Total Pageviews

Bolshoi Artistic Director to Return to Moscow Months After Acid Attack

Sergei Filin, the artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet who was nearly blinded in January in an acid attack that was sparked by professional jealousies, will return to Moscow this weekend after spending eight months receiving medical treatment in Germany, Reuters reported on Thursday.

But just what role Mr. Filin would play in the ballet company that he led, and when he might return to work, remained unclear.

The Bolshoi’s spokeswoman, Katerina Novikova, told Reuters that the troupe hoped Mr. Filin would recover and return but that “to what extent he will be able to take part in the life of the troupe, that will become clear in the nearest future.” The theater did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday.

A soloist at the Bolshoi, Pavel Dmitrichenko, confessed to hiring two accomplices to carry out the attack on Mr. Filin, but said that he thought Mr. Filin would simply be beaten, not doused with sulfuric acid. Mr. Dmitrichenko’s common-law wife, the ballerina Anzhelina Vorontsova, was said to be frustrated at her inability to land top roles. Ms. Vorontsova later resigned from the company, and in July, the theater’s general director, Anatoly Iksanov, was removed in an apparent effort to put an end to the string of scandals there.



Overdoses of ‘Molly’ Led to Electric Zoo Deaths

The New York City Medical Examiner has confirmed that two young people who died at the Electric Zoo festival on Randalls Island over Labor Day weekend took fatal doses of drugs sold on the street as “molly.”

The third day of the festival was canceled at the request of city authorities after the two overdose victims, Jeffrey Russ, 23, of Rochester, N.Y., and Olivia Rotondo, 20, of Providence, R.I., collapsed with high body temperatures. Their deaths came after a string of similar overdoses since March at dance concerts around the country â€" in Boston, Seattle, Miami and Washington, D.C.

Toxicology results showed Ms. Rotondo died from acute intoxication after taking pure MDMA, the euphoria-producing drug sold on the street in pill form as ecstasy and in powdered form as molly, said Ellen Borakove, a spokeswoman for the medical examiner’s office.

Mr. Russ had taken a fatal mix of MDMA and methylone, a closely related stimulant that is also often sold under the name molly. Methylone is one of several stimulants and psychedelic drugs often used by drug dealers to cut MDMA, law enforcement officials said.

Both substances have long been popular among people who go to raves and dance festivals. They are amphetamines that flood the brain with neurotransmitters like dopamine and serotonin, making people affectionate, euphoric and emotionally open. Users at dance events say the high helps contribute to an illusion of unity and communal feeling. However, they can also wreak havoc with the body’s cells, causing a person’s temperature to rise until organs shut down.

A third New Yorker, Matthew Rybarczyk, 20, died on July 15 of an overdose of methylone after attending a different electronic dance music concert on Governors Island, the medical examiner’s office said.

On average, only about four people a year have died in New York City from MDMA overdoses, a tiny fraction of the 700 deaths from drugs, city health officials say. From 2000 to 2011, there were 43 deaths from ecstasy, compared with 4,676 cocaine overdoses and 4,151 heroin overdoses.

Developed in 1912 by Merck, MDMA was not marketed until the 1970s, when psychiatrists prescribed it to help people open up during therapy.

Dance-music fans starting using the drug under the street name ecstasy in the 1980s, starting in Ibiza’s discos, then in the rest of Europe and the United States.

Perhaps inevitably, ecstasy pills became adulterated with other substances. There was another spike in use in 2000 and 2001, the last time dance music surged in popularity.



The Story of Chagall, as Told by His Granddaughters

 Bella Meyer, left, and Meret Meyer, in front of a painting by their grandfather, the artist Marc Chagall, that is part of a new exhibition of his work at the Jewish Museum. The painting is called Sara Krulwich/The New York Times  Bella Meyer, left, and Meret Meyer, in front of a painting by their grandfather, the artist Marc Chagall, that is part of a new exhibition of his work at the Jewish Museum. The painting is called “The Flayed Ox.”

Strolling through a museum, two sisters stopped at a painting, a fantasy scene of faces and rooftops and a huge ox hanging upside down. They remembered it from childhood â€" it had hung in their parents’ living room, not because their parents were wealthy art patrons with an impressive collection, but because the painting had been made by their grandfather, the artist Marc Chagall.

“I was always mystified by it,” one sister, Bella Meyer, said.

But her grandfather was not one to explain what he had in mind when he roughed out the canvas shortly after World War II, and when it occupied its place on the living room wall in the 1950s and ’60s, she dared not ask. “He would say to other people, ‘What do you feel? Go into your heart,’” she recalled.

Chagall, the pioneer of modernism, is the subject of a retrospective at the Jewish Museum on the Upper East Side called “Chagall: Love, War and Exile” that concentrates on the anguished works of his middle and later years.

In 31 paintings and 22 other works, along with letters, poems and telegrams in display cases, it tells the story that Bella Meyer and her twin sister, Meret, heard as children in France: how their grandparents finally fled Vichy France in 1941; how their mother, Ida, rolled up Chagall’s paintings and sent them off to the United States; how the precious shipment arrived undamaged; how Chagall reworked a few of them even as he began new ones.

Chagall, born in what is now Belarus in 1887, lived, uncomfortably, in Manhattan; a guide to the show says he felt disconnected from Russia and Paris. The Chagall biographer Julia Wullschlager wrote that he would “wander the back streets of Lower Manhattan to buy Jewish bread and gefilte fish and to converse in Yiddish with the small Jewish shopkeepers.”

Eventually, Chagall moved to upstate New York, and in 1948, he moved back to France.

That is the history that the world knows. His granddaughters, who are 58, have the history that they know.

Bella Meyer, a floral designer who lives in New York, said her earliest memory of Chagall was “his taking our fingers as if to understand who we were.”

“He was a very tactile person, someone who had a great need to understand the size of any mass,” she said. “He would touch us, take our cheeks. I have this memory of being touched as if it were a miracle. He looked at us as if we were a miracle, and I was thinking, ‘Hey, I’m just a little nothing. A nebbish.’ Even before I knew how to talk.’”

Meret Meyer, who lives in France and Switzerland, said that she marveled at “how he always stayed the same,” no matter whom he encountered.

“He was with de Gaulle and Malraux,” she said, “and I remember thinking it was incredible that he stays very natural when he is with these great people. I only realized it was an event because we had special dresses.” (In the 1960s, President Charles de Gaulle named the writer Andre Malraux minister for cultural affairs.)

They knew that he had been commissioned to do murals for the Metropolitan Opera House in 1966 and for a Met production of Mozart’s “Zauberflote” the following year. “We heard about it afterwards,” Meret Meyer said. (Her sister said they had been upset when the Met offered the murals as collateral for a loan in 2009. “It’s sad,” Bella Meyer said, calling the move a “gambling trick.” But she added, “It’s a very smart move.” Separately, the Met sold part of the “Zauberflote” set several years ago, but part remains in storage.)

Bella Meyer said she considered her grandfather’s paintings “friends” when she was a child. “I would go into the paintings and imagine the world in there,” she said.

But sometimes, she could not do that with the painting that had been in the living room, “The Flayed Ox.”

“I couldn’t understand this brutal statement,” she said, “and yet I was drawn to it, the strength of it.” (A book prepared for the exhibition by Susan Tumarkin Goodman, the Jewish Museum’s senior curator emeritus, says that World War II brought out memories of Chagall’s own childhood and visits to his grandfather, a ritual slaughterer.)

“He would always ask us if we loved him,” Bella Meyer said. “We would say, ‘Mais oui, grandpapa.’ He would ask if we loved his paintings. ‘Mais oui, grandpapa.’ He would ask if we found our ideal.”

Standing in the museum, she was asked if she had found her ideal.

“It’s hard to know,” she said. “The first time I was really in love, he came to me with the biggest smile and said, ‘I know now you understand my paintings.’”



Toronto Video: Jason Bateman on ‘Bad Words’

“Bad Words,” a comedy about a man who enters a children’s spelling bee competition, directed by and starring Jason Bateman, has a bright future. Focus Features bought worldwide distribution rights to the film, planning a 2014 release. In this video, Mr. Bateman discusses the bitter character he plays, and also talks about the experience of directing his first feature.



Attorney General’s Office Voices Concern about Sale of Hudson River School Painting

The New York Attorney General’s office has voiced its concern over the possible sale of a large oil painting by Thomas Cole that once hung in the Seward House Historic Museum in Auburn, N.Y.

The 1839 painting â€" “Portage Falls on the Genesee” - by Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School, was given to Gov. William H. Seward in gratitude for his work expanding the Erie Canal. It hung in his house in Auburn, now known as the Seward House Historic Museum, until April, when the Fred L. Emerson Foundation, which owns the artwork and once oversaw the museum, removed it for possible sale.

The foundation says the landscape â€" appraised five years ago at $18 million â€" is too valuable to be left in an institution that does not have adequate resources to protect it.

But Seward’s great-great-grandson, Ray Messenger, has gone to court to stop the sale and secure the return of the painting to the historic house.

In its letter, the Attorney General’s office questioned the foundation’s justification for the sale and said it still had “obligations under the Will to maintain and support the Seward memorial.”

The attorney’s general office is empowered to oversee the sale of assets by charitable organizations and any sale of the painting would have to be approved by the courts.

In the June letter, which several media outlets took notice of in recent days, Jason Lilien, the Charities Bureau chief, told the foundation that the organization’s most recent tax return indicated that it was “financially able to continue to provide the necessary financial support for the memorial. Accordingly, we do not see any justification for the sale of the Painting or why the Painting has not yet been transferred to the Seward House Museum.”

The foundation said it recognizes the concern of the Attorney General and others and remains committed to working out “a plan to safeguard the painting and protect the long term financial viability and well-being of the Museum.”

The organization has previously said it plans to sell the painting at Christie’s, share the proceeds with the museum and hang a copy in its place. The painting’s removal stirred an outcry among members of the Seward family, patrons of the museum, Auburn residents and museum professionals.

At a hearing Thursday, a New York State surrogates court judge ordered the foundation to respond by Sept. 27 to Mr. Messenger’s petition that seeks to block the sale.



Attorney General’s Office Voices Concern about Sale of Hudson River School Painting

The New York Attorney General’s office has voiced its concern over the possible sale of a large oil painting by Thomas Cole that once hung in the Seward House Historic Museum in Auburn, N.Y.

The 1839 painting â€" “Portage Falls on the Genesee” - by Cole, the founder of the Hudson River School, was given to Gov. William H. Seward in gratitude for his work expanding the Erie Canal. It hung in his house in Auburn, now known as the Seward House Historic Museum, until April, when the Fred L. Emerson Foundation, which owns the artwork and once oversaw the museum, removed it for possible sale.

The foundation says the landscape â€" appraised five years ago at $18 million â€" is too valuable to be left in an institution that does not have adequate resources to protect it.

But Seward’s great-great-grandson, Ray Messenger, has gone to court to stop the sale and secure the return of the painting to the historic house.

In its letter, the Attorney General’s office questioned the foundation’s justification for the sale and said it still had “obligations under the Will to maintain and support the Seward memorial.”

The attorney’s general office is empowered to oversee the sale of assets by charitable organizations and any sale of the painting would have to be approved by the courts.

In the June letter, which several media outlets took notice of in recent days, Jason Lilien, the Charities Bureau chief, told the foundation that the organization’s most recent tax return indicated that it was “financially able to continue to provide the necessary financial support for the memorial. Accordingly, we do not see any justification for the sale of the Painting or why the Painting has not yet been transferred to the Seward House Museum.”

The foundation said it recognizes the concern of the Attorney General and others and remains committed to working out “a plan to safeguard the painting and protect the long term financial viability and well-being of the Museum.”

The organization has previously said it plans to sell the painting at Christie’s, share the proceeds with the museum and hang a copy in its place. The painting’s removal stirred an outcry among members of the Seward family, patrons of the museum, Auburn residents and museum professionals.

At a hearing Thursday, a New York State surrogates court judge ordered the foundation to respond by Sept. 27 to Mr. Messenger’s petition that seeks to block the sale.



K.D. Lang to Make Debut on Broadway

The genre-crossing singer K.D. Lang will make her Broadway debut in February in “After Midnight,” the musical about Harlem’s legendary Cotton Club that opens at the Brook Atkinson Theater in October.

The show, which was originally as a Jazz at Lincoln Center production at City Center, under the name “Cotton Club Parade,” was renamed for its move to Broadway, and is otherwise unchanged. It remains built around the music of Duke Ellington, using Ellington’s original arrangements, performed by an ensemble directed by Wynton Marsalis, as well as the poetry of Langston Hughes.

But the producers of the $6 million Broadway version would have a changing cast of guest stars, starting with Fantasia Barrino, the Grammy Award winner and American Idol champion. Ms. Lang will succeed Ms. Barrino on Feb. 11, and will be in the show for a month.

Ms. Lang said in a telephone interview that she had never thought much about singing on Broadway, but that the offer came at the right time.

“I’ve been listening to great jazz singers lately, and wanting to go in that direction,” Ms. Lang said. “So the idea of singing Ellington, and working with Wynton Marsalis, seemed an auspicious opportunity. It’s challenging. It’s something outside my comfort zone. But it’s an opportunity to grow, artistically.”

She said that she had not sat in on rehearsals for the show. “I just made my decision in the last week,” she said. But she said that she is familiar with the Ellington songbook. Even so, she was not inclined to identify any favorites from among the songs she will be singing.

“I’ll have to determine that once I get my teeth into it,” she said. “The songs I consider favorites as a listener may not be the same ones I’ll consider favorites as a performer.”



Bowie Among Nominees for Britain’s Mercury Prize

David Bowie has been nominated for Britain’s prestigious Barclaycard Mercury Prize, along with several younger artists who were not even born when he first emerged as a star in the early 1970s.

The list of nominees for the 2013 prize, which will be announced Oct. 30, includes several newcomers: soul singer Laura Mvula, the folk rocker Jake Bugg and the all-female punk group Savages. Also nominated are Arctic Monkeys, Foals, Laura Marling, Rudimental, Disclosure, Jon Hopkins, James Blake and Villagers.

The finalists were chosen from more than 220 albums submitted by their record labels and a winner will be chosen by an independent panel of judges. The prize is meant to honor the best British or Irish album in a given year and often goes to lesser known acts who are critical darlings.

Last spring, Mr. Bowie released his first album in a decade, “The Next Day,” after a short, intense marketing campaign. He announced the album by releasing the single “Where Are We Now” on Jan. 6, which was his 66th birthday. The BBC reported that Mr. Bowie is the oldest person to be nominated for the prize, beating out the jazz pianist Stan Tracey by a month. Though he has made 24 studio albums, Mr. Bowie has never won the Mercury prize.

Simon Frith, chair of the judging panel, told the BBC the eclectic list of nominees reflects “that there is no dominant pop sound” at the moment. “You don’t have Adele and all her imitators in the charts, so it’s kind of an open field,” he said.



An Off Broadway Rarity: ‘Buyer & Cellar’ Turns a Quick Profit

The critically acclaimed play “Buyer & Cellar,” an Off Broadway show starring Michael Urie (“Ugly Betty”) as a struggling actor who goes to work for Barbra Streisand, recouped its $500,000 capitalization in just nine weeks of performances at the Barrow Street Theater, the producers announced Thursday.

Few Off Broadway shows ever turn a profit, and even fewer do it this quickly. But “Buyer & Cellar” received strong reviews last spring in its first production at the 99-seat Rattlestick Playwrights Theater, then transferred to its current 199-seat house in late June. The show recouped in late August, according to the lead producer, Darren Bagert, and has grossed more than $1 million at Barrow Street, which has a strong track record of profitability. Another play there, “Tribes,” recouped after its first 10 months of performances last year.

Mr. Urie is set to perform “Buyer & Cellar” next year in Los Angeles and Chicago, the producers said, and talks are under way for productions in San Francisco, Toronto, and Dallas. The play is by Jonathan Tolins and directed by Stephen Brackett.



Another Set of Beatles’ BBC Recordings Is On the Way

When Capitol Records released “The Beatles Live at the BBC” to great fanfare in 1994, Beatles collectors lamented that the two-disc set barely scratched the surface of the vast trove of recordings the band made for the BBC between March 1962 and June 1965. Many of those radio recordings were already on a 10-disc bootleg set, after all, and in the 19 years since then, bootleggers have come up with another three discs’ worth of material.

But Capitol and Apple, the Beatles’ own label, are determined to catch up. “On Air - Live at the BBC Volume 2,” another two discs, will be released Nov. 11. It will include 63 tracks, including 40 songs and 23 spoken segments, with interviews, introductions and studio banter. A remastered version of the 1994 set will be released at the same time.

The new set redresses some of the complaints about the original. It had seemed odd, for example, that the Beatles’ radio performances of some of their biggest hits, including “Please Please Me,” “She Loves You” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” were left off the first set. All three are included here, as are “This Boy,” “Words of Love” and “And I Love Her,” which the earlier set also skipped.

The new set also includes several songs new to the Beatles official discography, including a rocked-up version of Stephen Foster’s “Beautiful Dreamer,” Paul McCartney’s energetic rendering of Little Richard’s “Lucille,” and John Lennon’s biting account of Chuck Berry’s “I’m Talking About You.”  Included, too, is the Beatles version of “Happy Birthday,” recorded to celebrate anniversary of Saturday Club, one of the shows they performed on.

Three of the tracks have been released previously, including a cover of a Carl Perkins track, “Lend Me Your Comb,” which appeared on the first volume of “The Beatles Anthology.” There is no crossover between the 1994 set and the new album, but several songs from the earlier collection - including I Saw Her Standing There,” “I Got A Woman,” “Sure To Fall” and “Hippy Hippy Shake” - are heard here in different performances.

All told, the Beatles performed 88 songs on the BBC, most in multiple performances. Among them were 36 songs they never recorded at Abbey Road. Equally significant, though, is the way the BBC recordings were made. Essentially, they were live performances, sometimes with minimal vocal overdubbing. They represent the group’s concert style, which had an edge that their polished studio productions sometimes lacked - but although a few of the BBC recordings were made before live audiences, most were not, and are therefore free of the hysterical shrieking typically heard on even the most professionally recorded Beatles concert tapes.

Among the interviews are individual talks with each Beatle recorded for the Beeb’s Pop Profile program in November 1965 and May 1966. The sets will have notes by Kevin Howlett, a former BBC producer whose 1996 book, “The Beatles at the BBC - The Radio Years 1962-70” is being republished in a substantially expanded and reconfigured edition as “The Beatles - The BBC Archives 1962-1970,” by Harper Design, in November.



Another Set of Beatles’ BBC Recordings Is On the Way

When Capitol Records released “The Beatles Live at the BBC” to great fanfare in 1994, Beatles collectors lamented that the two-disc set barely scratched the surface of the vast trove of recordings the band made for the BBC between March 1962 and June 1965. Many of those radio recordings were already on a 10-disc bootleg set, after all, and in the 19 years since then, bootleggers have come up with another three discs’ worth of material.

But Capitol and Apple, the Beatles’ own label, are determined to catch up. “On Air - Live at the BBC Volume 2,” another two discs, will be released Nov. 11. It will include 63 tracks, including 40 songs and 23 spoken segments, with interviews, introductions and studio banter. A remastered version of the 1994 set will be released at the same time.

The new set redresses some of the complaints about the original. It had seemed odd, for example, that the Beatles’ radio performances of some of their biggest hits, including “Please Please Me,” “She Loves You” and “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” were left off the first set. All three are included here, as are “This Boy,” “Words of Love” and “And I Love Her,” which the earlier set also skipped.

The new set also includes several songs new to the Beatles official discography, including a rocked-up version of Stephen Foster’s “Beautiful Dreamer,” Paul McCartney’s energetic rendering of Little Richard’s “Lucille,” and John Lennon’s biting account of Chuck Berry’s “I’m Talking About You.”  Included, too, is the Beatles version of “Happy Birthday,” recorded to celebrate anniversary of Saturday Club, one of the shows they performed on.

Three of the tracks have been released previously, including a cover of a Carl Perkins track, “Lend Me Your Comb,” which appeared on the first volume of “The Beatles Anthology.” There is no crossover between the 1994 set and the new album, but several songs from the earlier collection - including I Saw Her Standing There,” “I Got A Woman,” “Sure To Fall” and “Hippy Hippy Shake” - are heard here in different performances.

All told, the Beatles performed 88 songs on the BBC, most in multiple performances. Among them were 36 songs they never recorded at Abbey Road. Equally significant, though, is the way the BBC recordings were made. Essentially, they were live performances, sometimes with minimal vocal overdubbing. They represent the group’s concert style, which had an edge that their polished studio productions sometimes lacked - but although a few of the BBC recordings were made before live audiences, most were not, and are therefore free of the hysterical shrieking typically heard on even the most professionally recorded Beatles concert tapes.

Among the interviews are individual talks with each Beatle recorded for the Beeb’s Pop Profile program in November 1965 and May 1966. The sets will have notes by Kevin Howlett, a former BBC producer whose 1996 book, “The Beatles at the BBC - The Radio Years 1962-70” is being republished in a substantially expanded and reconfigured edition as “The Beatles - The BBC Archives 1962-1970,” by Harper Design, in November.



Toronto Video: Ralph Steadman Discusses His Art

TORONTO â€" The lively political drawings of Ralph Steadman have been capturing attention for decades. The illustrator and cartoonist may be known for teaming up with the writer Hunter S. Thompson in 1969, but he has racked up his fair share of interesting life experiences as well. They are chronicled in Charlie Paul’s documentary about Mr. Steadman, “For No Good Reason,” which screened this week at the festival.

In conjunction with the documentary, the festival is holding a gallery exhibition of Mr. Steadman’s work. In this video, Mr. Steadman relfects on how he creates his work, including images from pieces on display in the gallery.



Remembering a Lift From Grandmother

Dear Diary:

I was helping my elderly sister off a Broadway bus and I was having difficulty helping her keep her balance and managing her walker at the same time.

Suddenly I saw her mouth open in surprise as a large young man behind her lifted her up by the elbows, carried her down the steps and placed her gently on the sidewalk.

As he jumped back onto the bus he announced: “This is what my grandmother used to do for me. I’m just giving back.”

Your grandmother would be very proud of you.

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: Autumn Can Wait

Today will provide New Yorkers with another opportunity to flaunt their summer fashion. (This was Wednesday in Madison Square Park.)Chang W. Lee/The New York Times Today will provide New Yorkers with another opportunity to flaunt their summer fashion. (This was Wednesday in Madison Square Park.)

Perhaps you were thinking that by mid-September you could put your air conditioners and tank tops in storage.

If so, you thought wrong.

Today shall be another hot one â€" not quite like yesterday, when the mercury hit 96 in Central Park, but still sunny and sticky, with temperatures creeping toward the upper 80s and a heat index around 90.

It may be September, but it is summer, after all.

With afternoon will come clouds, and probably rain, possibly a drenching. Behind it: cool, dry air through the weekend and into next week.

For today, though, pack an umbrella and matching sunglasses.

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

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit: O.K. so far. Click for latest M.T.A. status.

- Roads: No major delays. Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- Ralph Lauren and Calvin Klein provide the finale to Fashion Week.

- A cannoli-eating contest kicks off the Feast of San Gennaro in Little Italy. 2 p.m. [Free]

- Joseph J. Lhota, Republican nomination in hand, visits the Queens gravesite of the Lubavitcher rabbi and reputed messiah Menachem Schneerson and appears on NY1’s “Road to City Hall” at 7 p.m.

- Want to raise a chicken? You can take a class at a community garden in Bedford-Stuyvesant. 5:30 p.m. [Free]

- The BEAT Festival (it stands for Brooklyn Emerging Artists in Theater) opens with a night of performances in all corners of the Brooklyn Museum. 7 p.m. [Free, R.S.V.P. and donation suggested]

- Fireworks above the East River off East 25th Street. 8:45 p.m.

IN THE NEWS

- Democratic power brokers are urging William C. Thompson Jr. to forsake a runoff should Bill de Blasio fall short of 40 percent after all the votes are counted. [New York Times]

- Some people want to make Sept. 11 a national holiday. [CBS2 New York]

- What if the city set aside a voting booth for one lone voter and he didn’t show up? It happened on West 58th Street. [DNA Info]

- Tina Brown is leaving publishing to start her own conference company. [New York Times]

- There will be no weekend L train service in much of East Williamsburg and Bushwick through mid-October. [Gothamist]

- David H. Petraeus, the retired general and former C.I.A. director, was greeted by hecklers en route to his first lecture as a visiting professor at City University of New York. [Daily News]

- Panic briefly gripped fans of Chipotle restaurants after a bad shipment of black beans prompted the chain to stop serving them in many New York locations. [Fox News New York]

- Yanks beat the Orioles 5-4 but Derek Jeter is out for the season. The Mets clinched a nonplayoff spot and lost to the Nationals 3-0.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

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

What would you like to see here to start your day? Post a comment, e-mail us at nytoday@nytimes.com or reach us via Twitter using #NYToday.

Find us on weekdays at nytimes.com/nytoday.