Latino
Harlem Goes Radioactive
Michael Haggerty |
Pirates ride the air waves in Harlem.
Architectural Digest, step aside! Blacklines is a new quarterly magazine devoted to African-American architecture and interior design.
This summer, a 26-year-old mother of four in Williamsburg opened her mail to discover one of New York City’s rude ironies: She was about to be evicted for her own good.
Two lone renegades ask the AFL-CIO to endorse–gasp!–Senate Democrats.
Big corporations and developers reap major subsidies from the city, but their service staffs make starvation wages. Now a wave of organizing campaigns is trying to change the equation.
Charitable foundations want to improve life in poor neighborhoods. So do community organizers. So why don’t more philanthropists put their dollars behind the grassroots?
Why fight City Hall when you can be in it? In next November’s City Council election, it will be hard to find a ballot that doesn’t include a high-profile activist–or three.
To its Harlem neighbors, P.S. 90 is just another abandoned monstrosity. But a group of community developers believes it holds answers to a pair of the era’s most vexing problems: urban underinvestment and suburban sprawl.
Waterfront neighborhoods have been dumping grounds for everything from waste stations to sewage plants. Residents are saying no more–and small businesses are getting caught in the crossfire.