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Minnesota Orchestra’s Board Makes a New Proposal to Musicians

With the clock counting down to the Minnesota Orchestra’s Sept. 15 deadline to reach an accord in a labor dispute, the orchestra’s board made a new proposal to the musicians on Thursday in the hopes of jump-starting the stalled mediation process.

The board’s proposal called for the players to return to work on Sept. 30 and to work for two months under their old contract. Then, if no new agreement is reached, the musicians would work for the next two years with their base pay cut by nearly a quarter. (Last year, the musicians rejected a proposal that would have cut their base pay by roughly a third, leading management to lock out the performers.)

The musicians had favored a proposal that was put forward earlier this summer by an independent mediator. That proposal, which management rejected, would have brought the players back to work for two months under their old contract and then for two more months at a six percent pay cut while the two sides negotiate. Musicians favored that proposal because it would have allowed the orchestra to play two Carnegie Hall concerts in November and retain the orchestra’s music director, Osmo Vanska, who has threatened to quit if those concerts are canceled. But management worried that the short-term deal would widen the orchestra’s deficit but would not allow them to guarantee a full season to subscribers.

The board said that its latest proposal would still leave the orchestra with a $2.2 million deficit. “Our aim was to eliminate our deficit entirely,’’ Jon Campbell, the chairman of the board, said in a statement, “but the board has put forward this compromise in the hopes of getting musicians back on stage and audiences back in Orchestra Hall in time to launch a new season.”

Representatives for the musicians did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



Aug. 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.

Kenan Christiansen 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.Maps of all campaign events since April »
Events by candidate

Albanese

Carrión

Catsimatidis

De Blasio

Lhota

Liu

Quinn

Thompson

Weiner

Group event


John A. Catsimatidis
Republican

10:45 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Ravenswood Senior Center, the first of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Astoria, Queens.

11:15 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Archbishop Iakovos Senior Center, the second of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Astoria, Queens.

11:45 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the JVL Dimotsis-Vallone Senior Center, the third of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Astoria, Queens.

8 p.m.
Continues his musical tour to serenade donors with another concert from Jay Black, this time in Coney Island.

Bill de Blasio
Democrat

11:30 a.m.
After a Quinnipiac University poll released on Wednesday showed Mr. de Blasio with a 15 point lead over his closest rival, Christine C. Quinn, he holds a news conference to discuss how he believes Ms. Quinn will carry forward with a continuation of the Bloomberg administration’s policies, on Park Row and Centre Street in Manhattan.

3 p.m.
Is one of the three mayoral candidates to rally with fast-food workers protesting in Union Square for the right to unionize as well as a wage increase that would raise their pay to at least $15 an hour. Dissatisfaction with the bleak economics associated with entry-level wages began last November in New York, when about 200 fast-food workers went on strike in a one-day protest. Today’s demonstration, sponsored by the New York Communities for Change, is one of several protests expected to take place in major cities throughout the country.

John C. Liu
Democrat

4:15 a.m.
Accepts the endorsement of hundreds of yellow cab drivers in their own territory: the “Central Taxi Hold” at John F. Kennedy airport, in Queens.

7 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the Hunts Point Avenue subway station, at Southern Boulevard and Hunts Point Avenue in the Bronx.

9 a.m.
Joins the man who hopes to replace him, former Gov. Eliot Spitzer, for a meeting with the New York Hispanic Clergy in the Bronx.

11:45 a.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Prospect Hill Senior Services Center, the first of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Brooklyn.

12:15 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Fort Greene Hazel Brooks Senior Center, the second of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Brooklyn.

12:30 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the Grace Harewood Neighborhood Senior Center, the third of three senior centers he intends to visit on the day in Brooklyn.

1:15 p.m.
Holds a news conference to discuss his plans on how to deal with medical marijuana, outside New York Downtown Hospital in Lower Manhattan. Mr. Liu proposed legalizing marijuana earlier this month in an attempt to bring more revenue into the city.

3 p.m.
Is one of the three mayoral candidates to rally with fast-food workers protesting in Union Square for the right to unionize as well as a wage increase that would raise their pay to at least $15 an hour. Dissatisfaction with the bleak economics associated with entry-level wages began last November in New York, when about 200 fast-food workers went on strike in a one-day protest. Today’s demonstration, sponsored by the New York Communities for Change, is one of several protests expected to take place in major cities throughout the country.

5 p.m.
Greets evening commuters at the 14th Street A/C/E train subway station, on Eighth Avenue in Chelsea.

6:30 p.m.
Attends the New York County Democratic Committee Reception, at the 32BJ S.E.I.U. headquarters on West 18th Street in Manhattan.

7:30 p.m.
Participates in a mayoral forum on education, hosted by Brooklyn’s Community Board 17, at the Top Civic Center on Utica Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn.

8:45 p.m.
Is one of two candidates to speak at the National Conference of Puerto Rican Women Annual Scholarship Gala, at Tosca Marquee on East Tremont Avenue in the Bronx. Mr. Liu’s deputy in the City Comptroller’s Office, Ricardo Morales, will be honored as “Man of the Year 2013″ at the ceremony.

Joseph J. Lhota
Republican

11:30 a.m.
Visits Broadway Stages, a full-scale film and production facility, on Kingsland Avenue in Brooklyn.

Christine C. Quinn
Democrat

6 a.m.
Rises early to join fast-food workers striking for higher wages and better working conditions, outside McDonald’s on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. This is the first of two demonstrations calling for better working conditions that Ms. Quinn will participate in on the day.

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the 125th Street 2/3 train subway station in Harlem. Ms. Quinn is joined by Councilwoman Inez Dickens and Jackie Rowe Adams, a Harlem activist who lost two sons to gun violence and now works for stricter gun control measures.

8:15 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the 110th Street 1 train subway station in Morningside Heights with Assemblyman Danny O’Donnell, whose endorsement she received on Wednesday.

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

10 a.m.
Accepts an endorsement for his candidacy from Assemblyman Robert Rodiguez, outside the Finishing Trades Institute of New York in Long Island City, Queens. Mr. Thompson will also unveil his plans to improve workforce training and reduce unemployment throughout the city.

12:30 p.m.
Holds his second news conference of the day, this time on the steps of City Hall, calling for the removal of trailers being used as classrooms throughout the city.

6:30 p.m.
Attends the New York County Democratic Committee Reception, at the 32BJ S.E.I.U. headquarters on West 18th Street in Manhattan.

Anthony D. Weiner
Democrat

12 p.m.
Visits with senior citizens at the East Midwood Jewish Center, on Ocean Avenue in Brooklyn.

2:30 p.m.
Holds a news conference on what his campaign bills as “Big Thought Thursday,” where he will discuss his plans for a luxury real estate tax on expensive properties. It will be held outside 15 Central Park West, home to some of New York’s most expensive condominiums and bold-faced celebrities, on the southwest corner of Central Park.

5:45 p.m.
Greets evening commuters at the Church Avenue B/Q train subway station, on Church Avenue and East 18th Street in Brooklyn.

7:15 p.m.
Participates in a mayoral forum on education, hosted by Brooklyn’s Community Board 17, at the Top Civic Center on Utica Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn.

Sal F. Albanese
Democrat

7:45 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the Borough Hall 4/5 train subway station, at Joralemon Street in Brooklyn.

11 a.m.
Helps distribute food for Rosh Hashanah, at the Shorefront Jewish Community Center in Brooklyn.

4 p.m.
After participating in a similar rally on Saturday, Mr. Albanese reiterates his call for permanent ferry service to the Rockaways, on Beach Channel Drive in Rockaway Park, Queens.

7 p.m.
Participates in a mayoral forum on education, hosted by Brooklyn’s Community Board 17, at the Top Civic Center on Utica Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn.

Adolfo Carrión Jr.
Independent

7:30 a.m.
Greets morning commuters at the Delancey Street/Essex Street subway station, on the Lower East Side.

George T. McDonald
Republican

6:30 p.m.
Participates in a mayoral forum on education, hosted by Brooklyn’s Community Board 17, at the Top Civic Center on Utica Avenue in Flatbush, Brooklyn.



In With the ‘New’: Paul McCartney Album Coming in October

Paul McCartneyMary McCartney Paul McCartney

For a moment, it looked like what Paul McCartney needed when he was 71 was not someone to send a valentine or a birthday bottle of wine, but someone to fix his social media accounts. On Wednesday, Mr. McCartney’s Twitter feed began posting what appeared to be random words and fragments â€" “moon,” “fangled,” “sreel” â€" raising questions about whether it had been hacked or was trying to keep pace with popular nonsense-spouting accounts like Horse ebooks. But of course this pop star and former Beatle had a plan up his sleeve.

As attentive fans noticed, Mr. McCartney’s seemingly haphazard tweets all fit together with the word “new” â€" which also happens to be the title of a new album he will release in the United States on Oct. 15, as well as the first single from the album which was posted online late Wednesday. Mr. Cartney’s official Web site said that the album will contain 12 tracks and will be his first collection of original solo material since “Memory Almost Full” in 2007. (It is his first new record since “Kisses on the Bottom,” a 2012 release that consisted largely of covers of pop standards.) The song “New” is produced by Mark Ronson, but as to his other collaborators on the album, Mr. McCartney has so far offered no other new information.



On the Train, a ‘Girl on Fire’

Dear Diary:

After landing in New York a few weeks ago I took the E train from Jamaica to Pennsylvania Station, where I was meeting a friend.

At first the car was full of people, some just-arrived travelers like me balancing their luggage against the jolting of the train, and I backed myself into a corner to avoid disrupting the ebb and flow of people that occurred at each station.

About halfway through the journey the train was empty enough that I could sit down, with my small rolling bag pinched between my legs. A few seats away from me sat a woman and her two children, a girl and a boy. She was singing “Girl on Fire” to them, in a calm and certain voice, rich like butter. And the children were both totally enraptured.

I watched the three of them reflected in the dark glass of the window opposite me, willingly part of an intimate moment unfolding in public, until the mother took the children’s hands in her own and disembarked.

Now, back in the North Carolina suburbs, “she’s a lonely girl” and “it’s a lonely world” reverberate in my head.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via e-mail diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: Wild Things

Snake on the run! This one captivated the city when it briefly escaped its cage at the Bronx Zoo.Julie Larsen Maher/Wildlife Conservation Society, via Associated Press Snake on the run! This one captivated the city when it briefly escaped its cage at the Bronx Zoo.

There is perhaps no more unabashedly urban environment than New York.

That might explain the city’s gravitation toward animals like Gus, that illustrious polar bear at the Central Park Zoo, who had to be euthanized this week at 27 after developing a tumor.

(He’d become such a part of Manhattan that he had his own therapist.)

Wild parrots, meanwhile, flock free in Brooklyn. Nobody seems to know exactly where they came from.

A few years back, a 400-pound tiger was discovered in a high-rise in Harlem. Its owner had moved out, and fed it by gingerly throwing chickens through a crack in the door.

A cobra, which escaped its cage at the Bronx Zoo in 2011, soon had a parody Twitter account, and hundreds of thousands of followers.

There is scant proof for the tale that alligators live, and breed, in the city’s sewers.

Then again, they are found mysteriously every few years - near apartment buildings, in Central Park lakes, and, in one instance, under a car in Queens.

“It was like the urban legend washes up from the sewer and says, ‘What the heck am I doing here?’ and hides under a Datsun,” said Joyce Hackett, a novelist who discovered that reptile.

Here’s what you need to know for your Thursday.

WEATHER

A high of 82 degrees, but also thunderstorms. You win some, you lose some.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit Click for latest M.T.A. status.

- Roads Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- A nationwide strike by fast-food workers, who are seeking a wage of $15 an hour and the right to form unions without retaliation, will include Manhattan restaurants, according to organizers.

- Mayoral candidates, including Christine C. Quinn, Bill de Blasio, Williams C. Thompson Jr., and John C. Liu, plan to attend rallies in support of the workers, including one at Union Square at 3 p.m.

- Elsewhere during the day, Ms. Quinn announces her proposals for the Housing Authority, and Mr. Thompson unveils a “workforce training plan.”

- The last outdoor movie of the summer at Brooklyn Bridge Park will be chosen by public vote, and might well be Sharknado, a film about a tornado full of sharks assaulting Los Angeles. D.J.s play from 6 p.m. and the movie begins at sundown. [Free]

- The New York City Guitar Orchestra plays a 1 p.m. concert at Hudson Square in Lower  Manhattan. Go, and confuse your co-workers when you return by dropping “guitar orchestra” into conversation like you see them all the time. [Free]

- There’s an open studio at The Storefront on Pier 17 at noon, so you can peek into the mysterious workings of the art world. [Free]

- Larry Harlow and the Latin Legends band play a free concert at East River Park at 7 p.m. [Free]

- Klezmer music at 7 p.m. at Elmhurst Park in Queens. [Free]

IN THE NEWS

- A poll by Quinnipiac University shows Mr. Blasio outstripping his mayoral rivals, backed by 36 percent of likely Democratic voters. He’s approaching the 40 percent threshold, which would allow him to avoid a runoff. [New York Times]

- The survey found 21 percent backed Ms. Quinn, the City Council speaker, who had long been the front-runner. Mr. Thompson had 20 percent.

- About 2,000 trees damaged by salt water after Hurricane Sandy, some weakened to the point that they can fall on passers-by, will be cut down by the city this fall. [New York Daily News]

- More animal tales: a massive, and briefly mysterious, fish washed up in Manhattan. (It was apparently a sturgeon) [Gothamist]

- Mind control is now real. (O.K., this is not related to New York, but it’s freaky.) [New York Times]

AND FINALLY…

Sunny’s Bar in Red Hook, decades old and run by appropriately wizened characters, was severely damaged by Hurricane Sandy, but apparently did not qualify for government aid.

So local residents, and fans who donated on the fundraising site Kickstarter, collected the $100,000 for repairs.

Today, Sunny’s will reopen, according to The Brooklyn Paper.

Sunny Balzano, whose grandfather opened the bar in 1890, plans to turn the front into a giant blackboard where patrons who offered support can sign their names.

All in all, an excuse to drink and feel worthy about it.

Nicole Higgins DeSmet contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

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