The Brooklyn Paper Sphere: Related Content
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The MTA’s longstanding tradition for attempting new and expensive technology that usually winds up in the wastebasket continues unabated. Their latest brainstorm, resulting in the loss of $14 million, was supposed to “revolutionize” bus travel. Commuters would not only know when the next bus was due to arrive but would also be able to monitor [...]
Lafayette French Pastry in Greenwich Village, which served as a backdrop for SEX AND THE CITY and trendy caterer to the stars, may have overdosed on its own celebrity. Ted Kefalinos, proprietor of LFP, thought that his latest creation, a cookie named “Drunken Negro Face,” would be viewed as an “innocent design…nothing more than just [...]
The Lower East Side is about to get cool again, at least for a couple of days. On February 4th snowboarders will start taking practice runs down the ramp that’s being built on the side of the East River (you can get a nice view from the Williamsburg Bridge right now). Then on February 5th [...]
After the success of his novel IN COLD BLOOD, Truman Capote decided to throw a party. More in his element amongst the glitter of celebrities than at the keys of his typewriter, the magnificent gnome was a party animal if there ever was one. But unlike the typical soiree of the flowery 60s, where the [...]
Chesley ‘Sully’ Sullenberger, the US Airways pilot who landed in New York‘s Hudson River with all onboard escaping safely, smiles during a homecoming celebration on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2009, in Danville, Calif. Applauding him are his wife Lorrie Sullenberger, left, and Danville Mayor Newell Arnerich. (AP Photo/Noah Berger) Sphere: Related Content
Rooftop water tanks have dotted the NYC skyline since the late nineteenth century. They’ve changed little in that time, reaching their height of technological integrity around the 1920s, and stand like stately if quaint remnants of the city’s abiding past. Nonetheless, water tanks, mostly wooden, were and are a crucial source of New York‘s water [...]
On the day of John F. Kennedy‘s inauguration (January 20, 1961), the Northeast was paralyzed beneath 1-2 feet of snow. The president’s speech was carried on the heels of fierce winds and a biting cold. People were relatively more optimistic in those days, in spite of their fears and paranoia…before the fall of Camelot and [...]
As an aside: I’m not really looking for a “New America” but for an Improved America. Over the past few decades, this nation experienced more than enough “innovation“: a “new world order” over democracy, controversy over liberty, corruption over integrity, ineptitude over responsibility, and outrage over respect. The original ideals and principles of America, as [...]
In 1918, at the New York Hippodrome, legendary magician and escape artist Harry Houdini made an 8- foot, 6,000 pound elephant disappear. A crowd of over 5,000 packed the auditorium to watch Houdini’s latest stunt: the “world’s most incredible” conjuring illusion. The pachyderm would proudly and graciously appear upon Houdini’s introduction, with a raising of [...]
