![]() ![]() July-August 2019 Cathedral Village Voice.September-October 2019 Cathedral Village Voice.March – April 2021 Cathedral Village Voice.May – June 2021 Cathedral Village Voice.July – August 2021 Cathedral Village Voice.September – October 2021 Cathedral Village Voice - corrected version.You would be helping out in your community AND getting exercise! Please call Linda at 30 for details. ![]() Or more if you are willing! This would require about a half an hour of time per block, six times a year. Please are always looking for volunteers to deliver the newsletter in a one or two block radius. Whether you are big or small, we offer highly affordable rates. It’s how they keep informed of some of the city’s most high profile events, such as the Cathedral Village Arts Festival as well as the many gallery openings, public talks, school activities and literary events that occur every week in our neighbourhood. ![]() Readers eagerly anticipate each issue of the Village Voice. New Yorkers may have noticed something strange in the last few days: copies of The Village Voice, fresh off the press and still free, on newsstands and in street boxes.Advertise. In the way that some things come back stronger once before they go away for good, that sentinel of downtown New York bohemian life, the Village Voice, has published its last printed edition. “New York is back, The Voice is back, I’m back.” “It all makes sense,” said the longtime Voice columnist Michael Musto, who has a byline in the return issue. The new issue, which came out on Saturday, is the first print incarnation of the storied independent publication since August 2017, when its previous owner, Peter D. Barbey, took it digital-only a year before shutting it down. Brian Calle, the publisher of LA Weekly, bought The Voice in December and revived its dormant website in January. “It really makes the relaunch of The Village Voice real in a way it wasn’t before.” “For us, putting a print issue out was a stake in the ground,” Mr. A nice spring surprise to see a print today! /B4hksqRJLk He plans to publish a print issue about four times a year, he added, meaning that a famed alt-weekly is now an alt-quarterly. The comeback issue includes an article by the former Voice reporter Ross Barkan on the New York mayoral race, and one by Eileen Markey that revives the paper’s tradition of shaming the city’s landlords. He was laid off in 2013, brought back in 2015 and sent packing once more, along with his colleagues, at the time of the 2018 shutdown. Calle said he had not appointed an editor in chief, but was having conversations with people as he rebuilt the newsroom. Baker, a longtime Voice writer, has taken the role of senior editor.Īfter The New York Times reported the sale of The Voice last year, some journalists expressed concerns about Mr. Calle as the proprietor of the downtown paper, which was founded in 1955 by Dan Wolf, Edwin Fancher and Norman Mailer. Calle was previously an opinion editor at The Orange County Register in California and a vice president of the Claremont Institute, a conservative think tank, and his tenure at LA Weekly has been marked by boycotts led by former writers for the publication and a lawsuit filed by an investor. Iconic New York alt-weekly The Village Voice, which shut down in 2018, will be coming back in early 2021, according to a report Tuesday in the New York Times. Calle was a fan of the paper’s old spirit. “The new issue, to me, looks very Village Voice-y.” “He wants The Village Voice in all of its old, spunky, lefty history,” he said. ![]()
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