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Daily News from New York, New York • 6

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

6 Monday. January 11, 1988 daily news iij a N-r you're fromN jJSv mSM-W PUBLISHER'? Pau Rgby on vacafon. Apple y) Sauge L. ui I t.iT, i I -J A cn.rrt lie herd recent visit frcaitha Tho cr," c-d crrr.zrs MjMJl' "fjt i An cn-ilio TV thect for dsn popular CCzrti Lx centered a rTMwaj mjf paajari ft Jt4 mm -m-m Iff "llliiiisa llllllll to build a nsv; hotel: First, ycu rjcl fcb Harry Mackkme, real estate's version of "The Exterminator," is at it again. Three years after he made headlines with the illegal, middle-of-the-night demolition of a row of W.

44th St. buildings, the developer is building a 600-room luxury hotel smack dab on the disputed site. Not one to hide his light under a bushel basket, Harry's calling it Hotel Macklowe. His new son-in-law, Ken Swig, is said to be overseeing the project. "From what I know, he is quite proud of it," hotel consultant Stephen W.

Brener told Sauce. The offices of Macklowe and Swig did not return calls. On Jan. 7, 1985, a wrecking firm without permits razed four buildings, including the Hotel Lenox at 149 W. 44th St Macklowe had just purchased the site, and the demolition came just before a city moratorium kicked in that barred the razing of single-room-occupancy hotels like the Lenox.

Macklowe later agreed to put up $2 million for homeless housing, and last week a $1.5 million fine was levied against the contractor who tore the building down. A Building Department spokesman said Macklowe is within his rights to build since he has waited for the 18-month moratorium to run out ny? If Sauce knew the answer to that, it woukJVe been the lead item. Such delays "are inexcusable," a lawyer for Xerox wrote the agency. The city has 30 days to respond to the complaint. talk about in Ohio during the wintertime.

But the chatter this week is about a big New York company with a couple of thousand employes that about to exit the Apple for beautiful downtown Toledo. What's the name of the compa- CSSTCfCZI Department's ladder of command, would just as soon not taOt about ladders, thank you. Condon is wearing a cast on his wrist alter breaking it in a fail from a ladder in his Brooklyn home. He was heard grumbling at the Bay Ridge stattonhouse: "It was the first time I climbed that ladder, and it's my test" First Deauty A decade aso. Howard Hunrftz second sionar only to on the Police IM ti 1 1 1 ihiii C3 cenz C3 KSTCCT IMMh Thaieari, ex go-go dancer and ex-girl friend of Benv ward Ooatz.

has tost her $10 ma-lion damage suit against the OA's office for the search of her pad. That was soon after Goetz arrest for shooting four teens on the IRT. The DA's people said they were looking for a poem (entitled, 1 Want to Be a Prostitute, but My Husband Won't Let based on a larceny complaint brought by Theisen's previous boy friend. She maintained in her lawsuit that authorities were realty looking for Dsmie's gun. According to our Fran McMorrii, Xerox has discovered if no for a big corporation to fight made headlines as the very tough principal of Long Island City High School.

He preached the old values and demanded students wear ties, sit in their seats and respect authority. Later, he became a commentator on TVs "60 Minutes." Now that another iron-fisted principal, Joe Clark, is making similar headlines out in Paterson, Hurwitz reminds us his view of school discipline hasnt changed all that much. Retired from the school system but still active in education, he's putting down his thoughts in a forthcoming book, "The Last Angry iy 1 Z2, I I.IP.III.PWM City Had than it is for the rest of us. The office equipment firm, frustrated after 31 letters to the Koch administration went unanswered, finally appealed to a Manhattan judge last week. It wants the Department of General Services to pay a $36,449.63 bill due since 1965 for a 1090 Xerox copier on the floor of the Municipal Building.

dismissed the suit Iheisen had waited too long in fl ing the 3 TC1C3 T. Normally there's not much to 1 It i. 111.

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