School searches fax machines for leaks



Chester superintendent wants to know who sent honor roll to the newspaper
By Becca Tucker
Chester — Student honor rolls publicly recognize students’ hard work while inspiring others toward the same achievement.But the Chester honor roll published in The Chronicle last week has also inspired the superintendent of schools, Helen Anne Livingston, to search the district’s fax machines to find out who sent the honor roll to this newspaper. Not finding the evidence she was looking for, the superintendent sent an e-mail to district employees warning them off (please see e-mail, left).
Livingston’s e-mail was forwarded to the paper by a concerned person who, like everyone interviewed for this story, asked not to be identified for fear of retaliation.They may have good reason to worry. While public employees have the right to speak about matters of public concern, they also have an obligation to follow the directives of their employer.“I think the law is probably muddled here,” said Gene Policinski, vice-president and executive director of the First Amendment Center, a non-profit educational operation. But, he said, “The public has a right and a need to know what its schools are doing ... I would hope the school officials would be able to separate concerns over Web site comments from the beneficial aspects of using your newspaper and others to tell the public about what’s going on in the schools.”
In this economic climate, with this superintendent, teachers fear that even associating with an employee of The Chronicle could cost them their livelihoods.“In general, teachers can be disciplined for insubordination, which is not following directives,” said Carl Korn, the spokesperson for the United Teachers Federation. Discipline can range from “a talking to, to a reprimand, to suspension, to termination.”A teacher speaks outStill, one teacher broke the gag order and spoke with the newspaper. “I didn’t like how it was going,” he said.The teacher admires the superintendent. “I feel she’s done a very good job and a big improvement over the last superintendent,” he said. “This issue is a minor blemish on what otherwise is a very good and very well-run office. Top to bottom, I am impressed with her.”
But he is also confident that he is well within his rights to talk to The Chronicle. “As union members, we have the right to talk to anyone we want to, as long as it’s not confidential,” he said. “We can express our opinion. You can talk without fear of retaliation.”The local teachers’ union, the Chester Teachers’ Association, has been no help at all, according to this teacher.“I would like the union president to explain to the administration what our rights are — that we have the right to talk to anyone we want to,” he said. “It’s not based on who they’re happy with and that type of stuff.”The local union president, Pamela Kavenagh, is also Chester Academy’s school psychologist, so she would not return our call. She could, however, comment through Carl Korn, the United Federation of Teachers spokesperson. Korn called Kavenagh and reported back that the Chester Teachers’ Association supports free speech, free press, and free association, but is disturbed by the content of the online comments posted on The Chronicle’s Web site (see Background, right).
The teacher who spoke with The Chronicle has a different take on the unsavory Web comments.“You ignore them,” he said. “You can’t go around getting people not to talk about you, and you can’t go around focusing on things you can’t control. We have more important things to do. I believe it’s a minor inconvenience. So they say nasty things about you — it happens all the time.”By cutting off contact with the newspaper, “I would definitely say there’s a loss,” he said. “You’re not going to get all the good stuff that’s out there in the schools, and there’s a lot of good stuff. If you do anything that’s extraordinary, or a kid does something extraordinary, you want to hype it up. It can be something in class, or some kind of extracurricular activity, or some sort of contest we’ve done well in — all-county chorus, band, speeches.”The school board president and superintendent did not return calls for comment.
Parents feel a loss, fear repercussionsThat sense of loss is echoed by parents who used to read about their kids in the paper.“I used to open The Chronicle and see Chester students in there regularly,” one mother said. “Maybe I’d see a picture my daughter drew, or a picture of her in her Halloween outfit. We looked forward to getting The Chronicle on Friday. I don’t rush to my mailbox anymore.”All three moms who spoke to us did so on condition of anonymity. Even though parents were never told not to talk to the newspaper, they also fear retaliation from what they see as a vengeful administration.
“I have two kids who have to get through the system,” said the mother. “I don’t want to cause any waves. I don’t want their names to show up in the paper, their teachers to have any kind of grudge. We’re talking about Helen Anne Livingston. She’s the top of the food chain.”“I really think that this is dividing the community,” said another mother. “I almost feel people are forced to take sides. You’re either pro-Chronicle or you’re pro-Livingston. The further this is prolonged, I think it’s going to divide the community.”This mother worries that the hostile environment will make it difficult to hold onto good teachers, and that taxpayers will be less likely to approve the next budget if they haven’t read about anything happening in the schools.“It’s too strong a word to say dictator, but that’s almost the way it is,” said a third mother. “They’re intimidating to me because my child will suffer for this. I feel intimidated to speak out publicly because if I stand in front of the board and say there’s a problem, then the board should be able to correct it. But they’re doing it in reverse. The board answers to Helen Anne, which is ridiculous.”

Full Tilt Boogie

Jonathan Gleich commutes in style (and against the law) on one of New York’s few Segways. BECCA TUCKER rides shotgun.

Jonathan Gleich is an unlikely vigilante. He gets up at six every morning, goes next door to put eye drops in his 83-year-old mother’s eyes, takes a bath, fixes himself some rice cakes, clips a bike helmet underneath his hound-dog face and breaks the law. Every fair-weather day from Easter until Halloween, he makes the 15-mile commute from his Brighton Beach apartment to his office in Midtown Manhattan, where he’s an I.T. guy at a children’s clothing company, on his beloved Segway personal transporter. The physical act couldn’t be simpler. By tilting the handlebars to the right or left, Gleich, 49, weaves through backed-up traffic, and by leaning forward, he glides at 12.5 miles an hour past cyclists huffing uphill, while a random shuffle of Billy Joel, David Bowie, Louis Armstrong and Eminem comes to him through his iPhone ear piece. But in his wake he leaves quite a brouhaha: fuming cyclists, beaming children and cops who aren’t sure what to do.

When it first appeared on the market in 2001, the Segway’s inventor, Dean Kamen, envisioned a future in which cars would be banished from city centers and the grid would be teeming with “empowered pedestrians” on Segways. Seven years later, New York City looks the same as it ever did. Congestion pricing has just been laughed down, and the battery-powered self-balanced scooter is about as common a sight on our streets as a double-tall unicycle. In 44 states, Gleich’s commute would be legal (although in some states, he’d have to stick to the sidewalk), but in New York, Seggers—as Segway riders call themselves—remain in a sort of extra-legal limbo. As a result, the number of regular Seggers in the city has fallen from around 50 in 2006 to less than ten, according to Itsi Atkins, founder of NYSegwaytours.com. Nearly all city Seggers claim some sort of handicap, since Segways can be used by the disabled—but Gleich prefers not to do that, since his only disability is his unnatural attachment to the Segway.

The first stop on Gleich’s unlawful commute is the 7-11 at the corner of Kathleen Street and Coney Island Avenue where he gets his morning coffee. If all goes smoothly, that’ll be his only stop, and he’ll hit the Brooklyn Bridge at 9 a.m. He’ll arrive at the loading dock at his Herald Square office building at 9:30 a.m. on the dot, having consumed 15 cents worth of electricity and a dollar’s worth of coffee. But a vigilante must have his battle stories; and conversationally speaking, the best days are the ones on which Gleich goes to war with other commuters. His usual adversaries are the “spandex shitheads” —Gleich’s term of endearment for cyclists—who generally view Gleich as a “choad,” “poser,” or “lard-ass” bike-path hog. And then, of course, there’s the police.

Because the law is vague (it is not explicitly illegal to ride a Segway on the street, but the Segway cannot be registered as a motor vehicle, and it is illegal to drive a non-registered motor vehicle on the street), most cops do not ticket Seggers.

But Gleich has still managed to get himself in trouble with law enforcement. Gleich has received three tickets for an unregistered vehicle: the latest came on his way home from work on April 8. He must be the only person in the city who’s glad to be handed that orange envelope, which he sees as an invitation to, well, push the envelope. (“Maybe we’ll get a ticket,” he says hopefully over the phone, when we’re discussing a time to commute together.) He fights each one in court, pontificating on the environmental and congestion-easing benefits of the Segway, showing proof of insurance and flashing his “get out of jail free card,” a picture of him smiling between two Segway cops—and loses. The first ticket cost him $95, the second, $115.

Gleich is more Malcolm X than Martin Luther King, and for that, he has earned himself critics within the Segway community, who see him as too militant—that is, if it’s possible to be militant just by riding a gliding pogo stick. He’s unwilling to pretend he’s handicapped just to appease law enforcement. (Well, he does have a handicapped Segway sticker on his bag that he got his doctor to give him for an old disability, which allowed him to ride his Segway during a conference in Las Vegas, but he acknowledges that was a last resort.) He declines to avoid the patrol area manned by the cop who has given him two of his three tickets. The truth is, he likes the attention.To understand why, we need to take a step back to see the full Gleich. A big step back, because he was huge.

Gleich hasn’t quite adjusted to his 200-pound body; that’s because until a few years ago, his weight hovered near 500 pounds. He now gets colds often, which is why, when he rides his Seg on winter days, he bundles himself up like the Invisible Man; seats are uncomfortable, and when he flirts with women now their boyfriends actually see him as a threat. Sometimes he misses those extra 285 pounds.“When I was fat, I was unrestricted. I went anywhere, ate anything,” says Gleich. “So I can’t fit in an airplane seat? I flew first class.” Even at his heaviest, Gleich had a job and girlfriends. His social life revolved around going out to eat—a favorite spot was Brennan and Carr in Sheepshead Bay, famous for its roast beef sandwiches. But when they came out with the Segway, he was too big to ride one.

“Put some heavy duty tires on it!” he railed. “Make an industrial model!”Obese but active all his life, in 2003 Gleich finally developed a case of sciatica so severe that he couldn’t leave his apartment. He elected for laparoscopic weight loss surgery, a reversible procedure that alters the anatomy of the stomach to reduce food intake, followed by plastic surgery to remove excess skin. Being fat had never bothered Gleich; however, losing weight did. Eating became a regimented chore, his social life suffered, and he is now without a girlfriend. For the first time in his life, he has body-image issues. Friends are pointing out that his teeth are crooked, he has a mole next to his nose, his hair is beginning to gray—flaws that were invisible before, or at least irrelevant.

“When I was fat,” says Gleich, “they were happy I just showed up!” No longer the jolly fat guy, gregarious Gleich missed the attention that had always been directed his way. He needed a new attention-grabber, an ice-breaker that he could parlay into the kind of casual banter on which he thrives. In September of 2004, after dropping his first hundred pounds, he bought himself a used Seg (as he calls it) on eBay.

Gleich is now on his third Segway model in four years—the i2, sleeker and smarter than its predecessors (he keeps the second one at home, in case a friend wants to ride)—and if tinkering is a sign of affection, he clearly loves it all the more for having had to wait. He’s pimped it out with white LED headlights and red brake lights hooked up to an old laptop battery, and a horn that sounds like a duck being squished—efforts that won him a black leather motorcycle jacket emblazoned with the Segway logo at a Segway conference. Once again, Gleich is that dude that little kids point after, and now it’s okay for their parents to openly gawk, too.

Envision, for instance, the following scene, which takes place at around the halfway point of Gleich’s morning commute on a late March day: An older woman creeps along the Prospect Park loop in a red two-door sedan with her driver’s side window all the way down. It’s strange that she’s going about 11 miles an hour in a 25-mile-an-hour zone; but it’s stranger still that she’s there at all at 9:30 a.m. on a Tuesday morning. Between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., the park is closed to vehicular traffic. Always keen to help, Gleich makes a U-turn on his Segway and pulls up alongside the car to ask if she’s lost. “Lawst!??!” the lady screeches, her dyed black bob bobbing.
"In Brooklyn? Are you kiddin' me!?” The two native Brooklynites share a laugh at the thought. She was tailing him, that was all, trying to get a closer look at that gadget. They exchange a few more words and Gleich glides away. “That is the greatest machine I eva sawr!” she screams after him.

It’s no big deal, just one of a hundred interactions that take place over the course of a day. But add them up and you’ll see that Gleich gets as many shout-outs as a minor celebrity. Cost of Segway: $5,000. Knowing you’re constantly being noticed? Priceless.

The Dude of Life

BECCA TUCKER tracks down a fabled Phish songwriter pursuing his true calling: schoolteacher and suburban dad.

"What is that, Jamie?” Steve Pollak asks his three-year-old daughter, eying the chewed white lump atop the mound of fried rice on the heavyweight paper plate in front of her.

Jamie’s answer comes in the silent form of a squinched face and a small pointy tongue still stuck way out in disgust: It was a sub-par piece of sweet-and-sour chicken from Master Wok. She liked it 10 minutes ago, when it was offered to her on a green toothpick, from a Dixie cup, on a sample tray; but quite simply, it had been too long since her dad had cast his gaze in her direction. Jamie inherited her father’s love of the spotlight.

“Jamie…” A stern line appears between Steve’s eyes, below the pronounced brow ridge that, along with a super-wide jaw and lobe-less ears, makes him look like one of the Incredibles. Now that she has Daddy’s attention, Jamie does her best to secure it. She stares back up at him with big blue stoic eyes made somber by the sickening chicken. Implacable Steve shakes a napkin from a pile on the table, picks up the offending chicken piece along with the rice it has touched, and wordlessly deposits the clump in the nearest swinging garbage slot.

He eases back into his seat and swigs his Snapple, turning the cap around and around on the plastic table. Unseeing, he stares at the factoid printed on the cap’s underside. There’s a lot going on right now.

It’s Sunday afternoon at the Westchester Mall. His five-year-old son Jesse is counting out loud to 204. Jamie has ducked under the table and is sitting in my lap.

I’d called Steve’s house in Croton-on-Hudson a few days ago, wanting to do a profile of him; now, less than a week later, we’re at the mall with his kids. It’s the weekend, so he’s home from his job teaching elementary school in the Bronx. His eight-and-a-half months’ pregnant wife is home, on partial bed rest.

Steve spins the cap and spins the cap, pausing so long it’s unclear whether he’s going to speak or not.

Oh, right—he grins his wide elastic grin—how he got the best nickname ever.

It was a dark and shroomy night.
At Taft, a boarding school on a 220-acre campus in Watertown, Conn., curly-headed teenaged Steve appeared in a friend’s dorm room draped in a tapestry, wearing orange goggles and muttering what seemed at the time to be otherworldly wisdom. For perspicacity surpassing what one would expect of a sophomore from White Plains, Steve’s stoned classmates dubbed him the Dude of Life, which he might well have forgotten if he hadn’t been greeted by his new title the next morning.

It was 1982, and The Dude of Life was as imperial a stage name as any that had come before, right up there with the Chairman of the Board or Prince or Queen Latifah. Steve, a fledgling singer and lyricist, embraced it. Hell, he embodied it, donning the Dude get-up (topped with a straw golf hat) when his band, Space Antelope, entertained the student body with Grateful Dead covers and originals like “Fire at the Taft School.”

Today, the thin slice of the world’s population that is aware of Steve Pollak’s existence knows him better, perhaps only, by this stage name. Other characteristics of this demographic include being “really into” the jam band Phish, unwavering confidence that “they’ll tour again, just a matter of time” and a penchant for beginning stories with, “Me and my friends scored some nitrous…”

That’s because as it happened—as a wise man liked to say, as it was meant to happen—Space Antelope’s self-taught guitarist was a kid from New Jersey named Ernesto Giuseppie Anastasio III, known to his friends as Trey, and eventually, to the world, as the founder and lead guitarist of Phish.

Steve and Trey both ended up at the University of Vermont, where they continued jamming together and generally freaking freely. It took one semester before they were asked to take a brief hiatus, for a prank I promised Steve I would not publish.

What began as mutual adulation of the Grateful Dead had solidified, by 1983, into a lifelong friendship. Trey would be an usher at Steve’s wedding 16 years later, but for now, they parted ways. Trey finished up at Goddard College, in Plainfield, Vt., where he met keyboardist Page McConnell, who joined Trey, guitarist Jeff Holdsworth, bassist Mike Gordon and drummer John Fishman to form the band that would grow quietly from playing in the basement of an ROTC dormitory at 1983 to selling out Madison Square Garden in four hours in 1994.

Meanwhile, Steve ended up at SUNY Purchase, where he majored in literature and graduated in due course. He took a series of odd jobs, working variously at Sam Ash, delivering home health care equipment and selling everything from copying machines to advertising banners to insurance. All the while, his musical muse kept whispering a song in his ear every three weeks or so. And yet, the Dude of Life might have faded into oblivion, swallowed by an oversaturated market of singer-songwriters, were it not for the fact that getting each other suspended turns out to be a particularly strong bonding experience.

As Trey became a cult icon, the Dude emerged as a sort of mythological sideshow. Consider these chronicles from a 1990 newsletter from Phish headquarters:

Nov. 1984… Burlington VT
Phish is playing their first bar gig upstairs at Nectar’s. No one has seen or heard from the Dude of Life in three years. The band starts playing the opening strains of “Fluffhead,” and he appears again, picking up the microphone and improvising the words on the spot like a man possessed. Twenty minutes of utter chaos follow, moving one woman to pour out her emotions in an ultra high-pitched squealing fest on top of Dude’s preaching. A tape recorder is running and the event is secretly documented, ending all doubts about the Dude’s existence.

Winter 1988… Johnston VT
Phish is playing at Johnston St. College. Midway through the second act there is a commotion in the middle of the crowd. A circle clears, and a man appears dressed in full SCUBA gear, complete with tank and flippers. He moves to the stage and begins to sing… Police offices on duty grow tense as the crowd erupts in a joyous moment of positive energy. The officers pull the plug and eject the patrons. As the smoke clears, everyone realizes that the Dude has vanished without a trace.

1989… NYC
Phish is halfway through a set at Wetlands. A crazed looking man with close-cropped hair, a leather jacket, and shit-kickers approaches the stage. It is the Dude of Life. He grabs the microphone in a frenzy, sings a few lines, and vomits. Del Martin, Roadie Extraordinaire, calmly mops up the mess as the band plays on. Secretly disheartened by the incident, Del quits the following day.

Sept 1990… NYC
Wetlands again. A stretch limo pulls up in front of the club and the Dude of Life enters with an entourage of bodyguards and flunkies. He looks like a glam rocker. His hair is blue and he wears a bright green sparkling jacket and tights. The crowd is taken aback. He disappears and isn’t heard from again.

OK, so while such accounts of the Dude’s guest appearances may not be accurate to a word, they are—what would James Frey say?—emotionally true. The Dude did perform at all those shows, he did feign vomiting at the Wetlands, and he was better known for his outlandish get-ups and antics than for his singing voice or the handful of songs in the Phish repertoire whose lyrics he penned.

(While most Phishheads know the Dude wrote “Suzy Greenberg,” it takes some digging to discover that “Fluffhead” was inspired by the Dude’s oldest brother, who died of cancer, or that “Run Like an Antelope” was a Space Antelope original.)

The Dude embodied the side of Phish that was spontaneous and utterly unpredictable. While throwing yellow rubber chickens into the audience was a staple antic of the Dude’s act, even those chickens were unique. Each one had messages from band members Sharpied on them, some of which carried over from one chicken to another. On Phish.net, a mind-bogglingly comprehensive volunteer-run website, a fan named Ned reports that he caught a chicken in Toronto in 1993 with the following message from drummer John Fishman: “One day I’ll have such an orgasm that my...(To be continued on next bird).” Ned was looking for the missing chicken.

Every Phishhead wanted to own a corner of Phishtory: a rubber chicken, a speeding ticket at 4:20 a.m. on the way to a Phish show, a Dude sighting. A New Haven Coliseum concertgoer in 1998 reported after the show: “I had heard a rumor of the Dude of Life coming out, but I had heard these rumors before. When the Dude appeared for Suzie, it was mayhem.”

"The way I would consider it is, Phish was famous, and I got a taste of that fame,” Steve tells me over coffee in a suburban strip mall on the day we meet, a weekday evening after class was dismissed. “It was great. It definitely could be addictive.”

We’re at the Black Cow, a funky coffee shop in Croton-on-Hudson. He chats with a pony-tailed dad in the coffee line, arranging a play date for their sons. He slaps the kid five. Then he offers me a bite of his chocolate covered pretzel, breaking off an entire half. His speech resembles his song lyrics: simple and repetitive, with long pauses that would lend themselves to jamming.

Only once does Steve open up, dropping something akin to the sophomore mumbo-jumbo that earned him his title. The tapestry and goggles have given way to slacks and an athletic pullover, the curls are short and neat with a few gray strands if you look hard; but the Dude abides, and he’s still into visions.

“When I was a little kid, three or four years old, this may sound a bit cryptic, but I used to have these visions-slash-dreams of when I was much older, I’d say in my fifties or sixties, a lot older than I am now, and I just envisioned massive crowds of people and flags flying, banners waving. It was huger than anything I could have ever imagined, and it’s much bigger than anything I’ve experienced to date. It was about 100 times more massive than the whole Phish experience. And I never felt these were delusions of grandeur, but time will be the true test. I always felt something like that was gonna happen.”

That was the one things his wife had told him not to talk about today, Steve laughs. “Just don’t mention the visions,” she’d said.

Leslie Pollak is the practical one. “Steve and I are pretty opposites, just so you know,” she tells me on the phone. “I went to Cornell. Was not the artsy type—I was an economics major. Complete opposites. I’m more of the academic kind of person, and he’s more of the artsy person, and it’s really,” she laughs, “a complementary relationship.”

The two discovered on their first date that they shared a birthday, four years apart. Seven weeks later, they were engaged. (It was the second time for Steve, who’d been married, briefly, to a woman he met at SUNY.) Leslie tells it with Queens flair:

“When I was single, I was dating someone for many years, then I broke up with him and then I was dating someone else who I knew I wasn’t gonna marry, and on my 30th birthday, I blew out the candles—oh, my aunt was into the Law of Attraction, do you know what that is? Positive thinking, you have to be positive and be specific, and she made me read all these books on this cruise to Alaska, it was ridiculous. So on my birthday, I blew out the candles, I said ‘OK, God, I want to find someone who falls madly in love with me, and then hear the pitter patter of little feet after that.’

“I found my little dog Willie dodging trucks on the Willis Avenue Bridge. So my aunt said, ‘You said pitter patter of little feet, and fall in love with you, you weren’t specific.’“So next year—for some reason it was always at my birthday party—blowing out the candles, I say ‘OK, God, I want a tall dark male human being to fall in love with me, whom I fall in love with, but the clincher is he needs to propose to me before my college reunion on June 8th.’ Now this was January 17th. I was dating someone else.”

“Boom! Met him March 23rd. Boom! May 11th engaged. Went to my reunion, and that was it. That’s what happened. True story.”

It was Leslie, then a director of alumni at the Horace Mann School in Riverdale, who got Steve into teaching five years ago. It was clear he wasn’t cut out to be a salesman. “We both knew what we were getting into before we got married,” she says. “He knew, in order for me to be happy, I need to know there’s a pension, I need to know things like that.”

“And I knew that he was not, you know—nor did I want him to be—an investment banker or a lawyer, I knew that wasn’t what he was about. I think he thought that was what he had to do. He went into insurance for a while, and it was painful for me to watch that. I told him to get out.”

The Dude is known as Mr. Pollak now to the third through fifth graders at P.S. 16 in the north Bronx, where he teaches reading and writing, a half-hour commute from home. This is his first year there, but most of his fellow teachers know he’s the Dude. “Some care,” says Steve, “some don’t.” He has yet to bring his guitar to class, like he did when he was a private school teacher. At Ethical Culture School two years ago, he actually brought in the whole Dude of Life Band.

“One day, down the road, my aim is to help develop a curriculum that will be more appealing for these kids,” he writes in an email after our meeting, when he’s had some time to think. “There are major changes that need to take place on multiple levels in order for our national school system to become more effective. Complaining about it doesn’t do anybody any good.”

Of all his jobs to date, public school teaching is the best fit. It offers a pension, gets him home early, exposes Steve to a slice of life he missed at boarding school (city-schooled Leslie points out), and reminds him of the live performing he doesn’t have time for these days. “Every day, I’m still center stage,” he says. “When I was touring, you can do similar shows two or three nights in a row, and every night will still be different, you’ll have a different crowd, you’ll play the songs a little differently. In a similar way, I can do the same lesson for three different classes, and they’ll all be very different experiences.”

It wasn’t meant to last with Phish. As the band matured in the 1990s, some of its more grown-up fans started to resent what one refers to as the Dude’s “bombastic stage presence.” It’s hard not to like Steve, with his mile-wide grin and earnest passion for rock ’n’ roll, but not everyone liked the Dude. A purist who attended a show at Albany’s Pepsi Arena in 1997, where each band member took turns shouting “Bring in the Dude!” snidely reported that the chants “brought fear into the patrons of the Knick that a set would be wasted by some unfunny goofball.”

Some called the Dude a “Trey-mate,” criticizing him for riding his friend’s coattails. Strange that the week I meet Steve at the Westchester Mall with his kids, Trey will spend two days in jail for violating parole by missing a drug counseling session.

The Dude’s standing invitation to perform with the band was eventually revoked. Phish’s keyboardist, Page McConnell, explains one version of events in The Phish Book, by Phish and Richard Gehr: “He’s a talented and funny guy, with a knack for writing catchy songs, but most of the times we’ve played with him it hasn’t worked that well for me. It’s like seeing another act in the middle of our show. When he gets onstage, he wants to be completely out front, working the crowd, which comes naturally to him. He’s a friend of Trey’s, though, so the last time he wanted to play with us I ended up making the dreaded ‘call from Page’ you don’t want to get when you’re in the Phish organization. I’m not that hard a guy. I just don’t have a problem doing what’s best for the band.”

Whatever happened behind the scenes, the Dude mostly stopped performing with Phish (although he sang their encore, “Crimes of the Mind,” Thankgiving weekend of 2003 at the Nassau Coliseum). Younger Phish fans may never have laid eyes on him. While the Dude’s first solo album, Crimes of the Mind (1994), featuring Phish as the backing band, sold over 100,000 units, his second album, Under the Sound Umbrella (2000), sold only 10,000. When I called Paul Robicheau, a music writer who profiled the Dude in 1995 for the Boston Globe, his first thought was that I was researching for an obituary.
This is not to suggest I had to scavenge for people who’d heard of him. I found someone who had gone to crunchy Jew camp with his niece, Sarah Pollak, where they held a day of mourning when Jerry Garcia died. A friend of a friend, whose last name is Greenberg, was called Suzy in college. I exchanged emails with a guy who parked next to the Dude at a Phish show at Great Woods Amphitheater in Maine in 1994. The two got to talking in the parking lot, and the Dude, unsolicited, invited him backstage and introduced him to the band members. I happened upon a blogger whose ex-girlfriend once dated the Dude, and through him, got in touch with his ex.

“I don’t know if he still does shows at all but I’d assume having three children (almost) and a wife and third-graders would hinder those efforts,” the ex-girlfriend, who asked not to be named, wrote in an email. “Maybe he finally realizes he’s not going to be a rock star. I hope that he teaches his kids—his own and his students—that it’s OK to be anything you want, and that it’s always beneficial to follow your dreams, even if they don’t quite get you where you think. Had he become a rock star like Trey, he probably wouldn’t have the family he has now. And maybe he’d be the one with the drug problem and jail time. So it’s not always so bad to be the responsible one.”

Responsible as he’s become, Steve has no plans to bury the Dude of Life. “I’m definitely going back in [to the studio],” he says, “but I definitely gotta take care of the family stuff for a little bit.”

At 6 p.m. sharp, the head of a mini Dude appears just above our round table at the Black Cow, grinning. Five-and-a-half-year-old Jesse is a carbon copy of his dad, down to the Brazilian wish bracelet on his wrist. Leslie has brought the kids here to meet Steve, but she’s parked illegally, so she pops in and out, and leaves the kids inside. Jamie and Jesse have such a grand time goofing for the camera that another mom compliments Steve on what good models his kids are. When the time comes, they are not keen on leaving.

Steve subdues Jesse in a plush armchair, holds his white-socked foot by the heel, and slips on one Velcro shoe, then the other. How they came off in the first place is anybody’s guess. Jesse wants hot chocolate. Steve shakes his head no.

“They don’t have hot chocolate here?” mini Dude asks three times, each time louder than the last.

Steve casts a glance at me and grimaces, unwilling to be caught in a mistruth. “That’s not what I said,” he acknowledges. Fatigue makes Steve a weak opponent. First it’s “You can share a hot chocolate,” then “Jamie, look, Jesse put his parka on, so he gets a hot chocolate.” Finally, he’s holding the door open while the kids march out in front of him, Jesse in his blue parka, Jamie in her pink, each holding their own a cup of hot chocolate.

Watching the scene, it strikes me that it may not be humanly possible for one man to be a husband, father of three children under six, elementary school teacher, and rock star.

“A lot of my friends, we’re all in our forties now, so a lot of them have families,” Steve says. “Once you have a family, it does, it changes things. Suddenly, very often the world is revolving around your kids.”

The backlog of songs in Steve’s library that have yet to make it into the studio grows and grows. Steve won’t, or can’t, talk about his lyrics. “It always comes from the muse,” he says. “What am I writing about?—just, uh, I don’t know, I’m writing about… I try to write about… it’s a good question! I can’t answer that.”

But according to Leslie, who does not hand out compliments (she tends to judge her husband’s music by its salability), he’s doing some of his best work. “I really like a lot of his newer stuff that no one’s ever heard. Some of it I thought was superb. It’s just he hasn’t had time to do anything with it.”

The Dude, of course, agrees. One thing has remained constant in Steve’s life since he was a visionary three-year-old, and that’s his belief that his breakthrough is on its way.

In 1997, he told the Vermont Review that his second album was “rockin’ a lot harder than the first album… When the millions start rolling in, I will give it all to [my wife].” The Dude told JamBands.com in 1998: “[The Dude of Life Band is] going to be touring all across the east coast and we just got back from Toronto and those were our first gigs out of the country, and they went great. We’re looking to conquer the world basically.”

In 1999: “I’ve really been developing my own career and I’m really looking forward to putting my own musical idea onto CD. And ultimately, if everything goes as planned I am going to be making some big waves in the rock and roll world.”

And he’s saying it still.

Nine years, three kids, two marriages and two albums later, the Dude’s message has only become more urgent: “As you get older, you realize that time is short. You have to go out and live your life. If anything, my music will rock harder today than it’s ever rocked before,” he tells me, pausing to fold his coffee cup into a square.

The Yawn Patrol

BECCA TUCKER discovers that guarding nuclear plants may cause drowsiness.

At 6 a.m. on a Sunday in late August, a security guard arrived at work for a 12-hour shift at the Indian Point Energy Center, a nuclear power plant in Buchanan, 24 miles north of New York City.

The long day ahead didn’t faze him; he had worked 12-hour shifts before, and at least two previous posts on a Sunday.

Shortly before 2 p.m., the guard rotated to a post near an inner ring containing nuclear reactors and the spent fuel pool.

By 2:05 p.m., the guard had fallen asleep.One of the four resident inspectors employed by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and stationed at Indian Point—which satisfies as much as 40 percent of New York City’s energy needs—came cross the sleeping guard and talked to him, getting louder and louder for two straight minutes before finally waking him up.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission declared the guard’s behavior “unacceptable,” but never explained what happened except to publicly disclose the incident, and to report that the man (already close to retirement age) had no traces of alcohol or drugs in his bloodstream.

For its part, Entergy, the company that owns Indian Point, reiterated to its security staff the importance of remaining attentive.

It turns out that, in a society where millions swallow Ambien to get a decent night’s sleep, an unusually large number of security guards at nuclear power plants appear to have no trouble at all. Since 2004, the NRC estimates that roughly two dozen guards have been caught with their eyes closed in disconcertingly close proximity to a core reactor full of radioactive material.

In other words: While the rest of us sleep well at night thinking our nuclear power plants have guards watching over them, apparently some guards are sleeping equally as well. And while their somnolence doesn’t mean we’re in immediate danger, no one thinks it’s a particularly good idea for guards at power plants to be in deep REM cycle on the job.

In July of 2002, another guard at Indian Point was found “inattentive” (the term used by government investigators to describe dozing.) But the NRC did not issue a violation because there was no terrorist attack on the plant as a result, according to a Congressional audit. The same audit found that nationwide, the NRC tended not to issue formal citations and to minimize the significance of problems it found if the problems did not cause actual damage.

But there’s no denying the problem. A May 2003 newsletter from a division of the NRC states: “Media reports of security guards sleeping on the job at Indian Point nuclear power plant due to forced overtime and fatigue have received local coverage in New York.” In an Oct. 31, 2007 letter to Dale Klein, chairman of the NRC, a nonprofit watchdog group called the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) described the situation as a “nationwide phenomenon.” And the NRC itself has itself acknowledged the issue.

“For some reason, you’re right, there have been several that have occurred recently,” says Neil Sheehan, spokesman for the NRC. “And there doesn’t seem to be any universal reason for that.”

Several recent incidents have added to a general sense the guards aren’t doing as much guarding as they should, given the extraordinary damage that would result from a security breach on the job.

In February 2007, the Patriot-News in Harrisburg, Penn., reported on exhaustion of security officers working too much overtime at Three Mile Island (the scene of the infamous March 1979 accident that resulted in a partial core meltdown but no deaths or injuries). According to documents obtained by the newspaper, some guards have been working 13-hour shifts up to six days a week for more than six straight weeks. Last year, the paper reported that veteran officers were showing incoming guards the best places to sleep undetected while on duty.

In September, a frustrated security guard’s videotapes aired on WCBS-TV from inside Peach Bottom Nuclear Plant, near Philadelphia. The tapes showed 10 guards at different times of day in a “ready room” steps away from the plant’s two nuclear reactors, with their feet on their desks, heads resting against walls or cradled in their hands—all fast asleep. The NRC concluded that the level of security at Peach Bottom was “not significantly degraded as a result of these SO [security officer] performance issues.”

In October, the NRC “substantiated that security officers were willfully inattentive to duty or served as lookouts such that other security officers could be inattentive while on duty,” at Florida Power & Light, which owns Turkey Point nuclear power plant, near Homestead, Fla. Their investigation revealed that guards were sleeping on the job, or covering for sleeping colleagues, on a number of occasions from 2004 to 2008.

How does an epidemic like this start? Think about it. You are staring at a fence line from a guard tower. It is the ninth hour of your 12-hour shift. You are all alone, and job rules prohibit you from reading a magazine or doing a crossword puzzle. The fence gets blurry, you blink and your eyelids feel impossibly heavy…

“It’s an occupational hazard in some respects, you know?” says Jim Steets, a spokesman for Entergy, the company that operates Indian Point, of falling asleep across the security industry in general. “It’s hard to keep the mind stimulated.”

But Steets defends the strict work rules that may contribute to the problem. “One of the main elements of their responsibilities is to make observations, to know what’s going on around them,” he says. “The attentiveness to that would be diminished if they were to find themselves engrossed in a magazine or a book.”

Independent experts see a similar danger. “They were set up to almost die of boredom,” says David Lochbaum, director of the Nuclear Safety Project for the Union of Concerned Scientists, a nonprofit group that monitors environmental issues.Steets argues that on-the-job boredom is not unique to the nuclear industry, but represents a necessary evil that comes with working security, whether in prisons or at Macy’s.

“I’d hate to be a security officer on the night shift at a big department store,” Steets says. “I’d be curled up under the counter the whole time, probably, with a nice soft pillow.”

To help guards stay awake, he says, Entergy moves them from post to post at regular intervals and teaches them techniques to proactively avoid falling asleep, such as getting up from their seats, stretching their legs and focusing in on their environment. However, the company doesn’t provide its workers with caffeine; guards must bring their own lattes and cans of Red Bull.

No one knows why the number of sleeping guards appears to be higher in the nuclear security arena than it is in other, similar, professions. Since the Peach Bottom problem surfaced, Lochbaum has queried people who work in the unions that supply the guard forces about what goes on in other industries, and has discovered that in prisons, where people are also up in towers, random radio checks are used to verify that guards are awake.

“Nobody’s claiming that a guard never fell asleep at a prison post, but apparently it occurs less frequently because of those kinds of things that have been learned over the years. For some reason those lessons from other industries aren’t trickling over into the nuclear industry,” says Lochbaum, of the Union of Concerned Scientists. It looks like they might have learned a lesson, albeit the hard way, at Peach Bottom, where the NRC spokesman says it has started doing more frequent radio checks.

But it’s important to note that the utilities have, and continue to be, accused by watchdog groups like the Project on Government Oversight of overworking their guards. If that’s the case, everyone who has ever tried and failed to pull an all-nighter knows that it takes more than average mental fortitude, combined with significant doses of caffeine, to stay awake for 12 hours straight when sleep deprived. Security guards at nuclear plants can work as much as 16 hours in any 24-hour period, 26 hours in any 48-hour period, and 72 hours in any 7-day period.

Because each additional officer cuts directly into the utilities’ bottom line, the utilities often hire as few security officers as possible and work them between 60 and 72 hours a week, POGO says.

“I have interviewed guys [who work] between 60 and 72 hours,” says Peter Stockton, a senior investigator at POGO, who has spent two years studying security at U.S. power plants. “I have got to tell you, they are a mess.”

The NRC is looking into reducing the hour limit that plant employees can work, to an average of 48 hours per week over a six-week period, but that change is not slated to take effect until March of 2008, says Sheehan.

With the presence of a National Guard base and numerous other security checkpoints there’s almost no danger of a meltdown because of a sleeping security guard. But for those who see dark scenarios – such as a truckful of terrorists ramming their way onto the Indian Point property and driving explosives directly into the core reactor—how quickly and thoroughly would that expose New York to dangerous doses of nuclear radiation?

If the wind is blowing our direction, expect 44,000 immediate fatalities from acute radiation positioning as far as 60 miles downwind of Indian Point, added to the 518,000 who would eventually die from cancer within 50 miles of Indian Point as a result of radiation exposures, according to a 2004 report commissioned by Riverkeeper, a Hudson River-based environmental group. And that’s not taking into account what would happen if terrorists blew up the spent fuel pools.

“Once the cesium—there’s a cladding around the spent fuel—catches on fire, you’re really in trouble,” says Peter Stockton of POGO. “At Indian Point, you’d take out about a third of Connecticut.”

A well-coordinated attack (timed to coincide with a highly unlikely total breakdown in security) would take somewhere between three and eight minutes from break-in to meltdown.

“These attacks are very very fast, and very very violent, if there is one. Let me tell you, there are explosions all over the place,” says Stockton, who has observed around 75 mock terrorist attacks used to test nuclear plant security, although none at Indian Point. “You’re running out and all of a sudden your buddy gets his head blown off, and these guys are through the fence line in about three seconds. They blow the fence apart and it’s generally 45 seconds to the target they’re going to. Man, you gotta be ready to go. And if you’re sleeping, it’s gonna take awhile.”

"I'M NOT A KNICKS FAN, BUT I PLAY ONE ON TV"

To no one’s surprise except our hapless Knicks, BECCA TUCKER reveals that the “real fans” in those Knicks commercials are actors.

Clyde Baldo, a 52-year-old psychotherapist who changed his name from Roy to honor his favorite Knick, is a familiar name to those few fans who still follow Knicks basketball on MSG, the Madison Square Garden Network that has broadcast all 24 of the team’s tragic losses this season. In commercials promoting the worst Knicks squad in recent memory, Baldo confesses to a Knicks addiction that, in the context of current events, suggests a devotion that runs deeper than logic.“I love going to the Garden, but if not, I watch the game on MSG. And I have a ritual. I turn off all the phones, because do not bother me when a Knick game is on. And I keep the remote in my right hand and if they’re losing I put it in my left hand. If they’re losing by more than 10 points, TV off. I go back to the game. If they’re winning again, right hand. You have to understand, my remote is the sixth man. By the end of the game, I feel like I’ve played. I’ve gotta go get in the shower.”


What’s not so familiar to fans—or, apparently, to the Knicks management, or the ad agency that created the 30-second spots—is that Baldo is an actor. He has appeared on “The Sopranos,” “Law & Order: Criminal Intent” and “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” the History Channel’s “Breaking Vegas” series, 11 movies, a cable Optimum Online commercial and over 40 plays. And by the way, that story about how Baldo holds the remote? Not true.


This news may not shock skeptical Knick fans who’ve learned to deal daily with doubt. But the Knicks team itself was surprised to hear that their “real fans” had some experience in front of a camera, particularly since the ads are clearly intended to suggest otherwise. Of six “real fans” reached by the New York Press—there were 10 filmed in total—five happen to be actors.“I do know that when asked for the casting call, we asked for non actors,” Knicks spokesman Jonathan Supranowitz said, talking on his cell phone from a hotel in San Antonio, where the Knicks would play the Spurs. He called the Press after learning of inquiries into the resumes of its “real fans.”


“We made that distinction, that we do not want actors, we want real fans. And I know none of them had SAG [Screen Actors Guild] cards, but we found out after the fact – maybe from you. I’m not sure how we found out that Clyde was a part-time actor.” The advertising company that the Knicks hired to do the spots also seemed shocked by the news that its “real fans” were trained performers. “I had no idea, because they were supposed to sign affidavits that they weren’t actors. We even asked them what they did for a living,” said Daniel Wolfe, creative director of Wolfe/Doyle Advertising. “They wouldn’t tell me they were actors, because if they were, I don’t think I would have put them in the spots. I wouldn’t put them in the spots…Hey, if Robert De Niro would have come in, or Spike Lee, I would have said, ‘Hey, you guys would be great, but we can’t use you.’ ‘Cause actors are acting, fans are fans and they come from the heart. I depend on the casting company to do that, because we’re worried about all the other stuff that we need to do.”


Wolfe/Doyle had outsourced the casting to a specialized casting company, called Impossible Casting for its ability to corral hard-to-find types (they got a “Page Six” shout-out in 2004 for finding a midget willing to pose naked for a magazine fashion shoot). Impossible Casting’s job was to find people—specifically, not actors—who were still excited about the Knicks going into the 2007-’08 season, despite the fact that they were coming off their fifth straight losing season record after an off-season fraught with drama. They also had to be articulate and charismatic in front of the camera, and have two days available for the audition and the shoot.


Lechner declined to say how much the participants were paid, but Steve Conoscenti, a 22-year-old Knicks fan who made the callback but was not selected in the end, said he was told the job would pay between $1,000 and $1,500, with no residuals. Those chosen also got a free ticket to the season opener against the Timberwolves, which the Knicks won. In September, Impossible Casting put a posting for “ALL KNICKS FANS 15 to 80 years old” on Knicks chat rooms and blogs, MySpace and Craigslist. The call also went out to Actors Access, a website that publicizes casting calls, and to actors on Impossible Casting’s mailing list. Of the hundreds of hopefuls who responded in writing to the casting call, Impossible Casting called 40 or so back for an audition. Craig Lechner, owner of Impossible Casting, vetted each to be sure he or she was a Knick fan, and not a member of the Screen Actors Guild. (To become a SAG member, performers have to have worked for a SAG-affiliated company and pay a $2,211 initiation fee.)


While it’s true that none of those chosen were card-carrying SAG members at the time (one has since become a member), Clyde Baldo is not the only fan with a substantial acting resume.


There’s Jack Dempsey, the man Bostonians love to ridicule, whose commercial heckling Celtics fans was pulled after the Celtics beat the Knicks by 45 points. He found out about the casting call through Actors Access. Dempsey has acted on the soap opera “Guiding Light” and “Venus Rises,” a Sci-Fi channel takeoff on Star Trek called “Redshirt Blues,” and has had parts in four films and five plays. “I try to get as much work as I can, but like a lot of other New York actors, we have other jobs,” says Dempsey, 34. He pays his rent doing integrated ad sales marketing for a cable network.


Thomas F. Ray, 32, is a full-time actor, but he still gets nervous for every audition. He was sure he’d bungled this audition when he jumped up to re-enact Larry Johnson’s four-point play, forgetting that he’d just been wired with a microphone. “When I left, it was like... I don’t know: making a move on a girl that was totally inappropriate. I was like ‘Stupid! Stupid! Shouldn’t a did that!’” The Knicks commercial was Ray’s biggest job to date. “I’ve taken a lot of classes. I started out taking acting classes in college, came down here and took a lot of improv classes. I’ve just basically been building myself up as I’ve been going along over the past nine years.” Shortly after doing the commercial, Ray became a SAG member.


Matt Berkowitz, 40, got a call in September from his old friend from SUNY Purchase film school, Craig Lechner, owner of Impossible Casting, about the audition. “I’m a filmmaker, I’m an actor, so I can do anything,” says Berkowitz. “You want me to be Italian? I’ll be Italian, just pay me.” He estimates that he has been an extra in about 20 feature films, and has done a Nokia commercial. Berkowitz plays up his Jewish Brooklyn roots in his spot, telling a story about how he called his rabbi when the Knicks were losing to see if there was any possibility of religious intervention. “I’m pretty funny, I’m a comedian, I write, I do a one-man show, I do a lot of that. So I can milk it a little, but it’s a true story.” Berkowitz has been a Knick fan since he shared a bedroom with his Knicks-crazed big brother as a kid, but he would have jumped at any opportunity to be on TV. “Any commercial is good for your visibility,” says Berkowitz. “When I did the last Spider-Man, I did background stuff, but you know what? You get paid, and that’s another thing to add to your resume. I did commercials for urinary incontinence, you know?”


But the folks at Impossible Casting disagree with Berkowitz’s description of himself. “He’s not an actor!” objects Lechner. “Matt Berkowitz has done no acting. Friend from college doth not an actor make!... I was in My Fair Lady in high school. Does that make me an actor?”


Joshua Sankey is what casting agents refer to as a “character” actor. He’s got a double chin, receding hairline, and he’s not even wearing any Knicks gear in his commercial. His spot is not shot in the studio, like most of the others. He’s just standing on the sidewalk in front of Madison Square Garden, talking for a few seconds about how he pulled Eddie Curry’s socks out of a Dumpster. But Sankey’s acting career won’t depend on the Knicks commercial for a jumpstart. He’s a stand-up comedian with a show coming up at The Duplex in the West Village. He’s the “regular guy” checking out a hot chic in a bikini in a billboard for New York Sports Club and the fat guy in a bathtub on a billboard for Cirque du Soleil’s new show, Zumanity, that’s plastered all over Vegas. He’s in the upcoming Kevin Smith movie, Zack and Miri Make a Porno, and he’s been in dozens of commercials, including one for the NFL Network, for which he plays an ardent Jets fan.


While most of the actors in the spots have been taking grief for representing one of the worst teams in the NBA, they’re also taking calls from agents and long-forgotten contacts. “It’s very, very amazing how many people out of nowhere call you,” says Ray. “People you don’t think have your number. They call you and say ‘Hey, I just saw you on TV!’... With the Knicks commercial I’ve been going to a lot more auditions.”


Oddly enough, the Knicks’ sorry season may be garnering more publicity for these actors than might otherwise have been the case. As Impossible Casting’s Lechner wrote in an email: “All this hoopla about the commercials is all because the Knicks are having such a bad year. We’ve been in business 15 years and I’ve never seen such a commotion about some promos.”

This piece ran in the January 9, 2008 New York Press.

The Bloody Polo Club


A Lawless Sport Takes Root in a Chinatown Pit

Instead of ponies, they ride stripped down bikes tough enough to withstand the occasional wreck. Instead of grass, they get a face full of concrete when they bite it. Instead of wood, their mallets are sawed-off golf clubs or ski poles bolted to lengths of plumbing pipe. Instead of Bloody Maries, spectators sip Colt 45 malt liquor out of black plastic bags.

They’re urban bike polo players, and if you happen to pass them on your way through Chinatown on a Sunday, you might be more bemused than impressed. The six players circling the blacktop pit at Broome and Chrystie Streets don’t move as quickly as the soccer players on the nearby fields or as elegantly as the old men doing Tai Chi. The game looks like a halting mating ritual observed by a pack of shy, ungainly creatures.

But take a seat on an empty bench, put your feet up on the concrete wall, and watch: within a minute you’ll have picked the pros out from the amateurs. Some of these guys, when they get possession of the ball, have the ability to slow down the tempo so that they can do things like dribble between their front and back wheels, center it to a teammate in striking position or hold their bike steady with one hand while they poise, wind up and whack the ball with their mallet into a three-foot wide goal. When you take into account all the moving parts – ball, bike, body, mallet, teammates, defense – it’s a masterful display of control.

“It feels good to score a goal,” says Alfred Bobe, a sprightly, hyper-aggressive bike messenger on a brakeless track bike, “because you have to score with this part of the mallet [points to the head], which is near goddamn impossible, so when you score it’s like, Yes!”

If there’s one player who’s head and shoulders above the others, it’s Doug Dalrymple – both literally (he’s very big and blonde) and skill-wise. Dalrymple won’t admit as much; when I ask who’s the best, the two bike messengers within hearing distance point at him while he tactfully diverts the question.

Some people are goal scorers, Dalrymple says, while others might be overlooked because their talent is for passing or blocking. And “some people have bikes they can beat up and some people have bikes they want to be nice to, so that determines how aggressive they can be.”

“A sensible polo player does not play on his work bike,” says Bill Dozer, the self-proclaimed “godfather of polo.” “Your weekend activities should not interfere with your ability to make money Monday through Friday.”

About half the Chinatown regulars are bike messengers by trade; the other half are “fakingers” or “complete posingers,” as one player puts it – in other words, they look like they could be bike messengers but they do things like string violins or work at city-run nonprofits. They’ve got the tattoos, the piercings, the little bike caps and the keys hanging from carabineers hooked onto belt loops. They’re a “bit intimidating,” says Yorgo Tloupas, a newcomer from London; they’ve got the sex appeal that has marketers falling over themselves to sponsor tournaments.

“A lot of companies are into marketing to us now,” says Jon Birdseye, riding a red and silver track bike he put together himself. “They’ll give us messenger bags, bike frames – valuable prizes, but prizes most of us don’t need. It kind of legitimizes it, but that’s a good and a bad thing.”

Bike polo has been around for over a century, but its New York incarnation started in earnest in Chinatown last summer. This is the genesis story, as told by one player: “We just hang out doing bike stuff, and then some dude is like let’s play bike polo, and then more dudes show up.”

Because it’s still relatively new, the collective learning curve is steep. “The level of play is getting better,” says Brendan Enright, a recent arrival in the city from Indiana who’s been playing for three months. “Everybody. You can see it.”

A lot of catching up remains to be done, though, if New York wants to compete with the West Coast. “It’s a bunch of old school guys with nothing else to do,” says Bobe of the Seattle scene. “They’ve just been playing forever… They’re aggressive but polite. They will knock you off your bike but they won’t hurt you.”

In Portland, “they play for keeps and they play in a cage, so it’s much more Thunderdome,” says Dozer, who lived there for five years.

The equipment has grown more sophisticated in step with the play. “The mallets used to be brooms,” says Enright. Now the gearheads of the group are experimenting with handles made of Big Bertha drivers and uber-flexible bamboo. (Bobe’s bamboo mallet is autographed by Mess Man, a “righteous” Seattle legend. The industrial-strength PVC (poly-vinyl chloride) piping is obtained for the group by one guy, Paul, who gets it through his job.

“There’s a big DIY [Do It Yourself] ethic,” says Enright. “I am not a good mechanic with my bike. Some of the guys are welders and stuff. They take pity on me when they see parts falling off, my gears all messed up and stuff.”

“There’s no kind of head to this dragon. Everyone’s just friends,” says Corey Hilliard, a Philadelphia bike messenger who seems to split his time between cities.

“No fliers, no person to call, no real organization,” says Dalrymple, although somehow, he has recently emerged as the group’s unofficial spokesperson, interviewing with reporters from the Times and Jane magazine. “We don’t really have a permit. They don’t really bother us.”

Bobe, whose passion is surfing (his brother is a pro surfer), became a bike messenger nine years ago in search of “adrenaline satisfaction.” Seeing him fly through the goal cone in pursuit of a fast-moving ball, leap from his bike as it crashes into the back wall, re-mount and scream like a victorious matador, one might assume that bike polo gives him that satisfaction.

“No,” says Bobe. “This is just for fun. Just to spend some time with some bicycle enthusiasts. This is just an enclosed space. You don’t have the element of surprise. You can’t compare that to surfing, or being a messenger.”

Maybe not, but all the messengers seem to agree that bike polo is the best practice there is for being out on the streets.

“This game has done more for my handling in traffic than anything else.”
“It’s true! Traffic is nothing after this.”

More than a few layers of skin have been claimed by the pavement at Broome and Chrystie, but who knows? The skills sharpened here may have prevented an accident or three.
Out there, “your senses have to be full on,” says Bobe. “You can pay with your life.”

As sports go, urban style bike polo does not have many rules.

To score, you have to hit the ball through the goal with the end of the mallet. You can’t “shuffle” it in with the side of the mallet.

If you put your foot down, you have to “tap out” before you can reenter play. Tapping out means touching your mallet to a cone wedged between rungs of the railing that acts as the sideline.

“Like contact” – mallet-on-mallet or body-on-body – is allowed, but there is no grabbing with hands. Urban bike polo differs from the suburban version that is played on a field, with mountain bikes, in that it has no right-of-way rules. “Nothing says you can’t go in front of somebody, ride your bike into somebody,” says Dalrymple. “The rules are as few as possible,” although, he adds, “you’re not really encouraged to run into someone.”

Things will be a little more formal than usual at the much anticipated East Side Polo Invite, a tournament taking place at the end of April that will draw as many as 30 teams from around the country. “We’re designating a couple people that are going to spot infractions and try to assess little penalties,” says Hilliard, who will have a hand in organizing.

But at pick-up games, it’s not like there’s a ref to enforce these things.

When a mallet gets caught in the spokes of a bike wheel and a body hits the pavement, there’s no cry of “foul!,” no stoppage of play – just laughter from the spectators, and oftener than not, from the bleeding player himself.

The U.S. Bicycle Polo website cautions: “A grassy area 100 x 60 yards constitutes the USBPA official field, but you can play on almost any size or surface depending on availability. Just remember, falls do happen and grass is softer than asphalt or dirt.”

By utilitarian standards of happiness, wipeouts are for the best, as they give the waiting players and spectators something to heckle. The award for crowd pleaser of the day, however, would have to go to the drunk Hispanic man singing Guantanamero who took a piss on a park bench, then turned around with his penis hanging out of his pants and casually resumed watching the game and cheering: “Pusalo! Vamos Italia!” (Bobe was wearing a sweater with the Italian flag on it.)

“I was hoping not to get hurt until like two, at least,” says Brian Wang, pressing gauze to his bleeding ankle. He’s planning to get high tops this week – he’s thinking Converse All Stars – to prevent against what is becoming a recurring injury.

It’s almost a privilege these days, to bleed. That “you get to fall a little bit, get a few bruises” is a draw for Enright. It means you did something today.

“Some people wreck a lot,” says Dalrymple. “They’re pretty much nuts. There’s this one guy, I love playing with him because he’s somewhat dangerous and aggressive. He goes to the ball and tries to make the ball move. Some people do circles around it.”

No one has gone to the hospital from the Chinatown court – yet. “If you just watch the average speed and imagine wrecking your bike at that speed, you’re not going to get hurt too bad,” explains Dalrymple.

The best polo bikes tend have easy gear ratios, which allows for quick acceleration but not very fast top speed. The New York crowd mostly rides what are known as fixed gear bikes, which don’t coast. “The kids around here, they like ‘em,” says Dozer, because it gives them “better control over speed.” That might explain how all six players on the court can sprint for a ball and then suddenly pull up, weave a bit and avoid each other by centimeters before circling out.

Small frames are a plus, because you’re more likely to clear the bike if you jump off. And polo bikes are generally assembled from old, replaceable parts, so that wrecking your bike does not mean wrecking your wallet. On one bike, tweaked by its lefty owner, both hand brakes are accessible from the right handlebar, so that the player’s dominant arm is free to wield the mallet.

Only one player last Sunday was wearing a helmet. Others wore an irregular assortment of armor that included knee pads, a hockey elbow pad, shin guards, high socks, and gloves. The spokes of Dalrymple’s front wheel were protected, sort of, by a cardboard shield decorated with marker and the word “DEAD.”

There have been serious injuries, though, the kind that make you step back and say: shit. “My friend on the West Coast,” Dalrymple starts, then changes his mind. “I don’t want to tell that story. He doesn’t play polo anymore.”

The friend in question is Bill Dozer, the previously mentioned self-titled “godfather of polo.” Dozer is more than happy to talk about anything, be it the relative merits of the two halves of “Grindhouse” or the “horseshit I did last summer” that had him fighting for his life.

In the first few minutes of the first game of the 2006 West Side Invite in Portland (where, if you’ll remember, “they play for keeps”), Dozer T-boned into another bike, flew “ass over teakettle” over his handlebars and landed on the other bike’s handlebars. Damage included a separated sternum, three broken ribs, a severed artery, a collapsed lung, three liters of lost blood, and perhaps a permanently morbid outlook: Dozer now throws around ominous terms like “kidney-punch handlebars.”

At 30, he’s officially retired. “Sure, I wish I could play,” he shrugs. “I love it. But that’s, you know, it’s a career-ender. That’s kind of just the way it is. I ain’t got shit to prove to anybody anymore.” He still comes out, though, to “yell at people, make sure they know the rules.”

I lick the blood off my knuckles as I walk home, still sweaty and a little embarrassed. I did not fully understand what “fixed gear” meant before I borrowed Brian Wang’s bike. One thing it means is when you peddle backwards, you stop – and if you weren’t expecting that, you might even fall, and then the front wheel might get misaligned with the stem, and you might not understand why you are unable to bike straight until a spectator yells: “You might want to fix that! Put the wheel between your knees and straighten the handlebars! ‘Ere ya go!”

They were nice about it.

Clarence Norman Is Found Guilty on 3 Felony Counts

By REBECCA TUCKER, Special to the Sun September 28, 2005

Clarence Norman Jr., the longtime powerbroker of Brooklyn Democrats and the primary target of a wide-ranging investigation into judicial corruption in the county, was found guilty yesterday of intentionally soliciting illegal campaign contributions.
After beginning deliberations Monday, a predominantly black and female jury in state Supreme Court in Brooklyn convicted Norman, 54, of two felony counts of violating election law, one felony count of falsifying business records, and one misdemeanor count of falsifying business records.
Norman faces up to eight years in prison, prosecutors said, with sentencing before Justice Martin Marcus scheduled for November 29.
One of the most powerful black politicians in the state, Norman immediately resigned as chairman of Brooklyn's Democratic Party, an organization whose influence has waned as its corruption problems have escalated. As a convicted felon, Norman is also banished from the state Assembly seat in Crown Heights that he held for 23 years. Because the vacancy occurred after September 20, Governor Pataki has the option of calling for a special election to fill the seat before next year's November general election, according to sources in the governor's office.
Yesterday's verdict represented a major vindication for Brooklyn's veteran district attorney, Charles "Joe" Hynes. The verdict comes weeks after he eked out a victory in a hard-fought district attorney primary race in which his opponents accused him of turning a blind eye to corruption in a county plagued with allegations of judicial bribery. Supporters of Norman questioned whether the motives behind Mr. Hynes's investigation of Norman had to do more with politics than justice. Mayor Koch reportedly questioned the prosecution's intent to criminalize what he considered to be an ethics issue.
A Democratic political consultant, Hank Sheinkopf, said Mr. Hynes "has reclaimed the mantle of reformer and corruption-fighter that some have tried to take away from him,"
For Norman, it was a stunning defeat for a man who staged public rallies in his defense and who led a march with his father, a well-known Brooklyn pastor, and other supporters to Brooklyn's district attorney's office, where he turned himself in after he was indicted on October 9, 2003. Dapper in a three-piece suit with a handkerchief spilling out of his breast pocket, Norman sat stone-faced while the jury read its verdict. Minutes later, outside the courthouse, Norman rose to his defense." The facts substantiated that we did no wrong," Norman said to a pack of reporters.
The prosecutor in the case, Michael Vecchione, who heads the Rackets Division for the Brooklyn district attorney, told reporters after the verdict came in, "The world of Brooklyn politics is not the same today as it was yesterday."
The case hinged on whether the jury believed Norman knowingly broke campaign finance laws to cover costs for his 2000 and 2002 primary campaigns or whether it was a more innocent matter of shoddy bookkeeping.
The jury found that Norman knowingly solicited more than $10,000 in campaign contributions from Ralph Bombardiere, a lobbyist for the New York State Association of Service Stations and Repair Shops, and then tried to conceal the donations. In both campaigns, the amount solicited exceeded the legal limit of $3,100. The money, prosecutors charged, went to pay for such campaign items such as thousands of plastic bags emblazoned with Norman's name, but did not enrich him personally.
Norman faced charges that were included in four indictments against him and the party's executive director, Jeffrey Feldman. The other three indictments accuse Norman of using the judicial nominating system to steer contracts to favored consultants, accepting more than $5,000 in reimbursements from the Assembly for travel that had already been paid for by the county party, and depositing a $5,000 check made out to his re-election committee into his personal bank account, the Associated Press reported.
The indictments stem from Mr. Hynes's 2003 probe into reports of the buying and selling of judgeships and justices in Brooklyn. Although the party in the county has lost clout with voters, it has enormous influence over the selection of judges, a system in which party contributions by prospective judicial candidates are reputed to be a prerequisite for party nominations. The probe into illegal activity was triggered by the arrest of Judge Gerald Garson, who was charged with accepting gifts in return for fixing divorce cases.