Updated 8:53 a.m.
Good Thursday morning in this freezing, somewhat safer city.
During the mayoral campaign, some people warned that if Bill de Blasio were elected, the city might be plunged back to an era of rampant crime.
The critics included Mr. de Blasioâs opponent Joseph Lhota.
So, has it happened?
Not so far.
Through the first two months of 2014, serious crime in the city has dropped, compared to last year - which turned out to be a historically low year for crime.
Murders are down 19 percent, to 44, from 54.
Rape, robbery, burglary and grand larceny have dipped, too.
Shootings have dropped 13 percent.
The only major categories of crime that have increased are assault and car theft.
Of course, two months is not a lot of time.
And all the cold, snowy weather has undoubtedly helped keep things quiet.
The less confrontational policing policies promoted by Mr. de Blasio and his police commissioner, William Bratton, have not even been implemented yet.
âIt is not prudent to draw any conclusions from such a small window,â said Jon M. Shane, a criminologist at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
One bad-old-days image did stage a brief return: In January, subway-graffiti vandals went on a tagging spree.
The M.T.A. blamed the brutal cold; it was storing trains in less secure indoor yards.
Two taggers were arrested.
Hereâs what else is happening.
WEATHER
Looks like the weather changed its mind about warming up.
Morning temperatures in the mid-teens (current wind chill: 3 degrees) will give way to a lunchtime high of 29.
You may bask in memories of yesterday, when the mercury crept up to 39.
And in todayâs sunshine.
COMMUTE
Subways: O.K. Check latest status.
Rails: Delays of up to 20 minutes on N.J. Transit into Penn Station. Scattered delays on L.I.R.R. Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.
Roads: Delays of well over an hour on Route 80 East near Paterson. Inbound 40-minute delays at G.W.B. . Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.
Alternate-side parking is in effect.
COMING UP TODAY
- Mayor de Blasio calls in to Hot 97 radio at 8:35 a.m. Listen.
- Atheist groups protest a cross-shaped steel beam allowed to hang in the September 11 museum. Foley Square. 9 a.m.
- âJapan Weekâ takes over Vanderbilt Hall in Grand Central Terminal for, curiously, just three days. 11 a.m. [Free]
- âSpring/Break,â a curator-centric art show, opens at the Old School in SoHo. Noon. [$5]
- A journalist, Ada Calhoun, talks about the gritty old days on St. Marks Place, at the New York Public Library. 1:15 p.m. [Free]
- Samantha Power discusses ending sexual violence amid conflict, at the United Nations. 6:30 p.m. [Too late to R.S.V.P., but thereâs a livestream]
- Catherine Deneuve alert: The actress rings in a 10-day French film festival at Film Society Lincoln Center. 7:30 p.m. [$20, standby only, get there at 7] â¦
- ⦠And a citywide disabilities film festival begins with a documentary about a wheelchair-using world traveler. Jewish Community Center, 6:30 p.m. [$18]
- Last day for âVoices of Crisis,â an exhibition featuring recordings of Martin Luther King Jr. and other civil rights activists who spoke at the New School in 1964. Noon to 8 p.m. [Free]
- âAll the Way,â a play about Lyndon B. Johnson, starring Bryan Cranston from âBreaking Bad,â opens on Broadway. 6:30 p.m. [$45 and up]
- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.
IN THE NEWS
- Governor Cuomo has used his rivalry with Mayor de Blasio to his advantage. [New York Times]
- More than two dozen people contracted a rare skin infection after buying seafood at markets in Chinese neighborhoods. [New York Times]
- You can eat the fish, just donât touch it, the health department says. [New York Post]
- A Dominican barber in Washington Heights is offering a pre-Passover haircut discount. âOnly Jewish,â it said on the sign. Briefly. [Daily News]
- The former police commissioner Raymond Kelly took a job giving antiterrorism advice to commercial real estate clients. [Wall Street Journal]
- Where to escape the cold, without leaving the city. [New York Times]
- Where to cry in public, peacefully. [Tumblr, via New York Magazine]
- The latest animal remains to turn up in Prospect Park are rooster heads, on a platter. [Gothamist]
- A Brooklyn tattoo artist was criticized for tattooing his sedated dog. [New York Post]
- Scoreboard: Knicks top Timberwolves, 118-106. Nets over Grizzlies, 103-94. Rangers fall to Maple Leafs, 3-2.
AND FINALLY â¦
Two hundred years ago this spring, the Fulton Ferry Company opened in Brooklyn.
Robert Fultonâs steam ferry was the first reliable link between the City of New York and the Village of Brooklyn, which was suddenly booming.
âHer trip varied from five to 12 minutes,â the Long-Island Star reported (as was later noted by The Times).
âCarriages and wagons, however crowded, pass on and off the boat with the same facility as in passing a bridge.â
Tonight, an archivist explores how the old Brooklyn ferry slip changed transportation history at the Transit Museum.
The ferry enjoyed a brief, 69-year heyday; then it was overshadowed, by the Brooklyn Bridge.
Joseph Burgess and Joseph Goldstein contributed reporting.
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