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	<title>Observer &#187; The Best and Worst Men&#8217;s Rooms in New York City (After Midnight)</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; The Best and Worst Men&#8217;s Rooms in New York City (After Midnight)</title>
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		<title>The Best and Worst Men&#8217;s Rooms in New York City (After Midnight)</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2002/04/the-best-and-worst-mens-rooms-in-new-york-city-after-midnight/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Apr 2002 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>THE BEST:</p>
<p>The Stanhope Park Hyatt New York, Fifth Avenue</p>
<p>at East 81st Street . Use the one by the bar. Nice and clean. Hotels are good</p>
<p>in general, especially all those along Central Park South. Get in there no</p>
<p>problem, sit down, kick back for 45 minutes.</p>
<p> Hotel Belleclaire, West</p>
<p>77th Street and Broadway . Take elevator to ninth floor, turn left, go to</p>
<p>the roof. Nice view as you take care of business.</p>
<p> Paddy Maguire's Ale House,</p>
<p>Third Avenue between 19th and 20th streets . Total privacy, clean. Take your</p>
<p>time in there. You can get away with the ladies' room, too.</p>
<p> Dusk, West 24th Street</p>
<p>between Sixth and Seventh avenues . You can take a leak while watching the</p>
<p>people through the tinted window. A little bizarre, but somehow satisfying.</p>
<p> Manitoba's, Avenue B</p>
<p>between Sixth and Seventh streets . That giant bolt lock. No one's coming</p>
<p>in.</p>
<p> Bungalow 8, West 27th</p>
<p>Street between 10th and 11th avenues . Perhaps the best in Manhattan. Four</p>
<p>private rooms, one of them big enough to take a nap on the floor. Dark in</p>
<p>there. We like the black toilets with the dark toilet water. No one's gonna</p>
<p>bang on the door because the cigarette girl outside will stop them. Take your</p>
<p>time.</p>
<p> Los Dos Molinos, East 18th</p>
<p>Street between Park Avenue South and Irving Place . Homey, clean, bring one</p>
<p>of those good margaritas in there, sit down and read all the cool wanted</p>
<p>posters on the wall, or gaze at the John Wayne painting above the can. The lock</p>
<p>wasn't working the night we were there, but we were told it would be fixed.</p>
<p> THE WORST</p>
<p> The Village Idiot, 14th Street between Eighth</p>
<p>and Ninth avenues . No lock. Outhouse feel. Slidey floor. Vile.</p>
<p> Subway Inn, 60th Street and</p>
<p>Lexington Avenue . You come close to vomiting from the smell. Wear gloves,</p>
<p>do not sit downReal cheap drinks there, though.</p>
<p> Plug Uglies, Third Avenue</p>
<p>between 20th and 21st streets. No lock. No stall. No privacy. Cop bar. Look</p>
<p>out. Do whatever you gotta do fast.</p>
<p> Suite 16, corner of Eighth</p>
<p>Avenue and 16th Street. Two urinals, one long line for the stall. Attendant</p>
<p>watching everything, a major distraction that could lead to stage fright. For</p>
<p>privacy, pay off attendant with $8 pack of smokes, $2 tip.</p>
<p> The Liquor Store Bar,</p>
<p>corner of West Broadway and White Street. Only one bathroom. Big problem.</p>
<p>Someone's always knocking on the door.</p>
<p> Baby Doll Lounge, corner of</p>
<p>Church and White streets . Be very wary of burly bouncers. When they shake</p>
<p>their heads at you, you'll know the meaning of terror.</p>
<p> Vazac's, corner of Seventh</p>
<p>Street and Avenue B. Bring back the lock! Move fast, keep back to door. If</p>
<p>you do get stage fright, no reason to be ashamed. We sometimes take care of</p>
<p>business outside between B and C. Ladies, we hear if you make out with the</p>
<p>bartenders, they'll give you access to the basement bathroom.</p>
<p> -George Gurley</p>
<p> Spacemen Invade the East Side</p>
<p> Among the many ways Manhattan life has changed since Sept. 11:</p>
<p>It's harder to drive a 54-foot-long rocket ship into Central Park. So learned a</p>
<p>group of space enthusiasts who want to transport the Canadian Arrow-a</p>
<p>three-person rocket ship just a shade under six stories tall-from Ontario to</p>
<p>New York on April 25 for a benefit party at the Explorers Club on East 70th</p>
<p>Street.</p>
<p> The benefit in question is a fund-raiser for the X Prize</p>
<p>Foundation, a competition promising $10 million to the first private company</p>
<p>that launches a rocket carrying three people into orbit, brings them back to</p>
<p>Earth and relaunches the same ship within two weeks. The Canadian Arrow is one</p>
<p>of the hopeful rockets in the running, and organizers of the $500-a-plate X</p>
<p>Prize fête, eager for publicity, wish to park the spaceship around the corner</p>
<p>from the Explorers Club, specifically the East 72nd Street entrance to Central</p>
<p>Park.</p>
<p> The trouble is, the Canadian Arrow looks scary as heck. Modeled</p>
<p>after the old V-2 ballistic missiles used by Nazi Germany-this design makes it</p>
<p>easier to transport via train and truck, its proponents say-the red-and-white</p>
<p>spacecraft resembles a prop left over from Dr.</p>
<p>Strangelove , nowhere near as cuddly as NASA's puppy-nosed space shuttles.</p>
<p> The X Prizers seem to understand this. Even though they figure</p>
<p>that getting the permits to haul the Arrow to Manhattan will be easy-the ship</p>
<p>has no engines, no hazardous materials, and is already permitted to ride freely</p>
<p>in Canada-they know that the last thing rattled New York residents may want to</p>
<p>see driving down their block is a gigantic-missile-looking spacecraft</p>
<p>surrounded by police escorts.</p>
<p> "It'll attract a lot of attention," Canadian Arrow team leader</p>
<p>Geoff Sheevin said the other day. "Coming down to New York with a rocket on a</p>
<p>trailer, you've got to tell people about it, because you don't want to frighten</p>
<p>anyone due to recent events." Mr. Sheevin allowed that to the unsuspecting East</p>
<p>Sider, the appearance of the Canadian Arrow might be a "little ominous."</p>
<p> Space junkies are nothing but optimistic, however, and another X</p>
<p>Prizer figured that instead of being a fright, the visit of the Canadian Arrow</p>
<p>could be a boon to city-spaceship relations. "This isn't black humor," said</p>
<p>Mike Parker, an X Prize board member. "This is something that can</p>
<p>recontextualize rockets in a way that's very positive."</p>
<p> As of Tuesday, April 9, New York City's Department of Parks and</p>
<p>Recreation was still reviewing the application to stow the rocket in Central</p>
<p>Park. Meanwhile, Adeodato Ressi, another X Prizer, said his primary concern</p>
<p>wasn't the park, but whether the Canadian Arrow would receive clearance to</p>
<p>enter the Lincoln Tunnel en route to the city. "These guys are looking for</p>
<p>suspicious vehicles, and we're driving a goddamned missile through the tunnel,"</p>
<p>Mr. Ressi said. "If it doesn't get stopped, I give up … I'm moving to L.A."</p>
<p> -Gabriel Snyder </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE BEST:</p>
<p>The Stanhope Park Hyatt New York, Fifth Avenue</p>
<p>at East 81st Street . Use the one by the bar. Nice and clean. Hotels are good</p>
<p>in general, especially all those along Central Park South. Get in there no</p>
<p>problem, sit down, kick back for 45 minutes.</p>
<p> Hotel Belleclaire, West</p>
<p>77th Street and Broadway . Take elevator to ninth floor, turn left, go to</p>
<p>the roof. Nice view as you take care of business.</p>
<p> Paddy Maguire's Ale House,</p>
<p>Third Avenue between 19th and 20th streets . Total privacy, clean. Take your</p>
<p>time in there. You can get away with the ladies' room, too.</p>
<p> Dusk, West 24th Street</p>
<p>between Sixth and Seventh avenues . You can take a leak while watching the</p>
<p>people through the tinted window. A little bizarre, but somehow satisfying.</p>
<p> Manitoba's, Avenue B</p>
<p>between Sixth and Seventh streets . That giant bolt lock. No one's coming</p>
<p>in.</p>
<p> Bungalow 8, West 27th</p>
<p>Street between 10th and 11th avenues . Perhaps the best in Manhattan. Four</p>
<p>private rooms, one of them big enough to take a nap on the floor. Dark in</p>
<p>there. We like the black toilets with the dark toilet water. No one's gonna</p>
<p>bang on the door because the cigarette girl outside will stop them. Take your</p>
<p>time.</p>
<p> Los Dos Molinos, East 18th</p>
<p>Street between Park Avenue South and Irving Place . Homey, clean, bring one</p>
<p>of those good margaritas in there, sit down and read all the cool wanted</p>
<p>posters on the wall, or gaze at the John Wayne painting above the can. The lock</p>
<p>wasn't working the night we were there, but we were told it would be fixed.</p>
<p> THE WORST</p>
<p> The Village Idiot, 14th Street between Eighth</p>
<p>and Ninth avenues . No lock. Outhouse feel. Slidey floor. Vile.</p>
<p> Subway Inn, 60th Street and</p>
<p>Lexington Avenue . You come close to vomiting from the smell. Wear gloves,</p>
<p>do not sit downReal cheap drinks there, though.</p>
<p> Plug Uglies, Third Avenue</p>
<p>between 20th and 21st streets. No lock. No stall. No privacy. Cop bar. Look</p>
<p>out. Do whatever you gotta do fast.</p>
<p> Suite 16, corner of Eighth</p>
<p>Avenue and 16th Street. Two urinals, one long line for the stall. Attendant</p>
<p>watching everything, a major distraction that could lead to stage fright. For</p>
<p>privacy, pay off attendant with $8 pack of smokes, $2 tip.</p>
<p> The Liquor Store Bar,</p>
<p>corner of West Broadway and White Street. Only one bathroom. Big problem.</p>
<p>Someone's always knocking on the door.</p>
<p> Baby Doll Lounge, corner of</p>
<p>Church and White streets . Be very wary of burly bouncers. When they shake</p>
<p>their heads at you, you'll know the meaning of terror.</p>
<p> Vazac's, corner of Seventh</p>
<p>Street and Avenue B. Bring back the lock! Move fast, keep back to door. If</p>
<p>you do get stage fright, no reason to be ashamed. We sometimes take care of</p>
<p>business outside between B and C. Ladies, we hear if you make out with the</p>
<p>bartenders, they'll give you access to the basement bathroom.</p>
<p> -George Gurley</p>
<p> Spacemen Invade the East Side</p>
<p> Among the many ways Manhattan life has changed since Sept. 11:</p>
<p>It's harder to drive a 54-foot-long rocket ship into Central Park. So learned a</p>
<p>group of space enthusiasts who want to transport the Canadian Arrow-a</p>
<p>three-person rocket ship just a shade under six stories tall-from Ontario to</p>
<p>New York on April 25 for a benefit party at the Explorers Club on East 70th</p>
<p>Street.</p>
<p> The benefit in question is a fund-raiser for the X Prize</p>
<p>Foundation, a competition promising $10 million to the first private company</p>
<p>that launches a rocket carrying three people into orbit, brings them back to</p>
<p>Earth and relaunches the same ship within two weeks. The Canadian Arrow is one</p>
<p>of the hopeful rockets in the running, and organizers of the $500-a-plate X</p>
<p>Prize fête, eager for publicity, wish to park the spaceship around the corner</p>
<p>from the Explorers Club, specifically the East 72nd Street entrance to Central</p>
<p>Park.</p>
<p> The trouble is, the Canadian Arrow looks scary as heck. Modeled</p>
<p>after the old V-2 ballistic missiles used by Nazi Germany-this design makes it</p>
<p>easier to transport via train and truck, its proponents say-the red-and-white</p>
<p>spacecraft resembles a prop left over from Dr.</p>
<p>Strangelove , nowhere near as cuddly as NASA's puppy-nosed space shuttles.</p>
<p> The X Prizers seem to understand this. Even though they figure</p>
<p>that getting the permits to haul the Arrow to Manhattan will be easy-the ship</p>
<p>has no engines, no hazardous materials, and is already permitted to ride freely</p>
<p>in Canada-they know that the last thing rattled New York residents may want to</p>
<p>see driving down their block is a gigantic-missile-looking spacecraft</p>
<p>surrounded by police escorts.</p>
<p> "It'll attract a lot of attention," Canadian Arrow team leader</p>
<p>Geoff Sheevin said the other day. "Coming down to New York with a rocket on a</p>
<p>trailer, you've got to tell people about it, because you don't want to frighten</p>
<p>anyone due to recent events." Mr. Sheevin allowed that to the unsuspecting East</p>
<p>Sider, the appearance of the Canadian Arrow might be a "little ominous."</p>
<p> Space junkies are nothing but optimistic, however, and another X</p>
<p>Prizer figured that instead of being a fright, the visit of the Canadian Arrow</p>
<p>could be a boon to city-spaceship relations. "This isn't black humor," said</p>
<p>Mike Parker, an X Prize board member. "This is something that can</p>
<p>recontextualize rockets in a way that's very positive."</p>
<p> As of Tuesday, April 9, New York City's Department of Parks and</p>
<p>Recreation was still reviewing the application to stow the rocket in Central</p>
<p>Park. Meanwhile, Adeodato Ressi, another X Prizer, said his primary concern</p>
<p>wasn't the park, but whether the Canadian Arrow would receive clearance to</p>
<p>enter the Lincoln Tunnel en route to the city. "These guys are looking for</p>
<p>suspicious vehicles, and we're driving a goddamned missile through the tunnel,"</p>
<p>Mr. Ressi said. "If it doesn't get stopped, I give up … I'm moving to L.A."</p>
<p> -Gabriel Snyder </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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