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They’re Drawn Back, Once Again, by Stickball

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They’re Drawn Back, Once Again, by Stickball

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 Eric Mortensen swinging for the fences at P.S. 95 at the 31st Annual Stickball Reunion and his class’s 50th reunion.

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 Alan Frishman showed Sunny Dolney Moles a photograph of her that was taken on graduation day in 1958.

Yiggy showed up early, carrying the mop and broom handles he keeps in his closet back home. Barry Heyman, 63, arrived soon afterward, bearing a large black and white photograph of the eighth-grade class of 1958. David Sternthal, 63, the blurry one in the photo because he jerked when the boy next to him pinched him in the behind, brought his video camera.

Eric Mortensen, 66 — a retired teacher who carries his stickball gear in his minivan because, he explained, “You never know” — held out the hard rubber Spaldeen ball in his hand. “This stupid little ball, for a working-class neighborhood, provided us with all the entertainment we needed, until we got old enough to chase after girls,” he said.

They met Saturday morning on the blacktop of a schoolyard in the northern Bronx. They played in this yard when they were children and teenagers, and decades later, they still play in this yard, even if it is only once a year.

For 31 years, on the second Saturday in June, dozens of men and women who lived in the Van Cortlandt Village section of the Bronx in the 1940s and 1950s play stickball at their old school, P.S. 95. They called it Stickball Days at first, and this time they called it the 31st Annual Stickball Reunion.

Ed Yaker, 63, a retired math teacher who lives near the school and who everyone calls Yiggy, started the tradition in 1977. That first year, about 10 or 12 people came, said Mr. Yaker, an easygoing sort whose business card lists some of his activities as “beach” and “golf.” After a while, more than 100 attended annually, and they started making commemorative T-shirts and handing out an award called the Novi, in honor of a classmate who died years ago, Alan Novikoff.

Mr. Yaker has since been inducted into the city’s Stickball Hall of Fame, affiliated with the Museum of the City of New York.

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SG2 mulls sale of Bronx rent-stabilized housing

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SG2 mulls sale of Bronx rent-stabilized housing

The private equity-backed partnership SG2 Properties is considering selling several of its multi-family buildings in the Bronx.

“We are marketing a portion of our Bronx portfolio,” SG2 partner Stephen Siegel wrote in an email. “If we get what we think the properties are worth we will sell them.”

He would not confirm the number of buildings being offered, but several sources said that more than two dozen buildings with less than 2,000 apartments and about 50 stores could be sold.

The buildings include 1212 Grand Concourse and 2055 Anthony Avenue.

Many of the buildings were part of a $300 million, 51-building purchase by SG2 and partner BlackRock Realty Advisors in February 2007 from Bronx landlord Jacob Selechnik, sources said.

The city has seen billions of dollars invested by private equity companies in multi-family, rent-regulated apartments in recent years, mostly in northern Manhattan and the outer boroughs.

Critics say that as sales prices rise, buildings will become unaffordable for renters or the owners will not be able to maintain them.

SG2 has purchased some 5,000 units in more than 70 buildings in the Bronx, according to media reports.

At the time of the 2007 buy, Siegel, who is also chairman of global brokerage at CB Richard Ellis, said the mostly rent-stabilized apartments would remain affordable.

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