Good Wednesday morning to you.
It is 27 degrees.
Hereâs something odd: In 67 hours, it will be March.
Days are lengthening â" there is as much light now as there is in mid-October.
The sun inches higher in the sky.
But the thermometer still seems convinced that itâs mid-January.
Temperatures for the next seven days will average about 12 degrees below normal â" just below freezing during the day, down to 20 at night.
That would actually be well below normal in mid-January.
Oh, and it will also snow this morning.
Just a puff â" probably less than an inch.
The cold, though, is not going away.
This afternoon, the mercury might nudge 30 for a moment, like a strong-man bell rung by a weak man.
But even as the temperature creeps up, so will the wind.
Wind chills will lurk in the teens all day and night, down to the single digits by tomorrow morning as the temperature drops to 15.
By Friday morning, the wind chill will be back in minus-land.
The normal high temperature for this time of year is 45.
It is not in the forecast any time soon.
Enough statistics. Hereâs the advisory: Pull down your ear flaps.
And hereâs what else is happening.
COMMUTE
Subways: Check latest status.
Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.
Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
Alternate-side parking is suspended âto facilitate the winter weather response.â
COMING UP TODAY
- The Olympic ice-dancing champions Meryl Davis and Charlie White skate at Rockefeller Center at 8:30 a.m.
- A flash mob featuring the mayorâs Office to Combat Domestic Violence will dance, shout and otherwise rise up to âpromote healthy relationshipsâ at the ferry terminal in Staten Island at 7 a.m.
- Mayor de Blasio is having some New Yorkers over to Gracie Mansion tonight to talk about the importance of universal pre-K and after-school programs.
- Thereâs more to DNA than life. A chemist shows how DNA can be used on a nanoscale to produce objects, crystals and nanodevices, at New York University. 4:30 p.m. [Free]
- âAsk a Native New Yorkerâ: the author of that Gothamist column, Jake Dobkin, joins NY1âs Pat Kiernan at the Brooklyn Historical Society. 6:30 p.m. [$5]
- Imam Shamsi Ali and Rabbi Marc Schneier talk about the issues dividing and uniting Jews and Muslims, the subject of their book âSons of Abraham,â at Barnes & Noble on 82nd and Broadway. 7 p.m. [Free]
- Elijah Wood talks about his soon-to-open film âGrand Pianoâ at the Film Society Lincoln Center. 6:30 p.m. [Free, arrive one hour early]
- Rosie Perez discusses her memoir, âHandbook for an Unpredictable Life: How I Survived Sister Renata and My Crazy Mother and Still Came Out Smiling (With Great Hair),â at St. Josephâs College in Brooklyn. 7:30 p.m. [Free, R.S.V.P.]
- A show of new art exploring the legacy of Freud and his Austrian peers, âVienna Complex,â opens at Austrian Cultural Forum New York on the East Side. 6 p.m. [Free]
- A philosopher, Zev Adams, muses on the subjective experience of color and what it means, at the Brooklyn Public Library. 7 p.m. [Free]
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
IN THE NEWS
- Spike Lee, multimillionaire resident of the Upper East Side, went on a rant against the gentrification of his native Brooklyn in a speech last night. [Daily News]
- A toxicologist took the stand in Kerry Kennedyâs defense at her driving-while-on-sleeping-pills trial. [New York Times]
Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.
New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till late morning.
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