A 9/11 Judge Sets a Timer for a Month
By BENJAMIN WEISER
The sides in a wrongful-death suit stemming from the 2001 terrorist attacks will be limited to about a month in court.
Installations have been popping up across New Jersey for about a year, but some residents worry aloud about the effect on property values.
The sides in a wrongful-death suit stemming from the 2001 terrorist attacks will be limited to about a month in court.
Accusations that a Connecticut woman used a false address to enroll her 5-year-old son in school have stirred up arguments about differences in schools from one town to another.
Vincent L. Leibell III has an alternate proposal to prison time: a tour of duty as a diplomat in some unsteady corner of the globe — perhaps Iraq or Libya.
Two matters have given Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg a chance to vent about people who get special treatment.
Critics of abusive interrogations of suspected terrorists are taking legal action to seek punishment for psychologists who they say designed and served as consultants for the interrogation techniques.
Maria Rodriguez, an associate professor of psychology at Hunter College, has been working with students in CUNY’s career-conscious SEEK program since 1982.
About a dozen students occupied a historic administration building in protest Wednesday, days after the university’s president did not meet demands for a tuition freeze.
The city is weighing a proposal to create a class of cabs that would be prohibited from picking up passengers in most of Manhattan, but would be able to do so in other parts of the city.
In a hearing Wednesday, the City Council pressed the parks department about why there were more officers in Manhattan than in any other borough.
At the Time 100 spectacular in Manhattan on Tuesday, actors and politicians mingled with authors, activists and musicians.
Live video streams from the 12th floor of a library at New York University where a pair of red-tailed hawks has a nest.
Marie Winn, the author of “Red-Tails in Love: Pale Male’s Story,” will be responding to readers’ questions.
Trinity Grace Church in the East Village draws on a young crowd seeking a spiritual home.
At El Nuevo Bohío in the Bronx, Puerto Rican specialties are the order of the day.
These hobbyists don’t just accumulate memorabilia, they define their existence by it. Occasionally, they overdo it, and that’s just fine with them.
New Yorkers who hail from other countries recall why certain items made the journey with them.
News, restaurant reviews and arts coverage from New Jersey, Connecticut, Westchester and Long Island.
The Times is blogging from the East Village, Fort Greene and Clinton Hill. Explore our local blogs:
Sam Roberts hosts an inside look at the most compelling stories in Sunday's Times, 10:00 p.m. on Saturdays and 10:00 a.m. on Sundays, on NY1 News.
From the staff of The New York Times, a free, constantly updated insiders’ guide to our favorite things in New York, including restaurants, bars, coffee shops, boutiques and home furnishing stores, as well as events, outings and day trips.