Judge Allows Competing Plans To Reorganize Honolulu Symphony

A federal bankruptcy judge has “denied the Honolulu Symphony Society’s request to extend the period in which it alone could submit a plan for its reorganization. The decision allows the symphony’s musicians and other parties to submit competing plans for the troubled organization’s emergence from bankruptcy” along with those from HSO management.

Redesigning NYC’s Governors Island, And Adding Hills

“When considered with Michael Van Valkenburgh’s Brooklyn Bridge Park, under construction across the harbor in Brooklyn, [Adriaan Geuze’s plan] represents a shift in the character of the city’s park system as a whole that is as revolutionary as Robert Moses’ early public works projects or Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux’s Central Park.”

Pulitzer-Winning Dance Critic A Champion For Coverage

Sarah “Kaufman, who studied ballet at a Bethesda academy as a young woman, said her work was first published in college after she called the Washington City Paper and complained that it ran no dance reviews. ‘To the extent I can capture my experience in the theater and bring the reader there with me, it’s a joy to be able to do that,’ she said.”

Charities Argue Over Who Gets To Treat A Dancer Amputee

“Among Haiti’s thousands of new amputees, [Fabienne] Jean … has been singled out for special opportunities because of serendipity, news media attention and her potential as a symbol of Haiti’s resilience: if the dancer who almost died rises to dance again, that will resonate, her caregivers believe.” Her situation also illustrates Haitians’ dependence on foreign charities.

Convicted Art Dealer Salander’s Furniture To Be Auctioned

“The items,” from Salander’s Manhattan townhouse, “include Italian Baroque credenzas, 18th- and 19th-century American furniture, Venetian glass chandeliers and about 50 carpets. … The Stair auction will be the first sale of Salander’s property since he pleaded guilty to grand larceny and fraud in New York Supreme Court on March 18.”