Unwrapping indigenous art, p. 28
Volume 2, Number 17 FREE
East and West Village, Lower East Side, Soho, Noho, Little Italy and Chinatown
November 17 - 23, 2011
Krush Groove: Hightech trash cans offer hope in war on rats BY ALINE REYNOLDS A high-tech garbage collection method has been introduced in Chinatown and Tompkins Square Park — which definitely can use it, since they’re located in one of Manhattan’s most rodent-infested districts. The Chinatown Partnership Local Development Corporation, sponsor of the neighborhood’s forthcoming business improvement district, has partnered with Direct
Photo by Jason B. Nicholas
Angry Occupy Wall Street protesters took to the streets on Tuesday after they were evicted from their home base earlier in the morning.
Occupy’s try to pitch its tent in Hudson Square is blocked BY LINCOLN ANDERSON Hudson Square is a neighborhood still striving to raise its profile. And if Occupy Wall Street protesters had gotten their wish, that certainly would have happened in a big way, as the upcoming neighborhood would have been thrust into the glare of the international media spotlight that is following the determined fight of the “99 percent” for economic justice. However, an effort to turn a privately owned open space at Duarte Square into Occupy Wall Street’s fallback encampment on Tuesday morning ran into a stiff blue wall of opposition. Earlier Tuesday, a massive force of police officers had descended on Zuccotti Park at 1 a.m. They spent the next four hours systematically clearing the tent-filled park.
After O.W.S. was evicted from its home base, protesters marched around Lower Manhattan or camped out nearby, then, shortly after dawn, regrouped at Duarte Square, at Sixth Ave. and Canal St. Holding a General Assembly meeting, they resolved to enter the adjacent walled open space that has been used for LentSpace, a public sculpture park run by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Some of them then hopped over the wall, while two other individuals produced a bolt cutter, which they used to clip a gaping hole in the chain-link fence on the space’s southern side, allowing protesters to walk right in. However, police moved quickly to block a new epicenter for O.W.S. — a “Zuccotti II” — from taking root in the gated space, making about 20 to 25
arrests and forcing the protesters out of the enclosure. Garrett Perkins, 29, said the idea was to use the LentSpace site as a new camp-out area, partly because it was privately owned, but also because it has walls around it, which would have made it ideal. Perkins said he had actually managed to pitch his tent in the LentSpace area when the police moved in to clear out the protesters, at which point, he promptly threw his gear over the fence and hopped out. As he spoke early Tuesday afternoon, he pulled out of his pocket a small silver metal disk from an artwork on LentSpace’s eastern wall — a souvenir from an almost occupation. A metal worker from Chugiak,
Environmental Corp. (DEC Green) to install a solarpowered, digitalized trash compactor at the southeast corner of Canal and Mott Sts. Community leaders along with Councilmember Margaret Chin and others gathered at the Chinatown intersection on Wed., Nov. 9, to unveil the pilot compactor, dubbed, “BigBelly,” which holds five times the
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O.W.S. had its two months, Mike says, as park is cleared BY ALINE REYNOLDS, CYNTHIA MAGNUS AND JOHN BAYLES
This time there was no warning, no advance notice and no time to organize; the clearing of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators from Zuccotti Park, in the wee hours of the morning on Tuesday took everyone by surprise. About 1 a.m. police officers surrounded the park. Mayor Bloomberg, at a press conference later Tuesday morning said the park’s
owners, Brookfield Office Properties, had reached out to him and asked for help in enforcing park rules relating to health and safety. “In our view, it would have been irresponsible to not request that the city take action,” Brookfield said in a statement. “Further, we have a legal obligation to the city and to this neighborhood to keep the park accessible to all who wish to enjoy it, which had become impos-
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APPEALING TO A HIGHER POWER PAGE 6
EDITORIAL, LETTERS PAGE 22
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