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January 18-20, 2013 NEW YORK JAN 15–27, 2013 NEW YORK SEASON parsonsdance.org TWO NEW WORKS LAST WEEKEND — NOW THRU JAN 27! Joyce.org 212-242-0800 © Propp #1 FREE DAILY NEWSPAPER IN NYC [email protected] Breakout faces of 2013 {page 07} A director who sees 150 years into the future, a hilarious Aussie Rebel, a little boy who has grown into a ‘Giant Slayer,’ a transgender rapper and a group of Savages from the UK make up our diverse list of ... Open wide for winter food From Restaurant Week to a chili recipe, our ideas for a tasty season {pages 13-16} going out Time to pause the Netflix Get outside and explore all of the January fun our city has to offer {page 17} rejuvenation WEEKEND WAHLBERG ON ‘BROKEN CITY’ {page 08}

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Page 1: 20130118_us_new york

January 18-20, 2013NEW YORK

JAN 15–27, 2013NEW YORK SEASONparsonsdance.org

TWO NEW WORKSLAST WEEKEND — NOW THRU JAN 27! Joyce.org 212-242-0800

© Propp

#1 FREE DAILY NEWSPAPER IN [email protected]

Breakoutfaces of 2013 {page 07}

A director who sees 150 years into the future, a hilarious Aussie Rebel, a little boy who has grown into a ‘GiantSlayer,’ a transgender rapper and a group of Savages from theUK make up our diverse list of ...

Open wide forwinter food

From Restaurant Week toa chili recipe, our ideas for a tasty season {pages 13-16}

going out

Time to pausethe Netflix

Get outside and exploreall of the January fun ourcity has to offer {page 17}

rejuvenation

WEEKEND

WAHLBERG ON ‘BROKEN CITY’{page 08}

Page 2: 20130118_us_new york

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201302 new york

1

Joe Lhotaofficiallyrunning formayorFormer MTA chairman JoeLhota filed papers with thecity Board of Elections andCampaign Finance Board onThursday and announcedvia Twitter that he isrunning for mayor.

His campaign websitedeclares he will be “a mayorfor all New York,” with thetagline “Proven Leadership.”

A recent Quinnipiac pollfound that many voters stilldon’t know who Lhota is.

METRO

Queens polwants eroticdancerdisclosureA bill from AstoriaAssemblywoman AravellaSimotas aims to expandthe information requestedon liquor license applica-tions after a bar in her dis-trict failed to disclose that

it employed erotic dancers.The applications currentlylist “topless entertain-ment” as a category, butbars circumvent that byhaving the dancers keeptheir bras and G-strings on.The local communityboard recommended thebar’s license renewalbecause they were not in-formed it was a “go-gobar,” according to the DailyNews. METRO

News in briefNews in brief “All my followersshould followjoelhota4mayor.the campaignhas begun!”LHOTA, VIA TWITTER

In the news

Cuomo entersyear with highapproval marksAccording to a Siena pollreleased this morning,71 percent of New Yorkvoters approve of thegovernor and 60 percentthink he is doing a goodjob. “With nearly twoyears until the next timeCuomo will face the vot-ers, 60 percent of votersare prepared to reelecthim,” Siena pollsterSteven Greenberg said.New Yorkers also strong-ly support his gun legis-lation to ban assaultweapons. METRO/AB

In the news

NTSB: Ferry had damagedpropeller

LOWER MANHATTAN.Investigators found adamaged propelleron the ferry thatcrashed into LowerManhattan lastweek, the NationalTransportation SafetyBoard reported in astatement releasedThursday. Accordingto the NTSB, the pro-peller on the portside was damaged,and investigatorsplan to inspect itagain when the ferryis hauled out of thewater to be repaired.

METRO/AB

Taxi driver in comaafter brutal beating

Brooklyn assemblymembers will introduce bill that makes ita felony to assault taxi drivers Alleged assailant is free on$10,000 bail Fight started during an argument over the fare

New York City taxi driversand assemblymembers aredemanding justice after ataxi passenger brutally as-saulted a driver, Key ChunKim, in the early morningof New Year’s Day duringan argument over the fare.

Kim, 53, is in a coma.But his alleged as-

sailant, Andrew McElroy,28, is free on $10,000 bail.

Kim’s family, his fellowtaxi drivers and three lo-cal assemblymembers —Ron Kim, Ed Braunsteinand Walter Mosley —gathered for a prayer vigilin front of Kings CountyHospital Center inBrooklyn, where Kim wasreceiving treatment, onThursday afternoon. Theydemanded stronger prose-cution for McElroy as wellas anyone who assaults ataxi driver.

When the driver’s sis-ter, Kristin Kim, heardMcElroy was set free onbail and not charged witha felony, she was shocked.

“It was nonsense to mefor anybody to beat any-body into a coma,” Kimsaid. “I thought the casewas not treated fairly, andwithout feeling.”

Kim, Braunstein andMosley spoke about theTaxi Driver Protection Act,which would require as-saults against drivers to beprosecuted as felonies andfor signs to be posted in alltaxis warning against suchviolence.

Kim said legislationabout the in-taxi signs willbe introduced next week,

and he is optimistic thatthe other piece of the lawwill gain traction quickly.

“We are here becausewe are hopeful for theD.A. to bring the case be-fore the grand jury,”Braunstein said. “Any kindof assault on a taxi drivershould be considered afelony.”

Ibrahim Bah, who hasbeen a taxi driver for nineyears, was attacked by agroup of passengers last

month when he refused toallow six passengers in hiscar because the riding lim-it is only four.

He spoke out about theneed for the Taxi DriverProtection Act.

“Many of us choose todrive taxis,” he said. “Whycan’t I do my job? At leastwe deserve some protec-tion.”

Amanda [email protected]

Take a taxi

to a felony

There’s little tolerancein New York City forthose who assault transit workers.

A spokesman for theBrooklyn District Attor-ney’s Office said assaultson transit workers, EMTworkers and schoolsafety workers are auto-matically prosecuted asfelonies.

The Assault on TransitWorkers Initiative, inplace since 2008, coversbus and subway opera-tor assaults. But thereare no such penal lawsdesignated for assaultson taxi drivers, he said.

Assaults against taxidrivers are treated likeassaults against anycivilian, without anyspecial regulations, hesaid.

Although McElroy wascharged with misde-meanors and felonies,according to BhairaviDesai, executive directorof the New York TaxiWorkers Alliance, he canonly be prosecuted witha felony through agrand jury indictment.But no such grand juryindictment has or isscheduled to occur.

“Any kind ofassault on a taxidriver should beconsidered afelony.”ASSEMBLYMEMBER EDBRAUNSTEIN

Quoted

30Taxi drivers are 30times more likely tobe killed on the jobthan other workers,according to the NewYork Taxi WorkersAlliance.

10KAfter being arrestedand charged in thebrutal beating of taxidriver Key Chun Kim,suspected assailantAndrew McElroy is outon $10,000 bail.

AMANDA WOODS/METRO

Ibrahim Bah displays the arm injury he incurred after taxi passengers attacked him lastmonth. He is a strong advocate for the Taxi Driver Protection Act.

Key Chun Kim

Page 3: 20130118_us_new york

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Make it and theywill download: NewNYPD app popularThe NYPD recentlylaunched its own iPhoneapp, and in the two weekssince it’s been released,the app has been down-loaded 13,871 times.

The app was designedin-house by the tech teamat the NYPD, according toWeb Administrator ChrisApuzzo, with the supportof the commissioner’s ex-ecutive staff, the PublicInformation Office and theDetective Bureau, whichruns the Crimestopperssystem, one of the inte-grated features of the app.

Apuzzo said producingthe app was “a really coolin-house project.”

The app includes aWanted List with photos,the ability to submit a tipto the Crimestoppers sys-tem, crime videos as wellas videos showing the in-

ternal workings of theNYPD, and crime statisticsby precinct.

Apuzzo said Commis-sioner Ray Kelly and therest of the force “reallywant communication to beout there so the city knowswhat’s going on,” andthere’s no better tool forthat than a mobile app.

So far feedback hasbeen positive, Apuzzo said,and the app seems to bemeeting its goals.

“Commissioner Kellyand his executive staffwere adamant they want itvery easy to use,” Apuzzosaid, and a commenter onthe iTunes Store said exact-ly that.

A Droid version will bereleased in two months.

Danielle Tcholakian [email protected]

NYPD

The new NYPD app

BRONX ZOO

Proud parents Kicks and Milton watch over theirnewborn baby as they hang from trees. The white-cheeked gibbon was born on Wednesday at theBronx Zoo. This is the first gibbon born at the zoosince 2000. METRO

Cheeky. Monkey

A white-cheeked gibbon was born at the Bronx Zoo.

“CommissionerKelly and hisexecutive staffwere adamantthey want it veryeasy to use.”APUZZO

Quoted

Councilwomansays E. Harlemis most friskedEAST HARLEM. EastHarlem is the moststopped-and-friskedneighborhood inManhattan, Council-woman Melissa Mark-Viverito said yesterday.She held a protest andtown-hall meetingThursday night aboutstop and frisk, sayingthat the precinct in herdistrict had more than17,000 stops in 2011.This is the most inManhattan and sixthmost out of all five bor-oughs, according to heroffice. The area covers96th Street to 115thStreet. METRO/AB

Stop and frisk

Man says NYPDused anti-gay slurs

CROWN HEIGHTS. A CrownHeights man plans to suethe city after he said NYPDarrested him and yelledanti-gay slurs. According tothe Daily News, JabbarCampbell said officers re-

sponded to a noisecomplaint during a party athis apartment and rushedhim after he opened thedoor early Sunday morn-ing. He told the News thatthe officers yelled homo-phobic slurs at him andbeat him, causing a bloodymouth, split lip andswollen eye. METRO/AB

News in brief

JEREMY SPARIG/METRO

Stop and frisk

Page 5: 20130118_us_new york

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We live in a complicatedworld in which manypeople are not what theyappear. Lance Armstronghas pedaled off of his

pedestal. David Petraeus ended up witha biographer who wrote not onlybetween the lines but also between thesheets. I don’t follow pop culture close-ly, but I’m led to believe even thatadorable little Lindsay Lohan has haddifficulties.

Which brings me to InaugurationDay. Here in D.C., where giving falseimpressions is an art, President BarackObama is heading into his second termamid all the expected hoopla. Over thenext few days, he will be paraded, sere-naded, lauded and applauded. He willdeliver a soaring speech, shake handsand assure supporters they were rightto reelect him. Then he will probablylet many of them down.

It’s not entirely his fault. It happensto every president, and all of us are to

blame. Because campaigns are notmerely about what a candidate says,they are also about what we hear.Supporters, like lonely souls onInternet dating services, project theirwishes onto the candidate. Theyconvince themselves that their viewsand his are much more closely aligned

than the evidencewould warrant. Inhis first presiden-tial race, forexample, Obamawas repeatedlyportrayed as a rad-ical liberal —then many left-

leaning voters seemed astonishedwhen he proved too accommodating toRepublicans and big business, and notnearly idealistic enough for their tastes.

So the inauguration, even for a sec-ond term, is where those dueling reali-ties collide. It’s where the imaginarycandidate and the real president meetas if on a blind date, and we all get tosee what they have in common — anddecide whether the relationship we’vebet on is one we can live with.

– CNN’s Tom Foreman is a regular on “AC360°”/www.ac360.com and

“The Situation Room.”

Metro does not endorse the opinions of the author, or any opinions expressed on its pages.

“Here in D.C. ...giving falseimpressions is an art.”

Quoted

Advice

TOMFOREMAN POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT FOR CNN

THE MAN OF OUR DREAMS

[email protected]

I have to confess that I, too, havehad an imaginary girlfriend. To behonest, I think they all were upuntil I met my wife. So while Ican’t pretend to know what wasreally going on with Notre Dame’sstar linebacker Manti Te’o, as ChrisRock would say, “I understand.”

Panetta: Peopledon’t needassault weaponsDefense Secretary LeonPanetta joined the gun-control debate onThursday when he toldtroops at a military base inItaly that only soldiersneeded armor-piercingbullets or assaultweapons.

Asked by a soldier whatPresident Barack Obamawould do to protect schoolchildren from gun violencewithout infringingAmericans’ right to ownguns, Panetta said action

was needed. He toldmembers of the 173rdAirborne Brigade CombatTeam at Vicenza that therewere areas where stepscould be taken.

Panetta, who is on aweek-long trip to Europe,was President Bill Clinton’schief of staff when theUnited States banned thesale of assault weapons inthe 1990s. REUTERS

WH: Americansamong hostagesin AlgerianplantThe White House said onThursday that it believedAmericans were amongthe hostages taken bymilitants at an Algeriangas plant, was concernedabout reports of deaths inan operation by Algerianforces and was seekingmore information.

The government wasstill trying to determinethe number of casualtiesand who they were, andwas also in touch withBritish Petroleum officialsin London. REUTERS

In the news

An assault rifle

GETTY IMAGES

Page 7: 20130118_us_new york

WEEKEND2

07#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013new in the new year

1. SavagesSavages’ punctuated attackon every song is every bit asvicious and thrilling as theirname implies. The sound ofthis London band is what istraditionally called post-punk (sounding like a crossbetween Joy Division andearly U2) but the energy is100 percent punk rock.They’ve officially released asingle and a live EP, but ex-pect a full-length soon.

2. Night BedsWinston Yellen has the sortof voice that could quiet ahuge room. It’s not neces-sarily the Fleet Foxes/MyMorning Jacket delivery asmuch as realizing that this issomebody saying some -thing he feels deeply — andthere’s not much more con-tagious than that. If hissong, “Even If We Try,” is anyindication, his forthcomingalbum, “Country Sleep” (outon Dead Oceans nextmonth), will be a stunner.

3. SkatersMuch of the music on lastyear’s “Schemers” EP feelsso New Yorky that you canalmost hear the crinkle ofleather jackets. They have aStokes-like flair, but MichaelIan Cummings’ distinctvoice, so often shouting inhis previous bands Dead

Trees and Furvis, chills outhere.

4. Kingsley FloodThe people who helped pro-pel Kingsley Flood into win-ning a Boston Music Awardfor Best Americana Band lastfall obviously hadn’t heard“Battles,” their expansive

new album due out earlynext month. On its 12 songs,the band rocks, stomps anddigs in with a punk urgencythat almost feels like a reac-tion to being pinned to onespecific genre. There arefuzzy basses, horns, eeriekeyboards, coil-y electricguitars and tight melodic

turns of phrases that bringto mind groups as varied asthe Clash and the Shins.

5. GuardsThat this trio call their debut“In Guards We Trust” is agood indication of their sin-gular sound. They combinethe dreamy sing-alongmelodies of MGMT with therestrained polish of latterera Pixies.

6. Mykki BlancoMykki Blanco, the gender-bending alter ego of MichaelQuattlebaum Jr., mixes tribalbeats with radical rap. Thesolo artist follows in thenontraditional path ofrecent indie hip-hop a laOdd Future, successfully dip-ping into punk and electrowhile retaining individuality.When her EP “Betty Rubble:The Initiation” drops inMarch that will only add tothe buzz she generated withNovember’s “Cosmic Angel:The Illuminati Prince/ss.”

PAT HEALY & CHRIS LEO PALERMINO

1Nicholas HoultAge: 23

Provenance: Berkshire, U.K.Occupation: ActorNew projects: “WarmBodies” (Feb. 1), “Jack theGiant Slayer” (March 1)You may remember theseblue eyes from 2002’s“About a Boy,” Hoult’s firstappearance in a feature, butmore recently he starred asBeast in 2011’s “X-Men: FirstClass.” This year, he gets twostarring roles: first as thelovelorn zombie in “WarmBodies” and then as the titlecharacter in a retelling of“Jack and the Beanstalk.”With a role in 2014’s rebootof “Mad Max,” we expectHoult to stay in theheadlines for quite a while.

2Neill BlomkampAge: 33

Provenance: Johannesburg,South Africa

Occupation: DirectorNew project: “Elysium”(Aug. 9)This up-and-comer knockedit out of the park with thecritically acclaimed 2009alien invasion thriller“District 9” — his first full-length film. That success isrewarded with an equallyfuturistic drama with plentyof star power and studiodollars behind it. StarringMatt Damon and JodieFoster, “Elysium” imaginesthe world of 2159, when the

elite have escaped to aman-made space stationwhile the less privileged areleft to fend for themselveson the ravaged Earth.

3Rebel WilsonAge: 26

Provenance: Sydney,AustraliaOccupation: ActressNew projects: “Struck ByLightning” (in theaters),“Pain and Gain” (April 26)Wilson has already startedto make an impact with

roles in “Bridesmaids,”“Pitch Perfect” and“Bachelorette.” In 2013 we’llwitness her continued climbto the top ofHollywood’s new classof funny ladies withher role in the MarkWahlberg-fronted,Michael Bay thriller“Pain & Gain.”No doubt she’llprovide somemuch-need-ed comic re-lief to a

drama about three bodybuilders who get caught upin an extortion scheme.

4AnnaSophia RobbAge: 19

Provenance: Denver, Colo.Occupation: ActressNew projects: Robb scoredwhat was perhaps thisyear’s most coveted televi-sion role for a youngactress: that of a 16-year-old Carrie Bradshaw.Starring in the “Sex and theCity” prequel “The Carrie

Diaries” on The CW,Robb has the wit and

charm to pay hom-age to SarahJessica Parker’siconicperformance, yetmake this MissBradshaw herown.

HEIDI PATALANO & AMBER RAY

ONES TO WATCH IN 2013These actors, directors, rockers, rappers and writers

will be all over your media feed in the 11 months to comeNEW IN THE NEW YEAR

Music

Film & television

2

4

1 3

2

4

1

5

3

6

Books

1‘Red Moon’Benjamin Percy

Release date:May 7An Advanced ReaderCopy of “Red Moon”came to the Metrooffices and we can’tput it down. Athriller with a literarybent, “Red Moon” isa mixture of a super-natural thriller (hel-lo, werewolves!), alove story and a po-litical allegory. It’sgoing to be yoursummer read. Trustus.

2‘Tenth ofDecember’

George SaundersRelease date: Jan. 8This has alreadybeen hailed by theNew York Times asthe “best book of theyear” and it’s onlyJanuary. Saunders,the literary darlingand author behindthe beloved,straight-up weirdshort story collection“Civil War Land inBad Decline” returnsto the form with thislatest collection.

DOROTHY ROBINSON

Page 8: 20130118_us_new york

Need a movie madeon a shoestring?Mark Wahlbergmight be your

man. The former bad boy rap-

per turned Oscar-nominat-ed actor and now film andTV producer shared hisrecipe for making films:“You’ve gotta come in withthat television mentality.You’ve got a lot less moneyand a lot less time, butyou’ve got a great piece ofmaterial,” he says.

The next ingredient isattracting top talent — likeRussell Crowe, Wahlberg’sco-star in his latest film,“Broken City” — by serv-ing them juicy roles and of-fering them a share of theprofits.

In the crime thrillergenre — where Wahlberghas carved his niche — at atime when Hollywood stu-dios are reticent to takerisks, it’s the only way tostay ahead of the curve, hesays.

In fact, he’s baffled bymassive movie budgets. “Iwas just in New Mexicoshooting this movie in 38days, and before us ‘The

Lone Ranger’ was there,”he recalls. “It’s about twoguys on horses and it cost$250 million to make.What the f— were thesehorses doing? Do they fly?I don’t know. It’s crazy.”

By contrast, “BrokenCity,” in theaters Friday,cost around $55 million tomake. In it, Wahlbergplays an ex-NYPD officerhaunted by his past deadlyvigilantism. Now as a pri-vate detective, he’s beenhired by New York’s mayor(Crowe) to track the infi-delities of the politician’swife (Catherine Zeta-Jones).

The murky lawman is

a role Wahlberg has cometo love. “I can certainly ap-preciate and relate to theseguys. The bad guy who istrying to do somethinggood is usually the one Iroot for,” he says.

And out of all thoseshadowy do-gooders,which is his favorite?

He grins. “Dignam. ‘The Depar-

ted' was the most fun, be-cause I’m from that world.I’ve spent a lot of timewith those cops and I justgot to f—ing steamrolleverybody.”

Work ethicWahlberg’s working-classroots are no secret. As theyoungest of nine children,he’s built a multimilliondollar empire out of virtu-ally nothing — and anear-irrational fear of los-ing everything keeps himgoing. “I always feel likethere’s a good chance I’llend up back there,” he

says. “I keep that as a pos-sibility and that keeps mefocused and workinghard. I don’t want to letmy guard down or feeltoo comfortable and startbeing complacent — thenyou start feeling entitledand everything else. I’mready to go dig a ditch if Ihave to, whatever I haveto do to provide for myfamily.”

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201308 films

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‘Mama’

Director: Andres MuschiettiStars: Jessica Chastain,Nikolaj Coster-WaldauGrade:�����Tragic circumstances led totwo small children (MeganCharpentier and IsabelleNelisse) being abandonedfor five years in a cabin inthe woods. Rescued, they

are adopted by their uncle(“Game of Thrones” starNikolaj Coster-Waldau) andhis girlfriend (JessicaChastain) but the questionremains: Who is the mysteri-ous Mama they keep talkingabout?

This film has some nice,subtle creepy reveals, a vividdream sequence and, ofcourse, the ethereal Mama,who occasionally resemblesa giant hairball on the floor,but is eerie nonetheless.

It’s spooky rather thanscary, but has appropriately

creepy kids — the little oneeven scurries around thefloor on all fours like a tinysilverback gorilla — andenough jolts to earn a rec-ommendation.

RICHARD CROUSE

‘The Last Stand’Director: Kim Jee-WoonStars: ArnoldSchwarzenegger, JohnnyKnoxvilleGrade:�����It has been nearly a decadesince Arnold

Schwarzenegger has led abig-screen blockbuster, butin “The Last Stand,” the sex-agenarian is proving he’sstill got some fight in him.The threadbare story of asmall-town sheriffdetermined to prevent adrug lord from escapinginto Mexico certainly doesn’t break any newground in the action depart-ment, but for fans of thegenre it’s a welcome andwinking return from the for-mer Governator.

STEVE GOW

Reviews

AHEAD OF THE GAMEActor and producer Mark Wahlberg offers his recipe for making a hit

‘Broken City’ adds another shadowy do-gooder to his résumé

Liz [email protected]

“You’ve gottacome in with thattelevisionmentality. You’vegot a lot lessmoney and a lotless time.”WAHLBERG, ON HIS RECIPEFOR MAKING FILMS

We bet those muscles served Mark Wahlberg well on the set of his latest, “Broken City.”

From left: Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Jessica Chastain, Isabelle Nelisse and Megan Charpentier star in “Mama.”

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Film Society Lincoln Center -Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center212–875–5600 144 West 65th Street BetweenBroadway + Amsterdam Avenues55 BBRROOKKEENN CCAAMMEERRAASS (NR) 1:30, 6:00AARRSSEENNIICC AANNDD OOLLDD LLAACCEE ((11994444)) (NR)SSaatt and SSuunn 2:00BBRROOOOKKLLYYNN CCAASSTTLLEE (PG) 12:00, 7:30CCHHAASSIINNGG IICCEE (PG-13) 9:30HHOOWW TTOO SSUURRVVIIVVEE AA PPLLAAGGUUEE (NR)3:30, 8:00TTHHEE IINNVVIISSIIBBLLEE WWAARR (NR) 11:30, 4:45TTAABBUU (NR) 11:45, 2:15, 7:00

Film Society Lincoln Center -Walter Reade Theater212–875–5600 Lincoln Center & W. 65th St.AALLIIYYAAHH ((AALLYYAAHH)) (NR) SSaatt 9:00TTHHEE FFIIFFTTHH HHEEAAVVEENN ((BBEE--RRAAKKIIAA HHAA--HHAAMMIISSHHII)) (NR) SSuunn 1:00TTHHEE FFIILLMMSS OOFF FFRRAANNCCIISSZZKKAA AANNDDSSTTEEFFAANN TTHHEEMMEERRSSOONN (NR) SSuunn 6:00IINN CCAASSEE II DDOONN’’TT WWIINN TTHHEE GGOOLLDDEENNPPAALLMM ((AAUU CCAASS OOUU JJEE NN’’AAUURRAAIISS PPAASSLLAA PPAALLMMEE DD’’OORR)) (NR) SSaatt 6:30MMAAXX RRAAAABBEE IINN IISSRRAAEELL (NR) SSuunn 3:45TTHHEE MMEETTRROOPPOOLLIITTAANN OOPPEERRAA:: MMAARRIIAASSTTUUAARRDDAA LLIIVVEE (NR) SSaatt 12:55NNUUMMBBEERREEDD (NR) SSuunn 8:15

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AMC Loews Kips Bay 15888–AMC–4FUN Corner of 31st Street and 2nd Avenue

BBRROOKKEENN CCIITTYY (R) 10:05, 12:45, 3:30,6:25, 9:15, 11:45. Digital PresentationDDJJAANNGGOO UUNNCCHHAAIINNEEDD (R) 11:40, 3:20,7:00, 10:40. Digital PresentationGGAANNGGSSTTEERR SSQQUUAADD (R) 10:10, 12:40,3:20, 6:00, 8:45, 11:30. DigitalPresentationAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) 10:40, 1:00,3:15, 5:30, 8:00, 10:20. DigitalPresentationTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY AANN IIMMAAXX 33DD EEXXPPEERRIIEENNCCEE(PG-13) 11:00, 2:45, 6:15, 10:00. IMAX3DTTHHEE IIMMPPOOSSSSIIBBLLEE (PG-13) 10:00, 12:30,3:00, 5:35, 8:20, 11:00.C INDEPEN-DENT;Digital PresentationJJAACCKK RREEAACCHHEERR (PG-13) FFrrii 10:30, 4:15,9:50. Digital Presentation; SSaatt 9:50.Digital Presentation; SSuunn 10:30-4:15-9:50. Digital PresentationTTHHEE LLAASSTT SSTTAANNDD (R) 10:30, 1:00, 3:45,6:30, 9:00, 11:30. Digital PresentationLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) 11:50, 4:00,7:30, 10:55. Digital PresentationLLIIFFEE OOFF PPII 33DD (PG) 10:30, 1:30, 4:15,7:25, 10:30. RealD 3DLLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) 10:00, 1:15, 4:30,7:45, 11:00. Digital PresentationMMAAMMAA (PG-13) 10:45, 1:25, 4:15, 7:15,10:00. Digital PresentationTTHHEE MMEETTRROOPPOOLLIITTAANN OOPPEERRAA:: MMAARRIIAASSTTUUAARRDDAA LLIIVVEE (NR) SSaatt 12:55SSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R) 10:05,12:50, 3:30, 6:20, 9:10. DigitalPresentationTTHHIISS IISS 4400 (R) FFrrii 1:15, 7:00. DigitalPresentation; SSaatt 7:00. DigitalPresentation; SSuunn 1:15-7:00. DigitalPresentationZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 10:00, 11:50,1:20, 3:20, 4:40, 7:00, 8:05, 10:35, 11:30.Digital Presentation

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AMC Loews Lincoln Square 13888–AMC–4FUN 1998 BroadwayBBRROOKKEENN CCIITTYY (R) 11:05, 1:55, 4:45,7:35, 10:25. Digital PresentationDDJJAANNGGOO UUNNCCHHAAIINNEEDD (R) 11:15, 3:00,6:50, 10:40. Digital PresentationGGAANNGGSSTTEERR SSQQUUAADD (R) 10:30, 1:25,4:20, 7:15, 10:05. Digital PresentationTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY AANN IIMMAAXX 33DD EEXXPPEERRIIEENNCCEE(PG-13) 10:50, 2:40, 6:20, 10:00. IMAX3DTTHHEE IIMMPPOOSSSSIIBBLLEE (PG-13) 10:20, 1:10,4:00, 7:00, 9:55.CINDEPENDENT;Digital PresentationJJAACCKK RREEAACCHHEERR (PG-13) 10:10, 1:15,4:30, 7:45, 10:50. Digital PresentationLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) 11:00, 2:50,6:30, 10:10. Digital PresentationLLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) 11:30, 3:05, 6:45,10:15. Digital PresentationPPRROOMMIISSEEDD LLAANNDD (R) 11:25, 2:15, 5:00,7:50, 10:45. Digital PresentationSSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R) 10:15,1:20, 4:25, 7:30, 10:35. DigitalPresentationTTHHIISS IISS 4400 (R) FFrrii 10:00, 1:05, 4:10,7:20, 10:30. Digital Presentation; SSaatt11:20-6:15-9:30. Digital Presentation;SSuunn 10:00-1:05-4:10-7:20-10:30. DigitalPresentationZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) FFrrii 10:45, 11:45,2:30, 3:30, 6:10, 7:10, 9:50, 10:50.Digital Presentation; SSaatt 10:05-11:45-2:30-3:30-6:10-7:10-9:50-10:50. DigitalPresentation; SSuunn 10:45-11:45-2:30-3:30-6:10-7:10-9:50-10:50. DigitalPresentation

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5:10, 7:25, 9:45. CC/DVS-ClosedCaptions & Descriptive Video ServiceTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY IINN 33DD (PG-13) 11:55, 6:55.CC/DVS-Closed Captions & DescriptiveVideo ServiceTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY (PG-13) 3:20, 10:25.CC/DVS-Closed Captions & DescriptiveVideo ServiceTTHHEE LLAASSTT SSTTAANNDD (R) FFrrii and SSaatt 2:10,5:05, 8:00, 10:35, 12:30. CC/DVS-Closed Captions & Descriptive VideoService; SSuunn 2:10-5:05-8:00-10:35.CC/DVS-Closed Captions & DescriptiveVideo ServiceLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) 12:05, 3:35,7:00, 10:30. CC/DVLLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) 12:00, 3:15, 6:40,9:55. CC/DVS-Closed Captions &Descriptive Video ServiceMMAAMMAA (PG-13) FFrrii and SSaatt 12:20, 2:50,5:20, 7:50, 10:20, 12:35. CC/DVS-ClosedCaptions & Descriptive Video Service;SSuunn 12:20-2:50-5:20-7:50-10:20.CC/DVS-Closed Captions & DescriptiveVideo ServiceSSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R) 1:10,4:00, 6:50, 9:40ZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 12:00, 3:30,7:10, 10:50. CC/DVS-Closed Captions &Descriptive Video Service

Clearview’s Chelsea212–777–FILM 260 West 23rd Street at 8th Avenue;Between 7th & 8th AvenuesAANNNNAA KKAARREENNIINNAA (R) 11:40, 2:45, 6:15,9:15BBRRIINNGG IITT OONN (PG-13) SSaatt 10:00DDJJAANNGGOO UUNNCCHHAAIINNEEDD (R) 11:30, 3:15,7:00, 10:45. Digital ProjectionGGAANNGGSSTTEERR SSQQUUAADD (R) 11:20, 2:15,5:00, 7:45, 10:30. 35MMTTHHEE IIMMPPOOSSSSIIBBLLEE (PG-13) 11:10, 1:50,4:30, 7:30, 10:10. 35MMLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) 11:15, 3:00,6:45, 10:30. CC/DVS-Closed Captions &Descriptive Video ServiceLLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) FFrrii 12:00, 3:40, 7:10,10:20. Digital Projection; SSaatt 12:00-3:40-7:10. Digital Projection; SSuunn 12:00-3:40-7:10-10:20. Digital ProjectionOOPPEERRAA IINN CCIINNEEMMAA:: TTEEAATTRROO AALLLLAASSCCAALLAA’’SS ““LLOOHHEENNGGRRIINN”” (NR) SSuunn 11:00TTHHEE RROOCCKKYY HHOORRRROORR PPIICCTTUURREE SSHHOOWW(R) FFrrii and SSaatt 12:00SSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R)FFrrii and SSaatt 11:05, 1:45, 4:45, 8:00,10:55; SSuunn 4:45-8:00-10:55.ZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 11:45, 1:30,3:30, 5:15, 7:15, 9:00, 11:00. DigitalProjection

AMC Magic Johnson Harlem 9888–AMC–4FUN 2309 Frederick Douglass Boulevard &124th StreetBBRROOKKEENN CCIITTYY (R) 11:00, 1:45, 4:30,7:15, 10:00. Digital PresentationDDJJAANNGGOO UUNNCCHHAAIINNEEDD (R) 11:45, 3:30,7:00, 10:30. Digital PresentationGGAANNGGSSTTEERR SSQQUUAADD (R) 11:15, 2:00,4:45, 7:20, 10:15. Digital PresentationAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) 11:15, 1:30,3:45, 6:00, 8:25, 10:45. DigitalPresentationJJAACCKK RREEAACCHHEERR (PG-13) 10:20, 3:45,9:30. Digital PresentationTTHHEE LLAASSTT SSTTAANNDD (R) 10:45, 1:20, 4:00,6:45, 9:15. Digital PresentationMMAAMMAA (PG-13) 10:15, 12:45, 3:15, 5:45,8:15, 11:00. Digital PresentationPPAARREENNTTAALL GGUUIIDDAANNCCEE (PG) 1:15, 6:50.Digital PresentationTTEEXXAASS CCHHAAIINNSSAAWW 33DD (R) 11:45, 2:25,5:00, 7:25, 9:45. RealD 3DZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 11:30, 3:05,6:30, 10:00. Digital Presentation

AMC Loews Orpheum 7888–AMC–4FUN 3rd Avenue & 86th StreetBBRROOKKEENN CCIITTYY (R) 11:00, 2:30, 5:15,8:00, 10:45. Digital PresentationAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) FFrrii and SSaatt10:30, 1:00, 3:15, 7:45, 10:30. DigitalPresentation; SSuunn 12:20-2:45-5:00-7:45-10:30. Digital PresentationTTHHEE LLAASSTT SSTTAANNDD (R) FFrrii and SSaatt 11:30,2:00, 4:30, 7:15, 9:50. DigitalPresentation; SSuunn 12:40-3:10-5:40-8:15-10:55. Digital PresentationLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) 11:15, 3:00,6:30, 10:00. Digital PresentationMMAAMMAA (PG-13) 10:10, 12:45, 3:30, 6:00,8:30, 11:00. Digital PresentationPPAARREENNTTAALL GGUUIIDDAANNCCEE (PG) 10:00,3:55, 10:15. Digital PresentationTTHHIISS IISS 4400 (R) 12:30, 7:00. DigitalPresentation

ZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 10:15, 1:50,5:30, 9:00. Digital Presentation

AMC Loews Village 7888–AMC–4FUN 66 Third Avenue at 11th StreetAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) 10:45, 1:00,3:20, 5:40, 8:00, 10:20. DigitalPresentationTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY IINN HHFFRR 33DD (PG-13) 11:00,6:30. HIGH FRAME RATE;RealD 3DTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY (PG-13) 2:50, 10:15. DigitalPresentationTTHHEE MMEETTRROOPPOOLLIITTAANN OOPPEERRAA:: MMAARRIIAASSTTUUAARRDDAA LLIIVVEE (NR) SSaatt 12:55PPRROOMMIISSEEDD LLAANNDD (R) FFrrii 11:30, 2:00,4:30, 7:15, 10:00. Digital Presentation;SSaatt 10:00-5:00-7:30-10:00. DigitalPresentation; SSuunn 11:30-2:00-4:30-7:15-10:00. Digital PresentationTTEEXXAASS CCHHAAIINNSSAAWW 33DD (R) 1:20, 3:40,6:00, 8:20, 11:00. RealD 3DWWRREECCKK--IITT RRAALLPPHH (PG) FFrrii and SSaatt10:30. Digital PresentationWWRREECCKK--IITT RRAALLPPHH IINN 33DD (PG) SSuunn10:30. RealD 3DZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) FFrrii and SSaatt10:00, 11:50, 12:30, 1:30, 3:30, 4:00,5:00, 7:00, 7:45, 8:30, 10:30, 11:10.Digital Presentation; SSuunn 11:50-12:30-1:30-3:30-4:00-5:00-7:00-7:45-8:30-10:30-11:10. Digital Presentation

City Cinemas Village East Cinema800–FAN–DANG 2708181-189 Second AvenueAARRGGOO (R) 11:00, 12:00, 1:40, 2:40, 4:20,5:20, 7:00, 8:00, 9:50, 10:40LLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) FFrrii and SSaatt11:25, 12:30, 2:40, 3:45, 6:00, 7:00, 9:15,10:15; SSuunn 12:30-2:40-3:45-6:00-7:00-9:15-10:15.TTHHEE MMAASSTTEERR (R) 11:00, 1:55, 4:50, 7:45,10:40SSEEAARRCCHHIINNGG FFOORR SSUUGGAARR MMAANN (PG-13)11:10, 1:15, 3:20, 5:25, 7:30, 9:35SSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R) 11:30,2:15, 5:00, 7:45, 10:30

Angelika Film Center New York800–FAN–DANG 18 West Houston at Mercer StreetBBAARRBBAARRAA (PG-13) 1:00, 3:20, 5:40,8:00. DLP-Digital ProjectionHHYYDDEE PPAARRKK OONN HHUUDDSSOONN (R)FFrrii and SSaatt 10:00, 12:15, 2:30, 4:45,7:00, 9:15, 11:30; SSuunn 10:00-12:15-2:30-4:45-7:00-9:15.QQUUAARRTTEETT (PG-13) FFrrii and SSaatt 10:25,12:40, 2:55, 5:10, 7:25, 9:40, 11:55. DLP-Digital Projection; SSuunn 10:25-12:40-2:55-5:10-7:25-9:40. DLP-DigitalProjectionSSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R)FFrrii and SSaatt 10:00, 11:00, 12:00, 12:45,1:45, 2:45, 3:30, 4:30, 5:30, 6:15, 7:15,8:15, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 11:45; SSuunn10:00-11:00-12:00-12:45-1:45-2:45-3:30-4:30-5:30-6:15-7:15-8:15-9:00-10:00.WWEESSTT OOFF MMEEMMPPHHIISS (R) 10:00, 10:20

Lincoln Plaza Cinemas212–757–2280 1886 BroadwayAAMMOOUURR (PG-13) 11:05, 11:55, 1:30, 2:15,4:05, 4:45, 6:40, 7:15, 9:15, 9:45BBAARRBBAARRAA (PG-13) 11:00, 1:00, 3:10,5:20, 7:30, 9:35BBEEAASSTTSS OOFF TTHHEE SSOOUUTTHHEERRNN WWIILLDD (PG-13) 11:40, 1:35, 3:40, 5:40, 8:10, 10:10AA LLAATTEE QQUUAARRTTEETT (R) 11:45, 3:35, 7:50RRUUSSTT && BBOONNEE ((DDEE RROOUUIILLLLEE EETT DD’’OOSS))(R) 11:30, 1:50, 4:20, 6:50, 9:20TTHHEE SSEESSSSIIOONNSS (R) 1:40, 5:55, 9:55

AMC Loews 84th Street 6888–AMC–4FUN 2310 BroadwayAARRGGOO (R) 11:20, 2:15, 5:00, 7:45, 9:30.Digital PresentationAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) 11:35, 1:45,3:55, 6:15, 8:30, 11:00. DigitalPresentationTTHHEE LLAASSTT SSTTAANNDD (R) 11:30, 2:00, 4:30,7:00, 10:30. Digital PresentationLLIIFFEE OOFF PPII 33DD (PG) 11:00, 1:50, 4:40,7:30, 10:20. RealD 3DMMAAMMAA (PG-13) 11:15, 1:35, 4:00, 6:30,8:55, 11:15. Digital PresentationPPAARREENNTTAALL GGUUIIDDAANNCCEE (PG) 11:10, 4:50,10:20. Digital PresentationSSKKYYFFAALLLL (PG-13) 1:30, 7:15. DigitalPresentation

AMC Loews 19th St. East 6888–AMC–4FUN 890 Broadway At 19th St.

AARRGGOO (R) FFrrii 1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:40.Digital Presentation; SSaatt and SSuunn 11:05-1:45-4:45-7:45-10:40. DigitalPresentationAA HHAAUUNNTTEEDD HHOOUUSSEE (R) FFrrii 1:15, 3:30,5:45, 8:00, 10:20. Digital Presentation;SSaatt and SSuunn 11:10-1:15-3:30-5:45-8:00-10:20. Digital PresentationTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY IINN 33DD (PG-13) FFrrii 6:10. RealD3D; SSaatt and SSuunn 11:00-6:10. RealD 3DTTHHEE HHOOBBBBIITT:: AANN UUNNEEXXPPEECCTTEEDDJJOOUURRNNEEYY (PG-13) FFrrii 2:25, 10:00.Digital Presentation; SSaatt and SSuunn 2:30-10:00. Digital PresentationLLEESS MMIISSEERRAABBLLEESS (PG-13) FFrrii 2:45,6:30, 10:00. Digital Presentation;SSaatt and SSuunn 11:30-3:00-6:30-10:10.Digital PresentationZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) FFrrii 12:15, 1:30,3:45, 5:15, 7:25, 8:45, 11:00. DigitalPresentation; SSaatt 11:55-1:00-3:45-5:00-7:25-8:45-11:00. Digital Presentation;SSuunn 11:55-3:45-5:00-7:25-8:45-11:00.Digital Presentation

Clearview’s 1st & 62nd Street212–752–0694 400 East 62nd Street - At 1st AvenueBBRROOKKEENN CCIITTYY (R) 12:10, 2:45, 5:15,7:45, 10:20HHYYDDEE PPAARRKK OONN HHUUDDSSOONN (R) 11:50,2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00TTHHEE IIMMPPOOSSSSIIBBLLEE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:10,6:15, 9:15. Digital ProjectionLLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) 11:30, 3:00, 6:30,9:45ZZEERROO DDAARRKK TTHHIIRRTTYY (R) 12:00, 3:30,7:00, 10:30. 35MM

Landmark Sunshine Cinema212–330–8182 687Houston St. betw. 1st & 2nd Aves.BBAACCKK TTOO TTHHEE FFUUTTUURREE (PG) 12:00BBEEAASSTTSS OOFF TTHHEE SSOOUUTTHHEERRNN WWIILLDD (PG-13) 12:50, 2:50, 5:10, 7:15, 9:30HHIITTCCHHCCOOCCKK (PG-13) 12:05, 3:00, 6:00,8:00, 9:55TTHHEE IIMMPPOOSSSSIIBBLLEE (PG-13) 12:15, 2:45,5:15, 7:45, 10:15TTHHEE PPEERRKKSS OOFF BBEEIINNGG AA WWAALLLLFFLLOOWWEERR(PG-13) 12:45, 3:15, 5:35, 7:50, 10:10RRUUSSTT && BBOONNEE ((DDEE RROOUUIILLLLEE EETT DD’’OOSS))(R) 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00

City Cinemas East 86th St.800–FAN–DANG 2706210 East 86th Street, Between 2nd and3rd AvenuesDDJJAANNGGOO UUNNCCHHAAIINNEEDD (R) 12:35, 3:55,7:20, 10:45GGAANNGGSSTTEERR SSQQUUAADD (R) FFrrii and SSaatt11:30, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30, 11:45; SSuunn11:30-2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30.LLIINNCCOOLLNN (PG-13) 10:00, 1:00, 4:10,7:20, 10:25SSIILLVVEERR LLIINNIINNGGSS PPLLAAYYBBOOOOKK (R) 11:00,1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10:20

Quad Cinema212–255–8800 13th St., between 5th and 6th Aves.AANNNNAA KKAARREENNIINNAA (R) 1:10, 3:45, 6:20,9:10BBRRIIEEFF RREEUUNNIIOONN (NR) 1:00, 2:55, 5:15,7:10, 9:35AA RROOYYAALL AAFFFFAAIIRR ((EENN KKOONNGGEELLIIGGAAFFFFAAEERREE)) (R) 1:05, 3:55, 6:35, 9:20TTHHEE SSEESSSSIIOONNSS (R) 1:00, 3:00, 5:30,7:30, 9:30

Film Forum212–727–8110 209 W Houston St., Between 6th Aveand Varick StAAMMOOUURR (PG-13) 1:00, 1:15, 3:30, 4:00,6:15, 7:00, 8:45, 9:30BBLLAASSTT OOFF SSIILLEENNCCEE ((11996611)) (NR) SSuunn1:00, 4:20, 7:45CCIITTYY SSYYMMPPHHOONNIIEESS (NR) FFrrii 7:00HHOORRSSEE FFEEAATTHHEERRSS ((11993322)) (NR) SSuunn11:00KKIILLLLEERR’’SS KKIISSSS (NR) FFrrii 3:20, 9:10; SSaatt3:10-6:50-10:30.SSOOMMEETTHHIINNGG WWIILLDD ((11996611)) FFrrii 1:10, 4:50;SSaatt 1:00-4:40-8:20.TTHHEE TTHHIIEEFF ((11995522)) (NR) SSuunn 2:35, 6:00,9:20

Cinema Village212–924–3363 12th St., Between 5th Ave andUniversity PlaceBBIIRRDDEERRSS:: TTHHEE CCEENNTTRRAALL PPAARRKK EEFFFFEECCTT(NR) 3:00, 7:00CCHHAASSIINNGG IICCEE (PG-13) 5:20FFAAIIRRHHAAVVEENN (NR) 1:15, 9:40JJUUSSTT 4455 MMIINNUUTTEESS FFRROOMM BBRROOAADDWWAAYY(R) 12:55, 3:10, 5:25, 7:40, 9:55SSTTOOLLEENN SSEEAASS (NR) 3:05, 7:05TTAABBUU (NR) 12:45, 4:40, 9:00

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013 09film listings

Page 10: 20130118_us_new york

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201310 arts

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The greatest minds in cancer research recently gathered at the 35th Annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium to advance progress against breast cancer and share their most recent research. Join us for an in depth overview of these findings, along with strategies for cancer prevention, diagnosis and treatment.

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Old favorites andtwo new workspack DavidParsons’ dance

program at the Joyce. Theshow opens with Parsons’pretty, lilting “Wolfgang”(2005), choreographed toMozart; it’s Paul TaylorLite, an homage to thecompany where Parsonsbegan his career. Next, weget “Caught,” a great 1982piece that uses strobelighting to capture adancer — here the hunkySteven Vaughn — in mid-air. At the end comes “Inthe End,” a 2005 party per-formed to recordings bythe Dave Matthews Band.

Former company mem-ber Katarzyna Skarpe -towska premieres “BlackFlowers,” a mysteriousmourning dance to musicby Chopin. Three womenin black dresses suffer,haunted by three lumi-nous young men. Are theydead husbands or sons?Perhaps they are soldierslost in battle?

A Parsons premiere,commissioned by the WolfTrap Foundation as part ofits Faces of America seriesand excerpted for theJoyce season, is “Dawn to

Dusk,” an evocation ofSouthern Florida. Settingdancers against full-stagevideo projections ofwildlife and the built envi-ronment, it creates a situa-tion where you ogle thescreen and barely noticethe actual humans boogy-ing on the floor.

The piece has thedancers immerse them-selves in the sunnyEverglades wetlands,alongside alligators and anarray of gorgeous birds. Infront of the screen on theJoyce stage, the same peo-ple reproduce many of thesame movements — butbecause Howell Binkley’slighting favors the video, alot of their work is in vain.

Final score: birds 10,dancers 3.

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Dancing on air, in water, and on film In two premieres, Parsons Dance explores mourning and the Everglades

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If you go

Parsons DanceThrough Jan. 27Joyce Theater175 Eighth Ave.$10-$59, 212-242-0800www.joyce.org

Page 11: 20130118_us_new york

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013 11arts&television

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‘Fringe’

DRAMA. The epic sci-fi dra-ma has survived five sea -sons of near-cancella tion.So we have no doubt goodguys Olivia, Peter, Walterand Astrid will find a way tooverthrow the oppressionof the Observers in Friday’s

series finale. Series finale,Friday, 8 p.m., Fox

‘ProsecutingCasey Anthony’MOVIE. Rob Lowe is backfor another LifetimeOriginal Movie, this timestarring as Assistant StateAttorney Jeff Ashton, whoserved as prosecutor in theCasey Anthony murder tri-al. Premiere, Saturday, 8p.m., Lifetime AMBER RAY

TV watch list

From left: Astrid (Jasika Nicole), Walter (John Noble), Olivia (Anna Torv) and Peter (Joshua Jackson) have one more shot at saving the world on “Fringe.”

LIANE HENTSCHER/FOX

‘Picasso Black and White’Through Jan. 23Solomon R. GuggenheimMuseum1071 Fifth Ave. $22 for adults, $12 for stu-dents & seniors, free forchildren 12 and younger212-423-3500www.guggenheim.orgPicasso’s most stunningblack and whitemasterpieces are only ondisplay for one more week.Discover why the colorswere significant to Picassoand how it influenced hisother works.

NYC Golden Festival 2013Friday and SaturdayGrand Prospect Hall263 Prospect Ave.,BrooklynFrom $35, 718-788-0777www.goldenfest.orgHead to Park Slope to seeNew York’s one-of-a-kindmusic and dance festivalfeaturing the best Balkanand Gypsy music. The two-day festival will be hostedby the Zlatne Uste BrassBand and feature an arrayof Balkan food, drinks andart vendors.

New York City Ballet:Saturday at the Balletwith GeorgeSaturday, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.David H. Koch Theater20 Lincoln Center PlazaFrom $29, 212-870-5570www.nycballet.comThe renowned dancers willperform classics such as“Swan Lake,” “AllegroBrillante” and “SleepingBeauty.”

‘Life, Death, andTransformations in theAmericas’ SaturdayBrooklyn Museum200 Eastern Parkway,Brooklyn$12 for adults, $8 for stu-dents & seniors, free forchildren 12 and younger718-638-5000www.brooklynmuseum.orgVisit the Brooklyn Museumfor a curator tour of morethan 100 original piecesthat represent the spirituallife of the native peoplesfeatured from the Arts ofthe Americas collection.The tour also featuresdozens of artifacts thathave never been seen bythe public. BRIA MARIETTE

Pablo Picasso sits in front of “The Kitchen” (“La cuisine,”1948) in his rue des Grands-Augustins studio. The painting is part of “Picasso Black and White” at the Guggenheim.

Around town

Page 12: 20130118_us_new york

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201312 gossip

Checking in withsome of Hollywood’sbiggest names to seewhat they’ve been upto — in their ownwords, in 140 characters or fewer.

@RebelWilsonI would never onlinedate..unless it was for‘comedy research.’ Theother things I’ve donefor ‘comedy research’include fat camp, drink-ing..

@JoshRadnorI would be a terriblematador.

@rainnwilsonZero Dark Thirty wouldhave been better ifUsama Bin Laden hadbeen dressed like‘Waldo’.

@AlbertBrooksBless me Oprah for Ihave sinned.

@mindykalingI wish Taylor Swift and Iwere the youngest andoldest sisters, respec-tively, of a large JaneAusten-y type family

The feed ...

Kaling

We’ve frequently won-dered why Kristen Stewartand Robert Pattinson gotback together. Even beforeher little fling with RupertSanders fueled an entiresummer’s worth of gossipcolumns (thanks again,girl!), these two neverlooked all that happy.

But now, we under-stand: Together, they’vehelped the “Twilight” fran-chise rake in $635 millionat the domestic box office,which is only a fraction ofthe films’ $3.3 billionworldwide haul. Thismakes them the highest-grossing romantic celebri-ty co-stars, according to anew list from Forbes.

Being involved in reallife wasn’t a requirementfor the list, but it seemedto help. Pattinson and

Stewart handily beat No. 2— “The Vow” costarsRachel McAdams andChanning Tatum — by acool $510 million. Noteven the iconic Carrie andMr. Big could compete:Sarah Jessica Parker andChris Noth raked in a mere$95 million for their “Sexand the City” movies.

Is it their unique chem-istry, or is it the fact that“Twilight” fans will stare atanything that sparkles fortwo hours? Doesn’t matter— for $635 million, we’dthrow love to the were-wolves, too.

Does Lohan havea job on the side?Lindsay Lohan has report-edly found a new way tohelp pay off her heftydebts. Her father, MichaelLohan, and other sourcesclaim that the troubled ac-tress is making moneyworking as a high-class es-cort, according to Starmagazine. “She is gettingpaid to date rich men,”Michael says, putting theblame squarely on his ex-wife, Dina Lohan. “Dina is

pimping her out. It’s dis-gusting.” But so far thereare no allegations ofLindsay providing anyservices more intimatethan acting as arm candy.“The dates last for days,and the guys pay foreverything — hotel, travelcosts, food, whatever — aswell as jewelry and othergifts,” another source tellsthe magazine.

Kidman issurprisingly hard to shockNicole Kidman has beengetting plenty of atten-tion for her Golden

Globe-nominated role in“The Paperboy” thanks toan infamous scene inwhich she urinates onZach Efron. But Kidmandoesn’t get what the bigdeal is. “I just don’t findurination shocking. Ithink I peed in the begin-ning of ‘Eyes Wide Shut,’

too. But then, I don’tfind a lot of things

shocking. Violenceis a lot more shock-ing than sex — sexis primal,” she tellsthe HollywoodReporter. “I feltshy singing in‘Moulin Rouge,’but peeing — no,not shy.”

J.Lo would like to thank theAcademyJennifer Lopez’s career isdoing just fine, but there’sat least one item she stillhas her heart set on: anOscar. “I think everybodythat has ever taken actingseriously would love to berecognized in that way,”Lopez tells E! News. “Ofcourse! Why not?” She’seven good about keepingher acceptance speech upto date, should the needfor it arise. “It changesevery so often over theyears,” Lopez says.“Different people, differ-ent things.”

“All you need is love” is what poor people say.

Talking points

Let’s just bereally weirdfriendsThe New York Postreported that RussellCrowe and Dita VonTeese enjoyed “a roman-tic couple’s massage” atthe Four Seasons hotel inNew York last month andhave been getting flirty.Now, Crowe has taken toTwitter to deny the story.

“Dita Von Teese isbrave, smart, sweet andelegant. She is a friendof mine. Who wouldn’twant friends like that?Friends, not lovers,”Crowe tweeted.

Be honest: There’s noway you thought a storyabout Russell Crowe,Dita VonTeese andTwitterwas goingto end thatclassy.

Stewart, Pattinson tophighest-grossing couples

Lopez

Betty White iscooler than youBetty White turned 91 yes-terday, and she receivedquite the gift. In honor ofthe actress — who is a long-time animal lover and

activist — the LifelineProgram adopted a red-tailed boa from the LosAngeles Zoo in her name.

Betty and the snake,Jacob, starred together in amusic video to benefit thezoo last year. “Jacob is good

as gold and cuddles in myarms,” says White in a state-ment that we could onlyhope to make someday.

Didn’t send Betty a giftyet? She’s asking fans to do-nate to the Morris AnimalFoundation.

THE WORDMonica Weymouth’s take on the world of gossip @monicaatmetro [email protected]

– Dorothy Robinson will return on Jan. 21.

$635MAmount ‘Twilight’has made in the U.S.

Kidman

ALL PHOTOS GETTY IMAGES

Von Teese

Page 13: 20130118_us_new york

WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013 13winter dining guide

La Villette10 Downing St., 212-255-0300At the cozy new Frenchbistro in the former 10Downing space, start withthe tomato tarte — flaky lay-ers of puff pastry generouslytopped with emmentalcheese and juicy fresh toma-toes. If you’re daring, or justwant to eat as the French do,opt for the braised mustardrabbit as your main. Moretraditional? The Cajun-rubbed organic chickenbreast is another flavorfuloption. Creme brulee andchocolate mousse round outthe menu. Come back afterRestaurant Week and orderthe loup de mer (Europeansea bass), which chefChristophe Bonnegrace filetsfor you tableside.

Telepan72 W. 69th St., 212-580-4300Bill Telepan is offering athree-course savory menu atthe standard RestaurantWeek rate, or a four-coursemenu with dessert for $48.On the savory side, you'llfind vegetarian borscht, lob-ster Bolognese and heritagepork, among other dishes;for dessert, the goodies in-clude sticky toffee cake,quince granita parfait anddark chocolate bread

pudding, to name a few.

Perilla9 Jones St., 212-929-6868Bubba Gump’s got nothingon the Cane River Gumbohere (shrimp, andouillesausage, escarole and rice).For entrees, when are yougoing to prepare Japanese-

style grilled smoked tofu athome? Better try it here. Asfor dessert, we’re tornbetween the chocolate pud-ding cake with blood orangeand the almond financierwith oatmeal streusel.

Co-Op Food & Drink107 Rivington St.,

212-796-8040Lucky for you, the Japanese-American brassiere is servingnot three but four coursesfor Restaurant Week. Choosefrom the yellowtail taco orblistered shishito peppers tostart, and then opt for sushior fried chicken as you’re ap-petizer — we’re just getting

started here. Tuck intoshrimp and grits, sliders,seafood or a veggie ricebowl for your main, and saveroom for pecan pie or purplesweet potato pie (withmarshmallow!) for dessert.

What we’redrinking thiswinterBaby, it’s still cold outside.No need to leave the housefor a good mixed drink.

1. Milk ’n cookies2 parts Pinnacle CookieDough Vodka4 parts milkChocolate syrup

Directions: Shake ingredi-ents with ice and strain intomartini glass garnished withsyrup.

2. Snow Cap3 parts Maker’s MarkBourbon 2 tablespoons powderedsugar6 tablespoons sweet(heavy) cream2 parts orange liqueurNutmeg to tasteStrip of twisted orangepeel

Directions: Stir ingredientsand pour over crushed ice.Garnish with nutmeg andorange twist. Serve in asmall brandy snifter.

3. Subzero Citron1 part SVEDKA Citron1 part and splash Midori½ part Apple Pucker½ part Sour Mix

Directions: Pour all ingredi-ents into a cocktail shaker

filled with ice. Shake gentlyand strain over shaved ice ina chilled martini glass.Garnish with ribbons oflemon peel.

4. Frosty Boston CreamChocolate saucePolar Limited EditionBoston Cream SeltzerBaileys Irish Cream

LiqueurFrozen vanilla custard (or quality vanilla icecream that is dense)

Directions: Drizzle Baileys on the bottom oframekins, then add frozencustard. Drizzle withchocolate sauce. Just priorto serving, slowly top withthe seltzer.

NYC Restaurant Week menus we’re dying to try

We’re of the opinion that Restaurant Week is best time of year to be a NewYorker When else can you get a reservation at Boulud Sud or pay just under $40for three courses at Le Cirque? Our favorites for your taste buds and your wallet6

Molyvos871 Seventh Ave., 212-582-7500Chef Jim Botsacos’ Greek

menu will have you toast-ing your companions with acelebratory “Opa!”Highlights include a tradi-tional salad with feta, toma-

toes and kalamata olives,pasticio with spiced groundlamb and yogurt bechameland, for dessert, achocolatey twist on baklava.

Greek Salad is on the Restaurant Week menu at Molyvos.

Isola Trattoriaand Crudo Bar9 Crosby St., 212-389-0000Though raw fish is thespecialty at Isola, pop byduring Restaurant Weekto get a taste of whatelse chef Victor LaPlaca iscapable of. Warm upwith cauliflower soup ora mushroom flatbreadfor starters, and try thered wine-braised shortrib cavatelli for a heartymain. If you’re cravingfish, LaPlaca’s take oncioppino incorporateskale, white beans andcrostini.

If you go

Winter RestaurantWeek is underway nowthrough Feb. 8, withlunches for $25 and din-ners for $38. For partici-pating restaurants, visitwww.nycgo.com/restaurantweek.

Try hazelnut torrone or citrus panna cotta for dessert at Isola.

Meredith [email protected]

PAUL JOHNSON

MORGANS HOTEL GROUP

Drink up

2 4

1

3

Page 14: 20130118_us_new york

New Yorkers areused to jamminginto small spaces.Dining out is no

different, where it’s imper-ative to ignore your neigh-bors’ impending breakupor new job details whilesitting shoulder-to-shoulder. But just becausea restaurant is small doesn’t mean there’ssomething wrong with theplace. We’ve uncoveredsome eateries with heapsof enticing dishes persquare foot.

Sel et Gras131 Seventh Ave. South646-558-5468At just 224 square feet, thisWest Village newcomer istaking a cue fromNapoleon. GeneralManager Matthieu Andrehas worked in largerrestaurants but says thistiny corner of the city is

just right: “Smaller is bet-ter because it’s easier tomanage. You can overseethe whole restaurant justby moving your head fromleft to right!”

Chez Sardine183 W. 10th St.646-360-3705Sure, the name is appropri-ate for an eensy littlerestaurant. But at ChezSardine, the clean, warmdecor and hearty menu in-voke an intimate familymeal — not a crowdedNew York nosh. The restau-rant group Little Wisco, ofJoseph Leonard, Jeffrey’sGrocery and Fedora, is fill-ing tables with hearty dish-es that are sure to satisfy,like beef cheek curry andsmoked cheddar grilledcheese with foie gras.

Prune54 East 1st St.212-677-6221The mirrors on the wallaren’t tricking anyone —Prune is a tiny place. Butthe robust menu and cre-ative flair of chef/ownerGabrielle Hamilton haswon some hefty awards,including the James Beard

Foundation’s Best Chef of2011.

Dishes like theperiwinkles in chorizobroth and the spat-cooked pigeon with warmparsley vinaigrette and liv-er toast certainly showthat there is an extra doseof imagination coming toeach tiny, two-persontable.

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Get cozy at these tiny restaurantsNo elbow room? No problem These small spots boast big

flavors Teeny corners of the city where diners live large

Julia [email protected]

At Prune, the equation is simple: 14 tables, 14 people on the waitstaff.

At Sel et Gras, the tables are just big enough to fit the dishes.

CHRISTOPHERHIRSHEIMER

KATHERINE MILES JONES

Page 15: 20130118_us_new york

#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013 15winter dining guide

FIND A COSÌ®,SEE OUR MENU OR ORDER ONLINE AT

getcosi.com

Prices and menu items may vary by location. “Così” and related marks are registered trademarks of Così, Inc. in the U.S.A. and certain other countries. © 2013 Così, Inc. All rights reserved.

ADOBO MARINATED CHICKEN HEARTH-ROASTED VEGGIES,

ANCIENT GRAINS,& HOUSEMADE PICO DE GALLO

ADOBO CHICKEN

WITH AVOCADO

INTRODUCING THE COSÌ®

A BOWL FULL OF INSPIRATION

Veggie ChiliIngredients:1 tablespoon vegetable oil1 onion, medium dice1 carrot, medium dice2 garlic cloves, mincedKosher saltFreshly ground black pepper1 bell pepper, medium

dice1 zucchini, medium dice2 teaspoons ground

cumin2 tablespoons, plus 1 tea-

spoon chili powder2 (15-ounce) cans light

kidney, dark kidney orblack beans, drainedand rinsed

1½ cups water1 (28-ounce) can chopped

tomatoesChopped cilantro, forgarnish (optional)Quartered lime pieces, forgarnish (optional)Shredded cheddar cheese orcrumbled queso fresco, forgarnish (optional)Sour cream, for garnish (optional)

Instructions:

1Heat the oil in a largeheavy-bottomed pot with

a tight-fitting lid or a Dutchoven over medium heat untilshimmering. Add the onions,carrots and garlic, and sea-son with salt and pepper.Cook, stirring occasionally,until the onions havesoftened, about five minutes.

2Add the bell pepper andzucchini to the pot and

season with salt andpepper. Add the cumin and

Weekend

recipe

A winter crowd-pleaser Unlike its slow-cooking, meaty brethren, this chili recipe is easy, fast and vegetarian It also

makes for a hearty weeknight dinner Freeze leftovers in containers for a ready-to-eat meal

CHOW.com has all your cooking andentertaining needs met. Visit us forour original recipes, how-to videos,cooking tips and advice on etiquette.

chili powder and stir to in-corporate. Cook, stirring oc-casionally, until the carrotsare knife tender, abouteight to 10 minutes.

3Add the beans, water andtomatoes with their

juices and stir to combine.Increase the heat to high andbring to a boil. Reduce theheat to low and gently sim-mer until the vegetables aresoft and the flavors havemelded, about 15 minutes.Taste and season with addi-tional salt and pepper if nec-essary. Serve and garnish asdesired.

CONTRIBUTED BY

Chilly? This Veggie Chili recipe is a hearty dinner option on cold nights.

CHOW

Page 16: 20130118_us_new york

Trend watch The top 10 menu trendsyou’ll see in restaurants for2013 will be:

1Locally sourced meatsand seafood

2Sustainable seafood

3Healthful kids’ meals

4Environmental sustain-ability as a culinary

theme

5Children’s nutrition as a culinary theme

6New cuts of meat (e.g.Denver steak, pork flat

iron, teres major)

7Hyper-local sourcing(e.g. restaurant

gardens)

8Gluten-free cuisine

9Locally grown produce

10Whole-grain itemsin kids’ meals

— Source: NationalRestaurant Association

WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201316 food

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www.hunter.cuny.edu/ce Healthy habits to adopt this year5

It’s easy to take for grantedthe root of a New Year’sresolution — to be resolute.According to Janet Helm,registered dietician andauthor of “Cooking Light:The Food Lover’s HealthyHabits Cookbook,” gettinghealthy — and stayinghealthy all year — is aboutstarting small. “Your goalshould be attainable. If youhave success, that fuelsgreater success and thenyou can celebrate the littlevictories.”

1Cook more oftenFiring up the stove —

say, three times a week —is the foundation of healthyeating. Eating out generallymeans you’ll consume atleast 50 percent morecalories, and cooking istruly the only way tocontrol what you eat.

2Eat a healthy breakfast

“When you start your dayon the right foot, it leads tobetter habits throughoutthe day,” Helm says. Eatingbreakfast helps curbtemptations for the rest ofthe day. Helm’s recipespoint toward a breakfastwith whole grains, fruits orvegetables (or both), leanprotein and low-fat dairy.

3Be a mindful eaterMindful eating isn’t

about saying “namaste”every time you chow down— it’s about recognizingwhen you’re hungry andwhen you’re full, Helm says.Diets that demonize certainfoods make it hard to enjoythem at all, so Helm

suggests eating all kinds offoods and focusing oncontrolling portions instead

of restrictions.

4Eat more fishFollow the lead of Japan

and Iceland — where theaverage life expectancy is81 years — and incorporatemore fish into your diet.Fish is lean protein that’shigh in omega-3 fatty acids,which protect against heartdisease, stroke and highblood pressure. Eating fishtwo times a week is areasonable and attainablegoal.

5Be a part-time vegetarian

With recipes like pasta withblack kale, caramelizedonions and parsnips(pictured) or veggie pizza,Helm suggests going vegonce a week, for all threemeals. The bonus is thatvegetarian recipesencourage experimentation— so reach for the spicerack.

Janet Helm’s book has recipes to help you year-round.

Top 10

NEW IN THE NEW YEAR

He’s a local.

Check out our website, www.metro.us, for the recipe for pasta with black kale, caramelized onions and parsnips.

Julia FurlanMETRO WORLD NEWS

COURTESY OF COOKING LIGHT

Page 17: 20130118_us_new york

rejuvenation

17WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 2013

Weill Music Institute

Ticketsstart at $9

carnegiehall.org/FamilyConcerts212-247-7800Box Offi ce at 57th and SeventhArtists, programs, dates, and ticket prices subject to change. © 2013 CHC.

Sunday, January 20 at 2 PMStern/Perelman

Mambo ManiaJoin the Mambo Mania at Carnegie Hall! Eguie Castrillo, his orchestra, and special guest Gilberto Santa Rosa celebrate the passion and joy of mambo music and dance, transporting you and your family to the Caribbean.Thanks to New York City Department of Homeless Services for supporting young fathers and their families at this concert.

Join us for fun, free activities one hour before the concert.

Lead sup port for Carnegie Hall Family Concerts is provided byThe Irene Diamond Fund.

Carnegie Hall Family Concerts are also made possible, in part, by endowment gifts from The Irene Diamond Fund, Mr. and Mrs. Lester S. Morse Jr., and the Henry and Lucy Moses Fund.

Ages5–10

Eguie Castrillo

FamilyConcert

Learn how to growtomatoes Classes at the BrooklynBotanic GardenBrooklyn Botanic Garden1000 Washington Ave.,Brooklyn, 718-623-7200,www.bbg.orgExercise your green thumb(and artistic side) through aplethora of cool learning ex-periences, such as BasicFlower Arranging, HerbalAphrodisiacs, The Art ofBonsai and Beekeeping.

Add a new skill to your repertoire Classes at 3rd Ward195 Morgan Ave., Brooklyn718-715-4961,www.3rdward.comThis Williamsburg ware -house is the new hot spot forpersonal improvement.From classes in Web design,metalworking and every -thing in-between, this is theplace to reinvent yourself.

Take a walk ... through a cemeteryGreen-Wood CemeteryWillow Avenue, Brooklyn718-768-7300,www.green-wood.comNeed a quiet place? Considerthis: Cemeteries are the leastpopulated outdoor spaces inthe city. Among the tower-ing elm trees of Green-WoodCemetery in Brooklyn, enjoythe sculpture garden, dosome bird watching and visitthe final resting places ofsome of NYC’s most accom-plished residents, like Jean-Michel Basquiat and LeonardBernstein.

Go to high teaLady Mendl’s Tea SalonThe Inn at Irving Place56 Irving Pl., 212-533-4466,www.innatirving.com Over five courses of fingersandwiches, scones and pas-tries — and, of course, cus-tom teas — it’s impossiblenot to feel the pace of lifeslow down for one blissfulafternoon at Lady Mendl’sVictorian tea service.

Get lost in celluloidMuseum of the MovingImage, 36-01 35 Ave.,Queens,www.movingimage.usExplore the exhibitions andmaybe catch a full-length

feature that you’d never seeat the multiplex. This muse-um, dedicated to the art offilm, combines the enrichingexperience of a cultural insti-tution with the visceralpleasure of one of our mostuniversally shared pastimes.

Dine in at VestaVesta, 21-02 30th Ave., Astoria, 718-545-5550The low-lit Queens favorite isthe perfect place to enjoy thewinter ambience from aview other than yourbedroom. Save room for thewarm Baby Jesus date cake:We’re pretty sure God him-self would find it heavenly.

Play ping-pong (orpool — or darts!) Break, 32-04 Broadway,Astoria, 718-777-5400

If you’re tired of TV, head toBreak for a round of pool, airhockey or foosball. The 55-foot-long bar with a rotatingselection of 18 beers adds tothe fun. Can’t look awayfrom the tube? Break has 10HDTVs at the ready.

Take a circus classSTREB, 51 N. First St.,Brooklyn, 718-384-6491Elizabeth Streb foundedStreet Lab or ActionMechanics (SLAM) with agoal of creating “a beta-testfor a new cultural paradigm.”At the lab, try your hand atPOPACTION, the movementtechnique at the basis ofStreb’s teachings, or trampo-line, parkour, tight rope andtrapeze — which directorRobert Hedglin-Taylor told usto do “once for fear, secondfor fun.”

Hit open mic nightSpike Hill, 184 Bedford Ave.,Brooklyn, 718- 218-9737Spike Hill in Williamsburgprovides a warm atmo -sphere to kick back with abrewski and listen to thecity’s best up-and-comingbands. Every Wednesday, thetrendy venue hosts an openmic night, giving local acts achance to shine.

Take a gallery tourTwo Percent Gallery tourswww.thetwopercent.comYou live in New York City, theMecca of contemporary artgalleries, but you’re too in-timidated to stroll in to one.For 90 minutes, allow DavidBehringer, founder of TheTwo Percent Gallery Tours, tobe your artsy best friend.He’ll walk you through fiveof his current favorite galleryexhibitions in Chelsea or theLower East Side.

Spa the day awaySpa Castle, 131-10 11thAve., College Point, N.Y.,718-939-6300, www.spacastleusa.comIf a “spa castle” isn’t exactlywhat your body needs rightnow, then you’ve just comeback from the Caribbean andwe’re totally jealous. For therest of us, this is a relaxationoasis to heal all winter blahs,from lack of warm sunshine(Sauna Valley) to dry skin(Beauty Spa). METRO

Dress up and go to the operaThe MetropolitanOpera, Lincoln Center,212-362-6000, www.metoperafamily.orgFor dollars more than amovie ticket, impressyour date with a night atthe opera. Our pick:Kristine Opolais’ debutin Puccini’s bittersweetromance, “La Rondine.”Every Monday throughThursday the Opera of-fers 200 orchestra seatsfor only $20 each. Theserush tickets can be pur-chased at the Met boxoffice starting two hoursbefore curtain time.Since you’re saving apretty penny, take a cab!

Reasons to get outof hibernation

It’s 2013! This winter you’re finally going to quit the 24-hour ‘Breaking Bad’ marathons and explore all your city has tooffer The following picks are bound to lure you out of your PJs

13Play brewmaster

Fifth annual New YorkCity Beer Week Feb. 22 - March 3www.newyorkcitybrewersguild.comRefine your craft beerpalette or just drink abunch of pints with friendsat the fifth annual NewYork City Beer Week. Thispopular event spotlights12 NYC craft breweriesalong with renownedbrew houses from aroundthe world. Guests at yournext house party willthank you.

Kristine Opolais, center, stars as Magda in Puccini’s “La Rondine.”

KEN HOWARD/METROPOLITAN OPERA

COURTESY OF THE NEW YORK CITY BREWERS GUILD

Page 18: 20130118_us_new york

rejuvenation

WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201318

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Refresh yourselfwith a trip to thedermatologistWhen you look in the mir-ror and don’t like what yousee, the first piece of practi-

cal adviceNYC-baseddermatologistDr. Ariel Ostadhas is, “Don’tbe too hard onyourself.” His

second piece of advice?“Don’t be ashamed if youwant to look better.” Welive, he says, in a competi-tive environment, and thereare plenty of nonsurgicalprocedures that can helpyou look better and feel re-freshed. We talked to himabout two hot new ones.

Ultherapy: “This excitingnew procedure is a skin lift-ing [and] tightening proce-dure that uses ultrasoundto penetrate deep into theskin to cause contractions,”he says. Dr. Ostad saysUltherapy is “remarkable”

because it helps the doctorsee layers of skin and pene-trate deep enough to makea change. “In the past, wehaven’t been able to pene-trate the SMAS [Sub-Muscular AponeuroticSystem] layer of tissue,which is the layer rightabove the muscle used bysurgeons to pull back theskin.” Ultherapy can beused almost anywhere:Dermatologists can tightenthe neck and lift jowls tocreate a much smoother,defined jaw line. They canalso raise eyebrows and im-prove hooding on the eye-lids. “I’ve used it forpatients post-pregnancy forthe sagging skin, stretchmarks and loose skin frommultiple pregnancies. It’sremarkable.”

Fillers: Fillers, notes Dr.Ostad, are nothing new.But now there are muchbetter options available forthe consumer. “The issuewith past fillers is that theydidn’t work with really finelines around the upper lipsand crow’s feet. We nowhave fillers that can targetthose lines without lumpi-ness or bumps.” DOROTHYROBINSON

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#1 FREE DAILY IN NYC WEEKEND, JANUARY 18-20, 201320 letters&games

As the world's largest global newspaper, Metro has more than 17 million readers in over 100 major cities in 17 countries • Metro New York • main: 212-457-7790 • sales fax: 212-952-1505 National and Executive Sales Director Ed Abrams • U.S. Circulation Director Joseph Lauletta • U.S. Marketing Director Wilf Maunoir • e-mail sales: [email protected] • distribution e-mail: [email protected] appearing in Metro are published in good faith. Metro does not endorse and makes no representations about any of the advertising content appearing in its pages. Metro is not responsible for any loss or damage whatsoever resulting from readers using the services of its advertisers. Readers should exercise caution when replying to advertisements, especially those which require any form of payment, and, where necessary, should seek independent legal advice.

120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271

Eat rabbit food, not rabbit stewRE: “SO YOU WANT TO GOVEGAN IN 2013?” (METRO,JAN. 16) As a physician, Iwas delighted to see atten-tion finally being paid tothe health benefits of a ve-gan/vegetarian diet.Never has it been easier toexplore non-meat optionsand alternatives, and evendie-hard meat eaters areenjoying readily availableproducts such as Gardenand Morningstar Farms. Ihave long urged mypatients to considerdecreasing or eliminatingthe amount of meat theyeat — not just to benefittheir own health, but alsoto help impact the nega-tive effects of a meat-based diet on wildlife, theenvironment and worldhunger. Last but certainlynot least is the amount ofanimal suffering that canbe reduced by enjoyingjust a few vegetarian/veg-an meals a week. Thereare certainly many reasonsto “go vegan,” and therehas never been a bettertime. PATRICE GREEN, MD,VIA E-MAIL

These days: Buy a gun, get a palehorse for freeWhen the foundingfathers added the Second

Amendment to theConstitution, I think thefreedom to own and beararms had the premise thatthose weapons would beused in a rational and re-sponsible manner, onethat did not jeopardize thesafety and security of fel-low, law-abiding citizens.In light of our increasingrate of addictions to alco-hol, drugs, pain killers andother prescription medi-cines, not to mention themyriad of other social de-bilitations whichcontribute to irrationalityand irresponsibility, thepublic is justified in doubt-ing the sanctity of the earli-er premise. Ahigh-powered assaultweapon with an extendedmagazine in the hands of adysfunctional person is adevastatingly destructivecombination. We can nolonger be dogmatic aboutthe Second Amendmentthe way literal evangelicalsare dogmatic about thecreation, ignoring oppos-ing data and evidence.GLENN HAYES, VIA E-MAIL

With the money NRAmakes from the sale offirearms, and the contribu-tions they receive from or-ganizations and peoplesupporting their cause, itwould only be fair that theNRA be solely responsiblefor compensating the vic-tims of gun violence,instead of the taxpayers —in particular, since many ofus are in favor of gun con-trol. LUZETTE ALVARADO-ORTIZ, VIA E-MAIL

1 7

7 2 8 5 3

6 1 8 9

1 9

2 3 8 9 1

6 4

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Capricorn Dec. 22-Jan. 19. Tobe on the safe side, it would bewise to avoid issues on whichyou and your special someonehold strong, opposing views. Itwon't take much to light theother's fuse..

Aquarius Jan. 20-Feb. 19.Harboring a negative attitudewill have a strong effect on theresults of everything you do.This will include even most as-signments that you normallyperform by rote.

Pisces Feb. 20-March 20. Youare entitled to have some funand enjoy yourself, as long asyou don't overindulge or spendtoo lavishly on your personalpleasures. Both would carryheavy penalties.

Aries March 21-April 19. Em-phasizing only your interests

without any concern for thoseof others will not only turn offeveryone, it will lessen yourhopes of getting what youwant as well.

Taurus April 20-May 20.Guard against a tendency tomake a snap judgment basedon incomplete information. Anincorrect conclusion will takeyou completely off track andonly confuse you further.

Gemini May 21-June 20. It'snever a good day to lend to orborrow from a friend, so don'tstart now. Discipline might berequired in order to avoiddoing so, but it behooves youto muster up the necessarystrength.

Cancer June 21-July 22. Ourbehavior is always being scruti-nized by our peers, opponentsand supporters. Don't try toplease them all

Leo July 23-Aug. 22. Even if

you believe your ideas andmethods are better than thoseof others, they don't want tohear it, so keep it to yourself.Instead, try to accept others'points of view with an openmind.

Virgo Aug. 23-Sept. 22. It be-hooves you to be extremelycautious about how you useyour money, especially if you'reconsidering a major invest-ment. Make sure you have allthe facts at your disposal.

Libra Sept. 23-Oct. 23. Thiscould be one of those dayswhen you feel that everyonebut you is out of step with theworld. Unfortunately, the re-verse is likely to be true, andit's you who is not in sync withthe majority.

Scorpio Oct. 24-Nov. 22. Theonly way you'll be able tolighten your share of the loadis to acquire some assistance.

However, your chances of get-ting others to drop whatthey're doing to help you arenil.

Sagittarius Nov. 23-Dec. 21.You can be either great or com-pletely horrible about manag-ing your or anybody else'sresources. Be careful, becausetoday it might be the latter.BERNICE BEDE OSOL

Across1 Part of the leg5 Mrs. David Bowie9 — synthesizer13 Petri-dish contents14 Internet hookup16 Grease gun target17 Honda rival18 Popular takeout19 Lurch20 Monster’s loch21 Copper source22 Jungle chargers24 Headphones brand26 Economic upturn27 Round object30 Reinvest (2 wds.)34 Took a shot35 Cel character36 Friendly country37 Author -- Rand38 Stops short39 Twosome40 Lay at anchor42 Perry’s penner43 Like Atalanta45 Chocolate confections47 Maria Conchita —48 Is the right size49 Be a bookworm50 Bwana’s trek53 California’s Big —54 Slangy courage58 With, to Maurice59 Eldest Judd61 Taconite yield62 Horror-flick staple63 Shakespeare’s theatre64 Billionth, in combos65 Jillian and Miller66 Depot info67 Smooth-tongued

Down1 “Brian’s Song” lead2 Flu symptom3 Young chaps4 Park toy5 Take advantage6 Wavelike pattern7 Axlike tool8 Flic’s schnoz9 Xylophone kin10 Wagon pullers11 Butter substitute12 Hairstyling goos15 Dark reds23 “— so?”25 Code for O’Hare26 London chap27 Get going28 He played the Wiz

29 Krishna devotee30 Surveys31 Pilgrim John —32 Sherlock’s needs33 Temple city of Japan35 Weight allowances38 Walloping41 Blots out43 Gulf st.44 Motels, e.g.46 Evergreen tree47 Craggy abodes49 Ballroom number50 Long story51 Cosmetics brand52 Plant with fronds53 Flue buildup55 Europe-Asia range56 Ms. Braxton57 Uppity one60 Malt brew

Horoscope

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every3x3 box contains the digits 1-9. There is no mathinvolved. You solve the puzzle with reasoning and logic.

Solution to Thursday’scrossword

E-mail your letters:[email protected]

Keep them as brief as possible, preferably under 100words. Metro reserves the right to edit all letters. Please include your name and contact information.

Letters

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METRO NEW YORK | Editor in Chief: Tony Metcalf, [email protected] @edinchief metro | Managing Editor: Amber Ray, [email protected] | City Editor: Allen Houston,

[email protected] | Sports Editor: Mark Osborne, [email protected] Books/Parenting/Gossip/Travel Editor: Dorothy Robinson, [email protected]

Home/Style/Food Editor: Tina Chadha, [email protected] | Film/Tech/Dating Editor: Heidi Patalano, [email protected] | Wellbeing/Going Out Editor: Meredith Engel,

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Copy Chief/Theater Editor: Tracie Michelle Murphy, [email protected]

SUDOKU: EASY

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In the news

Schilling toauction sockIf some Yankees fanhas a spare$100,000, they caneradicate CurtSchilling’s bloodysock from existence.

Schilling isauctioning off theinfamous sock hewore during Game 6of the 2004 ALCS inorder to recoupmoney lost from hisfailed gaming com-pany, 38 Studios.

It will go up forbid online startingFeb. 4 and is expect-ed to fetch at least$100,000.

Patriots readyfor rematch with Ravens

The general belief, at leastin the tri-state area, is thatthe Patriots’ main rival arethe Jets.

But with this Sunday’sgame (6:30 p.m., CBS)marking the third playoffmeeting in four seasons,the Ravens and Patriots aredeveloping an intense ri-valry of their own.

“We’re two emotionalteams, so stuff happensout there,” Patriotslineman Logan Mankinstold reporters Thursday.“You just always have to besmart about it. ... You justhave to make sure you nev-er take it too far.”

The impending retire-ment of Ravens linebackerRay Lewis ratchets up theintensity even more. Lewiswas emotional on the fieldfollowing last Sunday’snarrow win over Denver.

“I looked at my team-mates after the Denver

game, and me and Ray[Rice] just sat there,” Lewistold reporters this week.“We hugged on the field,and he grabbed me kind ofhard. It’s just special. Toend it, whenever it ends,then so be it.” METRO

Abraham likelyto play vs. 49ersFalcons defensive end JohnAbraham, a name all toofamiliar to Jets fans, plansto play against the 49erson Sunday (3 p.m., FOX).

“Oh, yeah, you knowme, you can’t keep me outof that game,” Abrahamtold The Atlanta Journal-Constitution this week.“We’re going to treat thehell out of it.”

Pardon Jets fans if theyfind irony in that quote.Abraham famously sat outa playoff game in 2002against Oakland with theflu. But Abraham, who has10 sacks this season, willbe a crucial component instopping Niners QB ColinKaepernick. METRO

Playoffs in brief

An emotional Lewis, right, fell to his knees afterJustin Tucker kicked the game-winning field goal.

DOUG PENSINGER/GETTY IMAGESShumpert returngoes according toplan for Knicks

Starts, plays 15 minutes in first game backfrom injury Team blows out Detroit in LondonIman Shumpert’s return tothe Knicks’ starting lineupwasn’t exactly earth-shat-tering, but it was a success.

Shumpert played — andstarted — for the first timesince tearing the ACL in hisleft knee in Game 1 of lastyear’s playoff series againstthe Heat. He scored eightpoints on 3-of-7 shooting in15 minutes.

“I thought he answeredthe bell loud and clear,”head coach Mike Woodsonsaid of Shumpert.

The game was a ho-humaffair from the first quar-ter. The Knicks ran out to a29-17 lead on the Pistonsafter one and were neverthreatened. The final scorewas 102-87, as New Yorkimproved to 25-13.

Shumpert was part ofthe initial burst against thePistons, nailing a 3-pointerto make the score 16-2 infavor of New York.

Carmelo Anthony got achance to return to the are-na in which he won a goldmedal this summer, with26 points to lead all scor-ers. His fellow Olympicteammate Tyson Chandlerhad 10 points and 14 re-bounds.

Shumpert will have

plenty of time to recuper-ate from his first game ac-tion. Due to the travel backfrom England, the Knickswon’t play another gameuntil Monday.

Stern: Teamscan’t eavesdropCarmelo Anthony doesn’thave a problem with Knicksowner James Dolan listen-ing to him on court, butcommissioner David Sternmight.

Anthony said on Wed-

nesday uponhis arrival inLondon that hedidn’t mind thenews that brokeabout Dolan

recording opponents’ trash-talking toward Anthony.

But Stern on Thursdaysaid the microphones may

actually be against rules.“If a team does

something to eavesdrop onother players, they wouldbe sanctioned because itwould be against our rules,”Stern said.

Stern clarified that any-thing said on the court waslikely fair game. METRO

Mark [email protected]

Shumpert had eight points in his return to action.

NATHANIEL S. BUTLER/NBAE/GETTY IMAGES

263Daysbetween

games for ImanShumpert, who torehis ACL and meniscuson April 28, 2012,against Miami

Page 22: 20130118_us_new york

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T r a i n � S t a r t I m m e d i a t e l y

EXTERMINATION/Termite Certification N Y S c e r t . 6 / 9 d a y s . J o b s / b i z F i n ' l a i d

i f q u a l . 2 4 h r 7 1 8 - 2 0 5 - 0 5 5 7 / 8 0 0 - 2 2 0 - 5 4 9 4

� D R I V E R � B R O O K L Y N B U S C O .

“ C P - B P ” l i c . & B P S e n d r s m n t r e q ' d .

W i l l s p o n s o r f o r B . O . E D c e r t . A p p l y :

1 C o f f e y S t . , B r o o k l y n . � 7 1 8 - 8 5 2 - 0 2 8 6

� � � A B E T T E R C A R E E R � � �

$ 1 2 - $ 3 5 / h r N O e x p e r i e n c e n e e d e d

M O R N I N G / E V E N I N G / O V E R N I G H T

S H I F T S F / T & P / T 1 - 8 0 0 - 8 8 9 - 7 6 4 3

F L U S H I N G N O R T H E R N B L V D

R E T A I L S P A C E S A V A I L A B L E

1 3 7 - 0 2 A N o r t h e r n B l v d 1 8 0 0 S q F t

1 3 6 - 1 4 C N o r t h e r n B l v d 1 7 0 0 S q F t

1 3 6 - 3 9 3 7 t h A v e 4 4 5 5 S q F t

C a l l L i s a f o r I n f o 7 1 8 - 9 3 9 - 4 8 8 8

F l a t b u s h 6 9 6 E . 5 2 S t . F u l l y r e n o v

b r k , 5 b r s , 3 b t h s , m a r b l e e i k , l g l r ,

h d w d f l r s , f i n b s m t , p v t d r v w y , g a r ,

p o r c h O w n e r 6 4 6 - 4 3 1 - 0 1 0 5 , 7 1 8 - 7 4 0 - 5 2 2 2

S T . A L B A N S - 1 F A M I L Y , S O L I D

B R I C K , 2 B R S , F I N B S M T , A S K I N G

O N L Y $ 1 2 9 , 0 0 0 , O N L Y $ 3 , 0 0 0 O C .

A g e n t R a y : 9 1 7 - 8 8 7 - 9 4 3 8 .

� B E D S T U Y J E F F E R S O N A V E . �

B e a u t , l g , n e w 2 f a m , 7 b r s , 4 b t h s ,

2 f r p l c s , 2 n e w k i t s w / n e w a p p l s , f i n

b s m t , b k y d . � O w n e r 5 1 6 - 7 7 9 - 7 6 4 9 �

��� ACCEPTING NEW GUARDS ��� N o e x p n e e d e d . F T / P T , P a y s u p t o

$ 1 8 . 5 0 / h r . I m m e d i a t e . 3 4 7 - 9 9 4 - 6 6 5 7

A B R I G H T S E C U R I T Y J O B

U p t o $ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r F T / P T , n o l i c n e e d e d .

N o e x p e r i e n c e n e c . M u s t b e a v a i l

A S A P . C a l l 2 1 2 - 4 7 0 - 4 2 5 9

V A N N E S T A R E A

2 F a m , B r i c k , F u l l y R e n o v 3 B R D u -

p l e x / 2 B R + F i n B s m t & D r v w y .

O n l y 3 . 5 % D n . O w n e r 9 1 7 - 4 3 9 - 5 8 5 8

C R O W N H G T S . - L a r g e 3 B R A p t 2 n d

f l r , t r e n d y a r e a , h d w d f l r s , L R , D R ,

E I K . C l o s e t o t r a n s p . $ 1 6 7 5 / m o . P a y

o w n u t i l i t i e s . C a l l O w n e r 7 1 8 - 9 4 0 - 4 4 5 9

S o u t h e r n B r o n x L o c a t i o n s I m m e d i a t e

S t u d i o , 1 , 2 & 3 B R A p t s . N e w l y

R e n o v U n i t s , L g e O p e n F l r S p a c e .

$ 8 2 2 / m o & u p . O w n e r 7 1 8 - 6 1 7 - 2 8 0 0

W i l l i a m s b u r g S p a c i o u s N e w l y

R e m o d e l e d 1 B r , 4 t h f l o o r , W a l k i n g

d i s t a n c e t o T r a i n s P r i n c i p a l s o n l y .

C a l l O w n e r 7 1 8 - 9 1 9 - 5 6 8 9 f o r a p p t

B R O W N S V I L L E : 8 4 E a s t 9 4 t h S t . 6

F a m f u l l y r e n v o b l d g . 3 b d r s a l l n e w

b e a u t i f u l . S e c 8 o k . O p e n H o u s e s .

C a l l 3 4 7 - 8 7 5 - 5 6 1 1 / ( 6 4 6 ) 6 0 0 - 2 9 8 1 .

Canarsie-Georgetown-OMB � Stu $800 & u p � 1 B r $ 1 0 0 0 & u p � 2 B r - $ 1 3 5 0 &

u p � 3 B r - $ 1 7 0 0 & u p . B k r 7 1 8 - 5 3 1 - 3 5 8 5

E A S T 2 2 5 S T � B r a n d N e w B r i c k

2 F a m L u x u r y H o m e , 5 B R , C e n t r a l

A C , B s m t , D r i v e w a y , M i n D P

� $ 1 9 , 6 0 0 � O w n e r 9 1 7 - 5 1 0 - 7 0 0 5 �

�EAST FLATBUSH & CANARSIE� S t u d i o s , 1 , 2 & 3 B R a p t s . C a l l A g e n t :

7 1 8 - 4 5 1 - 1 0 0 0 o r 9 1 7 - 6 9 0 - 2 3 3 8

� GRAND CONCOURSE & OTHER AREAS � N i c e r e n o v a t e d a p t s . S t u d i o s , 1 & 2

B r s . N O F E E . C a l l M g m t 7 1 8 - 2 9 3 - 4 3 8 6

8 5 8 E . 2 1 5 S t . O p e n H o u s e S a t & S u n

1 2 - 4 p m , b r k 2 f a m 2 / 2 , 3 b t h s , f u l l y

r e n o v , f i n b s m t , d r v w y , g a r , o n l y 3 %

d o w n . O w n e r 6 4 6 - 4 3 1 - 0 1 0 5 . 7 1 8 - 7 4 0 - 5 2 2 2

E A S T F L A T B U S H ( E . 2 6 t h S t . )

N e w l y R e n o v 1 B R A p t . , H w d F l r s ,

P a y o w n u t i l i t i e s . $ 7 5 0 / m o + 1 m o

s e c . , C r d t C k . O w n e r 7 1 8 - 2 0 0 - 8 4 2 4

Q U E E N S V I L L A G E - I m m a c u l a t e

3 B R , 1 . 5 b t h s , L R , D R , E I K , h d w d

f l r s . N e a r t r a n s & s h o p s . $ 1 7 5 0 / m o . 1

m o s e c 1 m o r e n t . O w n e r 7 1 8 - 4 6 4 - 5 5 3 2

J A M A I C A 1 1 0 t h A v e & I n w o o d

F u r n ' d R o o m F o r R e n t . 2 n d F l r ,

1 m o r e n t + 1 m o s e c . $ 5 5 0 O w n e r

( A d y ) 7 1 8 - 6 5 8 - 2 7 7 3 f r o m 6 - 9 p m o n l y .

9 9 6 G R A N T A V E . � 3 B r s , 2 B t h s ,

2 n d f l r . N e a r Y a n k e e S t a . , G r a n d

C o n c o u r s e / 1 6 5 S t . $ 1 7 0 0 / m o . 2 m o s s e -

c u r i t y d e p o s i t . O w n e r 9 1 7 - 4 0 3 - 4 4 2 7

Mechanics School Bus B k l y n C o . n e e d s a n e x p e r i e n c e d i e s e l

m e c h a n i c s f o r b u s f l e e t . N Y S D O T

e x p . a + , T o p p a y , h e a l t h i n s u r a n c e

a n d v a c a t i o n . A p p l y i n p e r s o n , M o n -

d a y t o F r i d a y 5 0 1 5 B a y P a r k w a y

B r o o k l y n , N Y , 1 1 2 3 0 .

D I E S E L & G A S O L I N E M E C H A N I C S

S c h o o l B u s C o . F u l l & P a r t t i m e .

U n i o n S h o p A p p l y i n p e r s o n :

1 C o f f e y S t , B k l y n . � 7 1 8 - 8 5 2 - 0 2 8 6

A i r l i n e N o w H i r i n g . M a j o r A i r l i n e a t J F K ,

L a G u a r d i a , & N e w a r k A i r p o r t s N o w H i r i n g .

N O E X P E R I E N C E N E C E S S A R Y . $ 1 4 t o

$ 2 2 / h r + b e n e f i t s . C a l l 2 1 2 - 6 2 9 - 1 7 7 7 . F E E

B U I L D I N G S U P E R I N T E N D E N T

Q n s l o c . E x p ' d H a n d y m a n , l i c e n s e s ,

b o i l e r # 6 , c e r t o f f i t n e s s N Y F D .

E m a i l r e s u m e l s b e r 9 4 9 4 2 7 @ a o l . c o m

o r m o i s e s 0 8 0 3 @ y a h o o . c o m .

F R E E H H A T R A I N I N G

I m m e d J o b s i n 5 B o r o s O p e n H s e

T u e s . 3 p . W a l k - i n W e d . T h u r s . 9 a - 4 p

2 2 4 W 3 5 S T # 7 0 6 . 2 1 2 - 8 9 6 - 4 0 0 8

X I N C O N H O M E H E A L T H C A R E

PUBLISHERS NOTEAll real estate advertising herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 and state and local fair housing laws. The Fair Ho-using Act makes its i l l egal to advertise any preference, limitations or discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. State or local laws may make unlawful advertising that discriminates on the basis of age, marital status, or sexual orientation. Metro US will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which violates the law. The law requires that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. If you have any questions regarding housing discrimination, call the Long Island Housing Services at 1(800) 660-6920 in Long Island or the Anti-Discrimination Center at (212) 346-7600 in New

call HUD toll-free at (800) 669-9777 or the New York City Commission on Human Rights at (212) 306-7500

C U S T S E R V / A S S I S T A N T

W a n t e d 4 B k l y n . I n s & D r i v S c h l

o f f i c e . S o m e e x p p r f ' d . W r k 7 P M &

S a t s . F a x r e s 7 1 8 - 6 4 9 - 2 2 1 0 i n c e v e p h #

T I G W e l d e r : M i n i m u m 3 y r s e x p e r i -

e n c e i n w e l d i n g s t a i n l e s s s t e e l r e s -

t a u r a n t e q u i p m e n t . M u s t a s s e m b l e

B r o o k l y n l o c a t i o n . C a l l 7 1 8 - 6 2 8 - 9 3 0 0

A B A S I C C A R E E R I N S E C U R I T Y

N o e x p e r i e n c e n e c , w i l l t r a i n i f

n e e d e d . U p t o $ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r . F T / P T .

I n t e r v i e w t h i s w e e k o n l y 3 4 7 - 5 6 4 - 1 8 8 6

A B E T T E R E M P L O Y M E N T O P P T Y

N o e x p r e q ' d . w i l l t r a i n i f n e e d e d , u p

t o $ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r . M u s t b e a b l e t o s t a r t

a s a p . I n t e r v i e w s t h i s w k 7 1 8 - 6 5 0 - 2 5 8 7

A B A S I C S E C U R I T Y J O B

M u s t b e a v a i l a b l e A S A P N o e x p e r i -

e n c e n e c e s s a r y . U p t o $ 2 2 / h r .

C a l l 3 4 7 - 4 4 7 - 0 4 0 3

� � � Able and Ready Guards � � � W / t r a i n , m u s t b e a b l e t o s t a r t a s a p .

u p t o $ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r . C a l l N o w ! 2 1 2 - 4 7 0 - 4 3 2 6

100’s Available,All Boroughs

Private Entry Bath Cooking1 Person/2 Person $125wk/up

room rentals 212-697-3962

Early-Morning Nanny (Manhat-tan) Very active family with

four girls aged 0-11 are lookingfor an early-morning householdemployee who can keep up withour hectic schedule. Ideal can-didate will be hardworking, en-ergetic, professional, kind, pa-tient, easy-going, and honest.

The candidate must take direc-tion from a stay-at-home moth-

er and work well with otherhousehold staff, and should alsohave basic cooking skills. Must

be non-smoking and a gooddriver with a current license.Job hours are approximately

4:30am - 12:30pm during week-day mornings as well as Satur-day night babysitting, but can-didate should be flexible. Jobincludes fixing breakfast and

snacks, getting children to andfrom early morning activities,

light housekeeping, groceryshopping, errands, and meal

prep. Ability to swim and trav-el a plus. Must speak and readEnglish, have a strong resume,excellent references, and a spot-

less background check. Com-petitive salary. Contact: Bren-na at [email protected] 212-588-7416. Principals on-ly recruiters,please do not con-

tact us. Part Time.

Winterhaven, FL Retire nearWinterhaven, FL on a fixedto moderate income. Re-

served for those 55 & better.Income and other restric-tions apply, call Mitch for

details. 863-773-3031

Office Assistant NeededDynamic/Reliable/Responsi-ble w/ good PC knowledge.

Call 212.869.1432

� A BACK DOOR TO SUCCESS� S e r i o u s a p p l i c a n t s o n l y , u p t o

$ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r . F T / P T . H R # 2 1 2 - 4 7 0 - 5 6 4 1

C O R O N A $ 3 5 0 , 0 0 0

2 f a m , 3 / 3 , d r v w y , 2 f u l l b a t h s . f u l l

f i n s h b a s e m e n t . H a b l a m o s e s p a o l .

C a l l M a y b e l l 7 1 8 - 3 0 0 - 7 0 5 7

P a r k c h e s t e r / G r C o n c o u r s e / B o s t o n R d

1 , 2 , 3 B R a p t s , w a l k - u p b l d g . R e n o v

K i t / B t h , n r T r a n s & S c h o o l . S e c 8 O K .

O w n e r R o b e r t a 9 1 4 - 6 3 2 - 1 2 3 0

2 1 8 6 W a s h i n g t o n A v e O p e n H o u s e S a t

& S u n 1 2 - 4 p m , 3 f a m b r k r e n o v 3 / 2 / 2

b r s , b s m t , s e p e l e c & g a s , g a r , l o w

d n . O w n e r 6 4 6 - 4 3 1 - 0 1 0 5 , 7 1 8 - 7 4 0 - 5 2 2 2

We are looking for an Office Assistant.Duties include greeting clients, answering phones, and routing mail, data entry and retrieve, scheduling and calender maintenance, Ideal candidates will have proven customer service skills in an administrative setting and experience with Microsoft Office applicationsemail resumes to

PERSONAL ASSISTANCENEEDED

[email protected] IF INTERESTED

D eeting clients, answeringuties include gretrieve, scheouting mail, data entry and rr

calender maintenance, Ideal candidates wcustomer service skills in an administrativ

osoft Office applicatexperience with Micresumes toemail r

NEEDEPERSONAL ASS

ANCE

g phones, andeduling and

ovenwill have prve setting and ions

SISTTAED

Lowest Tuition Fees in the State Financial Aid, Scholarship Available if Qualify Easy Payment Plans Onsite State & National Examination Morning, Evening & Weekend Classes

» Nurse Aide (CNA)» Patient Care Tech (PCT)» EKG & Phlebotomy» Pharmacy Technician» Medical Billing & Coding» MS Office/ Accounting» ESL / CPR

» Medical Assistant» Dental Assistant» Computer Programming(C++,Java, .Net)» Computer Networking (A+, MCSE, CCNA)

Call Now: 866-487-5432(Close to Subway A, C, D, 2, 3, 4, 5, Q, R, G)

www.AccessCareers.Edu | Licensed by the state of New York

Student Visa

AvailableAccess Careers, Bklyn25 Elm Pl, #201, Brooklyn, NY-11201

HOME HEALTH AIDE/CNA TRAINING N Y S E D P C A t o H H A u p g r a d e .

C a l l 7 1 8 - 3 2 3 - 3 0 5 0

C O R P / F R O N T D E S K A G E N T

M u s t b e a v a i l t o s t a r t a s a p . N o e x p

n e c . W i l l t r a i n , u p t o $ 2 2 . 5 0 / h r .

C a l l 2 1 2 - 4 7 0 - 6 9 3 3 o r 2 1 2 - 4 7 0 - 8 1 1 2

1 6 0 s S t u $ 8 9 5 , e l e v 2 b r $ 1 3 0 0 / S 8 , 3 b r

$ 1 5 4 5 , 1 8 0 s 1 b r 9 0 9 , 2 b r 1 1 0 0 , 3 b r 6 f l

w / u 1 0 1 2 , P k c h s t r 1 b r S 8 , M o r r i s P k

1 b r S 8 , G n h l 1 b r e l e v S 8 , H t s P t e l e v

1 b r 9 0 9 / S 8 , O t h e r s / H U D - V A S H

w e l c o m e . S u s m a n R E 7 1 8 - 2 9 4 - 2 6 0 0

P R O T E C T I V E S E R V I C E S

N e e d a j o b ? C o n d u c t i n g i n t e r v i e w s

t h i s w e e k o n l y f o r t h e l a r g e s t f i r m s

i n N Y C . C a l l 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 9 9 - 9 5 7 3

D R I V E R S W A N T E D f o r a v e r y b u s y

B k l y n c a r s v c . G o o d b o o k i n g s .

d a y s / n i g h t s / w k n d s . A l l s h i f t s a v a i l .

M u s t h a v e L I C . C a l l 3 4 7 - 5 3 9 - 7 7 4 8

3 r d A v e / 1 7 6 S t B r a n d N e w 3 B r , B l d g

w / i n t e r c o m , n e w E - I - K $ 1 5 2 5 / m o

n e a r a l l t r a n s p & s h o p s S e c t 8 o k

B r o k e r s W e l c o m e O w n e r 2 1 2 - 6 9 5 - 3 5 1 0

1 0 A A A A H @ C I T Y M o n - S a t P r e & A n n

1 6 h r O J T * F i r e G d * M e t a l D e t * A / T e r r o r

S G L i c e n s e P k g * P i s t o l L i c P r e p $ 3 9 5

2 1 2 - 9 5 7 - 1 3 5 0 * 3 0 3 W . 4 2 S t # 6 1 0 @ 8 A v

L O B B Y A T T E N D A N T / G U A R D S

F T / P T , M O R N I N G & e v e n i n g s h i f t s

a v a i l . N o f e l o n i e s , u p t o $ 1 9 . 5 0 / h r .

M u s t s t a r t a s a p . C o n t a c t 7 1 8 - 7 7 2 - 8 3 1 8

F R O N T D E S K G U A R D S

W a l l S t . l o c a t i o n , n o e x p n e c e s s a r y .

P a y u p t o $ 1 3 . 2 5 p / h o u r .

C a l l L t . K e l l y : 3 4 7 - 2 4 6 - 9 3 0 5

S T A R T I M M E D I A T E L Y

A V E R A G E $ 1 8 / h r

N o E x p e r i e n c e r e q u i r e d

TRAINING BONUS OFFERED T r a i n i n g p r o v i d e d

9 1 4 - 2 3 3 - 0 6 4 5

E . N E W Y O R K � A v a i l N o w

U n f u r n ' d R o o m F o r R e n t . S e e k i n g

R e s p o n s i b l e I n d i v Q u i e t & C l e a n

I n c o m e v e r i f . O w n e r 3 4 7 - 6 1 0 - 9 3 2 5

� V a n N e s t V I C I N I T Y �

L a r g e R o o m . S i n g l e M a l e p r e f ' d .

2 w e e k s S e c + 1 w e e k r e n t . R e f s . r e q .

C a l l O w n e r 7 1 8 - 4 0 9 - 2 4 6 4

L A U R E L T O N � N e w V e r y L a r g e

4 B d r m A p t . S e p L R & D R , 2 F u l l

B t h s , H e a t I n c l . N r L I R R , B u s e s &

S h o p p i n g C t r . C a l l O w n e r 3 4 7 - 7 2 4 - 3 5 2 4

A D L I n s t i t u t e O f f e r s H o m e H e a l t h

A i d e & C N A T r a i n i n g . W e o f f e r

P l a c e m e n t a s s i s t a n c e f o r a l l g r a d s .

P T / F T & e v e n i n g c l a s s e s . 7 1 8 - 3 4 9 - 8 0 0 3

Affordable Furnished Roomsin Manhattan

Utilities IncludedSame Day Move InCable, TV, InternetNo Credit Check

$125 per weekCall 212-862-0457

STUDENT VISAS @ LOW COSTOn Queens Blvd Next to (E, F) Subway Stn.8002 Kew Gardens Rd, Queens, NY

www.parkchesternyc.com718-412-4696

PARKCHESTER

Parkchester is a great place to live. Wehave department stores, shops, super-markets, medical & dental offices even amovie theatre & our own post office.Walk to subway & express buses (just 30min to midtown. Street & garage parking. Apply on line today or schedule an appt to see our model apts.

OPEN HOUSE: TUES & THUR · 5PM-7:45PM

SAT · 10AM-1:45PM

$985 permo

2 BEDROOMSAS LOW AS

1 BEDROOMSAS LOW AS

$1335permo

RENT NOW AND SAVE AT

BRIGHT · BEAUTIFUL · SPACIOUSNO BROKER FEE · IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

SPECIAL: ONE HALF MONTH FREE RENT ON 1BR’SIF YOU SIGN A 2-YEAR LEASE BY JAN 31

TUITION-FREE IT TRAINING AND JOB PLACEMENT

A+ & MCTS CERTIFICATIONBRONX & BROOKLYN LOCATIONS

718-991-8400

www.perscholas.org

Apartments

Security / Law Enforcement

Commercial

Healthcare

Apartments General Help Wanted

Training

Transportation / Travel

Healthcare

Miscellaneous

General Help Wanted

Rooms

Domestic Help / CareHealthcare

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 866-900-9473

Weekend, January 18-20, 2013

Page 24: 20130118_us_new york

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Requires a system with Intel® Turbo Boost Technology. Intel® Turbo Boost Technology and Intel® Turbo Boost Technology 2.0 are only available on select Intel® processors. Consult your PC manufacturer. Performance varies depending on hardware, software, and systemconfiguration. For more information, visit http://www.intel.com/go/turbo. Not responsible for typographical or pictorial errors. Some quantities may be limited. City of N.Y. Dept. of Consumer Affairs License Numbers

1422465/0900311/0900616/1343836/0900615/1422476/1422467/1420524/0900617/0900310/1129222/1125853/1233118.

To order online

JR.com/To order by phone

800-221-8180Order Code: MET 0118 • Prices effective through 1/24/13

PARK ROWAcross from City Hall

212-238-9000Mon - Wed: 10:00-7:00 Thurs & Fri: 10:00-7:30 Sat & Sun: 11:00-7:00

SHOP DOWNTOWNAND SCORE AT C21 AND J&R

Spend $100GET $10*

Now through Sunday, January 20th

Shop Century 21 Department Store and

J&R Music and Computer World and score big.

• Spend $100 at C21 and receive a J&R $10 gift card.• Spend $100 at J&R and receive a C21 $10 gift card.

Don’t miss this great offer.

*Offer valid in-store only, January 18th through January 20th, 2013.Downtown C21 location only.

One gift card per customer. While supplies last.C21 and J&R team members are not eligible.

Gift card expires February 25th, 2013.

Mach SpeedTrio Stealth Pro 4GB 7" Capacitive Touch Android Tablet•Android 4.0 ICS •1.2GHz Cor-tex A8 processor •512MB RAM•Built-in Wi-Fi •Accelerometer& e-compass •Trio & AmazonAppstore $8999

(MDS SP7C)

SamsungFocus Quad-GSM Smartphone Unlocked•4.0" touchscreen superAMOLED •Windows® phonewith downloadable apps •5MPcamera & camcorder Was $219.88$16999

(SAM FOCUS)

DellInspiron i13z-8864sLV13.3" Notebook PC withIntel® Core™ i3-3217U1.80GHz•6GB DDR3 •500GB HD •IntelHD Graphics 4000 •Bluetooth®

•Webcam •Windows® 8Reg. $649$499 (DEL I13Z8864SLV)

Venta SonicCool and Warm Mist Ultrasonic Room Humidifier•Nano-silver technology •Shutsoff when it reaches desiredlevel •Up to 3.7 gallon outputper 24 hours •Ultra quiet

$79 (VEW VS205)

SennheiserCX870 Earphones•Dynamic stereo headphonehas wide 17-22,500 Hz frequency response •Soundpressure level (SPL): 115 dB•1.2m symmetric cableReg. $129.99$3299

(SEN CX870)

Samsung UN40EH5000 40" Class 1080p LED HDTV•40.0" diagonal •1920 x 1080 •ConnectShare movie •Wide color enhancer plus •SRS TheaterSound HDReg. $677.99$54799

(SAM UN40EH5000)

Samsung32" Class 720p LED HDTV•Produces a brilliant, clear picture•31.5" diagonal •60Hz •2 HDMI•1 USB •5 wattsx 2 audio powerstereo •DolbyDigital Plus •SRSTheaterSoundReg. $377.99$32799

(SAM UN32EH4003)

Maclaren Techno XT Stroller Crown Blue•4-position fully-reclining seat •Ergonomically shaped •3-position adjustable molded handles •6" alloy-style wheels •Removable washable seatReg. $340$199 (MLA WRT11013)

∑Mfr. Sug. Retail $149.99

SAVE $150

SAVE $97

IN-STORE ONLY Ω

Valid thru 1/20

SAVE $50

SAVE $130

WOW!

$22999 – $80________________$14999

Instant Rebatethru 2/02/13

SAVE$49

SAVE $141

New Service Plan Not Required.

SAVE∑

$70

Sing & Play EventSat.,Jan. 26TH

5: 00PM

$2999

1 Ann St.(corner of Park Row)JandRjr.com

Canon16MP Digital Camera•5x optical zoom •3' LCD •Updated focus-detection system for significantly faster focusing •Ultra-wide 24mm-equivalent zoom•1920x1080 video

INSTANTSAVINGS

$80

(CAN ELPH110HSBK) BLACK(CAN ELPH110HSPK) PINK