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A Well-Stamped Passport

Dear Diary:

My husband has been traveling overseas on business at least once a month for the past few years. His passport became so heavily stamped that he was forced to apply for a passport with extra visa pages.

As he was passing through passport control at J.F.K. this week, the guard looked him over and asked, “Are you married?” My husband nodded.

The guard slowly flipped through the bulky document. “How’s that going?” he deadpanned.

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Week in Pictures for May 24

Here is a slide show of photographs from the past week in New York City and the region. Subjects include the New York Aquarium, a nightclub in a Chelsea water tower, and an aerial view of beachfront homes in Mantoloking, N.J.

This weekend on “The New York Times Close Up,” an inside look at the most compelling articles in Sunday’s Times, Clyde Haberman will speak with The Times’s Eleanor Randolph, Michael Barbaro, Michael M. Grynbaum and Matt Flegenheimer. Also, Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand; Janette Sadik-Khan, New York City’s transportation commissioner; and Colin Quinn, a writer, comedian and performer. Tune in at 10 p.m. Saturday or 10 a.m. Sunday on NY1 News to watch.

A sampling from the City Room blog is featured daily in the main print news section of The Times. You may also read current New York headlines, like New York Metro | The New York Times on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.



Coney Island, 2:57 P.M.

Bryan Thomas for The New York Times

True, the weather has not been too beachy the last few days. Nor is it supposed to be on Saturday.

But there is a bright side: May has been yet another banner month for weather fans. Just ask Stephen Fybish, City Room’s persistent weather historian, who left a message Friday afternoon informing us that we had just achieved what weather historians (some of them, anyway) refer to as a “super-highlight switcheroo.” To wit:

“We have now gone from the fifth-driest April, with 1.31 inches, to what is already the ninth-wettest May. The total precip through 4 p.m. at the park for this month is 7.23 inches.”

That is quite a swing, Mr. Fybish. When was the last time that happened?

“Not since 1980 has there been such a turnaround from a dry month to a wet month. Because in 1980, they had the third-driest February, and that had a whopping 1.04 inches, and then they went to what was then the wettest of all Marches, 10.41 inches.”

With that, we wish you a great, or solemnly observant, weekend, as you see fit. And note that Sunday is supposed to be sunny. Maybe.



A ‘Sphere’ That Has Taken a Year to Roll Nowhere

Despite the beginning of renovation work at Battery Park, the David W. Dunlap/The New York Times Despite the beginning of renovation work at Battery Park, the “Sphere” remains.

The last word on the fate of Fritz Koenig’s “Sphere” for the World Trade Center, installed in 2002 at Battery Park as the city’s interim 9/11 memorial, came a year ago from Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. “I think it’s beautiful where it is,” he said.

One World Trade Center has been topped out in the time it has taken officials to decide what to do with the David W. Dunlap/The New York Times One World Trade Center has been topped out in the time it has taken officials to decide what to do with the “Sphere,” in the foreground.

And that’s where it has remained. The “Sphere,” which was to have been moved in the late spring of 2012, is still in Battery Park. If officials at City Hall, the parks department, the Battery Conservancy, the Port Authority or the 9/11 Memorial have a plan to relocate the 25-foot sculpture â€" badly damaged when the twin towers crashed down around it on Sept. 11, 2001 â€" they have not disclosed it.

The National September 11 Memorial and Museum at the World Trade Center Foundation, of which Mr. Bloomberg is chairman, does not want the sculpture. “We fully, 100 percent support the ‘Sphere’ being kept outside in a way the public can experience whenever they want to,” Joseph C. Daniels, the foundation president, said last year. “But it’s not going to be incorporated in the eight-acre memorial plaza.”

He said the plaza, designed by Michael Arad, was not intended for such artifacts of the attack. Also, since the plaza doubles as a rooftop for the memorial museum and PATH station, a considerable amount of structural retrofitting might be required to accommodate the 22.5-ton artwork. It can’t simply be plopped down.

The Battery Conservancy, headed by Warrie Price, does not want the “Sphere” in Battery Park, which it runs under contract with the parks department. Though the sculpture may be the biggest draw in the park after Castle Clinton, it was installed as an interim measure and has no place in the long-term renovation plan. The conservancy may also be concerned that Battery Park has so many memorials already that it will begin to feel like a necropolis.

Despite Ms. Price’s opposition, and despite the fact that she is the administrator of Battery Park, she must ultimately defer to the parks department, which Mayor Bloomberg controls through the parks commissioner. So the “Sphere” stays.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the sculpture, considered returning the “Sphere” to Hangar 17 at Kennedy International Airport, where other large-scale artifacts of 9/11 have been stored. But Patrick J. Foye, the executive director, put a halt to that plan more than a year ago, in deference to the wishes of victims’ family members.

He has since expressed general support for bringing the sculpture back to the trade center. But Mr. Foye has not elaborated on where, exactly, the “Sphere” might go, though the authority found a place for “America’s Response Monument (De Oppresso Liber),” an equestrian bronze honoring the Army Special Forces in Afghanistan.

Commencement of the renovation of Battery Park was supposed to be the nonnegotiable deadline for a relocation plan, since the “Sphere” stands in the middle of the construction area. But work crews have devised a way around it, suggesting strongly that Mr. Bloomberg’s last words a year ago were the last word indeed.

Badly damaged, the Archiv Fritz Koenig Badly damaged, the “Sphere” survived the attack on the World Trade Center of Sept. 11, 2001, and has been adopted by many as a symbol of resilience and hope.


Big Ticket | Diplomatic Crash Pad for $11.59 Million

The Portuguese government owned a unit at the Dakota for decades.Robert Caplin for The New York Times The Portuguese government owned a unit at the Dakota for decades.

In further fallout from Portugal’s fiscal meltdown, a grand and gracious apartment at the revered Dakota that had been used for four decades by that nation’s dignitaries as its Upper West Side diplomatic crash pad and entertainment hub sold â€" down to the penny â€" for $11,593,237.50 and was the most expensive sale of week, according to city records.

The eight-room residence at 1 West 72nd Street, No. 74, was listed for sale at $14.5 million last year and was reduced to $12.95 million in September. The monthly maintenance fee of $9,511 no doubt proved unsustainable to a government in the midst of fashioning a $107 billion bailout courtesy of the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.

The 3,600-square-foot apartment has three bedrooms, three baths and a powder room, along with three wood-burning fireplaces and the Dakota’s typical complement of 12-foot ceilings, 10-foot-tall ash-and-mahogany doors, and elaborate mahogany woodwork and plaster moldings throughout. The 27-foot corner living room has Central Park views and a planting balcony, while the 24-foot dining room faces south; the bedrooms are all sequestered on a north wing. Pocket doors lead from the entrance gallery to a paneled library with a fireplace.

John Burger and Guida De Carvalhosa of Brown Harris Stevens represented the seller via its consulate general at 590 Fifth Avenue. The buyers are David Folkerts-Landau, the chief economist of the Deutsche Bank Group, and his wife, Maie Folkerts; their broker was Jason Haber of Rubicon Property.

Mr. Haber said the buyers, who live in London, intended to “make a museum-quality restoration.”

Big Ticket includes closed sales from the previous week, ending Wednesday.



In an Old Steam Plant, Providing a Home for the Many Cats of Pratt

Conrad Milster, the chief engineer at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, has become the caretaker of the many stray cats that like to frequent the school's steam plant.Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times Conrad Milster, the chief engineer at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, has become the caretaker of the many stray cats that like to frequent the school’s steam plant.

After checking a multitude of old dials and meters down in the sprawling old steam plant, Conrad Milster, the plant’s chief engineer, returned to his Dickensian office at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, and spied a hungry gray cat outside his window.

“This is Dulcie,” said Mr. Milster, 77, letting her in. “She comes in to eat and then goes somewhere else. A lot of these rascals have good deals set up here.”

These rascals are the Pratt cats, a population of ownerless cats that for decades have been padding around amid the historic buildings and lawn sculptures on campus, befriending students and faculty members.

The cats have become legendary at this school of art and design in Clinton Hill, as has the curious, century-old steam plant housed in the basement of East Hall that many of them call their home, or at least their student union.

“For some of them, this is sort of the backup lunch counter,” said Mr. Milster, a lanky Queens native with red mutton chops and grimy jeans and calloused hands.

Since 1958, he has operated the plant, which provides heat and hot water to the campus. He is a revered figure at Pratt for his tending of both the plant and the cats, and for his rigging of steam whistles to the system and blowing them off loudly on New Year’s Eve for neighborhood residents.

The cats have become mascots to some students, including one called the Landlord, a snaggletoothed little guy who likes to keep watch over a Willoughby Street dorm. Then there is Lastat, Nicky, Teddy, Mickey and a cranky cutie known as Art School, who recently got soaked by an artist’s bottle of linseed oil and had to be taken to a Park Slope veterinarian who treats the Pratt cats.

Given the cats’ stature on campus, pangs of panic rippled through the school recently when school administrators told Mr. Milster that many cats would have to be removed because they were aggravating allergies suffered by staff members.

Many student and faculty members quickly circulated and signed petitions urging the administration to relent. Mr. Milster took three cats into the house that Pratt provides him on campus, where he already has about 18 cats rescued from campus over the years. Still, he was prepared to take in any other cats that might face removal, he said.

A Pratt spokeswoman did not immediately respond to calls and an e-mail on Friday morning.

But Mr. Milster said he met with Pratt officials this week and was told that the cats could stay if he created a dander-free space in the steam plant office by closing doors and windows and installing an air-conditioner.

As he spoke on Wednesday, several cats patrolled the balcony above the old plant’s equipment. One arose from a snooze on a steam pipe and wandered in to nibble leftovers from Mr. Milster’s sandwich.

“This is Prancey,” he said, “She usually sleeps upstairs in an art department office and comes down for meals. Yeah, they really know how to work the crowd here.”

But they also give back, he said, by helping to make Pratt feel like a family, he said, providing comfort to stressed-out students, especially after a fire in February damaged the Main Building and destroyed student art work inside.

“One of the few comforting things we had, after that, was the cats,” he said. “The students are very attached to these beasties. They have a real psychological value.”

Some estimates have put the number of cats in the dozens or even more than 100, but Mr. Milster said only a dozen frequent the steam plant.

“I’d have to count noses to be sure,” he said.

Some access the plant through utility tunnels under the campus. Others scoot in through his office window or with students through the building’s main entrance. They seem to love the warmth, the loud thrum of the machines, and the litter boxes and food - dry and wet - that Mr. Milster leaves out for them, at his own expense. The cats are depicted in photographs throughout the plant, including an homage to Big Momma, a huge black-and-white female who lived in the machine shop and died recently.

The original plant was built in 1887 and its steam-driven generators, installed in 1900, are thought to be the oldest in the Northeast. It serves as something of a museum piece and drawing subject for Pratt students, with its flywheels, glass-encased dials and pressure gauges, huge pipes and pistons.

“It’s really a 19th-century power plant,” Mr. Milster said, walking through the plant. “If this stops in the winter, Pratt stops.”

The cats seem to instinctively avoid electrical current and moving parts, he said, adding, “You could say they know more than human beings about respecting the machinery.”

Decades ago, he and his wife began taking in cats dumped on campus, or left behind by departing students. They would neuter them for possible adoption. They would take sick or nuisance cats to their home, and at one point had more than 50 living with them, he said. They enjoyed entering the healthier ones in shows, and Mr. Milster hung dozens of prize ribbons in the plant’s front window. He removed them recently when the cat controversy began, to lower the cats’ profile. But now, he said, he may hang them back up.

“These are not just street strays,” he said above the hum of his steam engines. “These are prize winners.”



A Tribute to George Jones, Canceled by the Health Dept.

George Jones, the legendary country musician, died in April.Mark Humphrey/Associated Press George Jones, the legendary country musician, died in April.

Even in death, George Jones was a no-show.

A tribute concert to Mr. Jones â€" the country singer who died last month, and was nicknamed “No-Show” for the performances he missed because of drinking and drugs â€"  was canceled on Thursday, hours before it was to begin.

The promoters said that city inspectors had shut down the bar in which it was to take place, the Rodeo Bar, at 375 Third Avenue, at 27th Street.

“It’s George working his powers from the grave,” said Boo Reiners, who had helped line up the musicians on the bill. “It was hard to get him to play New York City no matter how many tickets were sold. And it was funny to have this happen because on Wednesday, I was joking, ‘We should not do the show and have it be like No-Show Jones, ha, ha, ha.’”

Mr. Reiners and Elena Skye, who founded the Demolition String Band, much as they have arranged tributes to Kris Kristofferson and Glen Campbell (who are still alive, unlike Mr. Jones) and groups as different as the Monkees and Creedence Clearwater Revival.

They had compiled binders with more than 30 songs, ready to hand the performers as they arrived. Mr. Reiners said they had commitments from Teddy Thompson, the guitar-playing son of the renowned British folk songwriters Richard and Linda Thompson; the singer Laura Cantrell; Charlene McPherson, the lead singer of a band called Spanking Charlene; and Aaron Lee Tasjan, a songwriter and guitarist.

But then came the bad-news call from Jack Grace, a singer and songwriter who books performers for the Rodeo Bar, and minutes later, Mr. Reiners sent a text message to the performers, saying the show had been called off.

Mr. Reiners said in the text message that Mr. Grace had told them about a surprise inspection by the health department.

The inspectors had gone through the kitchen, Mr. Reiners said in the text message. “Then one of the inspectors crawled around on the floor in the trailer bar” â€" a cutaway trailer in the room with the stage, with a bartender working inside the metal shell â€" “and decided there is a structural problem,” the text message said. The inspectors ordered the Rodeo Bar shut down, he said.

Mr. Grace said later that “there’s some sort of water damage thing” with the trailer. He said the owner, Mitch Pollak, had sent him a text message saying there was “heavy water damage” around the trailer and that the bar would be closed until next week.

But the health department said it had closed the Rodeo Bar because of a mouse infestation.

“I hope we don’t have to lose the trailer,” Mr. Grace said. “That’s been an icon of the place.”

Mr. Reiners said that the George Jones tribute would be rescheduled.