Sunday, November 25, 2012

35. The Fiend of Second Avenue, 1871




         On the afternoon of August 26, 1871, a porter at the Hudson Railroad Freight Depot on 30th Street near Ninth Avenue noticed an intolerable stench coming from a small trunk delivered there earlier for shipment to Chicago.  The porter summoned the baggage master, who decided to open the trunk.  Prying the lid open, he removed a quilt and then an old blanket, and so discovered, doubled up inside, the naked dead body of a lovely young girl of about eighteen with abundant long auburn hair, and signs of incipient decay about the pelvic region.  Astonished, the baggage master alerted the police, who posted a guard around the trunk, which was already attracting scores of the curious.    

         A boy on the scene named Paddy recalled that the trunk had been delivered on a truck by a plainly dressed young woman who asked him to take the trunk to the baggage room.  Informed by the boy that she would have to buy her ticket first, she then went with the boy to the ticket office and bought a ticket to Chicago.  She told Paddy to be careful in handling the trunk, as it contained glass that she was sending to a friend.  The boy and the truckman carried the trunk to the baggage room, where it was checked through.  The woman then told the boy to meet her there at 7:30 p.m. to show her what car to enter, and left.  The boy wondered why she had come so early, since there was no train to Chicago until 8:00 o’clock that night.

         Right from the start there was little doubt in anyone’s mind that the young woman in the trunk had died while having an abortion.  New York State had been passing ever stricter laws banning abortion since 1828, and just three days before, on August 23, the New York Times had presented an exposé of the city’s numerous abortionists:


                        THE EVIL OF THE AGE. 

              Slaughter of the Innocents—Open Trade
                   in Crime—Where Vice is Nurtured—
                  The Moral and Physical Nature Both
                  Destroyed—Scenes Described by Eye-
                  Witnesses


         “There is a systematic business in wholesale murder conducted by men and women in this city that is seldom detected, rarely interfered with, and scarcely ever punished by law,” said reporter Augustus St. Clair, the author of the article, which affirmed that thousands of unborn infants were being murdered, and thousands and thousands of adults ruined in health and happiness, but so secretly that it was difficult to obtain evidence and witnesses.  Most abortionists, St. Clair insisted, were rank impostors without any knowledge of medicine.  The men were often former barbers, shoemakers, glaziers, and the like, and the women former midwives and nurses who therefore had some fragments of medical knowledge.  St. Clair then went on to recount the visits he had made to all the abortionists whose ads appeared regularly in the Times’s racy competitor, the New York Herald.  What followed was a roster of the city’s abortionists, from Madame Restell, the queen of the trade, down to the very dregs of the profession.  Among those quoted was a Madame Grindle, who insisted that hers was a noble work, saving poor, unfortunate women misunderstood by society, and a Madame Van Buskirk, who assured him that, in the event of a dead body, doctors and undertakers could be found to “fix” the matter. 

         That the Times managed to pull off such an exposé at this point is amazing, for it was in the midst of its campaign to destroy the Tweed Ring that governed the city.  But the article made quite a splash, and the news of a trunk murder a mere three days later rekindled the public’s interest and provoked a vigorous police investigation.  Eager to apprehend the murderers before morning, when the newspapers would warn them that the body had been discovered, Police Inspector Walling stayed in his office all night, directing all precincts by telegraph to search for a wagon matching Paddy’s description.  Meanwhile the unknown victim’s body, removed to Bellevue Hospital, was decomposing into a swollen black mass of corruption, leaving the police only a lock of hair with which to identify the corpse.  Hundreds braved the smell over the next few days to view the remains, ostensibly in hopes of identifying them.

         The next day brought a break in the case.  At 3:00 p.m. Walling, besieged by reporters and the curious, got a wire from the 18th precinct that the truckman being sought had come forward voluntarily.  Going to the station house, Walling met the truckman, Pickett by name, who said a lady had had him pick up the trunk at 687 Second Avenue and take it to the depot.  Going to that address, a sergeant in civilian clothes intercepted the resident, a heavyset man named Jacob Rosenzweig, who made a dash to escape before being seized.  More police came and, drawing their revolvers, saved the struggling Rosenzweig from being lynched by a crowd that was gathering.  When Pickett identified the prisoner as the man who had sent the trunk, Rosenzweig, who protested his innocence vigorously, was arrested and confined in the Tombs.  The woman who brought the trunk was not found, however, neither then nor later.


The arrest of Rosenzweig

         A German Jew who had come to this country from Russian Poland in 1865, Jacob Rosenzweig was a bull-necked, burly man with a mustache and red goatee.  A former saloonkeeper, he was indeed an abortionist with an office in Amity Place who practiced under the name Dr. Ascher and, like many of his colleagues in the business, displayed a bogus medical degree that he had obtained for forty dollars from an institution in Philadelphia.  Under the heading “MEDICAL” in the Herald, his ads read as follows: “Dr. Ascher.  Ladies in trouble guaranteed immediate relief, sure and safe; no fees required until perfectly satisfied.”  Which was pretty obvious.

         In his August 23 exposé St. Clair had described Rosenzweig as a man of about forty who claimed to be Russian but had the “twang” of a German Jew, which he tried to reproduce: “These other fellows are all humpugsh; they bromise to do someting vot they don’t do.  I poshitively do all operashunsh widout any danger, and as sheap as anybody.”  Reporting his arrest, the Times of August 29 described Rosenzweig as fat, coarse, and sensual-looking, with no hint of refinement in his person or manners, thus contributing to the public image of a man who would soon be labeled “the Fiend of Second Avenue.”  And in the Times of August 30 reporter St. Clair told how, when he interviewed Ascher/Rosenzweig for the exposé, the abortionist became suspicious, called him a spy and a devil, and threatened to kill him; only by himself drawing a revolver did the reporter manage to escape.  A dramatic incident, certainly, but one wonders why it wasn’t mentioned in the exposé itself, rather than days later after Rosenzweig’s arrest.

         The papers of August 31 announced that the victim had at last been identified by a physician and a dentist who had attended her.  She was Miss Alice Bowlsby, age 20, of Patterson, New Jersey, a young woman of good reputation, the daughter of a dressmaker.  She had left the home of her aunt in Newark on a train bound for New York, saying she was going home to Patterson, and had not been seen by friends or family since.  Learning this, the police searched Rosenzweig’s home again and found, in a heap of clothes near a wash tub, a handkerchief with faint letters in a corner that, under magnification, proved to be “A. A. Bowlsby.”  At last, hard evidence!

         But what of the man in the case?  Alice Bowlsby’s aunt said that Walter F. Conklin of Patterson, the son of a silk mill owner, might have become intimate with her niece.  On August 31 young Conklin took out a gun and killed himself, leaving this note: “I have had a morbid idea of the worthlessness of life, and now to be obliged to testify in this affair and cause unpleasantness to my family is more than life is worth.  Good by, dear father, mother, brother and sister.  Walt.”  With all Patterson agog, the tragedy was complete.

         And the accused?  Though at times dejected, he continued to assert his innocence, saying that people believed him to be a rich Jew and had therefore had him incarcerated, hoping to extract his fortune from him by persecution.  His wife and fourteen-year-old daughter Rosa, who were allowed to visit him, supported his claims of innocence, and he quickly retained an attorney.  And who was that attorney?  William Howe, who was just beginning his career as the most notorious and successful defense attorney of the day, the bejeweled elephant and flamboyant courtroom lawyer (some would say mountebank) described in post #29.  Howe’s appearance in the case guaranteed that it would be lively, since he had a knack for winning acquittals for defendants seemingly doomed to the gallows.   

         Howe went with his client to the coroner’s inquest at Bellevue on September 1, where Rosenzweig showed no hint of anxiety.  But in the face of abundant incriminating testimony – the boy Paddy, the truckman, a servant of Rosenzweig’s who had seen a young woman arrive at her employer's home, an undertaker whom Rosenzweig had consulted, Alice Bowlsby’s physician and dentist, and others – Howe could not prevent the verdict: peritonitis due to an abortion by Rosenzweig between August 23 and 26.  When Howe and a policeman accompanied Rosenzweig by carriage back to the Tombs, a crowd of several hundred hissed and groaned at Rosenzweig, who would have been assaulted if he had been on foot.  Meanwhile the arrest of several other abortionists kept the public’s indignation at a fever pitch.  Even the Herald joined in, denouncing the “unscrupulous quacks who ruin health and morals, at so much per head, without regard to medicine or law” – quacks whose ads it was still willing to print, minus that of Ascher/Rosenzweig.  Indeed, Rosenzweig's notoriety as the Fiend of Second Avenue now eclipsed even that of Thomas Lookup Evans, the "Ghoul of Chatham Street" (the Herald was always generous with epithets), who in May of that year had been convicted of an attempt to commit manslaughter (i.e., abortion) and packed off to do three and a half years at hard labor in the state's most celebrated repository of felons, Sing Sing.

         When Rosenzweig’s trial in the Court of General Sessions opened in October (things moved faster in those days), with Recorder Hackett presiding, District Attorney Garvin told the jury that killing an unborn child was murder and worthy of the gallows, though the worst the defendant could receive was a mere seven years in prison.  Never, he insisted, had so strong and clear a case as this one been presented to a jury.  Then, calling the same witnesses who had appeared at the Coroner’s inquest, he wove a tight web of circumstantial evidence.  After that, Howe presented the defense: a Mrs. Bowlsby of Brooklyn who said her daughter Anna lost a handkerchief during a visit to Rosenzweig and his family; three witnesses who testified that Rosenzweig was a man of good character; and Rosenzweig himself, who insisted that he had never had dealings with Alice Bowlsby or the truckman, and had never performed an abortion.  Then, in a surprise move to clinch his case, the prosecutor called Nellie Willis to the stand, a young woman who testified that she herself had had an abortion by instruments from Rosenzweig, with subsequent bleeding that necessitated a stay in a hospital.  This testimony was significant because, given the public attitude toward abortion and bearing a child out of wedlock, witnesses in abortion cases were hard to find and, when found, had a way of disappearing.

         William Howe’s two-hour summary claimed that the corpse sent to the Morgue was not Alice Bowlsby, whose mother never viewed it to identify it; that Conklin probably procured her death to protect himself, then sent the body to the house of an alleged abortionist, and finally killed himself to avoid exposure; that the handkerchief belonged to Miss Bowlsby of Brooklyn; and that the prosecution had offered no positive evidence that Rosenzweig was an abortionist.  Though his final plea for his client had the wife and daughter in tears, this was, I suspect, one of Howe’s less inspired efforts, involving an alternative explanation that reached the levels of fantasy, and the amazing coincidence of another A. Bowlsby and her handkerchief.  As regards the Mrs. Bowlsby who testified, it should be remembered that Howe had an army of auxiliaries available -- for proper remuneration -- to add their tears or cheers in the courtroom as needed, and to offer whatever testimony seemed appropriate.  

         The district attorney’s summary presented movingly the plight of a young girl who, when ruined and betrayed by her seducer, in desperation sought out one of the scoundrels advertising in the papers.  The Recorder then discredited the evidence of Mrs. Bowlsby of Brooklyn as hearsay, and urged the jury not to be influenced by prejudice against the defendant or by sympathy for his family.  Sent out to deliberate, the jurors were back in less than two hours with a verdict: guilty of murder in the second degree, the prescribed penalty for causing death by abortion.  The Recorder then addressed the defendant, calling him a man of uncommon nerve and dangerous, and sentenced him to the maximum term possible of seven years in state prison at hard labor. 


Sing Sing, Jacob Rosenzweig's first home away from home
         So ended the case of the Fiend of Second Avenue, or so it seemed.  But not if you know William Howe and his partner Abe Hummel (post #30), and what they were capable of.  While their client was busy at hard labor in the state prison at Sing Sing and then at Auburn, where he complained that "Howe didn't do a damned thing for me," they were giving hard scrutiny to the prosecution’s case and the new and tougher abortion law that the state legislature passed in April of 1872.  Then, in November 1872, Howe argued in the State Supreme Court that the last-minute testimony of Nellie Willis was illegal, since it constituted a separate charge not included in the indictment, for which the defense was therefore not prepared.  The court had to agree and so reversed the conviction, ordering a new trial.  Rosenzweig was immediately brought from Auburn back to the Tombs in New York City, pending the second trial.

         But William Howe wasn’t done yet.  He now argued in the State Supreme Court that the state’s new abortion law of 1872 specifically repealed the 1869 statute under which his client had been tried; since the new law could not be applied retroactively, and had no saving clause allowing cases in progress to continue to be tried under the old law, there was now no law on the books applying to Rosenzweig, who must therefore be set free.  The thought that this detested felon might be liberated dismayed legal experts and journalists alike, all the more so since Rosenzweig's colleague in iniquity, Thomas Lookup Evans, the Ghoul of Chatham Street, had been released from prison when the Court of Appeals found an error in the judge's instructions to the jury and therefore ordered a new trial that seemed unlikely to occur.  Now, while Rosenzweig's appeal was being argued in court, the Times received a “disgusting note” from the felon in question that it deigned to print in its issue of February 14, 1873 :

To the Editor of the Times
     Poland has no Friends – I am a Polander – I have no Friends – I am poor – God knows that I am not the man who committed the terrible deed, the Press are doing all they can to prejudice my case, all I ask is Fair play under the law, will You do as much for a unfortunate man without money or rich friends as to let these few lines appear in your great paper from the countryman of Pulaski and Koscuski.
     Yours & & &
        J. ROSENZWEIG m d

It should be remembered that Rosenzweig came to this country from Russian Poland in 1865, just two years after a Polish revolt was crushed by Russia while the rest of Europe remained aloof.  Unmoved, the Times in printing Rosenzweig’s note announced that it would be very glad to see him brought to the gallows.

The matter dragged on, as legal matters do, but on November 13, 1873, Judge Sutherland of the Court of General Sessions agreed that there was indeed no law under which even so notorious a criminal as Rosenzweig could be kept in custody, and therefore discharged him into the arms of his overjoyed wife and daughter, and a crowd of friends who congratulated him on his good fortune.  The Times denounced the legislature’s “hasty and bungling legislation,” but since abortion cases were almost ever tried again -- prosecutors were too overburdened, and witnesses too elusive -- the Fiend of Second Avenue was now free as a bird.  What then became of him isn’t clear, but one suspects that he wasted little time in departing from the city where he was somewhat less than persona grata. 

Many aspects of the case were ignored by the press of the time.  Why, for instance, were there so many abortionists?  Obviously, because there was great demand for abortion.  And why was that?  Because unmarried women like Alice Bowlsby dreaded the disgrace of bearing a child out of wedlock, and this country, unlike many in Europe, had no foundling hospitals where such women could give birth discreetly without compromising their reputation.  But respectable married women with large families, lacking knowledge of birth control, also sought out abortionists so as to escape the burden of further childbearing.  Not to mention actresses with obligations, and women so in the social swim that they couldn’t bear to miss the season because of pregnancy.  Also, it's worth keeping in mind that in those days, when doctors were just beginning to wash their hands and sterilize their instruments before attending women in childbirth, the mortality rate among women giving birth was high.  So the demand for abortion was great, and many unskilled adventurers were happy to meet it … for a price. 

         The situation didn’t change anytime soon.  In 1873 the zealous puritanical reformer Anthony Comstock (more of him in a future post) got Congress to pass what became known as the Comstock law, banning obscene matter from the mail, “obscene” being construed to include any article intended to prevent conception or procure abortion.  This legislation, which even forced medical manuals to eliminate certain illustrations so as to comply with the law, was enforced well into the twentieth century, and many states enacted even stricter laws.  With time, however, public opinion changed, the law was undermined in various court decisions, and in 1983 the Supreme Court finally declared key aspects of the law unconstitutional.

Source note:  Lurid crimes of the past have appeal.  The story of the trunk murder of 1871 is told in many blogs and websites, with varying degrees of accuracy.  Some say that Rosenzweig was tried twice, which he was not; some add fictional details 
for which there is little basis in fact; and some are blissfully unaware of the final disposition of the case, whereby Rosenzweig was set free.  Facsimiles of some of the Times’s articles reporting the case are available online, but I have relied instead on my notes from the press of the period, primarily but not exclusively the Times, taken while doing background research for my biography of Restell: The Wickedest Woman in New York: Madame Restell, the Abortionist  (Archon Books, 1988).  Aha! some of you are now exclaiming: clever Browder, he’s drumming up sales for his book, hoping to sluice money from our impoverished pockets into his own.  Ah, if only that were the case!  But alas, no, the book is long out of print and available only in reference libraries or second hand online at an outrageous price, not a penny of which comes to me.  A good free compendium of the book that includes direct quotes is available at victoriangothic.org. 

Thought for the day:  Silence: our end and origin.


                                    © 2012  Clifford Browder



Sunday, November 18, 2012

34. Praying Mantises and Painted Ladies: The Surreal World of Insects


         This post is about bugs, and most specifically insects.  No, I don’t mean our fellow tenants who pay no rent, the roaches, or the little bugs that have adopted my apartment as a habitation and a home – bugs that I am zealously massacring daily to the best of my ability.  I mean the insects that have the good grace to stay outside where they belong, and that don’t require the tribute of our blood (which excludes female mosquitoes) and only sting in self-defense.  Though in the past I’ve always been more oriented toward birds and wildflowers, while observing the wildflowers in summer I couldn’t help but see the insects that feed on them, spread their pollen, ravage them, or find in them a snug repository.  You can’t separate insects from flowers; they depend on one another, are inseparable.

                                                                                    User 2535
         Let’s begin with one I’ve seen only rarely, since it doesn’t bestir itself much but waits in place patiently for other small creatures to come within the range of its forelegs: the praying mantis.  The name comes from the insect’s posture, which to many suggests prayer, though “preying mantis” would be just as appropriate, since the mantis is predatory, feeding mostly on other insects, but sometimes on larger creatures as well, even up to three times its size.  It waits quietly until a victim approaches, then grasps it in its long spiked forelegs, from which there is no escape.  It has even been known to devour a wasp eating a bee.  Such is the world of insects: ruthless and surreal.  I've never been much interested in science fiction, because nature gives me the real-life equivalent, as seen in the appearance of this sinister character with the hungry jaws and barbed forelegs, easily matching anything that the wildest Surrealist artist could come up with.  And if you wonder why its prey comes within reach, consider how it blends in with its surroundings.  In the next two photos, can you see it clearly?  In the first one, maybe.  But the second (green) one??





File:Mante religieuse FR 2012.jpg
                                                                  JLPC
                                                                                  Nick Smith
         Now for something less sinister: painted ladies.  (Once again, please, no jokes.)  The painted lady is a common and wide-ranging butterfly found all over the world, as its other name, the cosmopolite, indicates.  (There is a distinctly New World species, the American painted lady, that differs from the cosmopolite only in a few details.)  The painted lady is easily recognized by the black-and-white corners of its forewings, and the rest of its wings orange with black spots.  It is one of my favorite butterflies, usually visible every summer, though sometimes abundant and sometimes fairly rare.  Last spring I saw a large number of them in vegetation along the Hudson River, which suggested a migration in large numbers, though a week later they were gone.  Its life span, alas, is only two to four weeks.  A related species is the red admiral, easily identified by the red-orange bands across the forewings and on the margins of the hind wings: another common summer visitor throughout North America, and another of my favorites.


                                                                          Zorba the Greek


         Insects usually elicit from me feelings of fascination and wonder, but in one case they elicit disgust.  In spring you will often see a whitish silken tent in the branches of a tree whose leaves are just coming out, and in that tent, if you look close, you will find a writhing mass of tent caterpillars who at intervals emerge to feed on the tender leaves of the host tree and then return to the tent.  I say “feed on,” but at times it amounts to defoliation.  Probably the amateur observer should let nature take its course, but this writhing mass so offends me, and I so love trees, that on occasion I have used a sturdy twig to rip the tent off the tree and then trample its squirming contents to death, thus preserving the tree from this menace.  But there are so many tents visible in the spring that my perhaps foolish interference poses no real threat to this species of caterpillars, the larvae of a moth, who in time leave the tent, disperse on the ground, enter the pupa (cocoon) stage, and finally emerge as adult moths who quickly breed and reproduce and then, within twenty-four hours in the case of the female, die.  Underlying this antipathy of mine to the larvae may be the suspicion, supported by some scientists, that insects through sheer numbers may in time inherit the earth.  





                                        Gary Alpert
         Tent caterpillars may inspire antipathy, but they aren’t a menace to us.  Not so the wood tick or dog tick, a tiny eight-legged creature akin to spiders and therefore not an insect. About 3-4 millimeters in size in the adult stage, it appears in this area usually in May and June, though a rainy season may extend the time somewhat.  Its nourishment is the blood of a host, so it waits patiently in weeds and grasses at about knee level until a mammal passes and it can latch onto it and, after a decent interval (about 24 hours) feed.  They are often found on dogs.  I have encountered these ticks both on the Palisades shore path in New Jersey and at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Sanctuary in Queens, where they can be abundant.  Even though I avoided brush and wore light-covered clothing to make them visible, and long sleeves to cover my arms, I at times spotted them on me and had to flick them off.  Even so, hours after returning from an outing I once encountered one crawling in my hair, and on another occasion found one skulking in a private part I shan’t further describe (your imagination can do wonders); in both cases they had yet to dig in, so getting rid of them was easy.  Which is just as well, since they can communicate disease. 

                                               Stuart Meek
         But the real menace in this area is the wood tick’s cousin, the much smaller deer tick or lyme tick; prevalent from March to October and almost undetectable by virtue of its size, it communicates lyme disease, a serious but treatable ailment.  I have managed to avoid these tiny pests, which is little short of a miracle, since in my annual visits to Monhegan Island in Maine in blissful ignorance I often visited a wet, low-lying area where I later learned they were especially thick.  Bob was not so lucky.  Even though he hiked less than I did on the island, on two separate occasions he discovered a tick digging into him.  Luckily, both times there was a doctor on the island who removed the tick and gave him antibiotics; he didn't get lyme disease.  Birds probably brought the ticks to the island, where deer were their preferred host (though the ticks are quite willing to settle for dogs or humans instead).  The Islanders finally voted to rid the island of its beloved deer, so a professional shooter came to the island and did the job, and since then the incidence of lyme ticks has dwindled and that idyllic island is rid of the chief nuisance plaguing it (aside from a few objectionable tourists).  To my knowledge, the lyme tick has not appeared within the limits of the city of New York, though it has so invaded Westchester County, just north of here, that gardens there have to be avoided through all the warmer months, or planned carefully so as to create low areas, free of weeds and grasses, that form a barrier the ticks don’t cross.



                                                                             Patrick Coin
         There are always those creatures that one knows from pictures but has never seen.  At the top of my insect list is the hickory horned devil, the larval or caterpillar stage in the life cycle of the regal moth, a species found from southern New Jersey south and to the west.  The adult moth is rather humdrum in appearance, but just look at the caterpillar, its body bright green with black-tipped red horns, a candidate for horror movies and just 
as surreal as the praying mantis.  I wouldn’t want it in my dreams.


         Another insect that I’ve never seen – indeed, one that is almost invisible – is the walking stick, whose long, thin body imitates the twigs it lives among.  A glance at the photograph shows why this is considered one of the most successful camouflage jobs in nature.  Can you detect the insect?  Be honest.


File:Ctenomorpha chronus body.jpg
                                                                                    Fir0002
                                                                               


                                                                                       ggallice
         Finally, a species that I have seen just once, hugging a tree trunk in broad daylight in High Rock Park on Staten Island: the luna moth.  For me, this long-tailed creature has a spectral beauty, strange, haunting, almost unreal.  Lime green with transparent eyespots, it has a wing span of up to 
4 1/2 inches, making it one of the largest moths in North America.  Though common in hardwood forests in the eastern half of the country, it is rarely seen, being nocturnal and having a life span of just one week.  It emerges only to mate, has no mouth, never eats (talk about focused living!).  Why the name "luna moth"?   Probably because the eyespots are marked with crescents that suggest the moon.  But for me, the creature is so strangely beautiful that it could well be a visitor from our own or another moon.  On this note I’ll end my brief look at the buggy world.  I could go on and on, but nothing surpasses the luna moth for otherworldly beauty. 

Thoughts for the day:  

The primordial language is light.  (For this, I am indebted to modern physics.)

Light made flesh is life.  

Updates:  

The studio of station WBAI (post #16) on Wall Street ("in the belly of the beast") was flooded by Hurricane Sandy.  They continued broadcasting thanks to Gary Null, who let them use his uptown facilities.  They have just returned to their building.

The Union Square greenmarket (post #17) was suspended following the hurricane, so emergency and construction vehicles could be parked there.  I went three times and found no market.  Now half the market is back, but part of its site is still in use, so the rest of the market is up at Madison Square.

Westbeth, the massive artists' residence near the Hudson River where Barton Benes resided (#33), was flooded by Sandy, with nine feet of water in the basement, and water up to five feet high surging down Bethune Street to Washington Street, a whole block from the riverfront.  Residents were without electricity (therefore no lights or elevators) for four days, and had no running water for seven days, and no heat or hot water for eleven days.  

Occupy Wall Street (#1, #4) has transformed itself into Occupy Sandy, a volunteer relief effort that, working with other volunteers, is bringing supplies and volunteers to victims of the hurricane not yet reached by other organizations.  Their current needs: nonperishable food, air mattresses, batteries, crowbars, and other items.  To find out how to help, go to their website.  More power to them!

                                                        © 2012  Clifford Browder