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Bronx Cemetery Offers a Different Sort of Internship

Interns working to restore mausoleums at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx include, from left, Kelly Ciociola, Johanna Sztokman and Sarah Cole.Ángel Franco/The New York Times Interns working to restore mausoleums at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx include, from left, Kelly Ciociola, Johanna Sztokman and Sarah Cole.

Even the best internships can require some degree of menial labor: answering phones, working copy machines, making Starbucks runs.

But perhaps only a historic cemetery could dispatch Ivy League students to the roof of a century-old mausoleum to clean out grime and debris trapped in the gutter.

Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx is getting a makeover this summer from interns who are crawling around mausoleum roofs, scrubbing bronze doors, pressure-washing limestone and granite monuments, and even putting back the head on a statue of a woman who lost it in a windstorm. A lush 400-acre site, which dates to 1863 and is a national historic landmark, Woodlawn is the final resting place of generations of New Yorkers and celebrities, including Celia Cruz, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Herman Melville, LeRoy Neiman and Joseph Pulitzer.

“Cemeteries have limited resources and tremendous volume,” said Susan Olsen, Woodlawn’s director of historical services, estimating that more than three-quarters of its 1,316 mausoleums and 150,000 monuments and gravestones need conservation. “No matter how hard I work, I can’t take care of all of them.”

So Kevin Wohlgemuth and Irene Matteini, both graduate students at the University of Pennsylvania studying historic preservation, were put in charge of a 1910 mausoleum built for the suffragist Alva Belmont and her husband, Oliver. It is a replica of the Chapel of Saint-Hubert at the Château d’Amboise in France, with stained-glass windows and a spire decorated with copper deer antlers (Saint Hubert is the patron saint of hunters).

Before the interns could set foot on the roof, they were required to attend a four-hour training class on climbing scaffolding. And when they finally ascended, they were confronted by a pair of furry squatters â€" raccoons â€" who left without a confrontation. Only then could they clean the gutter.

“It took two days of work, getting my hands dirty,” said Mr. Wohlgemuth, 31, recalling how he fished chunks of antlers and fleurs-de-lis from a foot of compacted dirt and decomposing leaves and branches. “It hadn’t been cleaned in decades.”

The internships, offered for the first time this year, are part of Woodlawn’s growing effort to promote itself as what Ms. Olsen calls a vast “outdoor laboratory” â€" brimming with works by noted period architects, artists and craftsmen, and luxurious materials and finishes rarely seen anymore.

“In today’s funerals, people mainly go to the church but not the cemetery,” Ms. Olsen said. “Back then, you went the whole distance with the bodies and then you came out regularly to visit.”

In recent years, dozens of Columbia University graduate students have adopted its mausoleums to study; on the first visit, each student is handed a key to one of them. The students have produced detailed reports on the conditions of 110 mausoleums, which Ms. Olsen is in the process of passing along to their owners. Some have already sent back money for suggested repairs and upkeep.

For the internships, Woodlawn partnered with two companies, Kreilick Conservation and Integrated Conservation Resources, to recruit and supervise the students. The first four interns are all graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania. They are paid $12 to $15 an hour, or a fraction of the fees commanded by professionals.

Johanna Sztokman, 27, said she had never been to a mausoleum until she was tasked with cleaning the doors of one, from the inside. That night, she dreamed of the experience. “I wouldn’t come here alone at night and go in there by myself,” she said.

By day, however, she found the cemetery quiet and soothing. She loved the view from the top of a mausoleum housing the remains of the businessman William E. Dodge Jr., where she painstakingly restored and weather-proofed mortar joints.

Heavy rains in recent weeks have hampered the interns. They had to delay the repair of a headless statute at the gravesite of J. Edward Simmons, a former president of the New York Stock Exchange. The head was knocked off by a tree limb eight months ago and has been sitting in a box in Ms. Olsen’s office.

“It’s like seeing a building fall apart, you want to fix it,” said Sarah Cole, 23, who grew up in Louisiana, where New Orleans cemeteries often feature vampire and ghost tours. “When you work on it, you have a sense of pride.”

Mr. Wohlgemuth has spent more than 70 hours in the company of the Belmonts, whose bodies are preserved in marble-lined tombs sunk into the floor of the mausoleum. He has started reading up on Ms. Belmont’s life. “It’s a very personal endeavor,” he said, “being inside a mausoleum and working to restore what she built,” he said.

He has also forged a connection with the cemetery, which has become his summer home. On his days off, he has wandered the grounds, bumping into tourists and stopping to watch funeral processions (there are 1,000 burials and 2,500 cremations a year).

Still, there is an awkward moment when he tells friends about his internship.

“They say, ‘It’s creepy,’” Mr. Wohlgemuth said. “I say, ‘It’s not, really. I think it’s beautiful.’”



Bronx Cemetery Offers a Different Sort of Internship

Interns working to restore mausoleums at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx include, from left, Kelly Ciociola, Johanna Sztokman and Sarah Cole.Ángel Franco/The New York Times Interns working to restore mausoleums at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx include, from left, Kelly Ciociola, Johanna Sztokman and Sarah Cole.

Even the best internships can require some degree of menial labor: answering phones, working copy machines, making Starbucks runs.

But perhaps only a historic cemetery could dispatch Ivy League students to the roof of a century-old mausoleum to clean out grime and debris trapped in the gutter.

Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx is getting a makeover this summer from interns who are crawling around mausoleum roofs, scrubbing bronze doors, pressure-washing limestone and granite monuments, and even putting back the head on a statue of a woman who lost it in a windstorm. A lush 400-acre site, which dates to 1863 and is a national historic landmark, Woodlawn is the final resting place of generations of New Yorkers and celebrities, including Celia Cruz, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Herman Melville, LeRoy Neiman and Joseph Pulitzer.

“Cemeteries have limited resources and tremendous volume,” said Susan Olsen, Woodlawn’s director of historical services, estimating that more than three-quarters of its 1,316 mausoleums and 150,000 monuments and gravestones need conservation. “No matter how hard I work, I can’t take care of all of them.”

So Kevin Wohlgemuth and Irene Matteini, both graduate students at the University of Pennsylvania studying historic preservation, were put in charge of a 1910 mausoleum built for the suffragist Alva Belmont and her husband, Oliver. It is a replica of the Chapel of Saint-Hubert at the Château d’Amboise in France, with stained-glass windows and a spire decorated with copper deer antlers (Saint Hubert is the patron saint of hunters).

Before the interns could set foot on the roof, they were required to attend a four-hour training class on climbing scaffolding. And when they finally ascended, they were confronted by a pair of furry squatters â€" raccoons â€" who left without a confrontation. Only then could they clean the gutter.

“It took two days of work, getting my hands dirty,” said Mr. Wohlgemuth, 31, recalling how he fished chunks of antlers and fleurs-de-lis from a foot of compacted dirt and decomposing leaves and branches. “It hadn’t been cleaned in decades.”

The internships, offered for the first time this year, are part of Woodlawn’s growing effort to promote itself as what Ms. Olsen calls a vast “outdoor laboratory” â€" brimming with works by noted period architects, artists and craftsmen, and luxurious materials and finishes rarely seen anymore.

“In today’s funerals, people mainly go to the church but not the cemetery,” Ms. Olsen said. “Back then, you went the whole distance with the bodies and then you came out regularly to visit.”

In recent years, dozens of Columbia University graduate students have adopted its mausoleums to study; on the first visit, each student is handed a key to one of them. The students have produced detailed reports on the conditions of 110 mausoleums, which Ms. Olsen is in the process of passing along to their owners. Some have already sent back money for suggested repairs and upkeep.

For the internships, Woodlawn partnered with two companies, Kreilick Conservation and Integrated Conservation Resources, to recruit and supervise the students. The first four interns are all graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania. They are paid $12 to $15 an hour, or a fraction of the fees commanded by professionals.

Johanna Sztokman, 27, said she had never been to a mausoleum until she was tasked with cleaning the doors of one, from the inside. That night, she dreamed of the experience. “I wouldn’t come here alone at night and go in there by myself,” she said.

By day, however, she found the cemetery quiet and soothing. She loved the view from the top of a mausoleum housing the remains of the businessman William E. Dodge Jr., where she painstakingly restored and weather-proofed mortar joints.

Heavy rains in recent weeks have hampered the interns. They had to delay the repair of a headless statute at the gravesite of J. Edward Simmons, a former president of the New York Stock Exchange. The head was knocked off by a tree limb eight months ago and has been sitting in a box in Ms. Olsen’s office.

“It’s like seeing a building fall apart, you want to fix it,” said Sarah Cole, 23, who grew up in Louisiana, where New Orleans cemeteries often feature vampire and ghost tours. “When you work on it, you have a sense of pride.”

Mr. Wohlgemuth has spent more than 70 hours in the company of the Belmonts, whose bodies are preserved in marble-lined tombs sunk into the floor of the mausoleum. He has started reading up on Ms. Belmont’s life. “It’s a very personal endeavor,” he said, “being inside a mausoleum and working to restore what she built,” he said.

He has also forged a connection with the cemetery, which has become his summer home. On his days off, he has wandered the grounds, bumping into tourists and stopping to watch funeral processions (there are 1,000 burials and 2,500 cremations a year).

Still, there is an awkward moment when he tells friends about his internship.

“They say, ‘It’s creepy,’” Mr. Wohlgemuth said. “I say, ‘It’s not, really. I think it’s beautiful.’”



More Classical Music on the Radio for Westchester County

Over-the-air broadcasts of the classical music radio station WQXR are being restored for some Westchester County residents. The station’s parent company, New York Public Radio, on Monday bought the small Ossining radio station WDFH-FM, at 90.3.

Residents of the area lost access to the WQXR signal in 2009, when New York Public Radio bought the station from The New York Times Company and moved the programming to a weaker signal on the FM band.

Listeners could still hear WQXR online or through a mobile app, but they wanted it terrestrially, Laura R. Walker, the president and chief executive of New York Public Radio, said in a telephone interview. “People were really asking for it,” she said. “Unlike other media in the digital age, radio is not going away. It’s still very much heard in cars and at work, and it’s also free.”

New York Public Radio said it paid $400,000 for WDFH, with help from a $300,000 Ford Foundation grant. It will now be known as WQXW and will simulcast WQXR. In the fall the station’s signal will be strengthened to extend WQXW’s reach to new parts of Westchester County, including Katonah, home of Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts. WQXR said it would expand its existing programming partnership with Caramoor.



Historians Defend Howard Zinn Against a Former Governor’s Critique

Howard Zinn in 2009.Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images Howard Zinn in 2009.

The radical historian Howard Zinn won a dubious prize of sorts last year when his best-selling “People’s History of the United States” came in second in an informal online poll to determine the “least credible history book in print.”

But now, some of Mr. Zinn’s strongest scholarly critics have rushed to his defense, following the revelation that former Indiana governor Mitch Daniels had, while in office, sent emails to a state education official asking for assurance that Mr. Zinn’s “truly execrable, anti-factual piece of disinformation” was “not in use” in Indiana classrooms.

Mr. Daniels, who is now president of Purdue University, posted a statement on the university’s Web site on July 17 saying that the emails, which were first reported by The Associated Press, “infringed on no one’s academic freedom and proposed absolutely no censorship of any person or viewpoint.”

Many scholars, however, were not reassured. The American Historical Association released a statement deploring “the spirit and intent” of the emails. An open letter signed by more than 90 Purdue professors criticized Mr. Daniels’s comments about Mr. Zinn (who died in 2010), noting: “Whatever their political stripe, most experts in the field of U.S. history do not take issue with Howard Zinn’s facts, even when they do take issue with his conclusions.”

Meanwhile, some scholars whose critiques of Mr. Zinn were cited by Mr. Daniels defended the historian â€" sort of.

Michael Kazin, a professor at Georgetown University and the author of a blistering 2004 critique of “A People’s History,” posted a statement online saying Mr. Daniels “should be roundly condemned for his attempts to stop students from reading Zinn’s big book and for calling Zinn a liar.” And Sam Wineburg, a Stanford historian and the author of another critique, posted to Twitter calling Mr. Daniels’s emails “a shameless attempt to censor free speech.”

In an interview with The Indianapolis Star, Mr. Wineburg said that he assigned Mr. Zinn’s book in his own classes. “This is not about Zinn, per se,” he said of the controversy. “This is about whether in an open democratic society we should be exposed â€" whether you’re in ninth grade or seventh grade or a freshman at Purdue â€" whether you should be exposed to views that challenge your own cherished view.”



Bryce Pinkham and LaChanze Are Broadway Bound

Bryce PinkhamCharles Sykes/Associated Press Bryce Pinkham

Casting additions to two shows scheduled for the coming Broadway season were announced on Monday. Bryce Pinkham, who is playing Longaville in the Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park production of “Love’s Labor Lost,” will join the cast of “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder,” the musical by Robert L. Freedman and Steven Lutvak that had a successful run in Hartford last fall and opens on Broadway at the Walter Kerr Theater on Oct. 22. Mr. Pinkham is to play Monty Navarro, who stands to become the Earl of Highhurst once he dispatches the eight better claimants. Those eight heirs are all portrayed by Jefferson Mays, who played the octuple role in Hartford. The show is directed by Darko Tresnjak.

LaChanzeRuby Washington/The New York Times LaChanze

Later in the season, the Tony Award-winning actress and singer LaChanze (“The Color Purple”) will star in in “If/Then,” a new musical by Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt, with Michael Greif directing - the same team that produced the Pulitzer- and Tony-winning “Next to Normal.” LaChanze will play Kate, an elementary school teacher who moves back to Manhattan just before her 40th birthday to make a fresh start. The cast also includes Idina Menzel as Kate’s neighbor, Elizabeth. The play will have a month-long run at the National Theater in Washington, starting Nov. 5; it is to open on Broadway at the Richard Rodgers Theater on March 27.

Also announced on Monday was the Off Broadway run of “Brendan at the Chelsea,” the United States premiere Janet Behan’s play about the last weeks in the life of the Irish poet, playwright and novelist Brendan Behan (who was Ms. Behan’s uncle). The production, by the Lyric Theater of Belfast, will star Adrian Dunbar (who also directs the show), and will have a five-week run at the Acorn Theater, starting on Sept. 4.



Book Covers: Before and After

Peter Mendelsund

In the latest installment of “Before and After,” four book designers discuss recent examples of their work. Each designer shared early concepts for a cover as well as the final design that ended up on the book.

Peter Mendelsund wrote about his experience designing a cover for Julio Cortázar’s experimental novel “Hopscotch,” which turns 50 this year:

I spent weeks working up various “Hopscotch” covers. I could’ve spent years. I still occasionally feel the urge to continue designing “Hopscotch.” But for the time being at least, here’s the final. It features the steps of a tango, superimposed on a “rayuela,” a hopscotch field. Using a game of hopscotch as a visual device always felt like the most apt (and most obvious) solution for the cover. (“Hopscotch,” the novel, may be read like any book: front to back. It also may be read by “hopscotching” through the chapters according to a set of instructions given by the author.)

Where this cover succeeds: It reflects a little bit of the crackling improvisational energy of the text.

Where it fails: It misses the book’s pathos.

The entire slide show can be found here.



A Documentary by Teller Explores the Magic of Vermeer

“Girl With a Pearl Earring,” one of Vermeer's most famous works.Mauritshuis, The Hague “Girl With a Pearl Earring,” one of Vermeer’s most famous works.

A picture may be worth a thousand words, and Teller, the non-speaking partner in the illusionist team of Penn and Teller, is a man of few. Still, he’s sufficiently interested in pictures, paintings and the creation of fine art that he has made them the subject of a new documentary, called “Tim’s Vermeer,” that has been acquired for distribution by Sony Pictures Classics.

On Monday, Sony Pictures Classics said it had picked up the worldwide rights to “Tim’s Vermeer,” a non-fiction film that is directed by Teller and which chronicles Tim Jenison, a Texas-based inventor who explores how Jan Vermeer created his photo-realistic paintings in the 1600s, a century and and a half before photography was invented.

In a decade-long exploration, Mr. Jenison travels to Delft, Holland, where Vermeer painted, and meets with the British artist David Hockney, who has made his own inquiries into how Vermeer and other master painters created their works. Ultimately, Mr. Jenison’s project “succeeds as he uses 17th century technology â€" lenses and mirrors â€" to develop a technique that might have been used by Vermeer, supporting a theory as extraordinary as what he discovers,” Sony Pictures Classics said in a news release.

Penn Jillette, the more verbal performing partner of Teller, explained the origins of the film in a statement. “My buddy, Tim Jenison, told me over supper he was going to try to paint a Vermeer,” Mr. Jillette said. “Tim is a genius, but I’m a skeptic. I wanted to see him do it. Teller has been the Penn and Teller de facto director since our beginnings so we made a movie of Tim’s whole monomaniacal trip. Having Sony Pictures Classics as the first words on the screen means it’s more than just a couple of Vegas magicians and an eccentric inventor in his garage â€" now, it’s a real film that will change the history of art.”

Sony Pictures Classics said it will release “Tim’s Vermeer” next year.



July 29: Where the Candidates Are Today

Planned events for the mayoral candidates, according to the campaigns and organizations they are affiliated with. Times are listed as scheduled but frequently change.

Joseph Burgess and Nicholas Wells contributed reporting.

Event information is listed as provided at the time of publication. Details for many of Ms. Quinn events are not released for publication.

Events by candidate

Albanese

Catsimatidis

De Blasio

Liu

Quinn

Salgado

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

11 a.m.
As a board member of the Police Athletic League, he attends a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the opening of new supervised outdoor recreational areas known as “PAL Play Streets” at 10 public-housing developments. For nearly a century, the annual summertime Play Streets program has been closing off streets and giving children supervised places to play varied activities, including stickball and jump rope, Nok hockey and mancala. The ceremony is at the New York City Housing Authority’s Grant Houses, on Amsterdam Avenue.

6:30 p.m.
Attends the opening of his eighth campaign office, this one on Third Avenue in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. The Kings County Republican chairman, Craig Eaton, is expected to join him.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

10:15 a.m.
Releases, with health care workers, a plan to resuscitate two ailing Brooklyn hospitals that are in danger of closing, at the southwest corner of Hicks and Pacific Streets in Cobble Hill.

11:10 a.m.
Accepts endorsement from Tenants PAC, a tenants’ advocacy group that represents tenants at Stuyvesant Town, a sprawling Manhattan apartment complex with some 30,000 residents, at the corner of East 16th Street and First Avenue.

3 p.m.
Attends one of several rallies being coordinated today by New York Communities for Change, United New York, backed by the union S.E.I.U., and Fast Food Forward, which are calling for increased wages in the fast-food industry, at Union Square.

6:30 p.m.
Greets, with his wife, Chirlane McCray, concertgoers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series’ annual gospel night featuring Marvin Sapp, Israel Haughton and the New Breed, at Wingate Field in Brooklyn.

John C. Liu
Democrat

7 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the Grant Avenue subway station, in Cypress Hills.

12 p.m.
Visits the Coney Island Generation Gap as part of a “day of service” the city comptroller’s office runs for its summer associates, in Coney Island.

5:45 p.m.
Greets afternoon commuters at the Intervale subway station, on Westchester Avenue in the Bronx.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

8:15 p.m.
Attends what appears to be his 10th iftar this month. Iftar is the traditional evening meal that breaks the fast of
Muslims during Ramadan. Tonight’s is being hosted by the Council of Masadjid of Queens, at Al Ishan Academy on Rockaway Boulevard in Queens.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

5:30 p.m.
Greets commuters at the Staten Island Ferry terminal, on South Street at the foot of Manhattan.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

7:15 a.m.
Joins striking fast-food workers at one of several rallies being coordinated today by Fast Food Forward and other groups calling for higher wages, outside a Manhattan McDonald’s, in the theater district.

11 a.m.
Joins a fellow City Council member, Steven Levin, at a news conference spotlighting imbalances in the city’s affordable housing market, at 5 Dunham Place, where 12,000 applicants are vying for the building’s 79 available affordable units, in Brooklyn.

12 p.m.
Returns with a fellow council member, Diana Reyna, to campaign at a Brooklyn senior center run by Los Sures that has been visited by three or more mayoral candidates thus far: Sal F. Albanese, June 11; Adolfo Carrión Jr., July 2; and Anthony D. Weiner, July 19. Ms. Quinn had tried to visit on July 16 but canceled to remain with Ms. Reyna’s teenage intern, who fainted from the heat at an event earlier in the day; after long delays waiting for an ambulance, she personally called the police commissioner, Raymond W. Kelly, to get an ambulance to the scene.

Some of Ms. Quinn’s events may not be shown because the campaign declines to release her advance schedule for publication.

William C. Thompson Jr.
Democrat

11 a.m.
Holds a news conference with State Assemblyman Karim Camara and Councilman Fernando Cabrera calling for the city to stop prosecuting teenagers as adults, outside City Hall.

5:30 p.m.
Greets concertgoers at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series’ annual gospel night featuring Marvin Sapp, Israel Haughton and the New Breed, at Wingate Field in Brooklyn.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

11 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at Nan Shan Senior Center, on 39th Avenue in Queens.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

11:15 a.m.
Meets voters, at the Senior Alliance Senior Center, on Corbin Place in Brooklyn.

11:45 a.m.
Greets voters, at the Lunar Park Senior Center, on West 12th Street in Brooklyn.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

3:45 p.m.
Tapes two-minute statement that all candidates are invited to submit to the New York City Campaign Finance Board that will air on NYC-TV and be used as part of an electronic voters giude.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Erick J. Salgado
Democrat

4 p.m.
Joins State Senator Rubén Díaz Sr. in a tour of the Bronx aboard a pick-up truck, greeting voters along the way.

6:30 p.m.
Participates in the Harlem Interfaith Commission for Housing Equality Bronx Chapter mayoral forum, at the Thessalonia Worship Center.

Readers with information about events involving the mayoral candidates are invited to send details and suggestions for coverage to cowan@nytimes.com. You can also follow us on Twitter @cowannyt.



New York Film Festival Will Open With ‘Captain Phillips’

Mahat Ali, Tom Hanks and Faysal Ahmed in a scene from Jasin Boland Mahat Ali, Tom Hanks and Faysal Ahmed in a scene from “Captain Phillips.”

For a film series that in the first few of its 51 annual programs began with works from directors like Luis Buñuel, Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, the New York Film Festival has more recently used its prestigious opening-night slot to spotlight more visible, mainstream and star-studded efforts. Those descriptions all apply to “Captain Phillips,” a new motion picture with Tom Hanks that will make its premiere as the opening-night selection of this year’s New York Film Festival, its organizers said Monday.

Directed by Paul Greengrass (“The Bourne Supremacy,” “United 93″) and based on real-life events, “Captain Phillips” stars Mr. Hanks as the commanding officer of the Maersk Alabama, a United States-flagged cargo ship that was hijacked by Somali pirates in 2009. The film will receive a theatrical release from Sony Pictures in October.

Kent Jones, the director of programming and selection committee chairman for the New York Film Festival, said in a statement that “Captain Phillips” was a “tough, tense, real-life thriller, capped by the remarkable performances of Tom Hanks and four brilliant first-time Somali actors,” and he hailed Mr. Greengrass as “a master of immersive reality-based narratives set along geopolitical fault lines.”

This year’s New York Film Festival will run from Sept. 27 to Oct. 13. In recent years its opening-night selections have included “The Social Network,” directed by David Fincher; “Carnage,” Roman Polanski’s adaptation of “God of Carnage”; and Ang Lee’s film version of “Life of Pi.”



New York Today: Some Pig

A mug shot of the escapee. Can you think of a name for this pig?Trevor Smith A mug shot of the escapee. Can you think of a name for this pig?

A piglet was found skittering among the cars and pedestrians on College Point Boulevard in Queens last week. It was likely on a jail break from a local slaughterhouse, avoiding a bacon fate.

The piglet wasn’t the only farm animal on the loose in the city in July. There was also a chicken strolling in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, and probably others that went unreported.

(Why are urbanites so charmed by tales of these rural denizens gone rogue in the big city?)

Blame the locavores.

There has been a recent rise in street corner slaughterhouses and urban animal husbandry. The city is home to over 700 food-producing urban farms.

As a result, the number of stray farm animals in the city has spiked, said Susie Coston, national shelter director of Farm Sanctuary, an advocacy group.

Farm Sanctuary has taken in more than 500 farm animals from New York City in the last decade, she said.

Most often, it’s chickens.

Some escape, others are abandoned. You can even adopt a hen on Craigslist.

The rescued piglet was taken to Farm Sanctuary’s upstate farm.

The group said it would appreciate suggestions for a name for the piglet, who is doing well. Leave your thoughts in the comments below or tweet them to @SarahMaslinNir.

WEATHER

Highs in the low 80s and a little bit grey. Bring an umbrella â€" there may be morning showers. Click for current forecast.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit Subways are O.K. Click for the latest status.

- Roads Traffic is moving well. Click for the latest status.

- Alternate side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- On the mayoral campaign trail, John A. Catsimatidis opens a campaign office in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. William C. Thompson Jr. appears on MSNBC’s “The Daily Rundown.” In Stuyvesant Town, Bill de Blasio will receive the endorsement of the Tenants PAC. In the comptroller’s race, Scott M. Stringer announces a plan to track Hurricane Sandy relief money.

- More urban agriculture: the American Museum of Natural History will have tastings this week of food cultivated in each borough. Today, it’s pesto from the Bronx.

- Sit in on a rehearsal of the experimental band (or, as they put it, “entertainment unit”) Skeletons as they work on their new album at 2 p.m. at Roulette, 509 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. [Free]

- Seven mystery writers read from their work at KGB Bar in the East Village. [Free]

- Celebrate the 100th birthday of Marcel Proust’s “Swann’s Way,” with readings by the literary power couple Paul Auster and Siri Hustvedt and others in Brooklyn Bridge Park at 7 p.m. [Free]

- Browse a pop-up gallery of re-imagined covers for classic books at the Housing Works Bookstore Cafe on Crosby Street in Manhattan at 7 p.m. [Free]

- Watch Billy Wilder’s 1948 romantic comedy “A Foreign Affair.” Marlene Dietrich is a sultry cabaret singer, in Bryant Park at sunset. [Free]

- See Agent J and Agent K fight aliens in the third installation of “Men in Black” at Coney Island Flicks on the Beach, on the Boardwalk at West 10th Street at sunset. [Free]

- It’s gospel night at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series in Brooklyn’s Wingate Field. 7:30 p.m. [Free]

- Shaken, not stirred â€" at an outdoor screening of “Skyfall,” in East River State Park in Williamsburg, Brooklyn at dusk. [Free]

IN THE NEWS

- Danny Kedem, the manager of Anthony D. Weiner’s mayoral campaign, has quit. [New York Times]

- An awning and passersby saved a baby after she fell out of window in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. [Pix 11]

- Saks Fifth Avenue was purchased by the Canadian department-store chain that also owns Lord & Taylor. [New York Post]

- A man successfully completed his swim in the Bronx River. He seems O.K. [New York Daily News]

- Long Island College Hospital, which was scheduled to close on Sunday, will continue to operate, for now, thanks to a court order. [NY 1]

- Lawmakers want co-op and condominium apartments to be eligible for federal disaster relief assistance. Many owners learned after Hurricane Sandy that they are largely barred from such aid. [New York Times]

- Baseball artifacts donated in the 1920s and stolen 40 years ago from the New York Public Library are popping up online. [New York Post]

- The body of a man killed in a weekend boating accident near the Tappan Zee Bridge may have been found. [New York Times]

AND FINALLY…

Sixty-eight years and one day ago today, a B-25 bomber on its way to Newark Airport smashed into the 79th floor of the Empire State Building. It was a supremely foggy day. The pilot, Lt. Col. William Smith, had dropped the plane too low, though he managed at first to avoid several other city skyscrapers.

More than a dozen people were killed, including Lieutenant Colonel Smith.

He had earlier radioed air traffic controllers to ask about weather conditions. He was told by one, according to the Associated Press, “From where I’m sitting, I can’t see the top of the Empire State Building.”

Michaelle Bond and E.C. Gogolak and contributed reporting.

We’re testing New York Today, which we put together just before dawn and update until noon.

What information would you like to see here when you wake up to help you plan your day? Tell us in the comments, send suggestions to Sarah Maslin Nir or tweet them at @nytmetro using #NYToday. Thanks!



New York Today: Some Pig

A mug shot of the escapee. Can you think of a name for this pig?Trevor Smith A mug shot of the escapee. Can you think of a name for this pig?

A piglet was found skittering among the cars and pedestrians on College Point Boulevard in Queens last week. It was likely on a jail break from a local slaughterhouse, avoiding a bacon fate.

The piglet wasn’t the only farm animal on the loose in the city in July. There was also a chicken strolling in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, and probably others that went unreported.

(Why are urbanites so charmed by tales of these rural denizens gone rogue in the big city?)

Blame the locavores.

There has been a recent rise in street corner slaughterhouses and urban animal husbandry. The city is home to over 700 food-producing urban farms.

As a result, the number of stray farm animals in the city has spiked, said Susie Coston, national shelter director of Farm Sanctuary, an advocacy group.

Farm Sanctuary has taken in more than 500 farm animals from New York City in the last decade, she said.

Most often, it’s chickens.

Some escape, others are abandoned. You can even adopt a hen on Craigslist.

The rescued piglet was taken to Farm Sanctuary’s upstate farm.

The group said it would appreciate suggestions for a name for the piglet, who is doing well. Leave your thoughts in the comments below or tweet them to @SarahMaslinNir.

WEATHER

Highs in the low 80s and a little bit grey. Bring an umbrella â€" there may be morning showers. Click for current forecast.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit Subways are O.K. Click for the latest status.

- Roads Traffic is moving well. Click for the latest status.

- Alternate side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- On the mayoral campaign trail, John A. Catsimatidis opens a campaign office in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. William C. Thompson Jr. appears on MSNBC’s “The Daily Rundown.” In Stuyvesant Town, Bill de Blasio will receive the endorsement of the Tenants PAC. In the comptroller’s race, Scott M. Stringer announces a plan to track Hurricane Sandy relief money.

- More urban agriculture: the American Museum of Natural History will have tastings this week of food cultivated in each borough. Today, it’s pesto from the Bronx.

- Sit in on a rehearsal of the experimental band (or, as they put it, “entertainment unit”) Skeletons as they work on their new album at 2 p.m. at Roulette, 509 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. [Free]

- Seven mystery writers read from their work at KGB Bar in the East Village. [Free]

- Celebrate the 100th birthday of Marcel Proust’s “Swann’s Way,” with readings by the literary power couple Paul Auster and Siri Hustvedt and others in Brooklyn Bridge Park at 7 p.m. [Free]

- Browse a pop-up gallery of re-imagined covers for classic books at the Housing Works Bookstore Cafe on Crosby Street in Manhattan at 7 p.m. [Free]

- Watch Billy Wilder’s 1948 romantic comedy “A Foreign Affair.” Marlene Dietrich is a sultry cabaret singer, in Bryant Park at sunset. [Free]

- See Agent J and Agent K fight aliens in the third installation of “Men in Black” at Coney Island Flicks on the Beach, on the Boardwalk at West 10th Street at sunset. [Free]

- It’s gospel night at the Martin Luther King Jr. Concert Series in Brooklyn’s Wingate Field. 7:30 p.m. [Free]

- Shaken, not stirred â€" at an outdoor screening of “Skyfall,” in East River State Park in Williamsburg, Brooklyn at dusk. [Free]

IN THE NEWS

- Danny Kedem, the manager of Anthony D. Weiner’s mayoral campaign, has quit. [New York Times]

- An awning and passersby saved a baby after she fell out of window in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. [Pix 11]

- Saks Fifth Avenue was purchased by the Canadian department-store chain that also owns Lord & Taylor. [New York Post]

- A man successfully completed his swim in the Bronx River. He seems O.K. [New York Daily News]

- Long Island College Hospital, which was scheduled to close on Sunday, will continue to operate, for now, thanks to a court order. [NY 1]

- Lawmakers want co-op and condominium apartments to be eligible for federal disaster relief assistance. Many owners learned after Hurricane Sandy that they are largely barred from such aid. [New York Times]

- Baseball artifacts donated in the 1920s and stolen 40 years ago from the New York Public Library are popping up online. [New York Post]

- The body of a man killed in a weekend boating accident near the Tappan Zee Bridge may have been found. [New York Times]

AND FINALLY…

Sixty-eight years and one day ago today, a B-25 bomber on its way to Newark Airport smashed into the 79th floor of the Empire State Building. It was a supremely foggy day. The pilot, Lt. Col. William Smith, had dropped the plane too low, though he managed at first to avoid several other city skyscrapers.

More than a dozen people were killed, including Lieutenant Colonel Smith.

He had earlier radioed air traffic controllers to ask about weather conditions. He was told by one, according to the Associated Press, “From where I’m sitting, I can’t see the top of the Empire State Building.”

Michaelle Bond and E.C. Gogolak and contributed reporting.

We’re testing New York Today, which we put together just before dawn and update until noon.

What information would you like to see here when you wake up to help you plan your day? Tell us in the comments, send suggestions to Sarah Maslin Nir or tweet them at @nytmetro using #NYToday. Thanks!