Why bother having the terror trials in a courthouse when we could have them at the new Long Island Rail Road terminal?
After all, the new “Atlantic Terminal” rail station that opened officially on Tuesday is one of the most heavily armored facilities in the borough — ringed by no less than 14 mammoth concrete coffins [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Business and Economy, Flatbush Avenue, Green Zone, Long Island, Long Island Rail Road, new york, terrorism, United States
Large groups of dolphins are currently vacationing in the waters in and around New York City. At least 150 to 200 dolphins were first spotted on Wednesday off the coast of Long Island: in Cold Spring Harbor, Huntington and Northport. Since then, they’ve split into two groups: one group venturing out into Long Island Sound [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Bronx, City Island, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, Long Island Sound, new york, new york city, United States
The worst subway disaster in New York City history occurred on November 1, 1918 in Brooklyn. A speeding Brighton Beach-bound BRT (the now defunct Brooklyn Rapid Transit) train failed to negotiate a treacherous “S” curve along an elevated-to-tunnel stretch of track at Malbone Street (now Empire Boulevard) and Franklin Avenue. While the lead car of [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Brian J. Cudahy, Brighton Beach, brighton line, brooklyn, brooklyn-bridge, Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation, BRT, Business, car, Consumer Park, disaster, Edward Luciano, empire boulevard, flagmen, Franklin Ave, Franklin Avenue, Franklin Avenue Shuttle, franklin avenue station, Franklin Street, line, Long Island, Luciano, Malbone Street, manhattan, motorman, Nassau, new york city, new york city history, New York City Subway, park pl, Park Row, Prospect, Prospect Park, Q Train, s curve, speed, station, subway, track, train, train dispatcher, Transit, transit train
About 2,300 years ago, a meteorite may have landed close to present-day New York City. The strike set off a tsunami that flooded the entire region and would have certainly destroyed anyone or anything in its path. Landing off the coast of Long Island (map), the space rock’s diameter was approximately 165 feet (50 meters) [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: Columbia University, Dallas Abbott, disaster, historic, HudsonRiver, Impact crater, Long Island, Meteorite, new york city
J. J. Byrne is a long-dead, long-forgotten Brooklyn borough president whose most notable achievement is the park that bears his name (or formerly bore his name). Since 1933, a three-acre patch of green at Fourth and Fifth avenues, between Third and Fifth streets, in Park Slope was called J. J. Byrne Park to honor his [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Battle of Long Island, brooklyn, historic, Long Island, manhattan, new york, Old Stone House, park, Park Slope Brooklyn, politics, United States, Washington Park
“Black Friday” is certainly looking darker this year; industry insiders referring to it as “Black November.” While stores expect a high turnout, sales are expected to be low. In spite of astounding mark downs, prices slashed down to the bone on many items, retailers are worried that shoppers will wait for December for even better [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Black Friday, christmas, Daily News, holiday, Long Island, new york, shopping, Valley Stream, Valley Stream New York, Wal-Mart
Beneath the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, to the north, lies a small jetty called Denyse Wharf. It’s a totally abandoned and hopelessly polluted spit of land that once served as a British landing point during the Battle of Brooklyn (then called Long Island) during the Revolution. Denyse Denyse, a Dutch colonist, was the dock’s original owner and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn, construction, culture, energy, Fort Hamilton, Fort Hamilton High School, historic, Long Island, new york, New York City Marathon, Thomas Greene, United States, Verrazano-Narrows Bridge
Image via Wikipedia
They say that politicians are full of wind (among other things), but Mayor Michael Bloomberg wants to convert New York City’s wind into energy. In yet another ambitious plan (some call it a “pipe dream”), the mayor intends to outdo Don Quixote in not merely tilting at windmills but have them built and [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (4) Article tags: brooklyn, Don Quixote, energy, Hudson River, Long Island, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, mayor-bloomberg, Michael Bloomberg, new york city, politics, queens, skyscrapers
clipped from www.brooklynpaper.com
Miss Brooklyn is now Miss New York!
By Gersh Kuntzman
Of course, it’s no surprise to readers (and lookers!) of The Brooklyn Paper, but Miss Brooklyn Leigh-Tayor Smith is now Miss New York!
The stunning Smith, who is admittedly a Virginia-raised Manhattanite, but has a strong tie to Brooklyn thanks to being a parishioner at the [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (5) Article tags: art, brooklyn, Brooklyn Paper, Fulton Mall, Gersh Kuntzman, Long Island, manhattan, new york, news, Performing arts, United States
Scientists are predicting that New York City will soon be hit by the Big One: not an earthquake, but a massive and deadly hurricane that will rival if not surpass Hurricane Katrina. Situated as it is on the globe, hurricanes that threaten the city are usually dissipated by the cold waters of the Atlantic, but [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (5) Article tags: construction, disaster, Hudson River, Hurricane Katrina, LaGuardia Airport, Long Island, manhattan, New Jersey, new york, new york city, skyscrapers, storm, Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, weather
Forty-four years ago, the murder of Kitty Genovese in Kew Gardens, Queens, brutal and viciously insane as it was, did not, at first, receive much media attention. In a nation still reeling in the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination, experiencing the first of many race riots, observing a sudden surge in the crime rate, this [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (3) Article tags: crime, historic, History of New York City, John Darley, Kew Gardens, Kew Gardens Queens, kitty genovese, Long Island, Long Island Railroad, new york, new york city, queens, The New York Times Company, United States, Winston Moseley
Among the many traditions and tales that have enriched the Algonquin Hotel since it opened in 1902 is its famous resident cat. The practice of keeping a cat dates back to the 1930s when hotel owner Frank Case took in a stray, lovingly pampered him, and virtually allowed the cat to run loose throughout [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: AlgonquinHotel, Arts, cats, culture, Frank Case, Hamlet, historic, John Barrymore, literature, Long Island, Matilda, Postings