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A Thrill Now Sadly Rare

Dave Taft

When I was growing up in Brooklyn, bats were common. They roosted in abandoned homes, in attics, in little-used garages or behind decorative window shutters in both the most affluent and the poorest neighborhoods. My summers were filled with bat sightings, as were fall evenings after my homework was done. That bats were familiars, or consorted with the dead, never occurred to me. I only wanted to see one up close.

To make that happen, I used a trick. My brother and I would begin the evening filling our pockets with carefully selected, irregularly shaped stones â€" the best were no larger than half an inch long. These were our insect decoys.

Positioning ourselves in empty lots near street trees or in fields where we had seen bats hunting, we would thumb-flick these stones as high as we could when we spotted one nearby. As the spinning stone reached its maximum height, the bat’s radar would detect the tiny “insect” and sometimes sweep in to investigate.

If we got the timing and the trajectory exactly right, the stone and the bat would intersect at eye level, a great view, illuminated by the city streetlights, and close enough for us to hear the faint flutter of wings. Every now and again, the bat would sweep its wing or tail under to intercept the stone, rejecting it at once as fraudulent.

I am anxious that my daughter may never have the chance to play this harmless game with me. Bats are scarce these days. Since the discovery of white nose syndrome in a New York State cave in 2006, millions of bats have died throughout the Northeast. The disease is caused by a previously unknown fungus (Pseudogymnoascus destructans) that reaches its morbid worst when bats are most susceptible, during their winter hibernation. The highly contagious disease spreads through densely packed, sleeping bats at will.

Though the exact means of death is unknown, infected bats rouse more often in winter, depleting critical energy reserves. The disease may afflict the bats’ brains, or it may simply be starvation, but sick bats occasionally emerge from hibernation to search the bleak February skies for flying insects. In either case, the disease is a death sentence. February’s cold is unforgiving.

In my experience, the little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus) is the most frequently seen in our area, especially around water, but I have also encountered silver-haired, hoary, Eastern red, and big brown bats in New York City and its vicinity. If you want to get fancier than flinging rocks, join one of several local nature centers or bat conservation groups for an evening foray. Leaders often carry devices that can decipher the bats’ echolocation, since different bat species hunt using different frequencies and cadences â€" many too high-pitched for unaided human ears.

I miss bats. I know I am not the only one. Each Halloween, as the parade of princesses, pirates, bats and black cats gets under way, I wish for better days for these small, furry marvels.



When ‘Frankenstorm’ First Caught Our Eye

From time to time, the weather-forecasting authorities issue warnings of some type.

Sometimes we write about them. Sometimes we don’t.

A year ago today, the National Weather Service’s highly technical Extended Forecast Discussion veered off into a digression about something it dubbed a Frankenstorm, “an allusion to Mary Shelley’s gothic creature of synthesized elements.”

We suspected something might be different about this one.

We had no idea.



Big Ticket | A Nascar Star Sells for $25 Million

15 Central Park WestEdward Caruso for The New York Times 15 Central Park West

An elegant apartment at 15 Central Park West with treetop vistas of Central Park just outside and a host of sophisticated customizations inside â€" like a built-in sushi bar in the great room overlooking the park â€" sold for $25 million and was the most expensive sale of the week, according to city records. The asking price for the 3,454-square-foot unit when it entered the market in May was $30 million, and the monthly carrying charges are $7,221.80.

A three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath condominium, No. 7C, it had been owned since 2007 by the Nascar superstar Jeff Gordon, who paid $9.67 million and was one of the first buyers at 15 Central Park West. He and his wife, Ingrid Vandebosch, commissioned extensive renovations and upgrades to the home, which was used as their urban pied-à-terre.

The couple recently moved to a $10 million four-bedroom, full-floor unit at the freshly converted Whitman on Madison Square Park, where one of their three neighbors (the Whitman has just four residences) is the former first daughter Chelsea Clinton and her husband, Marc Mezvinsky. The buyers of No. 7C are Mr. Gordon’s former downstairs neighbors; they elected to make a slight vertical move to gain a superior amount of living space. Nora Ariffin and Christopher Kromer of Halstead Property were the brokers for the seller, listed in public records as Carolina Real Property. The buyers, who used a limited-liability company, Mossullo, were represented by Noel Berk of Mercedes/Berk, also a resident of 15 Central Park West. The buyer’s apartment, No. 6E, a two-bedroom unit, is listed for sale with Ms. Berk for $10.3 million.

The week’s second-most-expensive sale also involved property belonging to a celebrity, if not a legend: Harold Prince, the most decorated Broadway producer/director in show business, whose 21 Tony Awards constitute a record. His robustly decorated Upper East Side town house sold for $19.1 million. The most recent asking price of the home, between Madison and Park Avenues, was $19.95 million.

The six-story neo-Georgian residence â€" built in 1910 but fully renovated in 2007 with the entire back wall replaced by glass â€" has 7,350 square feet of interior space; a 2,000-square-foot finished basement with a gym and a staff suite; a rear garden; a roof deck; a four-story atrium; and a south-facing terrace. Taxes are $128,000 a year, and there are no fewer than three powder rooms.

Paula Del Nunzio of Brown Harris Stevens represented Mr. Prince and his wife, Judith. The buyer of the five-bedroom, five-bath home used a limited-liability company, 48 East 74th Street.

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



Big Ticket | A Nascar Star Sells for $25 Million

15 Central Park WestEdward Caruso for The New York Times 15 Central Park West

An elegant apartment at 15 Central Park West with treetop vistas of Central Park just outside and a host of sophisticated customizations inside â€" like a built-in sushi bar in the great room overlooking the park â€" sold for $25 million and was the most expensive sale of the week, according to city records. The asking price for the 3,454-square-foot unit when it entered the market in May was $30 million, and the monthly carrying charges are $7,221.80.

A three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath condominium, No. 7C, it had been owned since 2007 by the Nascar superstar Jeff Gordon, who paid $9.67 million and was one of the first buyers at 15 Central Park West. He and his wife, Ingrid Vandebosch, commissioned extensive renovations and upgrades to the home, which was used as their urban pied-à-terre.

The couple recently moved to a $10 million four-bedroom, full-floor unit at the freshly converted Whitman on Madison Square Park, where one of their three neighbors (the Whitman has just four residences) is the former first daughter Chelsea Clinton and her husband, Marc Mezvinsky. The buyers of No. 7C are Mr. Gordon’s former downstairs neighbors; they elected to make a slight vertical move to gain a superior amount of living space. Nora Ariffin and Christopher Kromer of Halstead Property were the brokers for the seller, listed in public records as Carolina Real Property. The buyers, who used a limited-liability company, Mossullo, were represented by Noel Berk of Mercedes/Berk, also a resident of 15 Central Park West. The buyer’s apartment, No. 6E, a two-bedroom unit, is listed for sale with Ms. Berk for $10.3 million.

The week’s second-most-expensive sale also involved property belonging to a celebrity, if not a legend: Harold Prince, the most decorated Broadway producer/director in show business, whose 21 Tony Awards constitute a record. His robustly decorated Upper East Side town house sold for $19.1 million. The most recent asking price of the home, between Madison and Park Avenues, was $19.95 million.

The six-story neo-Georgian residence â€" built in 1910 but fully renovated in 2007 with the entire back wall replaced by glass â€" has 7,350 square feet of interior space; a 2,000-square-foot finished basement with a gym and a staff suite; a rear garden; a roof deck; a four-story atrium; and a south-facing terrace. Taxes are $128,000 a year, and there are no fewer than three powder rooms.

Paula Del Nunzio of Brown Harris Stevens represented Mr. Prince and his wife, Judith. The buyer of the five-bedroom, five-bath home used a limited-liability company, 48 East 74th Street.

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



Listening to the Roar of 1920s New York

Scenes from 1929 New York from Fox Movietone Newsreels preserved by the University of South Carolina, Moving Image Research Collections.

In 1929, New York’s Noise Abatement Commission outfitted a truck with microphones and sound recording devices to measure the city’s din. Researchers made more than 10,000 observations on the truck’s 500-mile journey past construction sites with billowing steam shovels and pounding pile drivers, underneath screeching elevated trains and past the cluster of electronics shops blaring music in Lower Manhattan’s “Radio Row.”

The commission, a short-lived agency that aggressively studied the soundscape to develop policies that would protect the health of the city’s inhabitants, concluded that a Bengal tiger could “roar or snarl indefinitely without attracting the auditory attention of passers-by.”

New Yorkers who believe the cacophony is worse today - with helicopters buzzing overhead and rumbling Fresh Direct trucks on the streets below - should put on a pair of headphones and take a tour around a new Web site that explores the sonic environment of a century ago.

“The Roaring ‘Twenties,” as it is called, was created by Emily Thompson, a historian of sound, technology and cultures of listening at Princeton University who has spent many years thinking about how best to present sonic complaints in the Municipal Archives of the City of New York and videos from the Moving Image Research Collections of the Libraries of the University of South Carolina with the hope of getting people into a 1929 state of mind.

“It’s my attempt to build a time machine,” she said.

There are hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles that chronicle the city’s struggle to contain the racket; letters from aggrieved citizens about loud ash collectors and ice cream men; plus more than 50 newsreels with synchronous sound footage that give a grainy vision of an environment defined by the growth of skyscrapers, the excavation of elevated railways, thundering internal combustion engines and whistling policemen.

A letter from Dr. C. Burns Craig to the health commissioner asking for relief from whistles and sirens on the East River dated April 13, 1931. Click Here to EnlargeMunicipal Archives of the City of New York A letter from Dr. C. Burns Craig to the health commissioner asking for relief from whistles and sirens on the East River dated April 13, 1931. Click Here to Enlarge

In one letter dated Oct. 5, 1932, Mr. N. Schmuck of 137 Milton Street in Brooklyn, complained to the health department about the Colonial Pickle Works on Greenpoint Avenue. The department’s commissioner, a man named Dr. Shirley W. Wynne, responded the following day in a surprising show of government efficiency and courtesy, assuring that Mr. Schmuck’s complaint had been referred to the sanitation department “for investigation and appropriate action.”

“There was optimism that science and technology could solve the problem that isn’t present today,” Ms. Thompson said.

Though the backbone of the site is the perniciousness of sound, the Fox Movietone newsreels from 1926 through 1930 provide a portal to the vitality and exuberance of street life at the time. In one, squealing pigs slide down a chute on Coney Island as a barker announces: “Luna Park Pig Slide… three balls for ten cents… ten balls for a quarter… hear that little pig squeal…”

Voyeurs and the curious can search the vast network of content by date, keyword or by location on a zoomable Google map overlaid with a black and white map from 1933. It took more than three years to develop the site, said Ms. Thompson. She worked with Scott Mahoy, a Web designer she met through Vectors, an online journal at the University of Southern California dedicated to multimedia literacy, which sponsored the project.

How to define noise, pinpoint it and how to temper human and mechanical outbursts make it a vexing issue for policy makers; but for historians, it is an ideal topic to dissect, Ms. Thompson said.

“It’s a wonderful lens to see what a society is worried about and to understand the people more in general,” she added. “If you listen carefully, you can learn a lot about a culture.”

A taxonomy of sound as presented in the Noise Abatement Commission's landmark study in 1930, A taxonomy of sound as presented in the Noise Abatement Commission’s landmark study in 1930, “City Noise.”  Click Here to Enlarge


Folding a Neighbor’s Laundry

Dear Diary:

My laundry had been occupying two big dryers in the building’s basement laundry room all afternoon while I ran errands and juggled conference calls. But instead of finding it piled in a heap on a bench, as usually happens when another tenant is impatient for dryer space, I saw an older woman serenely folding my towels, sheets and underwear.

“Excuse me, is that my laundry you’re folding?” I asked, stupidly; because of course it was. “I’m very late picking it up and I’m sorry if you had to wait for the dryer.”

Layla (for that was her name) smiled and said, “I am waiting for my own laundry to dry and thought I would fold yours. I enjoy folding.”

She had already folded half of the load beautifully â€" even the corners of the fitted sheets had a crisp, military precision. I didn’t know what else to do, so I started folding alongside her, mimicking how she snapped the towels and smoothed the pillowcases.

Layla is Brazilian and a professional housekeeper who has worked in my building, on East 52nd Street in the Turtle Bay area, for 13 years. I had never met her before.

“I think the world would be a better place if everyone was just a little nicer to each other, don’t you?” Layla said.

I do, indeed. Thank you, Layla.

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: Obama’s Here

Shien Hunte, left, and Saquan Warlick are thrilled that the president is visiting their school.Uli Seit for The New York Times Shien Hunte, left, and Saquan Warlick are thrilled that the president is visiting their school.

Updated 6:22 a.m. | All week long, one Brooklyn high school has been buzzing.

The president’s coming!

It was amazing enough that President Obama used his State of the Union address to praise the school for its innovative spirit.

But today, Mr. Obama is visiting the school, the Pathways in Technology Early College High School, or P-TECH, in Crown Heights.

“This is the first time I’m going to meet Obama,” said Shien Hunte, 14. “It’s been hectic.”

Latifa Morris, 15, said students have been chattering constantly about his arrival.

“They say they just want to touch him,” she said.

But to get that close, they’ve had to do a lot.

A partial list: clean out lockers, open desks, straighten classrooms, hang art, and make sure to arrive at 8:35 a.m., special tickets in hand.

“I’m going to wear a suit,” Saquan Warlick, 15, said.

Parts of Prospect Park will be closed from noon to 6 p.m. (not the entire park, as it seemed at first) for the president’s arrival by helicopter.

Obama plans to address students at 3:45 p.m. for 15 minutes.

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

WEATHER

Even (slightly) colder than the last couple of days, and cloudier, with a high of 53. Warming very slightly through the rainless weekend.

COMMUTE

Subways: Fine so far. Click for latest status.

Rails: O.K. Click for L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Staten Island Expressway slammed eastbound. Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

The president will disrupt traffic in Brooklyn from a little before 3 p.m. till sometime after 4, said Samuel Schwartz, better known as Gridlock Sam.

Eastern Parkway from the park to Crown Heights will close, as will parts of intersecting streets, including Flatbush Avenue.

Alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

- Governor Cuomo, Mayor Bloomberg, Schools Chancellor Walcott and Bill de Blasio go to P-TECH for the president’s speech. Live stream here.

- Joseph J. Lhota, the Republican mayoral candidate, critiques Mr. de Blasio’s “anti-school choice positions” in East Harlem at 11:30 a.m. He’s on “Morning Joe” on MSNBC at 7:20 a.m.

- Neil Degrasse Tyson, director of the Hayden Planetarium, explains how to defend the earth from asteroids, at 11 a.m. Watch here.

- Your big chance to jog in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn. It’s suspending its running ban from noon to 6 p.m. to accommodate those displaced from Prospect Park.

- Last day to feast at Madison Square Eats. 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.

- A Jean Paul Gaultier exhibit opens at the Brooklyn Museum. It includes mannequins with interactive faces.

- Brooklyn Fare opens a Manhattan store at 431 West 37th Street. A 45-seat restaurant is coming next month.

- The Crown Heights Film Festival continues through Saturday. 6:30 p.m. at FiveMyles on St. John’s Place. [Free]

- Attention Brooklyn: Uniqlo opens in the Atlantic Terminal mall.

- Looking for Halloween events? We listed a bunch on Thursday.

- And don’t forget The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

THE WEEKEND

Saturday

- Volunteers: help clean up Hurricane Sandy damage in Queens and Staten Island with the Clinton Foundation. [Click for info]

- Junot Diaz reads and otherwise speaks at Brooklyn Public Library. 4 p.m. [Free]

Sunday

- The Tour de Bronx bike ride. Check-in at 9 a.m. Depart at 10:30 a.m.

- Put on Google Glass and embark on, and document, a citywide scavenger hunt. [Click for info]

- Actors from the “social-impact theater company” Outside the Wire perform the Book of Job in the Rockaways, where people know something about being tested, to commemorate Hurricane Sandy. With audience participation. 4 p.m. at West End Temple, 6:30 p.m. at Rockaway Theatre Company in Fort Tilden.

- If you’ve ever wondered what happens when 15 or so basset hounds get together, check out the North Park Slope Basset Association’s meetup at Prospect Park. 11:30 a.m. Bring earplugs. [Free]

Weekend Travel Hassles: Click for subway disruptions or list of street closings.

AND FINALLY…

It’s everything that may annoy you about the new Brooklyn.

A barge from Vermont.

A crowd-sourced barge from Vermont.

Arriving in Brooklyn with produce and artisanal goods.

The Ceres has traveled 300 miles along an old trade route from Ferrisburgh, Vt., picking up cargo along the way.

It will be in the Brooklyn Navy Yard on Saturday for a big party.

The goal of the Vermont Freight Sail Project is to establish “a zero-emissions food trading network that builds community.”

The barge plans to leave with cocoa beans and locally roasted coffee.

Joseph Burgess and Andy Newman contributed reporting.

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