advertisesubscribecontactlogoOctober, 2004
Cover image: 10002, The Vote. Mr. Bush and Mr. Kerry (a photomontage). It’s the month before the presidential election, and we’re setting out to choose our officials, from president all the way down to our state representatives. To be perfectly honest, there must be districts where the results are up for grabs and candidates are struggling to the bitter end to gain what little advantage they can. Down here it’s all pretty much decided. Why, even our local September primary was cancelled for lack of interest.


Check out our earlier issues

  • Operation Special Gift It’s December, the time for all the faithful to go shopping. Our own Rachel Fershleiser has several unusual spots for you to visit, for that truly hip gift.
    December, 2006

  • Gouverneur Gardens Sunrise Last month, before the change to Eastern Standard Time, better known as Winter Clock, it remained dark outside in the mornings well into drive time. We snapped this shot from our living room window. Gouverneur Gardens are the six hi-rise buildings along Cherry and Montgomery Streets whose east-facing windows offered this fall a sweet, lemony reflection of the sun as it was rising beyond the East River.
    November, 2006

  • Macy’s Parade on Montgomery Street Four Hundred volunteers from Macy’s and the 50-piece all-girl marching band of Cathedral High School in Manhattan marched from the corner of Henry and Montgomery north to Grand Street, then made a right and poured into the Abrons Center Harry De Jur Playhouse for speeches. It was part of their first ever “Give Back Day,” and some 3,000 Macy’s volunteers were doing nice stuff for folks all across the nation, in commemoration of the launch of the Macy’s name nationwide last month.
    October, 2006

  • PEACE Dr. Nurur M. Rahman, from the Assafa Islamic Center, and Rabbi Shmuel Speigel, from the 1st Roumanian American Congregation, shared the stage last month, at the 7th Precinct’s annual National Night Out. Dr. Rachman charmed the crowd with his resounding Allah bless America…
    September, 2006

  • The BID has done it! At last, farmers are setting up their booths on Orchard Street each Sunday (through November), sharing fresh produce and a friendly conversation with LES shoppers.
    August, 2006

  • Open Streets Bulldozer piling metal plates to cover new ditches at the corner of East Broadway and Montgomery. Con-Edison has been digging up the neighborhood, replacing old gas pipes with new. Watch your step…
    July, 2006

  • Pardon our Soviet style Men At Work cover, but we couldn’t help ourselves, seeing as this bunch of burly, muscular workers are restoring our East River Park promenade.
    June, 2006

  • Vintage! Evan Ross, of Frock, displaying a vintage dress that would take your breath away, along with about a month’s salary. Vintage shops are raging on the LES, and not just the pricey ones.
    May, 2006

  • Jets’ New Stadium on the Lower East Side Well, those parking lots just stand there, we reckoned we should at least try…
    April, 2006

  • Whole Foods, Bad Neighbors? The arrival of space age grocer Whole Foods Market on the LES has been marred by its turf battle with local wine boutiques and Community Board 3. Will the skirmish taint WF’s reputation? Stay tuned.
    March, 2006

  • Is the Empire Zone Another Name for SPURA? The Seward Park Urban Development Area is comprised of several City owned empty lots, the future of which has been in limbo for four decades. With last month’s announcement of our neighborhood’s inclusion in the new Empire Zone, we asked political leaders if they thought the latter would breathe life into the former.
    February, 2006

  • What If They Poisoned our Neighborhood and Nobody Told Us? New York Senator Hillary R. Clinton waving a photograph of the 9/11 WTC smoke plume, at a press conference last month. Clinton and Congressman Jerrold Nadler blasted the EPA’s decision to set unreasonable limits on its downtown cleanup effort.
    January, 2006

  • Frank’s Window Paradise Each holiday season, bike shop owner Frank Arroyo turns his front windows into a magical kingdom of kinetic playfulness.
    December, 2005

  • Huddled Masses, Now with Gift Shop Nadine Stewart, a former journalist, is one of the Tenement Museum’s educators, conducting public and group tours. She’s also a regular contributor to the museum’s Educator Newsletter. The museum has been rapidly growing in fame and size.
    November, 2005

  • Fashion Flipside on Orchard Street The BID treated us last month to an amazing show of the best and the brightest in New York’s fashion design south of Houston Street.
    October, 2005

  • Odd Year Election It’s been a political summer, leading up to the “real” vote for Democratic candidates for the Council and BP.
    September, 2005

  • Daycare With the school year just around the corner, Sara Spielman provides a thorough guide to daycare facilities in the neighborhood. Is it time to introduce your toddler to the big world out there?
    August, 2005

  • Candidates' Debate Our cover in July, 2005 was an invitation to everyone who got hold of that issue to come over to hear the great multi-candidate debate, Tuesday, July 12, at 7 PM. It may be too late to RSVP at this point...
    July, 2005

  • Squirrel Menace Squirrels roaming freely (photograph by Erik Tischler). Are squirrels just rats with bushy tails and good PR? At least one Lower East Side resident is prepared to challenge the sweet image of these rodents.
    June, 2005

  • Free At Last! In a neighborhood where the scaffold rules our cityscape, what a relief it was this spring, to rediscover the vaguely Mediterranean doorways of our Educational Alliance building, on East Broadway. This miraculous unveiling of lovely early 20th Century architecture revived our hope to some day expose to the sun the highrisers at 410 and 460 Grand Street, and maybe even the thoroughly Christoed Seward Park High School. In the words of the immortal Credence Clearwater Revival: “What comes up…”
    May, 2005

  • Dreaming of an East River Beach The City Planning Commission has been presenting a gorgeous and imaginative plan for the future of the East River waterfront. But do they have the political wherewithal to carry it out?
    April, 2005

  • Promenade Comeback In two years or so we’ll be back to riding our bikes, strolling and picnicking along our bank of the East River, from Jackson to 14th Streets. It’s an $80 million promise from City Hall.
    March, 2005

  • Make CB 3 work for you Susan Stetzer and David McWater are eager to make themselves useful to local residents. But to get things done in those very real aspects of our daily lives, from transportation to recreation and everything in between, we must keep them and our 50-member community board informed. Call and complain, or better yet, show up at committee meetings. Go in groups and get up and speak out.
    February , 2005

  • Manhattan Windmills Some day soon, our neighborhood may be inundated with rooftop wind turbines and solar collectors, and our electricity will be free and clean. These are not idle predictions, but plans, already in place in the city of Toronto and, possibly, in the new Freedom Tower, across this very island.
    January , 2005

  • Hazmat personnel on Grand Street City Council Member Alan J. Gerson shares with us this month his own findings that, yes, the air is back to normal, but the crisis is not over.
    December , 2004

  • Jumbled LES Street Signs Noah Wildman reports on foreign design students who took it upon themselves to change the Lower East Side.
    November , 2004

  • 10002, The Vote It’s the month before the presidential election down here, and it’s all pretty much decided. Why, even our local September primary was cancelled for lack of interest...
    October , 2004

  • Taking Back the Streets Officer Rotanz of the NYPD Mounted Unit’s Troup A and a group of children from Baruch Houses took part in our Seventh Precinct’s "Taking Back the Streets" celebration.
    September , 2004

  • Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Decent Housing Instead of adding new low-income housing, at the expense of economic prosperity for all of us, we should concentrate on preserving what’s already there. We hope that the spirit of wisdom and generosity will prevail in preserving the city’s most diverse and most peaceful community.
    August , 2004

  • Summer Works in East River East River's gardens received intensive attention: this year the work involved turning over the soil and re-seeding.
    July , 2004

  • Grand Street Doctors Paul M. Koslow, Marc J. Rosenblatt, Andrew Dube, Dr. Maria Cellario, J. Clayton Dye, and Edwin J. Rosenblatt
    June , 2004

  • Hunting Serial Killers in East River Apartment Author Harold Goldberg moved down here last fall. His new book (coauthored with Helen Morrison) will shake conventions regarding the causes of serial-murder
    May, 2004

  • Seward's Steel Magnolia The new manager of Seward Park Coop is a native of North Carolina who learned his trade in Washington DC and Florida. He seems unperturbed by the numerous thorns in his northern garden
    April , 2004

  • Chief He’s been running the Seventh Precinct for a year, and crime stats continues to go down
    March, 2004

  • To Borrow Or Not to Borrow The $100,000 Question
    February, 2004

  • And a Terrace to Kill For... Newcomers fell in love with their 11th floor touch of the outdoors
    January, 2004


  • 
    
    EDITORIAL
    Two Choices: Vote, or Zip It
    Complaining only counts if you’ve taken real steps to change things

    BULLETIN BOARD
    All the News We Could Fit to Print
    Good bye, Stoney... New hotel on Rivington... Insure-A-Temp... Shellfish... New Caribbean restaurant... Exotic visits... Teardrop mugger... Edgie Multigenerational...

    EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN
    Restoring Time
    To celebrate the Seward Park Library renovation just walk in and browse the shelves, the Web, or the walls

    ALL POLITICS, ALL LOCAL
    10002, The Vote
    Who’s running, what are they saying, what are their chances? A comprehensive look at the Tuesday, Nov. 2 vote from a distinctly local point of view

    CENTERFOLD
    Even Action Heroes Like a Big Kitchen
    Up and Coming Film Star Michael Kelly raves about the luxurious space of his new Co-op Village apartment

    DEPT. OF NOSTALGIA
    Staring Back at our Past
    Local bank creates a haunting connection with the immigrant heritage of our neighborhood

    DELIVERANCE
    Whaddya’ Call a Male Midwife?*
    Gouverneur Hospital’s Richard Jennings “catches babies” like his grandma and greatgrandma before him

    GRAND DINING
    The Stylish Meat & Potato Man’s Meat & Potatoes
    Schiller’s Liquor Bar is solid, reliable, consistent, dependable, steady - you get the point...

    FAMILIES ON TRIAL
    In Defense of Daddy
    The political season is affecting every area of our lives. To illustrate, here are a few notes regarding an alleged “Vacation from Hell”

    MEDICINE
    It’s a Botox Party - No Lines!
    New Yorkers are enthusiastic about the hottest new trend in entertaining

    LOCAL DOCTOR
    Country Doctor Style Medicine in the Big City
    Internist Dr. Kara Rysman is a great believer in getting personally involved in the care she provides

    GRAND ART
    Safe Havens, Narrow Alleys and a Box Full of Art
    The new season is here!

    RIVER VIEW
    Talking Against the Wind
    You can get my parents out of the Lower East Side, but you can never, ever get the Lower East Side out of my parents. Especially during a hurricane...




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