
After a summer break that started on June 28 ... the Stage is back open today at 128 Second Ave. near St. Mark's Place. You may now go and eat large portions of delicious and inexpensive food again.
They're getting accustomed to trees, having spent their entire lives on an air-conditioner. I find it interesting that all three birds fledged to the buildings across 9th Street and seemed to prefer roofttops to treetops.
Who can cook like Mom?
This is the question that we kept asking ourselves on our hunt for authentic and delicious Taiwanese-Chinese food around New York City.
The short answer was no one unless you happen to have her secret recipes. After years of searching, we finally concluded that the only solution was to make it ourselves.
We quickly realized though that this was no easy feat. Before going out of town, Mimi used to stay up late washing, chopping, shredding, mixing, and wrapping dozens of fresh dumplings to make sure our Dad had something nutritious to feed us. When we left for college, she would come visit us with coolers of dumplings and jars of her secret sauce, enough to feed us and all our friends for weeks. The tradition continued when we moved into Manhattan as our refrigerators were always stockpiled with fresh dumplings, each one individually hand-wrapped. It was Mimi's way of taking care of us even when she was not around.
"I love this place," said Andres Restrepo, the Bowlmor district manager. "We've had families with four generations of bowlers coming here to hang out on a Sunday. Grandpa tells about times when Union Square wasn't the safest time, then his son talks about the 1980s.”
Indeed, in the bad old days, a manager was once murdered in the alley. But more recently, the lanes have been a glamorous haunt for A-listers such as the Strokes, Sarah Jessica Parker, Jimmy Fallon and Al Pacino.
A growing number of companies — many of them based in New Jersey — are illegally placing used-clothing bins throughout New York City, blocking sidewalks and serving as magnets for litter and graffiti. The receptacles typically have signs that indicate donated goods will go to the poor or, in some cases, to legitimate charities. But, city officials said, the needy do not benefit from much of what is collected. Instead, the clothing is often sold in thrift stores or in bulk oveseas, with the proceeds going to for-profit entities that can be impossible to trace, or even to contact.
“They have become the bane of our existence,” Kathryn Garcia, the city’s sanitation commissioner, said. “We have seen a significant uptick in the number of clothing bins placed illegally on public sidewalks. A dramatic increase.”
Claire, a talented but emotionally troubled dancer, joins a company in New York City, and soon finds herself immersed in the tough and often cutthroat world of professional ballet.