[Photo by @tenementcity]
We'll have more photos on the "Save Our Community Center MARCH AND RALLY" later this evening ... the rally started around 6 at Cooper Union...
[Photo by @tenementcity]
Updated 8:30
Here are a few more photos from the starting point of the march on East Ninth Street our the former PS 64... which included members of Rude Mechanical Orchestra, Tiny Band and others.
[Bobby Williams]
[BW]
[Dave on 7th]
[Do7]
... all under the watchful eye of the NYPD...
[BW]
[BW]
...later at Cooper Union...
[BW]
Updated
Serena Solomon filed a story on the march and rally at DNAinfo. Read that here.
From the article:
March organizer Susan Howard said the eviction, followed by years of watching the building deteriorate, has been a “devastating blow."
"I don't think the owner knows how much damage he has done and how deep the hurt is," said Howard, who is also part of the group Save Our Community Center CHARAS-64 (SOCCC-64).
"It was a cross-pollination of so many people — activists and artists," Howard said of when the building operated as a community center. "You had [singing practice] in the plaza. You had AA meetings in the gallery, computer classes, English classes."
The Villager also has an article today on the march/rally. Find that here.
Per that article:
"There is no room, and no desire, and no way we will live with a dorm in our backyard," declared Councilmember Rosie Mendez, shouting to the crowd from a bullhorn. "Cooper Union needs to rescind whatever deal I believe it doesn't have so Singer can give us back our building," Mendez added.
Assemblymember Brian Kavanagh was equally strident.
"As a community, we have to at some point draw the line and say this is a battle we are not going to lose, and this is a fight we're not going to quit," Kavanagh said.