
Jerry Delakas on Astor Place this evening… hours after learning that the city will let him reopen the newsstand that he has operated since 1987.
Photo by Michael Paul via the Save Jerry's Newsstand Facebook page.
"I think it shows a different stance on small business [under de Blasio], and a lot of those smaller businesses that have been set upon by city government should find this encouraging to fight back," said Advocates for Justice lawyer Arthur Schwartz, who is representing Delakas.
Delakas must pay the city $1,000 for a new license before he can reopen, plus the first $1,000 out of a $9,000 fine, according to legal documents.
He has to pay another $3,000 in May, $2,000 in August and $3,000 by Nov. 1, according to the documents.
#NYPD Investigating possible sex assault in #EastVillage Waiting for more details. pic.twitter.com/w27PMcS39r
— Weijia Jiang (@JiangWCBSWLNY) January 13, 2014
We were told the DOC shut down Frank for two reasons, the sidewalk fencing was “too high” and that their Christmas tree wasn’t to fire code.
The machine, designed and manufactured in Portugal, looks like a typical deli ATM — but functions more like a vending machine. You put in dollars and receive bitcoins back on your phone.
Users first download a bitcoin wallet mobile app — such as BlockChain or Mycelium — and set a password. A black-and-white QR code appears. They press the phone against the ATM’s glass window so it can scan the code, then feed in cash.
Last Call at #MiLady's 1/12/14. #Soho #NYC #history #closing #restaurant #bar #taverns
— tim schreier (@timmywvillage) January 11, 2014
Will miss this NYC establishment RIP MILADY's pic.twitter.com/0WtkNjMEW4
— Jesse Marco (@JesseMarco) January 11, 2014
So we just lost Milday's, Gray's Papaya and Cooper Union. When does the municipal name change to "Bank of America presents New York"?
— Sasha Frere-Jones (@sfj) January 11, 2014
@evgrieve Milady's closing?! Who do I punch in the balls about this?
— david blend (@daveblend) January 12, 2014
15,000 sf, five story elevator-ed Gorgeous brick building in fantastic SoHo location. Building has been completely gut-renovated. Fully built and fixtured restaurant on Lower Level, Ground, Second floor. Building will be delivered vacant. Incredible opportunity for luxury residential conversion.
Cooper Union will officially start charging its undergraduates tuition, after the Board of Trustees rejected a 54-page report compiled by a Working Group of alumni, staff, students and trustees that outlined a plan to keep the school free.
The minute that Cooper starts charging tuition, it loses its soul. It becomes a second-choice college in the most expensive part of the most expensive city in the world, which will never regain the kind of love and loyalty among its students and teachers that produced the summer’s sit-ins and the fall’s Working Group Report.