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Daily News from New York, New York • 26

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

(CM Ts an entirely new napkins for sale are dis-look for the East played under shelves hold- Village: white walls, ing wooden tea cannisters. MeachetT1-1 firtonr "VWii hIso can- eet i vnn-tpa tlfverjrnnttt' cards ana snoe insoies (they deodorize), as well as a wooden travel box holding a pot, two small cups and two canisters of Japanese and Chinese teas. pure, Zen-like. And the WHd Uly Tea Market is as serene as its West Chelsea parent, the Wild Lily Tea Room. Sit at one of the Wild Lily Tea Market's see-through tables and order 5 '9 yy---! jt km fr-i I a And if you crave a brightly colored plastic apron in orange, greenish purple or turquoise snacks chosen to go with a selection of more than 50 teas.

Some snacks can be like one worn by the manager, they're also available to buy. With warm weather here, outside tables also allow customers to watch the world go by as they sip iced teas jasmine, mint and strawberry-flavored Lulu's Dream among them. Wild Lily Tea Market 545 E. 12th St, between Avenue A and Avenue (212) 598-9097. Irene Sax bought individually, including sugar cookies almond meringues fat flaky scones ($1.75) and slices of green-tea pound cake.

There is also a sweet assortment of candied beans, rice-crisp balls and crunchy fried dough fingers (all for and a savory combination of spicy beans, tangy beef jerky and black sesame candies Cups, place mats and HOWARD SIMMONS DAILY NEWS For a lawyer on the way up, it's the worst-case scenario In the opening of Philip Jolowicz's "Walls of Silence," Fin Border is a Wall Street lawyer destined for a partnership in a British law firm about to merge with a powerful American firm. But when a 6 a.m. phone call from friend and client J. Carlson ends up being an invitation to witness a suicide and mass carnage on the FDR Drive, Border finds himself caught in a web of deadly corruption. The victim of an elaborate setup, Border has his clients torn from him, his bank accounts pillaged, and is soon facing civil and criminal charges.

Within the firm, he finds no loyalty and soon discovers that the long-dormant animosities toward his deceased father, a former partner at the firm, are alive and virulent Lucky for him, Carol 1 The reigning Best Picture Oscar winner comes to tape and DVD on Tuesday with the full treatment "A Beautiful Mind" (Universal, 136 rated PG-13) is on a double DVD that includes commentary by director Ron Howard and screenwriter Aklva Goldsman; interviews with Howard and producing partner Brian Grazer; deleted scenes, and a chat with John Nash, the schizophrenic math genius portrayed by Russell Crowe (pictured above with Best Supporting Actress Jennifer Connelly). "It's fair to say that this is the first DVD project that I've consciously worked on from the moment I knew it was going to be a 'go' movie," Howard said during a phone interview this week. During production, he said, he realized some scenes would have to go simply because of tempo and flow. "I knew I was going to want to put together a deleted scenes section" for the DVD, he said. Howard said, "It's the first time I've been able to do the commentary while the filmmaking experience was really vivid and fresh in my mind.

Usually it's a kind of nostalgic i revisiting. I'm beginning to view the DVD as an opportuni-ty to sort of do what authors do with author's notes and acknowledgments, a preface." The DVD is available in separate wide-screen and full-frame (TV-shaped) versions, which is fine with Howard. "I really appreciate that the films can be represented in their -original aspect ratio," he said. "I know a lot of people, even my own kids, they don't like that They would just rather see a nice little screen. I'm really delighted that for people who care, the original format doesn't just vanish with the end of the theatrical release." i THE MAJESTIC (Warner, 152 rated PG, also on i DVD) Jim Carrey enters folksy James Stewart territory, playing a screenwriter hunted in the 1950s by the House Un-American Activities Committee who loses his memory after an accident He ends up in a town where everyone believes he's a local war hero long thought dead.

Director Frank Darabont Shawshank Redemption," "The Green moves unhurriedly, and both the DVD and the VHS contain still more scenes. ROLLERBALL (MGM, 93 rated also on DVD) In this remake of the 1975 futuristic thriller, Chris Klein plays the star athlete In a brutal roller derbymotocross hybrid broadcast to a worldwide audience from that great sports center Kazakhstan. The film was rated PG-13 in theaters, but some nudity has been added and it's now an R. The DVD has commentary by Klein and co-stars Rebecca Romijn-Stamos and LL Cool J. NEWOJDVp BLUE VELVET SPECIAL EDITION (MGM, 120 mins.

plus extras, rated R) Thoughtful new comments from Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini, Dennis Hopper and Laura Dern, and an older chat with writer-director David Lynch, make this a must for Lynch lovers. The remastered 1986 film, in which the discovery of a severed human ear leads a young man into a surreal small-town nightmare, remains Anne, an old flame and senior ui-house counsel with Jefferson trust Carlson's former employer comes to his aid with pillow talk and inside information, but like everyone else in this morass of murder and deceit her motives are hardly pristine. She has a plan to get Fin back on his feet and out of the country for a while, but it involves going to the one place he can't stand. Jolowicz, a finance attorney, delivers a twist-filled thriller in his debut as a novelist. Atria ($25, 448 pages) Spencer Morgan i he city's maritime history clings to India House, a Florentine-style palazzo on Hanover Square, at the a north end of the recently restored Stone St.

One of the few pre-Civil War buildings remaining in lower Manhattan, the handsome brownstone structure was built by Richard J. Carman in 1851 for the Hanover Bank. In the 1600s, Hanover Square was home to the merchants whose ships docked nearby; it was also known as a place where the infamous Capt. Kidd paid social calls. From 1870 to 1885, the building housed the N.Y.

Cotton Exchange and WR. Grace Co. By 1914, it was a private club, renamed India House for its members' interest in foreign trade. Now home to Harry's Bar and Bayard's restaurant, its interior boasts, nausea theme suited to, THOMAS MONASTER DAILY NEWS CM CM cm" CM perplexing and riveting. Also Included: stills from scenes lost from the original four-hour cut, and the 1986 "Siskel Ebert review in which Roger Ebert nearly pops with anger over Rossellini's nudity.

E-mail: gputzer editnydallynews.com a maiden, called "Glory of the Sea," stands beneath a skylight and a bell that once rang aboard the 1920s luxury liner Leviathan can be found in the vestibule. f- Six original gas lamps grace the outside of India House. Lorraine B. Dlehl Hanover Square's seafaring history. Maritime paintings and models of some 35 ships are there for the viewing.

At the far end of the main room, a pair of brass cannons flanks richly carved banisters along an exposed staircase. wooden masthead, shaped like 3 CO in i.

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Pages Available:
18,845,358
Years Available:
1919-2024