donors dent Joe Biden, ther of them to needed to qualify polling numbers”

POLITICS

dim for Presidential prospects Democratic New Yorkers on the debate stage

C i e Watch

Jewish women and girls light up the world by lighting the Shabbat candles every Friday evening 18 minutes before sunset. Friday, February 21 – 5:19 pm. For more information visit www.chabbaduppereastside.com.

3

14 Restaurant Ratings 16

day Jon Friedman on a 8 love and music. p.

of peace,

SURVIVNG YOUR SUMMER COLD

seasonal How to deal with thefeel worse virus that makes usp. 2 than a winter bug.

We deliver! Get Our Town Eastsider sent directly to your mailbox for $49 per year. Go to OurTownNY.com or call 212-868-0190


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FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

A VALENTINE’S DAY PROPOSAL ON ICE HOLIDAYS

Rockefeller Center, Carson Daly and the surprise of a lifetime: How one couple kicked off their engagement Manhattan-style BY JENNIFER DOHERTY

Hayley Nejman took to the ice at Rockefeller Center on Friday morning with extreme caution, holding onto her boyfriend, Anthony Piglowski, for support as she skated for the first time in over three years. The last time the Erie, Pennsylvania native ice skated was on the couple’s last visit to New York, for New Year’s

I didn’t even realize it was happening ... As I was talking, I was like ‘Oh my God, I’m on TV!’” Anthony Piglowski

Eve 2016. This time Nejman was particularly intimidated by her fellow skaters — a group of about 20 teenage girls who seemed preternaturally comfortable on the ice, flying around, doing spins and striking poses. Despite her nerves, Nejman glided gamely around the rink, smiling and clutching Piglowski, a former high school hockey player, for balance. But when an announcer asked skaters to clear the ice “for cleaning,” it was Piglowski’s turn to be nervous. Instead of heading for the exit like the other skaters, he guided Nejman to the center of the rink and dropped to one knee as his stunned girlfriend protested: “Oh my God, Anthony! Stop!” Despite her shock, Nejman was all smiles and said yes immediately as their fellow skaters pulled out pink pompoms and cheered. “We came to New York a few years ago and we went ice skating here,” Piglowski told Our Town regarding his decision to propose to his high school sweetheart on the ice. “I played hockey growing up, and she

SERVING BROOKLYN AND THE ENTIRE TRI-STATE AREA

HOUSE HOUSE CALLS CALLS

SAME DAY SAME DAY SERVICE SERVICE AVAILABLE AVAILABLE

used to come to my games all the time, and we went ice skating for date night a lot, so when we decided to come here this weekend it was just a no-brainer to do it at Rockefeller.” The Rink at Rockefeller Center hosts approximately 200 engagements each year, according to the venue’s manager, Jason Park. “Our goal is to make sure each couple has a magical and memorable experience,” Park told Our Town. Not every couple gets an engagement as impressive as Nejman and Piglowski’s, however. Their romantic moment was captured by an NBC film crew and broadcast live on Today to over 3 million viewers on Valentine’s Day. The new fiancés skated over for an interview with Today co-host Carson Daly, who was waiting rink-side with a bouquet for Nejman and another engagement surprise: A sponsor had gifted the couple a three-day ski trip to Telluride, Colorado. In a final flourish, the other skaters — undercover members of the Chelsea-based youth synchronized skat-

Anthony Piglowski and Hayley Nejman at Rockefeller Center. Photo: Jennifer Doherty

ing program CPIce — returned to the ice to perform a choreographed routine to the viral proposal favorite, Bruno Mars’ “Marry You.” “I didn’t even realize it was happening. I forgot. As I was talking, I was like ‘Oh my God, I’m on TV!’” Piglowski said after helping Nejman off the ice. Nejman called the experience

“overwhelming but really exciting,” adding “I’m glad it finally happened.” With his big Valentine’s Day gesture accomplished by 8:45 a.m., Piglowski said the couple’s plans for the rest of the day were flexible. “We’re big animal lovers; we’ll probably check out the zoo.”

TOP $ PAID FOR JUDAICA COLLECTIBLES

ANTIQUES AND ESTATE BUYERS WE PAY $ CASH $ FOR ALL GOLD, GOLD & STERLING SILVER COSTUME JEWELRY, ALL COINS, PAPER MONEY & STAMP COLLECTIONS

We invite the community to join us for

NATIONAL NUTRITION MONTH

ALL GOLD...BROKEN OR NOT PRE- 1960 FURNITURE, CLOCKS & WATCHES (WORKING OR NOT) TIFFANY, BACCARAT, LALIQUE

Top $ Paid for Diamond & Estate Jewlery

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Silver Gold Coins • Top $ Paid, Herrend, Meissen, Top $ Paid KPM Etc., Antique Chinese & Japanese Art, Jade for Antique Coral Pottery Etc, Bronze Sculpture, All Musical Sterling! Instruments, LP Records, Vintage Toys...Pre 1970, Persian & Oriental Rugs, Oil Paintings & Comic Books, Hummels & LLadro......The List is Endless SEE OUR AD IN THE SUNDAY POST

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516-974-6528 ASK FOR CHRISTOPHER

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ANTIQUE & ESTATE BUYERS WILL TRAVEL ENTIRE TRI-STATE!

We buy anything old. One piece or house full. WILL TRAVEL. HOUSE CALLS. WILL WE HOUSE CALLS. WILLTRAVEL. TRAVEL. WE MAKE MAKE HOUSE CALLS.

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Each week we will cover a different topic and provide prizes and healthy food samples to participants.

Wednesdays March 4, 11, 18 and 25. 12 noon - 2pm

Location Gracie Square Hospital 416 East 76th Street (Lobby) between First and York Avenues


FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

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Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

CRIME WATCH BY JERRY DANZIG BIKE STOLEN ON BRIDGE

STATS FOR THE WEEK

Police said that at 4:15 a.m. on Tuesday, February 11, at 32-year-old man was riding his electric bicycle westbound over the Queensboro Bridge going to work when three men, ages 25, 23 and 20, punched him on the face multiple times and took his bike away without permission or authority. The 25year-old had blocked the victim’s path and told him, “Get out from the bike, or something will happen to you!” while the 23-year-old held the victim’s jacket and said “Give me money.” The 20-year-old in turn stepped on the victim’s right hand. The suspects then fled on two electric scooters and the victim’s bike, heading westbound toward Manhattan. The victim suffered a scratch and swelling on his left cheek. The stolen bike was valued at $1,730.

Reported crimes from the 19th precinct for the week ending Feb 9

COUNTERFEIT ENCOUNTER Police reported that at 10:36 p.m. on Wednesday, February 5, a 19year-old man met with a 20-year-old woman opposite 125 East 63rd St. near Lexington Ave. to sell her his iPhone. The seller handed his phone to the buyer, and she gave him the money agreed upon, which turned out to consist of counterfeit $100

Week to Date

Year to Date

2020

2019 % Change

2020

2019 % Change

0 0

0 0

n/a n/a

1 0

0 3

n/a -100.0

5 2

1 3

400.0 -33.3

30 14

13 16

130.8 -12.5

Grand Larceny

5 42

0 32

n/a 31.3

31 213

31 189

Grand Larceny Auto

1

2

-50.0

8

2

Murder Rape Robbery Felony Assault Burglary Photo by Tony Webster, via Flickr

bills. She then took off in a silver Nissan four-door sedan bearing stolen license plates, dragging the victim to East 63rd St. and Park Ave., causing him back pain and a laceration to his knuckles. The stolen iPhone was valued at $1,500.

HITTING DISPLAY AT THE APPLE STORE At 6:04 p.m. on Sunday, February 9, police said, a 34-year-old male employee inside the Apple store at 940 Madison Ave. near East 74th St. saw five men around 20 years of age come into the store, remove

items from a display and leave without paying for the merchandise. No weapons were displayed, and no injuries were sustained. The stolen merchandise included six AirPods valued at $954, five Apple Watches selling for $1,995 and two AirPod Pro’s priced at $498, making a total stolen of $3,447.

VERITABLE BURGLARY Police said that at 1:45 a.m. on Wednesday, February 12, a 35-yearold man went to the Veritable restaurant at 1201 Second Ave. at East 63rd St. to fumigate the

premises when he saw two 20-yearold men exiting the location wearing all black outfits, including black ski masks. The suspects fled westbound on foot up East 64th St. Upon entering the restaurant, the exterminator noticed a broken cash register on the floor. Police later said that $1,100 in cash had been stolen.

FARE FOUL Police reported that at 5:52 p.m. on Thursday, February 6, a 34-yearold man was seen entering the

The local paper for the Upper East Side

O P E N 1 2 P M - 1 0 P M E V E R Y D AY

0.0 12.7 300.0

subway at the 86 St. Lexington Station and skipped paying his fare by using a gate key issued for use in an official capacity without permission or authority. When the suspect was intercepted by police he falsely identified himself as a Transit Authority employee but couldn’t verify his identity, telling the officer, “I left my work ID at home.” Sherod Lightbourne was arrested and charged with possession of burglars’ tools, in this case a Fire Department key found in his left pocket.

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FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com POLICE

Drawing Board

Useful Contacts

NYPD 19th Precinct NYPD 23rd Precinct

153 E. 67th St. 162 E. 102nd St.

BY MARC BILGREY

212-452-0600 212-860-6411

FIRE FDNY 22 Ladder Co 13 FDNY Engine 39/Ladder 16 FDNY Engine 53/Ladder 43 FDNY Engine 44

159 E. 85th St. 157 E. 67th St. 1836 Third Ave. 221 E. 75th St.

311 311 311 311

CITY COUNCIL Councilmember Keith Powers Councilmember Ben Kallos

211 E. 43rd St. #1205 244 E. 93rd St.

212-818-0580 212-860-1950

1916 Park Ave. #202 211 E. 43rd St.

212-828-5829 212-490-9535

353 Lexington Ave. #704

212-605-0937

1485 York Ave. 505 Park Ave. #620

212-288-4607 212-758-4340

222 E. 79th St. 112 E. 96th St. 328 E. 67th St. 1465 York Ave.

212-744-5824 212-289-0908 212-734-1717 212-288-5049

100 E. 77th St. 525 E. 68th St. 1468 Madison Ave. 1275 York Ave. 1230 York Ave. 4 Irving Place

212-434-2000 212-746-5454 212-241-6500 212-639-2000 212-327-8000 212-460-4600

STATE LEGISLATORS State Sen. Jose M. Serrano State Senator Liz Krueger Assembly Member Dan Quart Assembly Member Rebecca Seawright

COMMUNITY BD 8 LIBRARIES Yorkville 96th Street 67th Street Webster Library

HOSPITALS Lenox Hill NY-Presbyterian/ Weill Cornell Mount Sinai Memorial Sloan Kettering Rockefeller University

CON EDISON POST OFFICES US Post Office US Post Office

1283 First Ave. 1617 Third Ave.

212-517-8361 212-369-2747

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CLARIFICATION: The front-page story, “Second Time Around for Suraj Patel” (Our Town, Feb. 13-19) was revised after our newspapers went to press last week. We made a change to indicate that his platform includes “debt-free college” rather than “free college,” and that the June primary ballot will include two other challengers (rather than three; one dropped out before press time). We made a change to clarify the order of schools he attended (Cambridge came after NYU Law) and added information on cash-on-hand fund-raising numbers. To read the updated story, go to http://www.ourtownny.com/.


FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

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Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

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Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney (at podium) at a press conference on Monday before the passage of H.R. 1980, the Smithsonian Women’s History Museum Act, with (left to right) Jane Abraham, Chair of the Congressional Commission; Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton; and Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick. Photo: Phi Nguyen

AMERICANS DESERVE A WOMEN’S HISTORY MUSEUM

VIEWPOINT

Congress takes the next step by voting to authorize the site BY REP. CAROLYN B. MALONEY

There are not many things that Democrats and Republicans agree on these days. But there is this: “America needs and deserves a na-

My response to those who ask why this museum is important is this; If we fail to recognize women, we cannot empower them. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney

tional museum dedicated to showcasing the historical experiences of women in this country.” That is the unanimous, bipartisan, topline conclusion of a report by the Congressional Commission on the American Museum of Women’s History. The Commission spent 18 months studying the issue and presented its final report to Members of Congress on November 16, 2016. It recommended that a museum dedicated to American women’s history belongs on or near the National Mall in Washington, DC. And the need for such a museum is not just something that the members of a bipartisan Commission agree on. On Tuesday, 374 Members of the House of Representatives, both Democrats and Republicans, voted to pass H.R. 1980, the Smithsonian Women’s History Museum Act to establish a Smithsonian women’s history museum on the Na-

tional Mall. I introduced this bill with Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), Congresswoman Brenda Lawrence (D-MI) and Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (DDC) in March 2019. Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) have introduced the companion bill in the Senate. Women have been left out of the telling of our nation’s history. Sadly, if you look at our 2,500 national historical landmarks across the country, only 5% honor women. And, studies have shown, women are underrepresented in the textbooks we use in our public schools. Properly honoring remarkable women in public spaces will serve to inspire people of all ages today and in future generations to pursue their goals in fields ranging from STEM disciplines to politics and everything in between. Two studies published a decade

ago in the Psychology of Women Quarterly found that because women face negative stereotypes regarding their competence in the workplace, they may derive particular benefit from the example of an outstanding woman who illustrates the possibility of overcoming gender barriers to achieve success. Years later, those examples remain hard to come by. Women have been at the center of every major moment in our nation’s history and made outstanding achievements in every sector of society, but our telling of history does not properly recognize them. Currently in the nation’s capital, there’s an Air and Space Museum, an International Spy Museum, a Textile Museum, a National Postal Museum, even a museum for buildings. But, there is no museum in our nation’s capital or anywhere in the country that comprehensively shows the his-

tory of the amazing, brilliant, courageous, innovative and sometimes defiant women who have helped to shape our country during every moment of our history. Those visiting our nation’s capital, people of all genders and of all ages, deserve to know the full story of American history. My response to those who ask why this museum is important is this; If we fail to recognize women, we cannot empower them. Empowering women and unlocking the potential of every young person should be a universal goal. That’s why this bill passed so overwhelmingly in the House of Representatives and why I believe it should get the same support in the Senate. This is not about politics or partisanship. This is about giving women – all women – our rightful place in history.


FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

7

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

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14-YEAR-OLD CHARGED IN BARNARD STUDENT DEATH CRIME

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A 14-year-old has been arrested in the fatal stabbing of a Barnard College student in a park during a robbery in December, a crime that rattled New York City residents, authorities said Saturday. Rashaun Weaver has been indicted by a grand jury and was taken into custody Friday night without incident, New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said at a news conference. Weaver, charged with second-degree murder and robbery, is the second teenager to be charged in the attack on 18year-old Tessa Majors in a Manhattan park. “We are confident that we have the person in custody who stabbed her,‘’ Shea said.

“And that person will face justice in a court of law.’’ The Associated Press is naming the juvenile defendant because of the seriousness of the crime and because he has been charged as an adult. Weaver’s attorney, Elsie Chandler, did not immediately return a call to Neighbor Defender Service of Harlem seeking comment. “He’s a 14-year-old child and he’s presumed not guilty,‘’ Chandler told the New York Post after Weaver’s bail hearing Saturday, at which he was ordered held without bail at a juvenile facility until his arraignment Wednesday. Majors was stabbed as she walked through Morningside Park early the evening of Dec. 11. She staggered up a flight of stairs to street level and collapsed in a crosswalk. A criminal complaint released Saturday described Majors as struggling on a landing with three people and screaming, “Help me! I’m being robbed!’’ Weaver said Majors was “hanging onto her phone’’ when he tried to take it, according to the complaint. Officials said they have evi-

dence from videotapes, witness identification and DNA evidence from Major’s fingernail clippings linking Weaver to the crime. The attack, two days before the start of final exams at the women’s school, troubled city residents because of its proximity to campus and its apparent randomness. Barnard is part of the Ivy League’s Columbia University. “This arrest is a major milestone on the path to justice for Tessa Majors,‘’ said District Attorney Cy Vance. A 13-year-old who was arrested Dec. 13 and charged as a juvenile with felony murder told detectives he was at the park with other youths but wasn’t the one who stabbed Majors. Vance said his office and the police are “in active investigation in terms of other suspects, and that will continue.’’ Majors, of Charlottesville, Virginia, played in a rock band and had told an editor from a newspaper internship in high school that she planned to take journalism classes in college. Hill reported from Albany, New York.

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8

FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

Our Town|Eastsider ourtownny.com

Voices

Write to us: To share your thoughts and comments go to ourtownny.com and click on submit a letter to the editor.

OUR FAVORITE BILLIONAIRE EAST SIDE OBSERVER

BY ARLENE KAYATT

Grassroots billionaire - NY has no shortage of millionaires - and some billionaires. And there’s nothing new about rich New Yorkers running for political office. But three billionaires with Manhattan roots seeking the same national office? That’s something, right? Well, here you go: For President: former mayor Michael Bloomberg, Tom Steyer, and POTUS himself. Steyer was born in Manhattan and attended Buckley School and is now a Californian. POTUS hails from Queens and lived at 56th St and Fifth until he tweeted he was leaving NYC for Mar-a-Lago at the end of his presidency because he was treated badly by NY’s political leaders. Mayor Mike, born in Medford, Massachusetts, resides on East 79th St, when he’s not out campaigning. Supermarket Man But the billionaires with Manhattan bona fides who’ve run in non-presidential political races, don’t stop there. Case in point, John Catsimatidis, who made his billions while living and working in NY. His Gristedes supermarkets are synonymous with NY and his investments in real estate and energy holdings are everywhere. So how come, as a billionaire New Yorker, he’s

NOT running for president? Easy. He was born in Greece. Came to the U.S. when was less than a year old. But Catsimatidis has been engaged in the political and civic life of NY, particularly in Manhattan, ever since. He was raised in Harlem. Has lived on Manhattan’s East Side and West side. He’s worked in the Bronx, in Queens and, of course, Manhattan. Like Bloomberg and Trump, he’s been both a Democrat and a Republican and has supported candidates from both parties. In his teenage years, he volunteered for West Side Democrat Congressman William Fitts Ryan and in later years worked in the campaign of Congressman Jerry Nadler. Today, he’s rooted in the life of the Republican Party. In 2013, he ran for Mayor in a Republican Primary. His daughter, Andrea, is chair of the Manhattan Republican Party.

Sto ries to Tell In his East Midtown office of the Red Apple Group (he’s the CEO), Catsimatidis sits casually in the conference room. Spectrum News 1 is on a big screen mounted on a wall, staring down, blaring mute, as he talks about his Gristede years on the UWS and how he started at the Red Apple off 96th and Broadway when his friend, who owned Red Apple, begged Catsimatidis to buy him out because he (the friend) didn’t get along with

his co-owner uncle; how, when he (Catsimatidis) was involved with the West Side Chamber of Commerce, he created the Columbus Avenue Festival in 1977 and how, under his leadership, the Chamber’s entire budget went from $20,000 to $200,000 a year and then five years later he created the Amsterdam Avenue Festival. Catsimatidis eagerly perused the walls of his photolined office suite to show me the grainy black-and-white pic of people and vendors packed in at the first Columbus Ave festival. Interestingly, in 1980 Our Town started the Third Ave Fair with the proceeds going to local organizations. I always thought that Ed Kayatt came up with the Manhattan Street Fair concept. Guess not. Catsimatidis spreads his billions through his philanthropy. He owns the Hellenic Times and recently acquired WABC Radio He hosts a weekly radio show on AM 970. While Catsimatidis financial and philanthropic empire are widespread, he’s a true denizen of the city. He made it. He gives back. Politics aside, he’s grassroots, and it started in the early days. In a 2015 article in the online West Side Rag, a former editor of Wisdoms Child, Arlene Kurtis, remembered that, it was through “the help” of Red Apple supermarket owner, John Catsimatidis, who “took full page ads and paid promptly,“ that Wisdoms Child, a local newspaper that started publishing in the 70’s but no longer does, was able to reach its West Side readers. Sounds like the generosity of spirit that started grassroots has come full circle. Way to go.

Photo via cwtv.com

NEWBIES OF NEW YORK ON THE TOWN

City life on the big and small screens BY LORRAINE DUFFY MERKL

277 people move out of New York’s metro area every day, according to Bloomberg News. “Katy Keene,“ a new series on The CW, is a 20-something, more diverse “Sex and the City” about four friends and just may have what it takes to fill the void with young people from near and

far. As with SATC, Manhattan is the fifth friend. Lucy Hale, in the title role, plays a native New Yorker whose late mother, a seamstress, inspired her love of fashion design. She’s a personal shopping assistant at Lacy’s (read: Bergdorf’s.) What would the workplace be without a nemesis who undermines Katy out of a promotion? Undaunted, the ever-cheerful retail associate gets snapped up by a different department head who sees Katy’s value and wants to groom her.

Somewhere on the upper Upper West Side, Katy resides in a four-story walk-up with two roommates, Josie McCoy and Jorge/Ginger Lopez. Josie is a soulful singersongwriter. On her second day in NYC, she meets a record producer who wants to launch her career. Jorge/Ginger is doing quite well as a drag entertainer, but aspires to perform on the Great White Way. We know he’ll make it, a la his impassioned, “Baby, remember my name,” speech with which he

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tells off a Broadway producer who’s rejected him. Pepper Smith, although not a roomie, rounds out the quartet. This British It Girl is, “the most connected person in New York,” which can only guarantee success for the fashion-empire she’s building. After work, they go dancing at of-the-moment clubs in fabulous outfits created by guess who? “Is this what it’s like every night?” asks Josie. “Welcome to New York,” squeals Katy.

Paying Her Dues Just like those who came here thinking they were going to live the Carrie & Co. life — replete with Mr. Big — the newbies calling Greyhound for their tickets might be a tad disappointed. Their experiences will probably end up closer to (hopefully not exactly like) that of Jane in the indie film tour de force “The Assistant.” Jane, played by Julia Garner, is a wanna-be producer, paying her dues as a support

staffer to a Weinstein-like boss, although she’s told by the ineffective HR manager that there’s nothing to worry about because she’s “not his type.” This is the part that I hope no one ever, ever has to deal with again. The tried and true reality of those at the entry-level, though, is that Jane, albeit her degree with honors from Northwestern, can barely afford to live in Queens and does not go out every night because she is working first-to-arrivelast-to-leave hours. In between, she makes coffee and copies, orders lunch, opens mail, arranges travel, runs errands, and answers the phone; all under the auspices of her two Machiavellian male coworkers. Where Katy is a cockeyed optimist who never saw a frown she couldn’t turn upside down, Jane can’t even fake a grin and would be served best by a Prozac prescription. But that’s NYC life on the small and big screens. Here is how it currently lays out before me: My daughter

Meg is interning with the hope that the position will lead to full time employment. Her just-graduated friend is working two part-time jobs until there’s an opening in her field of study. Some young people, like my son Luke, graduated and got the job they trained for in school, but still either live at home or with a multitude of roommates. While others, who got their degrees at the same time two years ago, are just getting their career grooves on. Even though they do go out and enjoy Manhattan, it’s not every night, nor are they dressed to the nines. Although none of their experiences are as bleak as Jane’s, thank goodness, they’re not quite as magical as Katy’s — yet there’s something about Manhattan that makes people believe they could be. That’s why, no matter how many people leave our city, there will always be those who just can’t stay away. Lorraine Duffy Merkl is the author of the novels “Fat Chick” and “Back to Work She Goes.”

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Calendar NYCNOW

Discover the world around the corner. Find community events, gallery openings, book launches and much more: Go to nycnow.com

EDITOR’S PICK

Wed 26 BERLIN PHILHARMONIC PIANO QUARTET The Rockefeller University 1230 York Ave 7:30 p.m. $10-30 rockefeller.edu 212-327-8000 The Berlin Philharmonic Piano Quartet is one of the few existing ensembles of this instrumentation, in contrast to the better represented form, the String Quartet. The group distinguished itself during its acclaimed 2018 premiere of Danny Elfman’s Piano Quartet.

ACTIVITIES FOR THE FERTILE MIND

thoughtgallery.org NEW YORK CITY

Science Salon with Claudia Dreifus | Naomi Oreskes, PhD: Why Trust Science?

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23RD, 7PM 92nd Street Y | 1395 Lexington Ave. | 212-415-5500 | 92y.org Harvard historian of science Naomi Oreskes talks about her timely new book, which advocates for scientists in the face of public confusion over vaccinations, climate change, and pandemics ($35).

How Magic Works—A (Bar) Talk by Magician Mark Mitton

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25TH, 8:30PM Third Ave. Ale House | 1644 Third Ave. | 646-559-9131 thirdavealehousenyc.com Get a magician’s take on our increasingly vritual present, how magic tricks work, and what tools they might provide as society asks us to process increasingly complex information ($18).

Just Announced | David Lang on How Words Become Music

TUESDAY, MARCH 10TH, 7:30PM Brooklyn Cent. Library | 10 Grand Army Pl. | 718-230-2100 | bklynlibrary.org Bang on a Can co-founder and Pulitzer Prize winner David Lang speaks with Metropolitan Museum of Art resident performing artists ETHEL (a New York-based string quartet), who will also provide musical accompaniment along with soprano Molly Netter (free).

For more information about lectures, readings and other intellectually stimulating events throughout NYC,

sign up for the weekly Thought Gallery newsletter at thoughtgallery.org.

Thu 20

Fri 21

Sat 22

THE INCREDIBLE STORY OF THE KAMERA UNIT

▲KIDS WEEK: OWL PELLETS

FILM: JINPA (2018)

Kosciuszko Foundation 15 East 65th St 7:30 p.m. Free A presentation about some of Poland’s most renowned film directors, their smashhit movies, and the unusual circumstances of their making which include fighting against censorship and the upper echelons of the communist government. thekf.org 212-734 2130

Dana Discovery Center in Central Park 110th St between Fifth & Lenox Ave 1:00 p.m. Free Head to the park and join the Urban Park Rangers’ free Kids Week programs. Whooo knows what you will find as you and your kids look through owl pellets and learn more about the adaptions of owls! nycgovparks.org 212-304-2277

Asia Society 725 Park Ave 7:00 p.m. $10-12 A new film by Tibetan director Pema Tseden tells the story of a truck driver who chances upon a hitchhiker on a quest for revenge. Based on a short story by Tseden and produced by Wong Kar-wai. asiasociety.org/new-york 212-288-6400


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New York Society Library 53 East 79th St 2:00 p.m. $29 Step inside a members-only library dating back to 1754 that has been through it all, from getting looted by British soldiers during the American Revolution to George Washington forgetting to return two books (c’mon, George!) nyadventureclub.com 636-590-6873

Guggenheim Museum 1071 Fifth Ave 7:30 p.m. $45 Celebrating the tradition of innovation in America’s partnered dance form, the Lindy Hop, choreographer Caleb Teicher and several Lindy Hop champions bring the joy, fire, and fight of competitive and social swing dance to the Guggenheim stage. guggenheim.org 212-423-3575

Explorers Club 46 East 70th St 6:15 p.m. $10 Dale Andersen has been involved with NASA’s Exobiology and Astrobiology programs since the mid 1980’s, pursuing his research interests in the origin, evolution and distribution of life in the universe. seti.org 212-628-8383

Wed 26 ◄POETRY NIGHT WITH SARAH RIGGS AND JOHN FREEMAN Albertine Books 972 Fifth Ave 6:30 p.m. Free Join two poets for an evening of readings and conversation on The Autobiography of Envelopes and Maps, two volumes that question our sense of place: what it means to be to be “in the middle of somewhere,“ and how places impact human experience. albertine.com 212-439-1433

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FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

ONE WOMAN’S VISION OF WOMEN EXHIBITS

IF YOU GO

Rachel Feinstein’s unpredictable and intriguing works are on dazzling display at the Jewish Museum BY VIRGE RANDALL

“Maiden, Mother, Crone” is an idiosyncratic tour of the roles of women as envisioned by the highly original Rachel Feinstein, executed in 35 works of paint, sculpture, maquettes and video. Based on the three major stages in women’s lives, the exhibit at the Jewish Museum is an adventurous mashup of literal cutting-edge sensibility (Feinstein used a chainsaw to create Picasso-like freestanding wood sculptures), draftsmanship, and references to the Italian Baroque period, Regency England, the Bible and more (she studied art history and religion at Columbia). Curated by Kelly Taxter, the Bar-

Model, 2000. Mirror, wood, plaster, and enamel paint. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian Gallery. Artwork © Rachel Feinstein unknown

WHAT: Rachel Feinstein: Maiden, Mother, Crone WHERE: The Jewish Museum 1109 Fifth Ave at 92nd St. WHEN: Through March 22 nett and Annalee Newman Curator of Contemporary Art at the Jewish Museum, the show, just in time for Women’s History Month in March, surveys three decades of Feinstein’s art, with its unpredictable and always intriguing techniques, influences, subjects and style.

The Whimsical and the Serious The tone is set at the entrance, where you are greeted by three larger-than-life statues in wood and canvas, each with very different subtexts. On either side are impressionistic statues of Christian saints – St. Sebastian, martyred with arrows, and St. Michael, surrounded in drapery that a Baroque sculptor like Bernini would love (he’s among her influences). Front and center is a strangely twisted tree, each branch ending with a mirror. As an artist who modelled since her teens, Feinstein drew inspiration from her experience and observations about appearance and identity. Her explorations of beauty, time, art, and femininity echo throughout the exhibit. The show balances the whimsical and the serious, the imaginative and the historical, the austere and the exuberant. Feinstein’s antennae is set on “high” to receive many different influences, from drawings by her son (like the exuberant “Mr. Time”) to her time in Miami. “Goldstein,” a 40-foot wall relief work, commissioned by the Jewish Museum, executed in white enameled wood, features a Miami-ish villa with a fancy car parked in front. The mood shifts dramatically with a searing “Crucifixion,” created after

St. Michael, 2012. Polymer resin, steel, wire, and wood. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian Gallery Artwork © Rachel Feinstein Photo: Giorgio Benni

9/11, which Feinstein witnessed from her apartment window. Here, she gives traditional imagery immediacy and power by stripping it of all color, using only form – canvas and wood. Christ is angular and twisted in agony, the three figures below – Mary, Mary Magdalene and St. John – crouch in attitudes of grief, despair and shock.

Behold the Crones The Crones in this show – five paintings on oval mirrors of elderly women in the towering wigs, hats and finery of Regency attire – are an engaging bunch of characters, painted in grays and whites: Eileen, awaiting some juicy gossip; Ruth, daintily sipping her tea; Eva, the impatient grande dame; Rhoda, the cheerful neighbor; and Marie, protectively guarding a baby deer. It feels like Feinstein knows these women – but she hired a casting director and professionals to find, dress, make up, light and photograph them all. Feinstein created the paintings just after she had given birth, while she was working on a fashion ad campaign. She confessed that she felt strange in her own skin and perhaps was looking toward the last major stage in a woman’s life.

Life in Three Dimensions The sculptures – a mix of plain wood and brightly (even garishly) painted statues that embody Maidens and Mothers – are the stars of the exhibit. Flat yet dimensional,

Mr. Time, 2015. Powder-coated aluminum, vinyl, and working clock. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian Gallery Artwork © Rachel Feinstein Photo: Robert McKeever

“Adam and Eve” captures the intricate balance of an entwined male and female figure near a lush tree. Feinstein skillfully uses positive and negative space for her narrative – Eve’s hand pokes through the foliage, holding an apple to offer to Adam. “Mother and Child,” made of wood, has a Picasso flavor in its three dimensions. Mother has a huge, stylized ear attuned to the babe in arms, and the child is all wide-open mouth, either crying or hungry. In contrast, “Girl” seems positively sedate, a figure rendered in plain wood, featureless and elongated, like something by Elie Nadelman (another Feinstein influence). And then there’s “The Bird Girl,” a sculpture of a Caribbean woman, brightly painted, like a carnivale celebrant, surrounded by the birds she feeds, which are whimsically fashioned like stop action figures, including a bug-eyed bluebird.

A Roman Garden and a Sassy Gal The second room is dominated by “Panorama of Rome,” painted on Mylar and covering every wall. The baroque-inspired work, in black, gray and white, with touches of maroon, gives a sense of place and mood – walking through this room feels like walking through a sculpture garden. The standouts here include “Butterfly,” a gaily painted statue of a sassy gal in bra, panties and garter belt, with high heeled peekaboo boots, blowing a kiss to a butterfly. And “Bleeding Shepherdess” is a perfectly executed spin on a classic trope: the hatted, beribboned shepherd girl, holding a lamb, her frilly skirts blowing in the wind – and bloodstained at the bottom because she got her period. Virge Randall, a freelance culture writer, also blogs about city life at https://www.newyorknatives.com/author/virge/


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PETITION PUSHBACK ON LASKER POOL AND RINK PLAN PARKS

Recreational hockey players and others raise objections to Central Park Conservancy’s renovation of the aging facility BY JASON COHEN

The Central Park Conservancy has a plan to replace the pool and ice rinks at the northeast corner of Central Park, but thousands of New Yorkers are not happy about it. Earlier this month, a group calling itself Preserve Lasker Coalition started a change.org petition asking the Conservancy to rethink its plan, preserve the Lasker Pool and both of the ice rinks. As of Feb.17, the petition had more than 3,800 signatures, with a goal of 5,000. The Lasker pool and ice rinks are slated to undergo demolition and replacement in the spring of 2021 as part of a larger project to improve and transform a roughly 20acre section of the park. That project, described in these pages in September 2019, is estimated to take three years to complete at a cost of $150 million. The Conservancy is contributing $100 million and the city’s Parks Dept. has allocated $50 million for the project.

Bad for Hockey While the petitioners recognize the need to renovate the 54-year-old facility, they have issues with the proposed design. A primary objection is the impact on hockey players. According to the petition, Lasker hockey programs include more than 50 youth teams serving over 1,000 kids, and six adult divisions with another 500 to 600 players. “The only two other locations for competitive ice hockey in Manhattan – Chelsea Piers and Riverbank State Park – are currently operating at or near full capacity with no plans to expand once Lasker

A wintertime photo of the Harlem Meer in Central Park, looking south and east, with the twin ovals that comprise the existing Lasker skating rink. Photo: Courtesy Central Park Conservancy

closes” the petition states. “Removing the ice hockey location at Lasker in Central Park slashes ice hockey and ice skating as affordable recreational amenities for present and future generations…” As one signer put it, “Lasker is home to Ice Hockey in Harlem and other groups that help make hockey accessible to low income families and neighborhoods. If you take it away, Hockey will only be available for the wealthy. And that shouldn’t be the case.” The petition also says the new pool will be 26 percent smaller than the current pool and therefore able to handle fewer swimmers. According to the conservancy, it will in fact be somewhat larger – more than 75 percent the size of the existing pool – bigger than an Olympic-size pool and one of the largest public pools in the city, able to accommodate 50-meter lap swimming. The children’s wading pool will be replaced by a splash pad, expanding water play opportunities for children. New York, like many municipalities, has moved away from wading pools due to increasing health and safety concerns and requirements.

Time for an Upgrade According to the Conservancy, the redesign is necessary because the existing facility does not comply with current code and operational requirements for support space and amenities (toilets, showers, staff space, etc.), nor with federal accessibility standards or local sustainability standards required of new public buildings. In addition, the rink infrastructure is failing, the refrigerant it uses is banned and the pool leaks chronically. “The project is designed to improve the quality of life for the millions of park users who will benefit from this major redevelopment in the park’s north end by repairing the damaged historic landscape and restoring the disrupted stream course between the North Woods and the Harlem Meer, which has caused flooding of the current facility ever since it was constructed in the 1960s,” said Conservancy spokesperson Stephanie Baez. “The new facility has been designed to provide the largest pool/rink possible on the site while complying with today’s codes...Unlike the existing facility, the new facility will be open and accessible to the local community yearround.”

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RESTAURANT INSPECTION RATINGS FEBRAUARY 6 - 12, 2020 The following listings were collected from the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene’s website and include the most recent inspection and grade reports listed. We have included every restaurant listed during this time within the zip codes 10021, 10022, 10028, 10128, 10029. Some reports list numbers with their explanations; these are the number of violation points a restaurant has received. Adyar Ananda Bhavan

1071 1st Ave

A

Arturo’s Pizza

1610 York Ave

A

Brodo

1246 Lexington Ave

A

Clean Market

240 E 54th St

A

Club Bonafide

212 E 52nd St

A

Delissimo Deli & Cafe

39 E 60th St

A

Dunkin’

900 1st Ave

A

El Aguila

1634 Lexington Ave

A

Lotte New York Palace -Pomme Palais

455 Madison Ave

A

Metropolitan Club

1 E 60th St

A

Naughty Crab

1621 Lexington Ave

A

Oita Sushi

1317A 2nd Ave

A

Ooki Sushi

1575 3rd Ave

A

Su Khum Vit 51

224 E 51st St

A

BY EMILY HIGGINBOTHAM

Taco Mix

234 E 116th St

A

Tenzan 89

1714 2nd Ave

A

The Little Beet

320 Park Ave

A

Trump Bar

725 5th Ave

A

Olive Freud had reason to celebrate on Monday morning. After spearheading a years-long neighborhood campaign against the 668foot tower that has been constructed on the Upper West Side, Freud, the president of the Committee for Environmentally Sound Development, prevailed — at least for the time being — with an order from a State Supreme Court judge for the building’s developers to remove as many as 20 floors or more from the project. “I want to thank the community. It’s true that I started it, but you all came with me,”

‘OFF WITH THE FLOORS!’ DEVELOPMENT

Community organizers, elected officials celebrate tentative victory after judge orders as many as 20 floors to be lopped off 200 Amsterdam project

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Olive Freud (left), president of the Committee for Environmentally Sound Development, with Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer at Monday’s press conference. Photos: Emily Higginbotham

Email us at news@strausnews.com

This is not just a victory for the Upper West Side. This is a victory for neighborhoods all across New York City.” Michelle Goldstein, president of the Municipal Art Society of New York.

Rep. Jerrold Nadler speaks to the press across the street from the 200 Amsterdam tower.

Freud said of her victory at a packed press conference at the corner of 69th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, across the street from the 59-story tower. “I think this is the end of very tall buildings. I think New York has said enough to this — to living in the shadows.” Freud and opponents of the tower have argued that the developers, SJP Properties and Mitsui Fudosan America, exploited a zoning loophole to create a “gerrymandered,” 39-sided zoning lot in order to build an exceptionally tall building in a neighborhood where 20-story buildings are the norm. Judge W. Franc Perry’s order may very well set a precedent for development in the city if it’s not turned over on the develop-

ers’ appeal, which they have pledged to do. Michelle Goldstein, the president of the Municipal Art Society of New York, which was one of the advocacy groups that brought the suit against the developers, believed that the impact of the judge’s decision would indeed be seen in future development in Manhattan. “This is not just a victory for the Upper West Side,” said Goldstein. “This is a victory for neighborhoods all across New York City because it is a clarion call that if you twist the law, that ultimately you are going to get stopped.”

The Need to Change Zoning Laws Freud and Goldstein were flanked by politicians at just about every level of govern-


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Comptroller Scott Stringer speaks with a constituent following Monday’s press conference.

ment at Monday’s press conference. Elected officials on hand included Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Congressman Jerrold Nadler, Comptroller Scott Stringer, assembly members Richard Gottfried and Linda Rosenthal as well as council members Helen Rosenthal and Ben Kallos. The politicians were complimentary of Freud’s dedication and leadership in this battle against the 200 Amsterdam project, and echoed one another in calls for fewer luxury condo developments and more affordable housing, as well as the need to change the zoning laws. “I don’t know what these developers were thinking. You’re not ever supposed to violate the zoning law under Olive Freud’s watch,” said Stringer. “If the entrance fee into this city is a $2 or $3 million condo … then this city has to realign itself with the reality of our community.” Nadler invoked the president, saying he and others had been fighting the Trump development for 30 years, and that the judge’s ruling was a partial victory. “This city cannot be a ghetto for rich people,” said Nadler, who then began a refrain of “Off with the floors!” in reference to the Queen of Hearts in Alice in Wonderland. The politicians were largely steadfast in their belief that Perry’s ruling would stand at the appellate court, but as work to complete the tower was still ongoing Monday, it prompted questions from the press about the elected officials’ certainty of the outcome. “If you look at the 39 ways he carved up a zoning lot, it’s

News of Your Neighborhood that you can’t get anywhere else

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200 Amsterdam Avenue building site. Photo: Alexis Gelber

wrong,” Brewer said. “So I think that this will stand, but we don’t know.”

“Where the Sausage Gets Made” The officials repeated that the building permits should never have been approved by the city’s Department of Buildings and then upheld by the Board of Standards and Appeals — agreeing that new personnel is needed in these positions, which are appointed by the mayor. “I think what everyone is saying is, this doesn’t have to be this way. The mayor of New York City, with a with a City Planning Commission that he appoints and controls, could step in and say enough is enough,” said Stringer, who is expected to run for mayor in 2021. “We need to appoint

a City Planning Commission to finally tackle the issues of real estate, land use and zoning. It’s where the sausage gets made. It’s where people get taken advantage of. And quite frankly, the prices that we see right now, because city government has failed to act, that we are now building these monstrosities that only a few thousand people in the whole world could afford to live in.” Nadler took the opportunity to endorse Stringer’s candidacy, saying he would be the candidate to change the culture of development in Manhattan. “The only actual guarantee [this ends] is if we elect a good mayor,” Nadler said. “The actual guarantee is to elect Scott Stringer mayor.”

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Business

DELAYED GRATIFICATION AND HOME OWNERSHIP

Ask A Broker

REAL ESTATE

The past, present and future of the value of buying in New York BY FREDERICK PETERS

For decades, real estate in New York was an asset with a sure-fire short-term return. Users and investors could be in and out in two to three years, either occupying the property or renting it to defray carrying costs. After that they could walk away with a tidy net profit, often as much as 12% to 18% over two years and 20% or a bit more over three years. That remained true until the big shift occurred in late 2015/early 2016. Now the story is different. Over the past four years, real estate values in Manhattan have (with some exceptions) fallen anywhere from 15% to 25%. Many of the sales consummated in recent months closed at prices which compare nearly to those of 2012. So we are going into 2020 with a market which, after all its ups and downs, has essentially delivered flat results over the past eight years. Is it any wonder that millennials, more experience-focused than ownership-focused to begin with, wonder what the value of homeownership might be? The local market’s reaction to multiple factors — including the loss of most SALT tax deductibility, the increase in the mansion tax, and the uncertainty caused by both domestic and global upheaval — has been to drive buyers to the sidelines in droves. Ultimately, the decision by buyers not to buy has recalibrated the market. Slowly at first, and then with increasing rapidity throughout the second half of 2019, prices dropped, often considerably. Now, if the last six weeks are any indication, buyers have regained some

Photo: Heath Brandon via Flickr

PARKING SPACE FOR SALE? BY ANDREW J. KRAMER

Buyers are now bidding on properties that offer real value, including the townhouse market. Photo: Steven Strasser

real estate appetite, bidding on properties that offer real value relative to the last four or five years. This has proven true even in the notoriously finicky townhouse market, where, according to the Olshan Report, more townhouses went into contract in January than in any month since mid-2016. The benefits of owning a residence are many, but they unspool over the arc of time. New York real estate can no longer play a part in anyone’s get-richquick scheme. The time horizons have stretched out such that the investment becomes a buy-and-hold, especially today as excess inventory clogs most areas of the marketplace. This includes rentals but is most acute in the luxury and ultra-luxury marketplaces.

As buyers once again activate the market, this inventory will be absorbed. Smaller units city-wide will probably go first, followed by the larger co-ops, which, because of their stringent rules, have increasingly offered terrific value for those willing to play that game. Then, over the next three to four years, the high-end condos which are still coming onto the market, augmenting an already saturated chain of supply, will sell. Once the absorption proves sustainable, prices will gradually start to rise. Frederick Peters is the CEO of Warburg Realty, a luxury residential real estate brokerage in New York City. Reprinted with permission from Frederick Peters’ Forbes column.

I own a two-bedroom coop and an indoor parking space, which I’m going to be putting on the market this month. Should the parking space be included in the asking price or should it be offered separately? The best way to answer this question, which is an excellent one, is to say that it depends on a few variables. In a market with a lot of available inventory, a great way for a seller to make their apartment stand out is to provide that extra “something” to capture attention and clinch a deal. However if

a sharper asking price is going to make your place stand out, you can offer the parking space as a separate/additional cost, and if the buyer isn’t driven to make this purchase, I’m sure you’ll have no problem selling it to someone else in the building.

Andrew Kramer is a Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker with Brown Harris Stevens. Direct your real estate questions to askandrew@bhsusa.com. You can learn more about Andrew at www.kramernyc.com or by contacting him at 212317-3634


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NUTS FOR NEW YORK CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

New York at the end of 2019 with plans to expand within the city. “This is my grandfather’s invention. He had the vision to do it in front of the customer, not in some basement or in a factory somewhere in Jersey or whatever,” Allall says, patting the oven. “He didn’t even graduate from elementary school, but he still had the vision. He was in the nuts business and he had this vision, like, ‘Let’s do it in the store.’” Thanks to Allall’s grandfather, Nuts Factory products are dry roasted, meaning they’re more healthful than many similar products. “Most of the nuts here in America, when you see roasted almonds, when you look at the ingredients, you’re going to see oil, which means it’s kind of fried more than roasted,” Allall explains. Positioned in the store windows, the machinery also works to lure customers in off the street, intrigued by the

moving parts and enticing smells. Allall’s father used their appeal to grow the brand into a household name in Israel, where Nuts Factory boasts 150 specialty boutiques located within grocery stores. Today, the company also claims its own lines of chocolate covered nuts, jams and fruit-based tea infusions, which all feature prominently at the New York location, along with rows upon rows of

sweet and savory roasted nuts and other snacks. For their Upper East Side location, the idea was to create a market feeling, as Allall explains. “You come; you fill yourself. Everything is in bulk. You can bring your own container. You see what you get, you can taste what you get. You see how it’s made. You can get as much as you want. You don’t have to get it pre-packed.”

Is this your right time? Regardless of market conditions, every day is the right day for someone to buy or sell a property. Life always has moves. Is this the right time for you?

Store’s Bestseller This last point is apt to please eco-conscious and the thrifty-minded alike. Allall and his team welcome zerowasters equipped with their own containers, while the store’s pick-and-mix style containers invite shoppers to choose as much—or as little—as they like from the store’s broad selection of treats made in-house. Oreo-coated pecans are the store’s bestseller (These also came out on top in an informal taste test by the Our Town staff.) The coconut-covered macadamias are also delicious, as are the shop’s candied walnuts. The boutique boasts an equally large

selection of savory nuts, among which the za’atar flavor and sweet-and-sour macadamias stood out for their cocktail-hour appeal. Beyond establishing the brand’s first U.S. presence, Nuts Factory’s Upper East Side outpost also marks the company’s first step into the world of prepared foods, with a coffee and sandwich bar in the back of the house that offers green chimichurri steak sandwiches (the store’s only non-Kosher product, Allall specifies). “It [the sandwich] was the most delicious thing I ever tasted,” Nuts Factory customer and decades-long Upper East Side resident

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Making candied pecans. Photos: Jennifer Doherty

Marilyn Presser told Our Town. Presser also cited reasonable prices and friendly, knowledgeable staff among the aspects of the shop she appreciated. Allall and his staff are eager to share their products, proffering samples readily and explaining where and how everything is made. Confident in the brand’s value, Allall plans to open a second Nuts Factory location in Chelsea in March, with more stores to follow. Smiling as he talks about his products and his plans, Allall sums up the brand that his family’s legacy. “It’s as fresh as you can get,” he says before turning to assist a customer.


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FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

LENOX HILL CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 As the end of 2019 approached, and after “seeing all the angst without anybody talking to anybody else,” as she put it, Brewer and Council Member Keith Powers created a special task force to bring all the parties together, including Northwell. “The hospital wanted to have one place where everybody’s concerns were discussed,” Brewer said, “and it seems to be going pretty well. It’s a very sophisticated group of people, needless to say. Community Board 8 is very active. And we’ve been having some good discussions.” In fact, after just three meetings – the first one was in early December – the residential tower was dropped from an “alternative configuration” that Northwell presented to the task force on February 4. Under the original plans, the proceeds from the residential component were intended to cover a significant potion of overall hospital construction costs, initially estimated at more than $2 billion and possibly reaching the $3 billion range. Without that level of funding, the rest of the project would necessarily be scaled back. As a result, in another major change, the revision calls for renovating eight of the existing hospital buildings instead of tearing them down and replacing them with new construction, as described in the original plan.

“It’s a very sophisticated group of people, needless to say ... And we’ve been having some good discussions.” Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer Quick Turnaround Northwell prepared the revised plan in less than a month, after Brewer and Powers requested it in early January. “They’re not going to get their project through unless they have dialogue and unless they make changes,” Brewer told Straus News. “I think they knew that, and so they’ve been responsive. I think they weren’t responsive until the task force started meeting.” Joshua Strugatz, Northwell’s vice president for Manhattan redevelopment, said the task force, which includes board members from residential buildings close to the hospital, as well as representatives from the Committee to Protect Our Lenox Hill Neighborhood, a group formed to oppose the original project, offers Northwell a chance “to really listen on a smaller scale than what we might have experienced previously in community boards and things of that nature. We’ve found that this has been a very productive

An architect’s rendering of the double-story, glassed-in atrium, at the base of the 30-story hospital tower at Lexington Avenue and 76th Street that is still part of the redevelopment plan. Rendering: Courtesy of Lenox Hill Hospital / Northwell Health

process and an efficient use of time. And both Gale and Keith have exemplified some terrific leadership.” Strugatz also made clear that the process is ongoing, and what Northwell presented was a potential alternative and not the new plan. “I would just caution everyone that this [revision] was done in a very

A typical congested street scene on East 77th Street with double- and triple-parked ambulances outside Lenox Hill Hospital’s emergency room, one of the issues redevelopment was intended to address. Photo: Courtesy of Lenox Hill Hospital / Northwell Health

short period of time and there is a lot more study and analysis that would be required,” he said. “By no means have we come to a definitive conclusion. We will continue to listen to the concerns, we’ll continue to work through this task force.”

Necessary Features In a background document that Northwell issued with a statement about the task force, it emphasized that certain core elements of its original plan, including single-bedded patient rooms, a new emergency room to replace the current crowded and undersized facility, and state-ofthe-art ORs, are not negotiable. “These are all necessary features for a modern healthcare facility and cannot be compromised as part of Lenox Hill’s revitalization,” the document reads. In line with that position, the alternative plan preserves the 516foot, 30-story main hospital tower on Lexington Avenue that was part of the original plan. Last March, Michael Dowling, president and CEO of Northwell, told Straus News that Lenox Hill needed to modernize to keep up with other city hospitals. “Other major facilities in Manhattan have advanced their physical plants dramatically and expanded over the past couple of years,” he said. “And we cannot just stand still and continue to exist where the youngest building in this facility today was built 40 years ago.”

Clashing Views In contrast to Northwell’s view of Lenox Hill as a Manhattan-based, world-class medical center, the Committee to Protect Our Lenox Hill Neighborhood, a fierce opponent of the redevelopment project, sees the Upper East Side institution as a community hospital. In a statement, the group called the alternative proposal a step in the right direction, but said “the massive size and scale of the proposed hospital tower are still unnecessary and unacceptable, and this fight is far from over.” Derek Dillon, a neighborhood resident and committee board member, said it’s all a matter of scale, and the hospital tower is wildly out of proportion to the neighborhood, where current zoning limits building heights to 210 feet on Park and 170 feet on Lexington. “We support a better Lenox Hill, not a bigger Lenox Hill,” Dillon said. For his part, Keith Powers, who, along with Brewer, has the biggest say in the matter, is optimistic now that people are talking. “The task force has served as a productive forum to bring together stakeholders and share feedback on the proposal,” he said in a statement. “In the coming months, we will continue to work through the task force to find a plan that best balances the needs of the aging hospital with the community’s input.”


FEBRUARY 20-26, 2020

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PUBLISHING’S DIVERSITY CHALLENGE

BOOKS

Two recent controversies spur industry to review inclusive efforts BY HILLEL ITALIE, ASSOCIATED PRESS

As debate rages around “American Dirt,‘’ the bestselling novel criticized for its portrait of Mexican life and culture, publishers are pledging to change a historically white industry as critics question whether it can truly transform. Diversity has been an issue in publishing for years, but perhaps never so urgently as in the past few weeks, when Mexican American authors and others have cited “American Dirt’’ as evidence of a publishing culture where white voices are valued above others. Critics say flaws in Jeanine Cummins’ narrative about a Mexican mother and son fleeing to the U.S. were overlooked by the book’s editorial and promotional team and the many writers and booksellers who were early advocates. “Of course, we’ve had a lot of conversations, looking at diversity and ways - as we always do - to address the recruitment and publishing of Latinos,‘’ says John Sargent, CEO of Macmillan, which released Cummins’ novel last month through its Flatiron Books division. Marketed in part as a new “Grapes of Wrath,‘’ the John Steinbeck novel which helped define the Great Depression,

“American Dirt’’ was lauded by an i ndustry that is predominantly white, liberal, anxious to make a profit and eager to make a difference. A book that Cummins and Flatiron had thought would personalize the experience of immigration instead became an example to some of its own distance from the issue. Publishing executives and editors often shy away from discussing diversity on the record, but Flatiron president and publisher Bob Miller bluntly acknowledged they had not anticipated the “anger that has emerged from members of the Latinx and publishing communities.’’ “The fact that we were surprised is indicative of a problem, which is that in positioning positionin this novel, we acknow failed to acknowledge our own w limits,‘’ Miller wrote in a recent statement press statement.

“Homogeneous Industry” “Homogeneou According to a new study by the mul multicultural chilpubli dren’s publisher Lee & Low, industr is around 75% the industry white, and mostly female. publish who spoke to No publisher Asso The Associated Press dist puted those numbers, w which were roughly the a those in a Lee same as & Low survey released y four years earlier. “E “Even though ther may be more there awa awareness of diversit issues, the sity nu numbers on the in industry side a aren’t really changing says Lee & changing,‘’ Jaso Low. “It’s still Low publisher Jason

a very homogeneous industry, especially in some of the executive and gatekeeping roles.`` CEOs including Sargent, Michael Pietsch of Hachette Book Group and Carolyn Reidy of Simon & Schuster say longtime barriers to diversity in publishing include the self-reinforcing networks of a historically white, upper-class industry, and the stress of being the only non-white member in a room. The industry’s low salaries, “often from $36,000-$40,000 in one of the world’s most expensive cities, can also make it hard to retain good people. “They don’t necessarily see a career path. They can get burned out and a little exhausted,‘’ says Nicole Johnson, executive director of the activist organization WeNeedDiverseBooks. Jennifer Baker, an author and editor who in 2014 created the “Minorities in Publishing’’ podcast, says the book world faces structural issues common to a wide range of industries. Asked if she had seen signs of signs of progress in publishing, she said she saw “no clear pathway to correction,“ adding that “Bottom line,‘’ there won’t be “sustainable change” without fully taking on the system itself.

Internships and Outreach Programs Several publishing executives agreed on a rough outline of industry demographics: Entry level positions, notably in publicity and marketing, are the most diverse, while high-level editorial jobs are more white; employees under 40 are more diverse than those over 40; those who work in children’s publishing are more diverse than those in adult books divisions. “Children’s librarians and educators have been at the forefront of urging publishers to diversify the books we offer,‘’ Pietsch says. All of the so-called “Big Five’’ publishers - Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, Hachette, Macmillan and HarperCollins - have for years had diversity efforts, including internships and outreach programs, and in-house initiatives like mentoring and requirements that all job openings include a diverse range of candidates. In 2019, Penguin Random House announced a “Strategy Plan’’ with goals including the diversification of employees and a more inclusive work culture. But the publisher faced its own embarrassment last

ollaboweek. It had collabornes & rated with Barnes verse’’ Noble on “diverse’’ editions of such ure as classic literature in,‘’ “Frankenstein,‘’ “The Wizard of and Oz’’ nd ``Romeo and or Juliet’’ to honor y Black History h Month, which n takes place in February. The covers featured illustrations of the main characters with dark skin, while tly by and the texts, mostly about white people, were left the same. After widespread criticism online, with many wondering why the publisher and Barnes & Noble didn’t simply promote writers of color, the program was canceled. “These recent events underscore the critical importance of the work we have to continue to do together,“ says Penguin Random House US CEO Madeline McIntosh, adding that the publisher would ``recommit’’ to a “full range of perspectives, experience, and expertise.’’

Dedicated to Diverse Voices Earlier this week, Myriam Gurba, David Bowles and other prominent critics of “American Dirt’’ met with Flatiron executives. In a press release issued after the meeting, the writers - members of the activist group (hash)DignidadLiteraria - said Macmillan had committed to developing an “action plan’’ within 90 days. Sargent declined to offer details but confirmed there was “an agreed upon effort’’ to address diversity. Imprints dedicated to diverse voices have been around for decades and continue to be formed, among them One World at Penguin Random House and Simon & Schuster’s 37 Ink. HarperCollins imprints include Amistad Press, one of the country’s oldest African American publishers; and the Native-focused Heartdrum, scheduled to begin in 2021. Amistad’s editorial director, Tracy Sherrod, says she hopes to publish around 20-24 books this year, double what Amistad was releasing when she joined it eight years ago. Amistad’s books range from Jacqueline Woodson’s novel “Another

Photos via Amazon.com

Brooklyn’’ to Jenifer Lewis’ memoir “The Mother of Black Hollywood.’’ “I first came into publishing in the 1980s and at that time it was believed that black people didn’t read. That statement was made to me multiple times, so we’ve come a long way, a long way baby,‘’ she said with a laugh. “We’re growing as an industry, but there will be some growing pains.’’ Since 2016, the trade group the Association of American Publishers has partnered with the United Negro College Fund for a paid internship program that places around 10 students each year. The activist organization WeNeedDiverseBooks works with publishers and agents to recruit interns; the program began with five interns in 2015 and will likely place 15-20 this summer. Out of 44 interns, 39 have since graduated from college and 30 have found full-time work in publishing, according to the organization. Recent interns who spoke to The Associated Press had positive memories and said they learned valuable lessons. “It made me want to continue pursuing a career in publishing,“ said Michaela T. Glover, who interned at Candlewick Press in 2018 and is now an intern at Heineman. Among other things, she said she read a few “tremendous manuscripts’’ and contributed to the illustrator meetings. “I am still seeking to be a part of publishing and striving to have more diverse and inclusive stories and environments,`` she said.


CROSSWORD

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T A B D O M E N U J Z E H W B

S P U K D A E A F N O S E Q T

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P Q N R L E A X J B R S U B J

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V Q B L E S T S F K U E C U D

S H I N S L B K V E O B B B S

The puzzle contains the following words. They may be diagonal, across, or up and down in the grid in any direction.

T O W Q P T G J C H E S T J D

Abdomen Chest Endocrine Eyes Face Heart Knees Liver Lungs Nose Pancreas Shins Spine Toes Trachea

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H U A R N G E B J R Y T E X S

5 3

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E N W E C K P Q I O C H Y C S

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Across 1. Recedes 5. Manitoba native 9. “Doctor ___” (BBC series) 12. “Groovy!” 13. Camera part 14. “Say what?” 15. Sandwich bar 16. Computer menu option 17. Distinctive doctrine 18. Photos of color waves for example 21. Beer dispenser 22. Colorful flower, for short 23. Football shirt 26. Jellies 30. Indian nursemaid 31. Case for sewing gear 32. Time in power 35. Storage spot 37. Kind of paper 38. Spleen 39. Get to the point 46. Middle East title 47. Train track

U N P Q H N E N I P C O D F E

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WORD SEARCH by Myles Mellor

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Each Sudoku puzzle consists of a 9X9 grid that has been subdivided into nine smaller grids of 3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column and box must contain each of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium and difficult.

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SUDOKU by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan

by Myles Mellor

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CLASSIFIEDS

ANTIQUES/COLLECTIBLES

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

PUBLIC NOTICES

If you have received a discharge from the Bankruptcy Court, you are not personally liable for the payment of the loan and this notice is for compliance and information purposes only. However, The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006-HYB1), still has the right under the loan security agreement and other collateral documents to foreclosure on the shares of stock and rights under the proprietary lease allocated to the cooperative apartment. Dated: January 22, 2020 Frenkel, Lambert, Weiss, Weisman & Gordon, LLP Attorneys for The Bank of New

York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006-HYB1) 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 631-969-3100 File #01-091024- #98311

PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICE OF SALE OF COOPERATIVE APARMENT SECURITY PLEASE TAKE NOTICE: By Virtue of a Default under Loan Security Agreement, and other Security Documents, Karen Loiacano, Auctioneer, License #DCA1435601 or Jessica L Prince-Clateman, Auctioneer, License #1097640 or Vincent DeAngelis Auctioneer, License #1127571 will sell at public auction, with reserve, on February 26, 2020, at the In the Rotunda, New York County Courthouse, 60 Centre Street, New York NY

10007, commencing at 1:30 PM for the following account: Norman Bergman, as borrower, 328 shares of capital stock of Sutton Garden Owners Corp. and all right, title and interest in the Proprietary Lease to: 420 E 55th Street, Unit 12C, New York, NY 10022 Sale held to enforce rights of The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006-HYB1), who reserves the right to bid. Ten percent (10%) Bank/Certified check required at sale, balance due at closing within thirty (30) days. The Cooperative Apartment will be sold “AS IS” and possession is to be obtained by the purchaser. Pursuant to Section 201 of the Lien Law you must answer within 10 days from receipt of this notice in which redemption of the above captioned premises can occur. There is presently an outstanding debt owed to The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006HYB1) (lender) as of the date of this notice in the amount of $854,219.82. This figure is for the outstanding balance due under UCC1, which was secured by Financing Statement in favor of Countrywide Financial Corp. And filed on November 2, 2005 in CRFN: 2005000612042. Said lien was thereafter assigned to The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006-HYB1) and recorded on August 11, 2015 in CRFN: 2015000276875. Please note this is not a payoff amount as additional interest/fees/penalties may be incurred. You must contact the undersigned to obtain a final payoff quote or if you dispute any information presented herein. The estimated value of the above captioned premises is $918,000.00. Pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code Article 9-623, the above captioned premises may be redeemed at any time prior to the foreclosure sale. You may contact the undersigned and either pay the principal balance due along with all accrued interest, late charges, attorney fees and out of pocket expenses incurred by The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006HYB1). and the undersigned, or pay the outstanding loan arrears along with all accrued interest, late charges, attorney fees and out of pocket expenses incurred by The Bank of New York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, As Trustee (CWMBS 2006-HYB1), and the undersigned, with respect to the foreclosure proceedings. Failure to cure the default prior to the sale will result in the termination of the proprietary lease.

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POLICY NOTICE: We make every effort to avoid mistakes in your classified ads. Check your ad the first week it runs. The publication will only accept responsibility for the first incorrect insertion. The publication assumes no financial responsibility for errors or omissions. We reserve the right to edit, reject, or re-classify any ad. Contact your sales rep directly for any copy changes. All classified ads are pre-paid.

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Call Barry Lewis at (212) 868-0190 or email barry.lewis@strausnews.com TO PLACE YOUR NOTICE

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