Thursday, November 1, 2012

New york city

  • Should the Race Be Run?

    For some reason, the uplifting value of the New York City Marathon, however, is so off the charts in Bloomberg World that nothing trumps diverting countless police and sanitation resources to marathon duty, even when parts of the metropolitan area lie ...

    www.nytimes.com

  • Officials Defend Decision Not to Cancel Marathon

    Mary Wittenberg, chief executive of New York Road Runners, defended the decision to put on the New York City Marathon as scheduled Sunday after some runners and politicians called for the race to be canceled in the wake of Hurricane Sandy.

    www.nytimes.com

  • Hurricane Sandy's New York City death toll climbs to 38 as city attempts to ...

    But the governor declined to criticize the decision to hold the New York City Marathon on Sunday. "It is a balance on all these things," Cuomo said.

    www.nydailynews.com

  • 'Pure mayhem' as New York City tries to get back to work

    Msnbc's Thomas Roberts takes a look at aerial shots of massive bus lines and snarled traffic in New York City as the subway remains flooded in lower Manhattan, where CNBC's Scott Cohn reports.

    usnews.nbcnews.com

  • New York City public transportation free through Friday

    Andrew Cuomo declared a transportation emergency Wednesday night, giving New York City the go-ahead to waive fares on the city's buses, subways and rail lines through Friday.

    www.latimes.com

  • Hurricane Sandy: New York City Sea Barrier Could Have Stopped Surge ...

    All that was needed to prevent mass destruction from the storm surge in New York City was a sea barrier of the type that protects major cities in Europe, some scientists and engineers say.

    latino.foxnews.com

  • Where To Find Internet, Phone Service In New York City After Hurricane Sandy

    Hurricane Sandy has brought mighty New York to its knees, knocking out electricity and Internet for hundreds of thousands in neighborhoods throughout the five boroughs.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • LaGuardia Airport Reopens: New York City's 3 Major Airports All Opened Post ...

    New York's three major airports will be operating under reduced schedules on Thursday as flight services start returning to normal following Superstorm Sandy.

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Bellevue Hospital, New York City's Flagship Facility, Starts To Evacuate As ...

    Bellevue is the flagship facility of New York City's 11 public hospital system, and it's also the oldest. Located near the East River, in the blackout zone of Lower Manhattan, the hospital had been operating on generators since Monday, but the 17 ...

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • Hurricane Sandy New York: City Struggles Back After Killer Storm (PHOTOS ...

    NEW YORK - Flights resumed, but slowly. The New York Stock Exchange got back to business, but on generator power. And with the subways still down, great numbers of people walked across the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan in a reverse of the exodus ...

    www.huffingtonpost.com

  • In Sandy's aftermath, New York City commuters face struggles old and new: the ...

    1 (Bloomberg) -- Miles-long traffic jams and intersections choked with cyclists greeted commuters trying to get to work in New York as the most populous U.S. city struggled back to its feet amid the devastation of superstorm Sandy. Drivers from New ...

    www.washingtonpost.com

  • SAT Is Postponed Throughout New York City

    As New York City continues its recovery from Hurricane Sandy, its schools will remain closed for the entire week, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg announced.

    thechoice.blogs.nytimes.com

  • Storm Closes City Schools for a Week

    By JENNY ANDERSON. Published: October 31, 2012. New York City public schools will remain closed through the rest of the week, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said Wednesday, creating an enormous scheduling headache for harried parents.

    www.nytimes.com

  • Sandy costs New York City $200 million a day in economic damage

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - The aftermath of super storm Sandy is costing New York City up to $200 million a day in permanently lost economic activity, including everything from the sale of pizza slices to corporate mergers and other Wall Street deals, the ...

    www.reuters.com

  • A Restroom Plan Can Relieve Some Worry

    That's why 1,750 portable restrooms, from A Royal Flush, are placed at the start of the New York City Marathon. "A lot of runners laugh about it, but a really important component to having a good race is doing your prerace business," said Beth Risdon, ...

    www.nytimes.com

  • In New York City, the challenge of getting around ...

    NEW YORK - Subways, railroads and buses started to roll again, cars jockeyed for passengers, and even air travel eased slightly Thursday as New York City and regional transportation systems began to recover from some of the gridlock and paralysis ...

    www.registerguard.com

  • It's back to business in New York City

    It's back to business in New York City. At 9:30 a.m., right on schedule, Mayor Michael Bloomberg rang the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange, then gave a hopeful thumbs-up.

    seattletimes.com

  • Sandy Aftermath Live Blog: Death Toll Climbs, NYC Power Slowly Being ...

    New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg praised the MTA in a Thursday afternoon news briefing for restoring partial subway service in time for the morning commute, and said that despite waving subway fares to encourage the use of public transportation, ...

    www.ibtimes.com

  • Hurricane Sandy forces big changes to New York City high school sports calendar

    Hurricane Sandy forces big changes to New York City high school sports calendar. Local HS coaches are now being forced to come up with different ways to prepare their teams without access to fields and other facilities that have been shuttered by mass ...

    www.nydailynews.com

  • New York City Hurricane Veterans Reflect on Sandy

    A day after the storm battered and inundated New York City, a stretch of Broadway running through the neighborhood still looked mostly untouched, discounting some uprooted trees and broken branches.

    abcnews.go.com

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