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Baruch Students Break Out the Ray-Bans

Baruch College's new plaza used to be a street: East 25th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues, which is flanked by Baruch buildings.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times Baruch College’s new plaza used to be a street: East 25th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues, which is flanked by Baruch buildings.

Columbia University has its verdant quad, New York University has Washington Square, but until recently, Baruch College, the City University of New York’s outpost in the Flatiron District, had no outdoor space to call its own.

The college is housed primarily in buildings that flank East 25th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues, where students would dodge traffic â€" an estimated 20,000 street crossings a day, not all of them legal â€" to get from class to class.

But in December, the school received permission from the city to permanently close its East 25th Street block to vehicular traffic. Since then, it has been reconfigured into an outdoor plaza, of the sort familiar to travelers in Michael R. Bloomberg’s New York.

On Thursday, Baruch turned its annual Spring Fling into a celebration of plazahood.

Students streamed out of buildings, nearly filling the block. Alicia Keys’s “This Girl is on Fire” rang out from steel drums, and a Ferris wheel offered riders a different view of the 17-story William and Anita Newman Vertical Campus on the south side of the street.

A Ferris wheel at Thursday's Spring Fling gave students a different view of the campus.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times A Ferris wheel at Thursday’s Spring Fling gave students a different view of the campus.

On an average day, the amenities of the plaza are more quotidian: movable tables and chairs providing a place to study, some planters and boulders to break up the long block. But students said they were very pleased to have even the simplest of spaces to gather outdoors.

“Everyone’s a little bit happier,” said Chris Catalano, the president of the undergraduate student government. “This time of year, people would love to be outside, but we didn’t have that option. People would be crammed in the cafeteria desperately searching for a seat â€" it kind of gets crowded in there. You’d wind up seeing people just sitting on the sidewalks; anywhere they could find a seat.”

Mitchel B. Wallerstein, the school’s president, was delighted to preside over the occasion. “It’s been a dream of many of the presidents before me to create an outdoor campus environment,” he said. “Fortunately the current mayoral administration has had this plaza program and was very open to the idea.”

Students filled the former street in celebration on Thursday.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times Students filled the former street in celebration on Thursday.

Baruch has resurfaced the black roadway in beige and plans to raise it to curb height to make the space feel more permanent. The folding tables and chairs look like those in other city pedestrian zones, but are painted Baruch blue-and-gray.

Despite the school branding, Mr. Wallerstein cast the plaza as a winning proposition for the school and its neighbors, some of whom opposed the change.

“This part of Manhattan has the least amount of public space in the city,” he said. “This adds to the public space for the whole community.”

The plaza is open 24 hours a day; the school plans to hold art fairs, concerts and other events in collaboration with the neighborhood. (Baruch also has three buildings between East 22nd and East 23rd Streets.)

While a game of ultimate Frisbee is not as likely here as it might be on larger, greener campuses, Baruch students said they were happy with what they’ve got.

“This is a commuter school,” said Valery Pinette, a student. “So it’s really great to create some kind of community.” She added, “We don’t have a campus, per se, so this is just what we get. And I think we deserve it.”

John Shapiro, chairman of the Pratt Institute’s Center for Planning and the Environment, said that outdoor common space was essential to higher education.

“To say it boosts morale suggests that it’s dessert; I’m suggesting that it’s protein,” he said by phone. “Students need a place to let it all out. They have erratic schedules. They are at a highly social period of their life. A lot of learning is experiential.”

He added: “In the end of the day, we want that direct light, we want that feeling of the passage of the seasons, the changing of time during the day, the people watching.”

The volleyball net was set up only for Thursday's festival, but the street is now open only to pedestrians round the clock year round.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times The volleyball net was set up only for Thursday’s festival, but the street is now open only to pedestrians round the clock year round.


Bloomberg Gives Sept. 11 Museum a $15 Million Loan

A visitor at the National September 11 Memorial and Museum site last month. The memorial is open; the museum expects to open next year.John Moore/Getty Images A visitor at the National September 11 Memorial and Museum site last month. The memorial is open; the museum expects to open next year.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has personally lent the Sept. 11 museum $15 million to help cover expenses until the institution opens at ground zero a year from now.

Mr. Bloomberg, who serves as chairman of the National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the former World Trade Center site, is charging the lowest possible interest rate â€" less than 0.3 percent â€" so that the transaction would qualify under federal rules as a loan rather than a gift.

The cost of building the 100,000-square-foot underground museum has swelled to roughly $1 billion.

The private foundation has received about $600 million from state and federal governments, as well as the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. It has also raised more than $450 million in private donations from individuals and corporations, including $15 million from Mr. Bloomberg himself.

But the largest donors often contribute their money over time, occasionally creating a cash-flow problem for the foundation. Delays have also driven up the cost of the project.

“The fact our chairman was able to extend a loan on such favorable terms is something we all recognize as something tremendously generous,” said Joseph Daniels, president of the foundation.

Mr. Bloomberg is making the loan through a corporate entity of which he is the only shareholder. A spokeswoman for Mr. Bloomberg did not immediately respond to a request for comment on why the money is being proffered as a loan rather than a gift.

The foundation had sought to borrow the money from a bank, but most lenders were reluctant to make a loan against donation pledges. One bank, JPMorgan Chase, did offer to provide a loan, but the interest rate and fees would have cost four percentage points more than the loan from Mr. Bloomberg, Mr. Daniels said.

He said the foundation would start drawing down the Bloomberg loan sometime in the fall.

At its board meeting last week, the foundation also formally voted to charge an entry fee to the museum when it opens. The museum expects to open next April. The board members did not set the fee, but it is expected to be between $20 and $25, despite the large dollop of public funds. The foundation expects that the museum will attract about 2.5 million annual visitors.

The memorial itself is free, although the foundation recently adopted a $2 service fee for online reservations.



Quinn Takes a Break From Candidate Forums

As the campaign for mayor of New York City intensifies, it is not unusual for the Democratic candidates to sit side-by-side many times a week, often fielding identical questions over and over again all around the five boroughs.

But the pattern appears to have finally broken: Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker, is having a forum-free week.

Ms. Quinn, the front-runner in the Democratic primary, missed a forum sponsored by a young professionals group on Wednesday evening, and said she could not attend an education-focused discussion on Thursday night. So she will not be appearing alongside her rivals until next week at the earliest.

“I’ve been to about somewhere between 30 or 40 forums already; we’ve already committed to about a dozen more in the weeks ahead,” Ms. Quinn said at a news conference on Thursday. “Unfortunately, sometimes, the schedule precludes you from being everywhere and at every event.”

The Quinn team cited prior commitments in both cases, noting that the campaign trail could get hectic. Aides said Ms. Quinn had committed to several candidate events over the next few weeks.

Recently, the forums have turned into a regular opportunity for Ms. Quinn’s rivals, whose poll numbers have barely budged in months, to aggressively attack her. A hostile crowd at a forum on housing matters booed Ms. Quinn so loudly that the moderator had to ask for quiet so she could reply to the questions.

The forum Ms. Quinn is to miss on Thursday is hosted by Diane Ravitch, an influential education expert, who has been critical of the Bloomberg administration’s approach to New York City’s public schools.

Ms. Quinn is also planning to skip an event on Monday focused on animal rights; that forum is being organized by a group that has invested in negative ads attacking her.

Ms. Quinn attended an event on Monday for a Greenwich Village political club, but the format did not require the candidates to sit on a panel with one another. Ms. Quinn also attended an event on Saturday at the Cooper Union, which two of her rivals, Bill de Blasio, the public advocate, and William C. Thompson Jr., a former city comptroller, did not attend.

Ms. Quinn’s campaign will begin its door-to-door canvassing operation this weekend, a more direct way to solicit support than the forums, which are often attended primarily by journalists and local activists. And on Thursday, her campaign released a smartphone application that will alert users to Ms. Quinn’s policy ideas as she releases them.



American Repertory Theater Announces Full Season

The American Repertory Theater at Harvard University - a company that has been the birthplace of several Broadway hits, including the recent revival of “Pippin” and the controversial reworking of “Porgy and Bess” - will present six productions in its 2013-14 season in Cambridge, Mass.

In addition to Robert Schenkkan’s “All The Way,” which was already announced, the lineup includes “Witness Uganda,” a musical by Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews, and an adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Tempest” by Andrew Posner and Teller, of Penn and Teller.

Mr. Schenkkan’s work, which stars Bryan Cranston as President Lyndon B. Johnson, is directed by Bill Rauch, who staged its premiere at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival last July. It opens the season in September.

“The Heart of Robin Hood,” by David Farr, offers a twist on the story of the outlaws of Sherwood Forest, who in this version only consider sharing the spoils of robberies with the poor after Marion persuades Robin Hood to do so. It is directed by Gisli Orn Gardarsson.

As a holiday offering, the company is presenting “The Light Princess,” a musical for young audiences, with a book by Lila Rose Kaplan and lyrics and music by Mike Pettry, after a short story by George MacDonald. Allegra Libonati is the director.

Diane Paulus, the company’s artistic director, will direct “Witness Uganda,” a work in which a young man flees from New York after his church begins to investigate his sexuality, and helps build a school in a Ugandan village.

The season also includes a dance work, “The Shape She Makes,” about an obese teacher who must give a speech at a conference for math prodigies, choreographed by Susan Misner and directed by Jonathan Bernstein, as well as “The Tempest,” which is directed by Mr. Posner and Teller, and includes magic by Teller and music by Tom Waits.



American Repertory Theater Announces Full Season

The American Repertory Theater at Harvard University - a company that has been the birthplace of several Broadway hits, including the recent revival of “Pippin” and the controversial reworking of “Porgy and Bess” - will present six productions in its 2013-14 season in Cambridge, Mass.

In addition to Robert Schenkkan’s “All The Way,” which was already announced, the lineup includes “Witness Uganda,” a musical by Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews, and an adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Tempest” by Andrew Posner and Teller, of Penn and Teller.

Mr. Schenkkan’s work, which stars Bryan Cranston as President Lyndon B. Johnson, is directed by Bill Rauch, who staged its premiere at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival last July. It opens the season in September.

“The Heart of Robin Hood,” by David Farr, offers a twist on the story of the outlaws of Sherwood Forest, who in this version only consider sharing the spoils of robberies with the poor after Marion persuades Robin Hood to do so. It is directed by Gisli Orn Gardarsson.

As a holiday offering, the company is presenting “The Light Princess,” a musical for young audiences, with a book by Lila Rose Kaplan and lyrics and music by Mike Pettry, after a short story by George MacDonald. Allegra Libonati is the director.

Diane Paulus, the company’s artistic director, will direct “Witness Uganda,” a work in which a young man flees from New York after his church begins to investigate his sexuality, and helps build a school in a Ugandan village.

The season also includes a dance work, “The Shape She Makes,” about an obese teacher who must give a speech at a conference for math prodigies, choreographed by Susan Misner and directed by Jonathan Bernstein, as well as “The Tempest,” which is directed by Mr. Posner and Teller, and includes magic by Teller and music by Tom Waits.



American Repertory Theater Announces Full Season

The American Repertory Theater at Harvard University - a company that has been the birthplace of several Broadway hits, including the recent revival of “Pippin” and the controversial reworking of “Porgy and Bess” - will present six productions in its 2013-14 season in Cambridge, Mass.

In addition to Robert Schenkkan’s “All The Way,” which was already announced, the lineup includes “Witness Uganda,” a musical by Matt Gould and Griffin Matthews, and an adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Tempest” by Andrew Posner and Teller, of Penn and Teller.

Mr. Schenkkan’s work, which stars Bryan Cranston as President Lyndon B. Johnson, is directed by Bill Rauch, who staged its premiere at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival last July. It opens the season in September.

“The Heart of Robin Hood,” by David Farr, offers a twist on the story of the outlaws of Sherwood Forest, who in this version only consider sharing the spoils of robberies with the poor after Marion persuades Robin Hood to do so. It is directed by Gisli Orn Gardarsson.

As a holiday offering, the company is presenting “The Light Princess,” a musical for young audiences, with a book by Lila Rose Kaplan and lyrics and music by Mike Pettry, after a short story by George MacDonald. Allegra Libonati is the director.

Diane Paulus, the company’s artistic director, will direct “Witness Uganda,” a work in which a young man flees from New York after his church begins to investigate his sexuality, and helps build a school in a Ugandan village.

The season also includes a dance work, “The Shape She Makes,” about an obese teacher who must give a speech at a conference for math prodigies, choreographed by Susan Misner and directed by Jonathan Bernstein, as well as “The Tempest,” which is directed by Mr. Posner and Teller, and includes magic by Teller and music by Tom Waits.



Park Slope Food Co-op Takes Up New Cause: Saving a Hospital

Park Slope Food Co-opMichael Nagle for The New York Times Park Slope Food Co-op

The Park Slope Food Co-op, which fought a veritable civil war over whether to boycott Israeli products, has taken on a new cause célèbre: the fight to save Long Island College Hospital.

In a letter written “on behalf of the 16,000 members” of the co-op, its general manager, Joseph Holtz, and a member, Dr. Saul Melman, call on Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to “take a leadership role” in developing a plan to save the money-losing hospital, known as LICH, which serves a large swath of food co-op territory from its perch in Cobble Hill in northern Brooklyn.

Mr. Holtz said Thursday that the fight over whether to keep LICH open was an appropriate issue for the co-op to engage in because it fit the seventh of the seven international principles of cooperation. “The seventh one is concern for community,” he said. “We feel like it’s something the co-op should be involved in when the basic infrastructure of our community is threatened, and part of the basic infrastructure is health services. By taking a hospital out of our community that serves a significant number of people, that’s going to make it really bad for everyone who lives here.”

LICH is run by SUNY Downstate Medical Center, part of the State University of New York, which has said the hospital is losing so much money it is threatening the rest of the medical center. SUNY officials have also noted that many of the affluent residents of northern Brooklyn prefer to seek medical care in the more prestigious Manhattan hospitals, leaving LICH dependent on poorer patients whose government health insurance â€" if they have it â€" pays less than private insurance plans.

Mr. Holtz’s co-signer on the letter, Dr. Melman, an artist and an emergency room doctor at LICH, said that wealthy, educated co-op members were patients at LICH too, and that this was not limousine liberalism. “I personally have taken care of too many to count co-op members in the E.R.,” Dr. Melman said.

At the co-op’s general meeting on Tuesday, when the letter was overwhelmingly approved by about 300 people, Dr. Melman said, one man told how his first child had been born at LICH and a father of three said he had recently taken his 3-year-old, who was vomiting, to the emergency room. “He was surprised about the short waiting time and the excellent care he received,” said Dr. Melman, who sent the letter to Mr. Cuomo by FedEx on Wednesday.

Long Island College HospitalRuby Washington/The New York Times Long Island College Hospital

With the population of northwest Brooklyn growing, he said, waiting times in other hospitals, like Methodist and Brooklyn Hospital Medical Center, would be even longer if LICH closed, Dr. Melman said.

Downstate recently withdrew a request for permission from the New York State Health Department to close the hospital, under pressure from doctors and unions who filed a lawsuit to block the closing and obtained a temporary restraining order.

Asked for comment on the co-op’s letter, a spokeswoman for the Health Department said, “SUNY is formally reaching out to hospital operators and health care providers to gauge interest in providing medical services in the LICH community, including running LICH as an acute care hospital.”

Mr. Holtz said that saving the hospital was considered urgent enough that it was skipped over other items on the co-op’s packed agenda, which included issues like whether to phase out the free distribution of plastic bags for customers to put their vegetables in on the shop floor, and whether to start another co-op branch.

“If it had had its normal term it would have been later this year or early next year, because there’s quite a few agenda items in the pipeline,” Mr. Holtz said.

But Mr. Holtz compared the LICH decision to the co-op’s decision to oppose hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, on the grounds that it was a threat to the food chain.

“This was really easy, you know, it had overwhelming support,” he said.



I’ll Seat You Last: Tony-Snubbed Shows Take Back Free Tickets

On Tuesday the Tony Award big shots had their say, spreading around nominations to 26 Broadway plays and musicals - and shutting out several others. Now some of the scorned are striking back: The producers of Bette Midler’s hit play “I’ll Eat You Last” and Alan Cumming’s mostly-one-man version of “Macbeth” are pulling back free tickets for many of the 868 Tony voters, and instead offering to sell them at standard prices of about $135 each.

While a few Tony voters have been heard grousing over drinks at theater district hangouts, a spokesman for “I’ll Eat You Last” said on Thursday that many voters were understanding and had decided to purchase seats to see Ms. Midler, in her first role on Broadway since “Fiddler on the Roof” in the late 1960s.

The Midler play is a particularly hot ticket: It has been selling out, and the producers are charging as much as $298 for seats in prime locations - probably where Tony voters would have been sitting for free if Ms. Midler had been nominated. “I’ll Eat You Last,” about a rough day in the colorful life of onetime Hollywood super-agent Sue Mengers, is scheduled to run through June 30.

An 24-person committee decided who would be nominated for Tonys this season.. And rescinding free tickets for those who choose the winners has happened before: Producers pulled back tickets for the 2012 revival of “Streetcar Named Desire” after it received only one Tony nomination, for best costume design, and producers of “The Graduate” (which starred Kathleen Turner and Alicia Silverstone) did the same after the play received no Tony nominations in 2002.

A spokesman for the producers of “I’ll Eat You Last” noted on Thursday that some Tony voters had received free tickets to the play before the nominations. “Once they were announced, and given that the show is a limited engagement, the producers elected to follow the precedent of shows from prior seasons and informed voters that tickets would be available at standard box office prices,” the spokesman said.

As for “Macbeth,” the play has been selling well but has had many empty seats in the mezzanine at some performances. The Tony voter tickets would have been for prime seats in the orchestra. The lead producer, Ken Davenport, said on Thursday that he was putting the interests of his investors first in pulling back tickets, as the show tries to recoup its capitalization of $2 million and turn a profit before its scheduled closing date of July 14.

“Because we only have 64 performances left and because of the high demand for prime orchestra seats, every single ticket is extremely important to our business model,” Mr. Davenport said. “To give away over 1600 seats would be to give away more than an entire house. And while I’d love every Tony voter to see the show now more than ever, without a potential for gain, it just doesn’t make fiscal sense.”



Albee’s New Play, ‘Laying an Egg,’ Postponed Again

Edward Albee’s “Laying an Egg,” announced six weeks ago as a centerpiece of the Signature Theater’s 2013-14 season, has been postponed for the second time, the company announced on Thursday. Mr. Albee’s work was originally to have had its world premiere as part of the Off Broadway company’s 2011-12 season - its first at the Signature Center, its new Midtown space - but was postponed when the famously self-critical playwright, now 85, decided that it needed revamping.

In place of Mr. Albee’s work, the company will present the world premiere of “The Old Friends,” a new work by Horton Foote. The play, about two Texas farming families who find themselves at odds, will be directed by Michael Wilson, and will have Betty Buckley, Hallie Foote and Lois Smith in its cast. Previews begin on Aug. 20; the opening is scheduled for Sept. 2.

Neither Mr. Albee nor James Houghton, the artistic director of the Signature Theater, responded to email and telephone messages on Thursday. The first time Mr. Albee withdrew the play, which is about a middle-aged woman who is determined to become pregnant despite complications, he said that it was taking him longer to complete than he had expected. “I was over-complicating things,” he said in an interview in The New York Times. That season, the work was replaced with one of Mr. Albee’s earlier plays, “The Lady From Dubuque.”

In announcing the postponement, the Signature Theater said that it “remains committed to premiering” the work “in a future season.”



‘The Nance’ Extends Its Run

Performances of the Broadway play “The Nance” will be extended by eight weeks through August 11, Lincoln Center Theater announced on Thursday, aiming to capitalize on the Tony Award nomination this week for lead actor Nathan Lane.

The show received four Tony nominations for design contributions as well, though not a best play nomination for the playwright, Douglas Carter Beane. The play, which opened to good reviews in April, is about the personal and professional travails of a gay New Yorker (played by Mr. Lane) who performs in a 1930s burlesque theater as a nance, a brazenly effeminate stock character. The production by the nonprofit Lincoln Center Theater has been selling well; it took in $445,409 last week, or 60 percent of the maximum possible gross, a solid amount for a play.



Crowning 1 World Trade Center

Lucas Jackson/Reuters

Looking a bit like a rocket taking flight, the spire of 1 World Trade Center was hoisted aloft on Thursday and set on a temporary platform atop the nearly completed building. When it is bolted into place at a later date, the spire will bring the building to a height of 1,776 feet. It will be the tallest building in the world.

Lucas Jackson/Reuters
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press
Justin Lane/European Pressphoto Agency
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Gary Hershorn/Reuters


Typed Lyrics to Unreleased Dylan Song Head to Auction

Izzy Young, who owned the Folklore Center in Greenwich Village during the height of the folk revival, is famous for having nurtured a young Bob Dylan when he first arrived in New York City. Mr. Dylan would hang around the back of Mr. Young’s store on Macdougal Street, listening to records and writing songs, and it was Mr. Young who organized Mr. Dylan’s first concert in the city in 1961.

That relationship soured after Dylan went electric in 1965 and folk purists accused him of selling out. Now Mr. Young, 85, is the one selling something: a manuscript of an unpublished song Mr. Dylan gave him in 1963 while he was working on the groundbreaking album “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.” Christie’s auction house said the manuscript will be sold in London on June 26, as part of the house’s Pop Culture Sale.

“This unreleased song, written against the background of the threat of nuclear warfare, is not only a beautiful example of Dylan’s songwriting, representing his political protest activities during that era but is also a potent symbol of the anxieties of the American public in the early 1960s,” wrote Nicolette Tomkinson, a director at Christie’s, in a description of the sale.

Mr. Young said in a statement that he had asked Mr. Dylan to contribute to a book of songs against the atomic bomb in 1963. The next day, the songwriter gave him a manuscript for “Go Away You Bomb.”

The typewritten lyrics to Christie’s The typewritten lyrics to “Go Away You Bomb.”

It was one of two Dylan manuscripts Mr. Young has held on to for five decades, even after he moved to Stockholm in the 1970s and opened another Folklore Center there. The other manuscript is for “Talking Folklore Center,” the 1962 Dylan song about Mr. Young’s Greenwich Village store.

“I have never sold anything important to me until now and the funds raised will help to keep the Folklore Center in Stockholm going,” Mr. Young said.

Composed at the height of Mr. Dylan’s protest-song period, the lyrics of “Go Away You Bomb” are full of his typical word play: “I hate you cause yer man-made and man-owned an’ man-handled/An’ you might be miss-made an’ miss-owned an’ miss- handled an’ miss-used/An’ I hate you cause you could drop on me by accident an’ kill me.”

According to Mr. Dylan’s autobiography, “Chronicles,” Mr. Young’s Folklore Center was also where Mr. Dylan first met Dave Van Ronk, the folk singer who gave him an important break by inviting him to join him onstage at the Gaslight.

Ms. Tomkinson estimated the sheet of typed lyrics would sell for between $38,000 and $54,000.



Typed Lyrics to Unreleased Dylan Song Head to Auction

Izzy Young, who owned the Folklore Center in Greenwich Village during the height of the folk revival, is famous for having nurtured a young Bob Dylan when he first arrived in New York City. Mr. Dylan would hang around the back of Mr. Young’s store on Macdougal Street, listening to records and writing songs, and it was Mr. Young who organized Mr. Dylan’s first concert in the city in 1961.

That relationship soured after Dylan went electric in 1965 and folk purists accused him of selling out. Now Mr. Young, 85, is the one selling something: a manuscript of an unpublished song Mr. Dylan gave him in 1963 while he was working on the groundbreaking album “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.” Christie’s auction house said the manuscript will be sold in London on June 26, as part of the house’s Pop Culture Sale.

“This unreleased song, written against the background of the threat of nuclear warfare, is not only a beautiful example of Dylan’s songwriting, representing his political protest activities during that era but is also a potent symbol of the anxieties of the American public in the early 1960s,” wrote Nicolette Tomkinson, a director at Christie’s, in a description of the sale.

Mr. Young said in a statement that he had asked Mr. Dylan to contribute to a book of songs against the atomic bomb in 1963. The next day, the songwriter gave him a manuscript for “Go Away You Bomb.”

The typewritten lyrics to Christie’s The typewritten lyrics to “Go Away You Bomb.”

It was one of two Dylan manuscripts Mr. Young has held on to for five decades, even after he moved to Stockholm in the 1970s and opened another Folklore Center there. The other manuscript is for “Talking Folklore Center,” the 1962 Dylan song about Mr. Young’s Greenwich Village store.

“I have never sold anything important to me until now and the funds raised will help to keep the Folklore Center in Stockholm going,” Mr. Young said.

Composed at the height of Mr. Dylan’s protest-song period, the lyrics of “Go Away You Bomb” are full of his typical word play: “I hate you cause yer man-made and man-owned an’ man-handled/An’ you might be miss-made an’ miss-owned an’ miss- handled an’ miss-used/An’ I hate you cause you could drop on me by accident an’ kill me.”

According to Mr. Dylan’s autobiography, “Chronicles,” Mr. Young’s Folklore Center was also where Mr. Dylan first met Dave Van Ronk, the folk singer who gave him an important break by inviting him to join him onstage at the Gaslight.

Ms. Tomkinson estimated the sheet of typed lyrics would sell for between $38,000 and $54,000.



Typed Lyrics to Unreleased Dylan Song Head to Auction

Izzy Young, who owned the Folklore Center in Greenwich Village during the height of the folk revival, is famous for having nurtured a young Bob Dylan when he first arrived in New York City. Mr. Dylan would hang around the back of Mr. Young’s store on Macdougal Street, listening to records and writing songs, and it was Mr. Young who organized Mr. Dylan’s first concert in the city in 1961.

That relationship soured after Dylan went electric in 1965 and folk purists accused him of selling out. Now Mr. Young, 85, is the one selling something: a manuscript of an unpublished song Mr. Dylan gave him in 1963 while he was working on the groundbreaking album “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan.” Christie’s auction house said the manuscript will be sold in London on June 26, as part of the house’s Pop Culture Sale.

“This unreleased song, written against the background of the threat of nuclear warfare, is not only a beautiful example of Dylan’s songwriting, representing his political protest activities during that era but is also a potent symbol of the anxieties of the American public in the early 1960s,” wrote Nicolette Tomkinson, a director at Christie’s, in a description of the sale.

Mr. Young said in a statement that he had asked Mr. Dylan to contribute to a book of songs against the atomic bomb in 1963. The next day, the songwriter gave him a manuscript for “Go Away You Bomb.”

The typewritten lyrics to Christie’s The typewritten lyrics to “Go Away You Bomb.”

It was one of two Dylan manuscripts Mr. Young has held on to for five decades, even after he moved to Stockholm in the 1970s and opened another Folklore Center there. The other manuscript is for “Talking Folklore Center,” the 1962 Dylan song about Mr. Young’s Greenwich Village store.

“I have never sold anything important to me until now and the funds raised will help to keep the Folklore Center in Stockholm going,” Mr. Young said.

Composed at the height of Mr. Dylan’s protest-song period, the lyrics of “Go Away You Bomb” are full of his typical word play: “I hate you cause yer man-made and man-owned an’ man-handled/An’ you might be miss-made an’ miss-owned an’ miss- handled an’ miss-used/An’ I hate you cause you could drop on me by accident an’ kill me.”

According to Mr. Dylan’s autobiography, “Chronicles,” Mr. Young’s Folklore Center was also where Mr. Dylan first met Dave Van Ronk, the folk singer who gave him an important break by inviting him to join him onstage at the Gaslight.

Ms. Tomkinson estimated the sheet of typed lyrics would sell for between $38,000 and $54,000.



Brantley, Isherwood Answer Readers’ Questions About the Theater Season

Jonny Orsini, left, and Nathan Lane in Sara Krulwich/The New York Times Jonny Orsini, left, and Nathan Lane in “The Nance.”

This week Ben Brantley and Charles Isherwood, theater critics for The New York Times, took readers’ questions about the Broadway season and this week’s announcement of the Tony Award nominations. Below are their answers to selected questions.

Q.

For Mr. Brantley, I was surprised by his lukewarm reviews for both “The Testament of Mary” and “The Nance.” Would he like to further talk about his responses to both plays? Did Mr. Isherwood also see these plays and respond similarly? â€" drjp1025, Los Angeles

A.

Ben Brantley: I said pretty much what I wanted to say in those reviews, though you can always expatiate, I suppose. There was much I liked about the production of “The Nance,” especially Nathan Lane’s performance and the gritty sense the production conveyed of burlesque in its final days. But the script turned preachy and conventional, and in doing so, I think, betrayed its title character, who became more of a mouthpiece than any actor should have to be.

“Mary,” I felt, was betrayed by its production. It’s an excellent script, and in Ms. Shaw, it has a most compelling star. But the busy staging, by Deborah Warner, undercut as well as underlined the play’s insights and moments of revelation. I think I said all this in the original reviews, but we critics are always happy to elucidate.

Charles Isherwood: Unfortunately I can’t express much enthusiasm for those productions either. “The Testament of Mary” struck me as an unhappy match between talents. Having read Colm Toibin’s text in its published from, as a novella, I was transfixed by the dispassionate beauty of the writing. It seems to me the material drew its strength from the emotional restraint that was the keynote of Mary’s reflections - she seemed all but hollowed out by horror of what she had witnessed. Fiona Shaw’s performance had moments of intense quiet but these were overpowered by the general ferocity, not to mention the general busy-ness of Deborah Warner’s production. (I do find it bizarre, however, that the Tony nominating committee included “Mary” in the best play category without recognizing Ms. Shaw’s performance; take away the performance and the production consists of a vulture and an odd assortment of props. Go figure.)

As for “The Nance,” I wish Douglas Carter Beane had dug more deeply into the psyche of the main character, and that his young love interest had not been such a blandly idealized character. Also, I have to admit that I didn’t find any of that whiskered burlesque comedy even remotely funny.

Q.

Do you have any comments on why all nominated new musicals are adaptations? â€" Bethynyc, Massachusetts

A.

Brantley: I could do a riff on the culture of recycling here. But for many years, many classic book musicals have been adaptations. “The Book of Mormon” is an most obvious recent exception. But think of the Rodgers and Hammerstein canon: “Oklahoma!” and “Carousel” are adapted from plays, and “South Pacific” from a novel. More recently, musicals are more likely to look to movies for inspiration, as “Kinky Boots” did this season and hits like “Hairspray,” “The Producers” and “Once” did in seasons past. Even Stephen Sondheim, whom one thinks of as conceiving shows out of air with his collaborators, has looked to the movies for his “Passion” and “A Little Night Music.” And “Merrily We Roll Along” was a latter-day variation on a Kaufman and Hart play.

Isherwood: Throughout their history Broadway musicals have been drawing on other sources for inspiration. Many of the classics - from “Show Boat” and “Oklahoma!” to “Sweeney Todd” - have found their origins in other mediums, so in a sense it’s nothing new. What is new is the tendency these days to simply musicalize movies, a sign I suppose of film’s dominance in our culture (and our decreasing literacy, perhaps). Three of the four nominated new musicals were based on movies. There’s no inherent reason why films shouldn’t make for fine musicals - I quite liked “Hairspray” - but the track record of the last decade or so is not inspiring.

A scene from the musical Sara Krulwich/The New York Times A scene from the musical “Hands on a Hardbody.”
Q.

“Hands on a Hardbody” was one of my favorite entries this season. I recall the reviews were mostly on the positive side of neutral, and remember discussing with friends my fear that NYC audiences wouldn’t “get it”, and that tourists would eschew it in favor of in-your-face blockbusters. I’d love to hear your thoughts on the show, and if you think anything could have been done to give it a longer life. â€" Chris, Orlando, Fla.

A.

Brantley: I am sad to say that I missed “Hands on a Hardbody,” though I had every intention of seeing it, honest. I’ll leave it to Charles to speak of why it didn’t survive and how it might have been able to.

Isherwood: “Hands on a Hardbody” was human-scaled and, despite measures of comedy, fundamentally serious in its consideration of how economic hardship had pushed its characters to the edge of desperation. Broadway musicals mostly traffic in splashy theatrics, happy fantasies and “feel-good” stories - all the nominated musicals certainly did. (I am glad, at least, that “Hardbody” won a nomination for Trey Anastasio and Amanda Green’s eclectic, appealing roots-rock score.) I don’t think the show really belonged on Broadway, but unfortunately there really isn’t a viable marketplace for musicals Off Broadway - they are so expensive to produce. I would hope the show might have an extended life in regional theaters. It deserves it.

Q.

Which annual theater awards (e.g., Outer Critics Circle, Drama Desk, Tony Awards, etc.) have you found over time to best reflect critical excellence? â€" Ed B., New York

A.

Brantley: All awards are arrived at by compromise, which means they seldom reflect true originality or excellence.

Isherwood: We are certainly awash in theater awards these days, and I cannot claim to keep track of how the chips fall from year to year. Even the most esteemed award, which is probably the Pulitzer Prize for drama, has a far from perfect record in terms of selecting plays that, with time, have proven their enduring worth. Laurel-bestowing makes the award-givers and the award-getters feel good, but I’m not sure we should look to awards tallies for measures of true artistic merit. Maybe only history can give that verdict (and, heck, even history probably gets things wrong now and then).

A scene from Sara Krulwich/The New York Times A scene from “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” with, from left, Madison Dirks, Tracy Letts, Carrie Coon and Amy Morton.
Q.

I know how Mr. Isherwood felt about “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”, but how did Mr. Brantley feel about the show? â€" Monica Reida, Chicago

A.

Brantley: I am always happy to see a solid production of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?,” one of my favorite plays. If I was less enamored of this version than Charles was, it was because I felt that Tracy Letts’s George overpowered Amy Morton’s Martha, and that the marital battle needs to be evenly matched for maximum impact. Mr. Letts was superb, though, and his performance offered me new and provoking insights into George. This alone made the production worth attending, and it had much more to offer than that.

Q.

Do you feel that, with the majority of performance nominees being first-time nominees or being simply younger than typical, and that, with a lot of older, previous Tony nominees being passed over, that a new era of Broadway performers has been ushered in, and that we may be seeing more new works featuring new or younger actors?â€" Phil, Philadelphia

A.

Brantley: Broadway, like any creative vampire, always needs new blood, so I’m glad if the Tony nominations reflect a fresh infusion of talent. Experience has taught me to ruminate, though, that many of the brightest young talents, having used the stage to announce their presence, are likely to be lost in the mills of television and film making, rather than develop into theater stars.

Isherwood: I wasn’t particularly struck by the preponderance of youth among the acting nominees, actually. Perhaps in the musical categories there were more fresh faces or at least new-ish names, from Stark Sands and Billy Porter to Santino Fontana and Laura Osnes. I hope for the sake of Broadway’s future that these performers and others can continue to develop their careers, but the business has contracted over the decades, and great musical theater roles are harder to come by. I do think there’s something a mite cheering in the fact that the nominators didn’t seem to factor in celebrity quite as much as they normally do, including the likes of Tracy Letts and Amy Morton, theater stalwarts whose show had closed. (That said, Bette Midler was robbed!)

Seth Numrich, left, in Sara Krulwich/The New York Times Seth Numrich, left, in “Golden Boy.”
Q.

What have been the shows that most pleasantly surprised you this year? Alternatively, have there been any shows you were eagerly anticipating that disappointed you? â€" Ali, New York

A.

Brantley: I went with limited expectations to Richard Greenberg’s “Assembled Parties” (and, please, can somebody change that title, which is impossible to remember). I hadn’t thought much of his adaptation of “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” which had opened on Broadway not long before. But this was a return to top form for Mr. Greenberg, with a production full of eloquence and stylized wit. This sort of comedy of manners is much harder to pull off than it appears - it needs to create the illusion of an effortlessness that is in fact very hard-won. And I was sorry that neither its superb leading lady, Jessica Hecht, nor its director, Lynne Meadow, were nominated for Tonys. On the other hand, not really. If it weren’t part of my job, I wouldn’t even look to see what was nominated.

Isherwood: I was most pleasantly cheered by the excellent revival of Clifford Odets’s “Golden Boy.” Although its director, Bartlett Sher, had done a wonderful job with another Odets play, “Awake and Sing!,” I was nevertheless impressed by how vibrant and alive the play felt (and was glad the Tony nominators gave it plenty of love: 8 nominations, more than any other production of a play, old or new). Maybe that’s why the biggest disappointment of the season - among quite a few, alas - was the less effective revival of Odets’s “Big Knife.” The play considers some of the same themes (the corrupting influence of money on the soul, etc.) but hasn’t weathered the years as well, and I’m not even sure the sympathetic touch of Mr. Sher could have made a powerful case for it.

Q.

Why so much talk about awards? Why isn’t there more conversation about differences of opinion? Why the persistent avoidance of conversation about actual artistic content? â€" Craig Lucas, Putnam Valley, N.Y.

A.

Brantley: If I had a choice, I would ignore all award ceremonies (except the Grammys, which are a hoot). I find them embarrassing to the point of excruciation. They are not, and cannot be, objective measures of worth. It’s not just that it takes time to uncover lasting merit, but most awards are arrived at by a kind of horse-swapping procedure wherein nobody’s true favorite is likely to win. But people, being people, have a hunger for lists and prizes that quantify merit. It makes the world seem a little more manageable, I suppose. Newspapers are necessarily in the business of giving the public what it wants to read, and I work for a newspaper. Hence I try to write with some enthusiasm about awards in which I personally have little interest.

Isherwood: We live in a culture that’s obsessed with competition, like it or not, and seems to become only more so. Witness the huge popularity and proliferation of talent contests on television, not to mention the multibillion-dollar industries that are major league sports. (And even college sports.) And nothing brings out differences of opinion more than the hoopla surrounding who did and who didn’t get nominated! I can tell you writing about matters Tony-related is not, ahem, one of the most appealing aspects of the job. But it’s also unavoidable.



Country Stars’ Tribute to George Jones Streaming Online

Fans wait outside the Grand Ole Opry for the public funeral service for George Jones.Mark Zaleski/Associated Press Fans wait outside the Grand Ole Opry for the public funeral service for George Jones.

Not many funerals are held at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville.  But the service for George Jones, the hard-drinking singer considered by some critics to be the definitive country singer of the last half-century, is one of them.  Today his funeral at the music hall, the closest thing that country music has to a cathedral, will be streamed live at 11 a.m. Eastern time on the Opry’s Web site and in audio at wsmonline.com. It will also be broadcast live on several networks â€" CMT, GAC, RFD-TV and FamilyNet.  The service is bound to feature some good music. The lineup of performers includes Charlie Daniels, Vince Gill, Alan Jackson, Ronnie Milsap, Brad Paisley, the Oak Ridge Boys, Tanya Tucker and Wynonna.



Housing Project Meets Art Project in the South Bronx

Temporary public art projects are plentiful in New York City but they rarely make their way to the South Bronx and almost never to the grounds of public housing projects. But beginning this month the Swiss artist Thomas Hirschhorn, with the help of the Dia Art Foundation, will build the last in a series of temporary monuments at the Forest Houses, a New York City Housing Authority development in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx.

Called “The Gramsci Monument,” the work - which will take the form of a kind of temporary pavilion built on the grounds of the housing project - will be the fourth such monument Mr. Hirschhorn has built over the last several years, dedicated to writers and philosophers - like Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze and Georges Bataille - whose ideas have inspired him. Antonio Gramsci was an Italian political theorist and Marxist who was imprisoned for many years under Mussolini. “The Gramsci Monument” will be the first such installation in the United States by Mr. Hirschhorn, who said he had chosen the site because of his desire to “create a new form” of public art, “based on love for a ‘non-exclusive audience.’ ”

The monument will be built under Mr. Hirschhorn’s direction, largely by residents of the Forest Houses, whom he approached several months ago to propose the project and who will be paid for their work. Work will probably last into June with an opening planned for July. The structure, to be made from inexpensive wood and other materials, will include an exhibition space, a theater area, a lounge, an Internet corner and a bar providing food, prepared by residents. Children’s workshops and lectures will be held, and a daily newspaper and radio station will be operated during the run of the monument, which will continue through Sept. 15.



Housing Project Meets Art Project in the South Bronx

Temporary public art projects are plentiful in New York City but they rarely make their way to the South Bronx and almost never to the grounds of public housing projects. But beginning this month the Swiss artist Thomas Hirschhorn, with the help of the Dia Art Foundation, will build the last in a series of temporary monuments at the Forest Houses, a New York City Housing Authority development in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx.

Called “The Gramsci Monument,” the work - which will take the form of a kind of temporary pavilion built on the grounds of the housing project - will be the fourth such monument Mr. Hirschhorn has built over the last several years, dedicated to writers and philosophers - like Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze and Georges Bataille - whose ideas have inspired him. Antonio Gramsci was an Italian political theorist and Marxist who was imprisoned for many years under Mussolini. “The Gramsci Monument” will be the first such installation in the United States by Mr. Hirschhorn, who said he had chosen the site because of his desire to “create a new form” of public art, “based on love for a ‘non-exclusive audience.’ ”

The monument will be built under Mr. Hirschhorn’s direction, largely by residents of the Forest Houses, whom he approached several months ago to propose the project and who will be paid for their work. Work will probably last into June with an opening planned for July. The structure, to be made from inexpensive wood and other materials, will include an exhibition space, a theater area, a lounge, an Internet corner and a bar providing food, prepared by residents. Children’s workshops and lectures will be held, and a daily newspaper and radio station will be operated during the run of the monument, which will continue through Sept. 15.



Housing Project Meets Art Project in the South Bronx

Temporary public art projects are plentiful in New York City but they rarely make their way to the South Bronx and almost never to the grounds of public housing projects. But beginning this month the Swiss artist Thomas Hirschhorn, with the help of the Dia Art Foundation, will build the last in a series of temporary monuments at the Forest Houses, a New York City Housing Authority development in the Morrisania neighborhood of the Bronx.

Called “The Gramsci Monument,” the work - which will take the form of a kind of temporary pavilion built on the grounds of the housing project - will be the fourth such monument Mr. Hirschhorn has built over the last several years, dedicated to writers and philosophers - like Spinoza, Gilles Deleuze and Georges Bataille - whose ideas have inspired him. Antonio Gramsci was an Italian political theorist and Marxist who was imprisoned for many years under Mussolini. “The Gramsci Monument” will be the first such installation in the United States by Mr. Hirschhorn, who said he had chosen the site because of his desire to “create a new form” of public art, “based on love for a ‘non-exclusive audience.’ ”

The monument will be built under Mr. Hirschhorn’s direction, largely by residents of the Forest Houses, whom he approached several months ago to propose the project and who will be paid for their work. Work will probably last into June with an opening planned for July. The structure, to be made from inexpensive wood and other materials, will include an exhibition space, a theater area, a lounge, an Internet corner and a bar providing food, prepared by residents. Children’s workshops and lectures will be held, and a daily newspaper and radio station will be operated during the run of the monument, which will continue through Sept. 15.



A Missed Opportunity to Drive the Subway

Ruby Washington/The New York Times

Dear Diary:

One of the reasons I have tried a few new things from time to time stems from an incident that happened when I was 5, more than 50 years ago.

My parents had taken my sister and me into the city â€" maybe we saw a show; I can’t remember. But along the way, we took the subway - for me, the first time. We went into the first car, and my sister, Adrienne, and I rushed to the front to look out the door window at the tracks speeding by. I turned and looked into the keyhole of the motorman’s tiny compartment and shouted to Adrienne that I could see “a man in there!”

Suddenly, the door popped open and the motorman said, “Hey kid, you want to drive?”

This was my moment to do what nobody I know to this day has ever done â€" drive a subway train.

I laughed and got all shy and said, “No sir.”

The door shut. In so many ways.

And looking back, I realize that a lot of the choices I have made â€" jumping into new jobs, racing a car around a speedway, learning to fly a plane â€" can be traced back to that day. I have never wanted to say, “I coulda but I didn’t.” And life has been pretty interesting.

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