RLn 05 15 14 edition

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Sartyrs and the Long Road to Equality pg. 2 POLA Approves Extension of Ports O’ Call Negotiations pg. 3

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Susie Glaze & the Hilonesome Band Comes to Alva’s pg. 14

By Terelle Jerricks, Managing Editor

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May 16 - 29, 2014

Harold Greene: Piece By Piece/ to p. 4

The Local Publication You Actually Read

Artisan and woodworker Harold Greene in the San Pedro warehouse where he built the furniture that will mark the “town square” at the foot of 5th Street. Photo by Terelle Jerricks.

he Port of Los Angeles is close to finishing what’s billed as the modern town square on Fifth Street at Harbor Boulevard. The square is scheduled for completion before the Tall Ships Festival in August. On May 8 and 9, artisan woodworker Harold Greene installed four large tables at the town square by the harbor. “AECOM, the architectural design firm that hired me, wanted a communal type of seating and they wanted tables that could seat many people,” explained Greene, as he prepared to move the tables to the plaza. “I came up with several concepts, but this is the one they chose.” The tables are 21 feet long and they are roughly 8 feet wide. Each table has square holes that are affixed atop 3 foot columns bolted firmly into the ground and each table is complemented with eight benches. So perceivably 24 people can be seated at a single table. To complete his latest work, the port allowed him to use one of the old compressed cotton warehouses on Berth 57. This is one of the warehouses from Berths 56 to 60, where the future marine science research center, AltaSea, is to be built. But right now, the entire dock on the East Channel is quiet. And, in the cavernous Berth 57 warehouse, Greene only hears the beating of wings of this harbor’s various bird species. Sunlight filters through the upper windows. Spanning the length of a football field, Greene rides his bike from one end of the warehouse to the other to get to the restroom. Greene’s 35-plus years of experience transforming wood into furniture is visible on his hands—rough from processing and handling wood varieties of all types and ashened from sawdust. From the very beginning, this project was a labor of love. Greene’s sons, Harold, 31, and Marcus, 24, assisted in the milling, sanding, fabricating and assembly of the wood. Interestingly enough, both sons are following their father’s footsteps in their own ways. Marcus is graduating with bachelor of fine art degree from California State University Long Beach, while Harold is graduating with a bachelor of science degree in mathematics and natural science. Greene, in his wide experience as a woodworker, musician and composer, happened to enjoy studying all of the above when he was growing up. At 1,000 pounds each, their sheer size required Greene to build an apparatus that would hold the tables off the ground and rotate them, like a rotisserie chicken with minimal effort. Even with the special rigging,

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