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A Departed ‘21’ Club Fixture, Known for His Stories, Inspires a Few

Lorenzo Robinson, a bathroom attendant at Robert Stolarik for The New York Times Lorenzo Robinson, a bathroom attendant at “21,” in a 2004 photograph.

As soon as Tip O’Neill came back from the men’s room at the “21” Club, Nicholas Verbitsky knew that Mr. O’Neill had fallen under the charms of the Rev.

“Tip came back to our table with a big smile and said, ‘I just met the nicest guy in the bathroom - he really knew his stuff,’” recalled Mr. Verbitsky, chief executive officer of United Stations Radio Networks, after finishing lunch on Tuesday in the dining room at the “21” Club, the venerated Midtown restaurant on West 52nd Street that was once a speakeasy.

This was in the 1980s, and the elated restroom user was, at the time, the speaker of the House of Representatives, something that the savvy bathroom attendant knew instantly, addressing him as Mr. Speaker and offering him a hand towel.

This was no ordinary restroom attendant. It was Lorenzo Robinson, who since 1989 served the rich, famous and important customers of “21” during their most private moments.

Mr. Robinson, known to scores of “21” customers as the Rev, died Thursday at 71, shortly after delivering the eulogy at a service in Connecticut for a sister, officials at the restaurant said. The officials did not know the cause of death, and Jerelene Robinson, Mr. Robinson’s widow, did not immediately return a phone call on Tuesday afternoon.

“The Rev was an amazing raconteur - he would be up to date on the economy, world affairs, and he could just wax poetic about a myriad of issues,” Mr. Verbitsky said. “It’s not often you look forward to going to the men’s room, but with the Rev there, you did.”

Mr. Verbitsky’s dining companion, Marty Weisberg, another longtime “21″ customer, nodded.

“He wasn’t a washroom attendant - he was your friend, and he was an essential part of the ’21’ experience,” Mr. Weisberg said.

Mr. Robinson was as much a part of “21” as the cast-iron jockeys guarding the door, the red-checkered tablecloths, and the steak tartare. And restaurant employees said he was still working in the days before he died.

Dressed in his smart white uniform, Mr. Robinson would greet restroom users while turning on the faucet and offering a towel. He would also offer a once-over of a gentleman’s clothing with a little brush.

Mr. Robinson, an ordained Baptist minister, would keep current by reading several newspapers every morning while commuting by train from his home in Stamford, Conn.

In 2004, Mr. Robinson told The New York Times that he came from an extended family of Baptist ministers and his father, uncle and nephew all worked in the bathroom at “21.” He took over the job after the 1989 death of his uncle Otis Cole, who had worked the restroom at “21″ since the 1940s, he said.

According to an obituary placed by Mr. Robinson’s family in The Stamford Advocate on Tuesday, Mr. Robinson was active in community service, served as pastor at multiple churches and headed several civic organizations. The Robinsons had one child, a daughter.

Two of his favorite interactions were with Nelson Mandela and Ronald Reagan, said Shaker Naini, a longtime greeter at “21.”

“The Rev met Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan and Clinton and he had conversations with them,” Mr. Naini said, offering an anecdote about Mr. Reagan trying to turn on the faucet to wash his hands, only to have Mr. Robinson say, “Please, Mr. President, I have to do that for you.”

Then Mr. Reagan handed Mr. Robinson his cufflinks with the presidential seal. Mr. Robinson wore the cufflinks to work every day after that, Mr. Naini said.

Mr. Robinson performed wedding ceremonies for several customers and employees, including Ed Kennelly, a bartender at “21.”

“The Rev insisted on doing my wedding,” Mr. Kennelly said on Tuesday, wiping down the bar. “He was a true character. Men would bring him out of the restroom to meet their families.”

“We have CEO’s coming in here crying, learning that the Rev died,” he said. “The Rev took that job, and he elevated it.”



Matthew Barney Film in the Lineup at Australia Arts Festival

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In Performance: Kristen Sieh and Libby King of ‘RoosevElvis\'

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Life to Go On, But Jonas Brothers Call It Quits

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A Concert of Sad Songs, Delivered Anywhere in the World

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Beck to Release New Album After Signing With Capitol Records

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My Morning Jacket Plans a Resort Rock Festival, Yoga Included

My Morning Jacket performing in New York this month.Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for CBGB My Morning Jacket performing in New York this month.

Remember when going to a rock show meant packing into a crowded, grungy club, where the music was loud and the air was filled with smoke (various kinds), sweat and the aroma of beer? If you're happy to have all that well behind you, but still have a yen to rock out - perhaps with some ritzy conveniences - the Southern rock band My Morning Jacket has a deal for you.

The band is presiding over One Big Holiday, a four-day festival that the group is calling “an all-inclusive musical adventure,” an hour south of Cancún, Mexico, near Playa del Carmen, Jan. 26 to 30.

At prices that range from $1,249 to $2,599, tickets to the festival - which the band is calling “an all-inclusive musical adventure” - include a room at the Hard Rock Hotel Riviera Maya, as well as meals, drinks, activities (yoga classes, tennis, kayaking, snorkeling, tequila tastings and dance parties are among those promised). And, of course, concerts.

My Morning Jacket plans to play three full sets. Also on the bill are the Flaming Lips, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, Mariachi El Bronx and the D.J. Rob Garza, from Thievery Corporation.



Bolshoi Dancer Pleads Not Guilty in Attack on Artistic Director

MOSCOW - Pavel Dmitrichenko, a soloist with the Bolshoi Ballet, pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to ordering an acid attack that nearly blinded the troupe's artistic director. The man accused of carrying out the attack admitted his guilt but said he had been acting alone.

That man, Yuri Zarutsky, 35, pleaded not guilty to a charge of conspiracy to commit assault because he alone had mixed and used a caustic mixture of acid and urine in the January attack, Russian state media reported.

Mr. Dmitrichenko, 29, said in March during a taped interrogation that he had authorized the assault on the artistic director, Sergei Filin, but “not to the extent that it occurred.” The attack exposed bitter rivalries among the world-famous ballet company, and Mr. Filin has not fully recovered despite 23 surgeries to restore his eyesight.

On Tuesday, Mr. Dmitrichenko told the court that “I never asked Zarutsky to carry out an attack on Filin and cause serious harm to his health.” A man suspected of being the getaway driver, Andrei Lipatov, also pleaded not guilty.

All three men could receive a maximum sentence of 12 years in prison if convicted.



Dutch Website Catalogs Art Looted in Nazi Era

A four-year review by more than 400 Dutch museums and galleries has turned up a list of 139 artworks that may have been forcibly taken from Jewish families during the Nazis' reign, the BBC reported on Tuesday. The works, which include a Matisse and several by Dutch artists, are listed on a special website. (An English version of the site won't be available until 2014.)

Heirs can file claims with the Dutch Restitutions Committee, an independent advisory panel. A previous review of museum collections examined only transactions that took place between 1940 and 1948. The new review, which was initiated in 2009, is an acknowledgment by the government that previous efforts to return looted property were incomplete. This latest search goes back to 1933, with an eye to gaps in provenance.

Speaking to the BBC, Siebe Weide, the director of the Netherlands Museums Association, said, “We know that there were doubtful transactions concerning works acquired before 1940, after Kristallnacht,” referring to the coordinated attacks on German and Austrian Jews that occurred in 1938.



Seeking Students\' Short ‘Hamlet\' Videos

“Brevity is the soul of wit,” declares Polonius in William Shakespeare's “Hamlet.” And perhaps short videos of lines from one of the Bard's most-loved plays will expose the souls of their performers, too. So The New York Times invites student actors and actresses to submit their performances of lines from “Hamlet” using Instagram.

The Times's critics have been cataloging the recent bounty of professional performances of Shakespeare's plays. And with several stagings of “Hamlet” opening soon, we'd like to see how high school and college students interpret key lines from the play using the cameras and apps on the smartphones they might be carrying.

To prove that you can fit plenty of Shakespearean pathos into 15 seconds - the maximum length of an Instagram video - we invited a professional actor, Michael Urie, to The New York Times to perform a few lines from the play:

If you are a high school or college student, use Instagram to record one short video of your performance of lines from “Hamlet.” (“To be or not to be” is only an example.) Then fill out the form and submit the link to the video below. You can also add the hashtag “#MaximumShakespeare” on your Instagram post.

The deadline to submit a video link is Dec. 1, 2103. The best videos will be featured on nytimes.com later in December. If you cannot see the form below, it is also available at this website.

By submitting to us, you are promising that the content is original, doesn't plagiarize from anyone or infringe a copyright or trademark, doesn't violate anybody's rights and isn't libelous or otherwise unlawful or misleading. You are agreeing that we can use your submission in all manner and media of The New York Times and that we shall have the right to authorize third parties to do so. And you agree to the rules of our Member Agreement, found online at our website.



College Painters to Face Off Onstage

The gladiatorial side of the art world is usually kept under wraps, in the jockeying for prominence among artists, gallery owners and curators. But ArtBattles U wants to get the sparring out in the open. The company, which specializes in finding opportunities for student artists to show their work, is presenting what it is calling a Live Art Battle - painters create works while audiences watch - on Nov. 14 in the Marlin Room at Webster Hall, the rock club on East 11th Street.

ArtBattles U staged a similar contest at Webster Hall in April, and another in Spartanburg, S.C., in September. But it is expanding its approach. The Nov. 14 battle is open to college students in the tristate area. Four winners will be selected by the audience and will compete in the spring against winners of three other battles. One is to be held at Underground Arts in Philadelphia on Nov. 21; the other two cities have not yet been announced.

The contest will offer its student competitors marketing opportunities as well. All the work created at the battles will be available for sale, and some will be incorporated into an ArtBattles U line of iPhone, iPad, laptop and gaming console skins.



Cellphone-Hater in the Subway

Dear Diary:

I was waiting for the No. 1 train on the underground platform at the 79th Street station when a cellphone rang. The faces of nearby people expressed annoyance, but only the man sitting next to me complained.

“I hate phones that work in the subway. Maybe it’s hard to believe, but this is my quiet time. My reading time.”

I stifled a laugh.

It was his phone that had rung.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: Mayoral Misfits

Click on the video above for more on the minor-party candidates.

Bored by the mayoral race?

You haven’t met the lesser-known candidates on the ballot.

There’s the “political impressionist” Randy A. Credico of the “Tax Wall Street Party.”

“I’m the mimic,” Mr. Credico said. “But de Blasio picked up a lot of my rhetoric, about taxing Wall Street and changing the criminal-justice system.”

To run for mayor, a candidate must submit petitions with at least 3,750 signatures.

Fifteen people have made it onto next Tuesday’s ballot.

They include Jimmy McMillan of the “Rent is Too Damn High” party.

Then there is Michael J. Dilger, founder of the “Flourish Everyone Can Shine Like the Sun” party.

Asked about his party’s name, Mr. Dilger paused.

He was ordering a slice of pepperoni pizza. It had been a long day selling comedy tickets in Times Square.

The name, he said, came from his Jesuit education, and a belief that every person’s potential is limitless.

Still, Mr. Dilger expressed confusion about whether his petitions had been certified.

“I’m on the ballot â€" are you sure?” he asked.

(Yes, we’re sure.)

Here’s what else you need to know for Tuesday, the anniversary of Hurricane Sandy.

WEATHER

Patchy sun, with a high of 53. But enjoy it. The rest of the week looks gloomy.

COMMUTE

Subways: Fine so far. Click for latest status.

Rails: O.K. Click for L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect through Thursday but suspended Friday.

COMING UP TODAY

Hurricane Sandy Anniversary

- Entrances to the R train in Brooklyn and to A-train stations south of Howard Beach in Queens will be free all day. You’re on your honor not to get on any connecting trains.

- Volunteers will plant beach grass on dunes at Breezy Point in the Rockaways to help them withstand storm surges, from morning till afternoon.

- Joseph J. Lhota is on the John Gambling radio show on WOR-AM (710) at 7:10 a.m. Then he helps plant beach grass at Breezy Point and attends remembrance services in Staten Island and Queens.

- Bill de Blasio speaks at storm remembrances in Red Hook, Brooklyn, and on Staten Island.

- Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg visits shoreline-hardening projects in Staten Island and Queens and speaks at the site of a new levee in Coney Island at 11:30 a.m.

- Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo tours places damaged by the storm in Lower Manhattan and Queens, then speaks at a gas station on Long Island.

- Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey leads a prayer service at a Baptist church in Newark at 10 a.m.

- A exhibit of more than 200 photos, “Rising Waters,” opens at the Museum of the City of New York.

- A mural by senior citizens commemorating the storm is unveiled on the Coney Island boardwalk.

- There will be candlelight vigils along the shoreline all around the region. Manhattan’s begins at 6:45 in East River Park in the East Village.

- Staten Island’s vigil is at 7:45 p.m., all along the South Shore. But before, people will walk, eat, pray.

- Brooklyn will be lit up, too. Get to one of these spots by 6:30 p.m.

- A vigil on Beach Channel Drive in Far Rockaway at 7:30 p.m.

- At 8 p.m., there will be a moment of silence across the state.

Non-Hurricane

- The Landmarks Preservation Commission votes on whether to extend the Park Slope Historic District.

- A State Senate education committee public hearing on changes to the Regents tests, at 250 Broadway Downtown.

- The New York Civil Liberties Union releases a report on the provocative theme “How School Discipline Feeds the School-to-Prison Pipeline.”

- The fledgling and still-unhoused Filipino American Museum has its first event, a sound-and-light performance at Third Streaming gallery in SoHo. 7 p.m. [Free]

- Foreign-policy panels at N.Y.U. one on relations with Iran, at 6 p.m., one on drone strikes at 6:30 p.m. [Free]

- Will Self and Martin Amis converse at McNally Jackson Books in SoHo. 7 p.m. [Free]

- The noted partying authority Andrew W.K. delivers a “special party lecture” at the Bedford + Bowery Newsroom in Williamsburg. 7 p.m. [Free, R.S.V.P.]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- The state attorney general’s office sent letters to Barney’s and Macy’s seeking information on their security procedures, after accusations of racial profiling of shoppers. [Daily News]

- Poll: New York City voters favor casino expansion in the state, but not in their backyards. [New York Times]

- Mr. de Blasio’s tenants seem to like him as a landlord. [New York Times]

- A Jewish deliveryman won a $900,000 verdict against a Midtown restaurant for years of anti-Semitic harassment. [New York Post]

- An appreciation of Staten Island pizza from the food critic Robert Sietsema. [New York Times]

- Yesterday was the 50th anniversary of the demolition of the original Penn Station. Atlantic Cities has a photo tribute.

- Scoreboard: Rangers lose belated home opener to Canadiens, 2-0.

AND FINALLY…

This time last year, Hurricane Sandy was heading for New York.

By mid-morning the city was shutting down. Trains had stopped running.

Union Square was deserted.

There, we came across a man holding a cup of coffee.

Instead of gloves, he wore socks on his hands.

We asked who he was.

Karem Kosse, 40. He had come from Mali, in the hold of a ship.

This was scarier, he said.

He had nowhere to go.

We wrote the address of the nearest shelter on a business card, wished him luck.

A day later, we received this voicemail:

“You give me the address to look for some place to sleep. You were very kind. We’ve stayed there for awhile.”

We could hear voices in the background. A crowded room.

“I pray for you,” he said before hanging up.

“You pray for me.”

Joseph Burgess and Andy Newman contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

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