STORY TELLER FOR THE KIDS, Bryan Adrian at the British Council in Tbilisi, Saturday morning story telling hour ... click this link
Features included in this edition:
Street News, New York City, June 1993, Bryan Adrian reporter and Norbert Bergrath photographer
"SOME DECENT STREET FOLK", "Interviews 1 and 2" by Bryan Adrian
plus....
"EMS: Emergency Medical Services", NYC 1993, by Bryan Adrian
Columnist SEYMOUR DURST June 1993 commentary
Seymour Durst, columnist
Seymour's son, Robert Durst, has been recently made famous/infamous once again, in the 2010 movie "All Good Things" with Ryan Gosling & Kirsten Dunst, and the HBO 2015 miniseries "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst"
"Helping the Homeless to Help Themselves"
STREET
NEWS was founded in 1989 by Libertarian Party
advocate and Editor-In-Chief, Hutchinson Persons & Co-founder Wendy
Oxenhorn. She left Street News after her
first year over "philosophical differences on how to run the organization".
The paper experienced financial troubles in the early 1990s due to embezzlement
of funds. Richard Moskowitz, who started
as a vendor for SN, threw out Hutchinson
[literally out the window and into the streets on his head], over suspicion of
stealing from the company till. Mr.
Moskowitz immediately became managing editor and publisher. He then hired Bryan Adrian to be his deputy
editor and feature writer, keeping Janet Wickenhaver on the staff as his assistant
publisher. Later the paper was taken over by its printer,
Sam Chen of Expedi Printing, after heated battles and quarrels with Moskowitz
and Adrian, who did not want to let go of the paper during a slump in sales. Chen attempted to turn a profit from Street
News, but he was no match for the talent and skills of the Moskowitz/Adrian
partnership, and he was quickly unsuccessful.
By the mid-1990s, Street News' sales had dropped significantly and some
predicted that the newspaper was going to end, especially after Mayor Rudolph
W. Giuliani supported
the crackdown on panhandling and peddling in the subways. Nearing Christmas Day
in 1994, Ms. Wickenhaver told the New York Times that the five-year-old
tabloid-size paper was $15,000 in the red. She said the owner, [a printer who
turned owner, Sam Chen, the same who had thrown out Moscowitz and Adrian in an
internal budget/power coup], had ordered the shutdown after concluding that he
could not cover the printing costs any longer.
In April 1996, John "Indio"
Washington took the reins at the troubled newspaper. "I became the first Native American
Indian Editor in Chief of SN," he says.
"Sales went up to 20,000 per issue thanks to our staff of
reporters, vendors 'n, of course, our readers!
We are still the only for-profit homeless paper in the United States,"
he said at the time.
On September 11, 1997, in Seattle, Washington,
"SN" (STREET NEWS)
received an award from The North American Street Newspaper
Association for "inspiring the modern street newspaper movement.
Modeled on Street News, several years later, a parallel type of newspaper
opened in London
called THE BIG ISSUE. Street News inspired over the next decade, a
global basket of homelessness issues news publications. Germany has 19 such periodicals,
with combined annual sales of 4m. Norway, which counted only 6,091
homeless people in the latest national survey in 2009, publishes ten papers
with a combined circulation of 133,000—up 10,000 on 2011. (Many of its sellers
are poor but not technically homeless.) Local `versions of Britain’s Big Issue have recently got going in Nigeria and Macedonia. Australia’s
title sells 33,000 a week, up from 7,000 in 1996. Oddly, street papers are faring worse in the
countries where they began. America’s
pioneering Street News, which started in New
York in 1989, closed in 2007. No replacement has
emerged, though the city’s shelters count a population of well over 59,000
homeless people.
Publishing manager, Richard Moskowitz
"Street News" New York City, first newspaper on homelessness to be published in the world. Also featuring news and commentary on joblessness, involuntary part time work, vets with no jobs, urgent need for national healthcare system, vets health and legal problems, etc.
Norbert Bergrath, Photographer
Bryan Adrian, reporter and deputy editor
Richard Moskowitz, General News Manager
Seymour Durst, columnist
Seymour's son, Robert Durst, has been recently made famous/infamous once again, in the 2010 movie "All Good Things" with Ryan Gosling & Kirsten Dunst, and the HBO 2015 miniseries "The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst"
Seymour Durst's 1993 column on early FEMALE COMBAT PILOTS [Seymour is famous for his DEBT CLOCK that was for decades showing at Times Square how much real money was bleeding out of the U.S. Social Security Trust and leaving us all with NADA one day forthcoming]
click here for full story on Seymour Durst and Times Square real estate "building preservationists' holocaust hole" due to many Times Square historic theaters being sold/demolished for grandiose overpriced office tower real estate developments, in THE ELECTRONIC WHIP, LONDON
Short stories, blogs, poems, filmscripts, news articles, video & tramp journalism, by Bryan Adrian ... click this link
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