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Week in Pictures for Sept. 13

Here is a slide show of photographs from the past week in New York City and the region. Subjects include the first day of school, election night parties in the mayoral race, and the 12th anniversary of Sept. 11.

This weekend on “The New York Times Close Up,” an inside look at the most compelling articles in the Sunday newspaper, Sam Roberts will speak with The Times’s Eleanor Randolph. Also, Joseph J. Lhota, the Republican mayoral candidate, and the authors Kevin Baker and Jonathan Lethem. 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.



American Ballet Theater Announces Diversity Program

American Ballet Theater has launched a partnership with the Boys and Girls Clubs of America and regional ballet companies across the country aimed at increasing the meager number of minority dancers, the troupe announced on Friday. The program, titled Project Plié, will offer scholarships to talented young dancers of color and train dance teachers who work in underrepresented communities.

The face of the new initiative, which was reported by The Wall Street Journal, is Misty Copeland, the 31-year-old African-American soloist, whose appearances in a Diet Dr. Pepper commercial and in magazines have drawn fans outside of the ballet world. Ultimately the company hopes not only to attract more dancers from minority groups, but also more minority-group audience members as well. Rachel Moore, the troupe’s executive director, said, “In launching Project Plié, American Ballet Theater aims to take an important step toward helping the classical ballet profession better reflect the racial and ethnic diversity of our country’s population.”



Spider, New York’s Oldest Cabby, Dies at 94

Johnnie Footman, in an undated photo, was a New York City cabdriver for several decades. He died on Tuesday at the age of 94.John McDonagh Johnnie Footman, in an undated photo, was a New York City cabdriver for several decades. He died on Tuesday at the age of 94.

It’s the end of the line for New York City cabdriver 016337 - that’s the hack license number of Johnnie Footman, who turned 94 last month and was the oldest licensed yellow-cab driver in the city.

Mr. Footman, who was widely known by his nickname, Spider, died on Tuesday, after several decades of driving a yellow cab in New York, said several friends and his longtime dispatcher, Stanley Wissak, an owner of the 55 Stan cab depot in Long Island City, Queens, where Mr. Footman worked for many years.

“He was here Monday and he died Tuesday,” Mr. Wissak said.

Mr. Footman renewed his hack license last year, and it was valid until its expiration date next February. For the past few years, Mr. Footman worked only a couple of days per week and he had stopped driving a cab in recent months, but he continued to show up most days at the cab depot, which held a birthday party for him last month. Mr. Footman’s cause of death was unclear, but Mr. Wissak and others said his health had recently been declining.

How Mr. Footman became known as Spider is unclear, but those who knew him said he gained it while riding his beloved Harley Davidson in a Harlem motorcycle club. While he no longer climbed behind the wheel of a yellow cab as often, Mr. Footman would still regularly drive to 55 Stan in his aging Chevy Blazer from his apartment on East 119th Street in Manhattan, just to hang around with off-duty cabdrivers and other workers.

“He liked coming around and talking to everyone - it kept him active, and we treated him like he was God,” Mr. Wissak said, adding that Mr. Footman knew the city like the back of his hand, and had countless cab stories, including descriptions of couples having sex in the back seat and accounts of the celebrities he picked up, which included Rock Hudson and John Wayne.

The charismatic Mr. Footman had a preference for cheap cigars and wore a big plastic spider pendant around his neck and a baseball hat with a label that said “Old Dude made of Achey Breaky Parts!” Despite his age, he talked about women with the excitement of an undergraduate during an interview last year at the cab depot.

Mr. Footman, who was slight of build and stood 5 feet 6 inches tall, would slip a stack of folded cardboard and foam on the driver’s seat of his daily rental cab at the beginning of each shift. He boasted a nearly spotless driving record and never had any accidents while working for 55 Stan, Mr. Wissak said. In recent years, he would warn passengers who got in his cab that he drove slowly.

“He just didn’t feel he was safe enough to drive passengers; he was a little unsure of himself,” Mr. Wissak said. In recent years, Mr. Footman complained that passengers complained more while tipping less.

Mr. Footman was born in Lakeland, Fla., and moved to New York to escape the racism of the South, said the filmmaker Josh Weinstein, who featured Mr. Footman in a recent documentary, “Drivers Wanted,” about 55 Stan. The film was screened last Saturday night at the cab depot but Mr. Footman felt too weak to attend, Mr. Weinstein said.

Mr. Footman started his cab career pumping gas, fixing engines and washing cabs for the Terminal Cab company in Hell’s Kitchen, before he obtained his hack license and began driving - from DeSotos and Checkers to Crown Victorias, Mr. Wissak said.

While it was unclear exactly when Mr. Footman first obtained his hack license, David Yassky, the commissioner of the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission, said it was “only a few short years” after the modern taxi industry was born in 1937, when the city’s board of aldermen first began limiting the number of hack licenses granted in the city.

“He’ll be missed,” Mr. Yassky said. “He was one of those drivers who knew the streets, knew his cab and knew his passengers, and he balanced all three perfectly.”



Toronto Video: Jessica Chastain on ‘The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby’

In “The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby: Him and Her,” the details and struggles of a marriage are portrayed from two perspectives in essentially two separate films. “Him” tracks that relationship through the eyes of Conor (James McAvoy), while “Her” makes Eleanor (Jessica Chastain) its focus. This week, the Toronto International Film Festival has been screening the movie, occasionally in reverse order, putting “Her” first. In this video, Ms. Chastain speaks about her role and the dual requirements of playing her character in one film, and Conor’s impressions of her character in another.



Video Reviews of ‘Blue Caprice,’ ‘Mother of George’ and ‘The Family’

In this week’s video, Times critics look at “Blue Caprice,” “Mother of George” and “The Family.” See all of this week’s reviews.



Big Ticket | Gramercy Park Penthouse for $42 Million

Residents here get keys to Gramercy Park.Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times Residents here get keys to Gramercy Park.

The duplex penthouse at 18 Gramercy Park South, the luxuriously upgraded former Salvation Army rooming house for women, sold for its full asking price of $42 million and was, by a landslide, the most expensive sale of the week, according to city records.

The buyer, no stranger to trophies, is Leslie Alexander, the billionaire owner of the Houston Rockets of the National Basketball Association. The team won the N.B.A. championship the same season Mr. Alexander paid $85 million to acquire it in 1993. Mr. Alexander put in a pre-emptive bid for this trophy penthouse at the first opportunity.

The 6,300-square-foot duplex, PH17, has pride of place on the 17th and 18th floors of the condominium building, which the city has designated a landmark. The unit has a full arsenal of bells and whistles dreamed up by Robert A. M. Stern Architects, Zeckendorf Development and Eyal Ofer’s Global Holdings, the same team that built the global billionaire magnet 15 Central Park West. The monthly carrying charges are $19,407.89, and like the other privileged owners, Mr. Alexander gets a key to Gramercy Park, a perk that evidently appealed to him for his New York City pied-à- terre (he owns five residences, among them an oceanfront estate in Southampton).

“Mr. Alexander loved the location because it was on Manhattan’s only private park in a prewar condo designed by one of America’s top architects,” said his broker, Melanie Lazenby of Douglas Elliman Real Estate. Zeckendorf Marketing handled the sale for the developer.

Besides scoring an aerie in the tallest, and most exquisitely renovated, building on the park, Mr. Alexander has nearly 2,000 feet of outdoor space divided among four terraces, one of which is 40 feet wide and provides views of the Chrysler Building. There is a heated infinity pool and sun deck on the top level and a 132-square-foot south terrace with a whirlpool.

The powder room is black onyx, and there are four en-suite marble baths. The master suite upstairs has 11-foot ceilings, a Calacatta Caldia marble slab bath with a steam shower and cast-iron tub, and access to two terraces.

On the lower level, there is a reception room, library, gallery, custom kitchen, formal dining room, staff suite, three guest bedrooms, and a living room with 40 feet of park frontage. A grand salon with a wood-burning fireplace completes the upper level.

“This penthouse sale affirms the great confidence that the market has shown in 18 Gramercy Park,” said Arthur Zeckendorf. “This one-of-a-kind home has commanded the highest price paid for a downtown apartment.”

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



Vikram Seth’s ‘Suitable Boy’ Sequel Finds a New Home

Weidenfeld and Nicolson, an imprint of the British publisher Orion, has acquired “A Suitable Girl,” the sequel to Vikram Seth’s gargantuan 1993 novel “A Suitable Boy,” after a deal with another publisher fell through this summer when Mr. Seth failed to deliver the manuscript on time.

“A Suitable Girl,” which Hamish Hamilton had acquired for a reported $1.7 million, was to have been published in the fall, to coincide with the 20th anniversary of “A Suitable Boy,” which tells â€" in more than 1,300 pages â€" the interlocking stories of four Indian families, and centers on the quest to find a husband for a rebellious young woman named Lata. But that deal began unraveling in July, prompting speculation that Penguin, Hamish’s parent company, was paying more attention to the bottom line in the wake of its merger with Random House.

The new novel, which will feature Lata, now a grandmother, in the role of matchmaker, is now scheduled to be published in 2016.

The Orion deal also included e-book rights to “A Suitable Boy,” which will be published electronically for the first time, along with an anniversary edition of the print book, which has sold more than a million copies in 20 languages.

Mr. Seth, who has published only one other novel since “A Suitable Boy,” said in a statement on Orion’s Web site that he was happy to be back with his old publisher, which “took a risk” 20 years ago with “A Suitable Boy.”

“It is entirely in the fitness of things that ‘A Suitable Girl’ will be joining her companion,” he said. “And for my part, it is a great pleasure to be home again.”



Book Review Podcast: Delia Ephron’s Essays

Mario Wagner

In The New York Times Book Review, Elinor Lipman reviews “Sister Mother Husband Dog (Etc.),” the new collection of essays by Delia Ephron, sister of the late essayist and screenwriter Nora Ephron. Ms. Lipman writes:

Many of the pieces, like “Blame It on the Movies,” should be read as autobiographical slices rather than essays. We learn how she met the WASP first husband who was a bad fit; about her long, still-happy second marriage; about her dogs (she apologizes for the essay “Dogs,” but she shouldn’t); about the networking or lucky breaks that brought her first, second and third books into print; and about her most-watched movie (“Seven Brides for Seven Brothers,” at least 30 times). She is unpretentious and â€" one bets â€" truthful always. “In college the only thing that interested me was dating. Being in love. In the library I had a reward system: 10 minutes of studying, 10 of daydreaming.”

On this week’s podcast, Ms. Ephron discusses her book; Eric Schlosser talks about “Command and Control,” his new book about nuclear weapons; and Gregory Cowles has best-seller news. Pamela Paul is the host.



Philip Levine Is Awarded $100,000 Poetry Prize

Philip Levine, the former United States poet laureate who spent his early years writing verse between shifts as a Detroit autoworker, has been awarded the Academy of American Poets’ Wallace Stevens Award for lifetime achievement.

Philip Levine in 2011.Jim Wilson/The New York Times Philip Levine in 2011.

The prize, which comes with a $100,000 award, is given annually for “outstanding and proven mastery of the art of poetry.” Mr. Levine’s collections include “What Work Is,” which won the 1991 National Book Award; “The Simple Truth,” which won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize; and, in 2009, “News of the World.”

In an essay quoted on the academy’s Web site, Mr. Levine, now 85, described the impulse to put his experiences on the assembly line into verse. “I believed even then that if I could transform my experience into poetry I would give it the value and dignity it did not begin to possess on its own,” he wrote. “I thought too that if I could understand my life â€" or at least the part my work played in it â€" I could embrace it with some degree of joy, an element conspicuously missing from my life.”

Other prizes announced by the academy include the $25,000 Lenore Marshall Prize for the best first book of poetry last year, awarded to Patricia Smith’s “Shoulda Been Jimi Savannah”; a $25,000 fellowship for “distinguished poetic achievement,” awarded to Carolyn Forché; and a $25,000 translation fellowship, given to John Taylor for his English version of work by the Italian poet Lorenzo Calogero.



Philip Levine Awarded $100,000 Poetry Prize

Philip Levine, the former United States poet laureate who spent his early years writing verse between shifts as a Detroit autoworker, has been awarded the Academy of American Poets’ Wallace Stevens Award for lifetime achievement.

The prize, which comes with a $100,000 award, is given annually for “outstanding and proven mastery of the art of poetry.” Mr. Levine’s collections include “What Work Is,” which won the 1991 National Book Award; “The Simple Truth,” which won the 1995 Pulitzer Prize; and, in 2009, “News of the World.”

In an essay quoted on the academy’s Web site, Mr. Levine, now 85, described the impulse to put his experiences on the assembly line into verse. “I believed even then that if I could transform my experience into poetry I would give it the value and dignity it did not begin to possess on its own,” he wrote. “I thought too that if I could understand my life â€" or at least the part my work played in it â€" I could embrace it with some degree of joy, an element conspicuously missing from my life.”

Other prizes announced by the academy include the $25,000 Lenore Marshall Prize for the best first book of poetry last year, awarded to Patricia Smith’s “Shoulda Been Jimi Savannah”; a $25,000 fellowship for “distinguished poetic achievement,” awarded to Carolyn Forché; and a $25,000 translation fellowship, given to John Taylor for his English version of work by the Italian poet Lorenzo Calogero.



New Yorkers Do Things Because They Can

Dear Diary:

Recently I met a New Yorker in an online chat room. She told me that a few hours earlier she had walked into a burning building. What for, I asked. Her response: “Because I can.”

I began to wonder: do New Yorkers do things without thinking of the consequences? Like the shark who found himself on the N train; was he so excited about going on the subway that he didn’t think about the consequences of leaving the Hudson?

Living in Australia I am unaware of what it’s like to be a New Yorker, but one day I hope to be one. Will I then conform to my surroundings and become unaware of the consequences?

I hope not.

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: Checking it Twice

Election workers will inspect voting machines today to tallly the official numbers.Robert Caplin for The New York Times Election workers will inspect voting machines today to tallly the official numbers.

For William C. Thompson Jr., it’s all over but the counting.

But the counting counts.

And so, across the city today, election workers will crack the seals on 5,059 voting machines.

They will compare the vote totals recorded there to the figures written down on the night of the mayoral primary.

Mr. Thompson is hoping that when the dust settles, Bill de Blasio, who currently has 40.3 percent of the votes tallied in the Democratic primary, falls below 40 percent.

That would force a runoff â€" unless Mr. Thompson concedes, as party leaders, seeking unity, are pressing him to do.

On Monday, the reckoning continues with the tallying of paper ballots.

The board said Thursday night that there were nearly 80,000 of those.

The odds strongly favor Mr. de Blasio.

But Mr. Thompson hopes to pick up votes wherever he can, and on the machine count, there are often discrepancies.

“There’s room for error,” said Valerie Vasquez, a spokeswoman for the city’s Board of Elections. “You’re talking about poll workers who have been working Election Day for some 16-odd hours.”

Here’s what else you need to know for Friday the 13th and the weekend:

WEATHER

Scattered showers over the area should pass by mid-morning â€" take a disposable umbrella.

After that, look out. It will be very pleasant, with sunny skies and a high of 76.

The sun will remain, except at night, through Wednesday, with highs staying in the 70s.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit: Fine 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 today but suspended Saturday for Yom Kippur. (Yes there are streets that have alternate-side rules on Saturday, mostly commercial strips.)

COMING UP TODAY

- Joseph J. Lhota, the Republican mayoral candidate, goes to Staten Island to watch ”The Goonies” â€" and shake some hands â€" at 6 p.m. at Bloomingdale Park. [Free movie and handshake]

- If you see bloody people and emergency workers in haz-mat suits outside the Barclays Center tonight, don’t panic. It’s a disaster drill, with the Fire Department and Marines, from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.

- Tickets go on sale at noon for the rapper Earl Sweatshirt’s Oct. 7 show at the Bowery Ballroom. (You may remember a profile of him in The New Yorker).

- Enjoy free live music at the American Folk Art Museum, starting at 5:30 p.m., in Lincoln Center.

- An exhibition, “A Queer History of Fashion: From the Closet to the Catwalk,” opens at the museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology.

- The former good-guy pro wrestler Bruno Sammartino (your childhood hero, perhaps) donates a replica of his championship belt to the Italian American Museum and speaks out against bullying.

- Lit Crawl â€" like a weekend-long pub crawl, but with authors â€" kicks off with events across the East Village and the Lower East Side.

- Hiroki Kuroda takes to the mound at 7 p.m. as the Yankees look to stay in the wild card hunt against the Red Sox.

Joseph Burgess and Nicole Higgins DeSmet 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.



New York Today: Checking it Twice

Election workers will inspect voting machines today to tallly the official numbers.Robert Caplin for The New York Times Election workers will inspect voting machines today to tallly the official numbers.

For William C. Thompson Jr., it’s all over but the counting.

But the counting counts.

And so, across the city today, election workers will crack the seals on 5,059 voting machines.

They will compare the vote totals recorded there to the figures written down on the night of the mayoral primary.

Mr. Thompson is hoping that when the dust settles, Bill de Blasio, who currently has 40.3 percent of the votes tallied in the Democratic primary, falls below 40 percent.

That would force a runoff â€" unless Mr. Thompson concedes, as party leaders, seeking unity, are pressing him to do.

On Monday, the reckoning continues with the tallying of paper ballots.

The board said Thursday night that there were nearly 80,000 of those.

The odds strongly favor Mr. de Blasio.

But Mr. Thompson hopes to pick up votes wherever he can, and on the machine count, there are often discrepancies.

“There’s room for error,” said Valerie Vasquez, a spokeswoman for the city’s Board of Elections. “You’re talking about poll workers who have been working Election Day for some 16-odd hours.”

Here’s what else you need to know for Friday the 13th and the weekend:

WEATHER

Scattered showers over the area should pass by mid-morning â€" take a disposable umbrella.

After that, look out. It will be very pleasant, with sunny skies and a high of 76.

The sun will remain, except at night, through Wednesday, with highs staying in the 70s.

TRANSIT & TRAFFIC

- Mass Transit: Fine 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 today but suspended Saturday for Yom Kippur. (Yes there are streets that have alternate-side rules on Saturday, mostly commercial strips.)

COMING UP TODAY

- Joseph J. Lhota, the Republican mayoral candidate, goes to Staten Island to watch ”The Goonies” â€" and shake some hands â€" at 6 p.m. at Bloomingdale Park. [Free movie and handshake]

- If you see bloody people and emergency workers in haz-mat suits outside the Barclays Center tonight, don’t panic. It’s a disaster drill, with the Fire Department and Marines, from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m.

- Tickets go on sale at noon for the rapper Earl Sweatshirt’s Oct. 7 show at the Bowery Ballroom. (You may remember a profile of him in The New Yorker).

- Enjoy free live music at the American Folk Art Museum, starting at 5:30 p.m., in Lincoln Center.

- An exhibition, “A Queer History of Fashion: From the Closet to the Catwalk,” opens at the museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology.

- The former good-guy pro wrestler Bruno Sammartino (your childhood hero, perhaps) donates a replica of his championship belt to the Italian American Museum and speaks out against bullying.

- Lit Crawl â€" like a weekend-long pub crawl, but with authors â€" kicks off with events across the East Village and the Lower East Side.

- Hiroki Kuroda takes to the mound at 7 p.m. as the Yankees look to stay in the wild card hunt against the Red Sox.

Joseph Burgess and Nicole Higgins DeSmet 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.