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New York Today: Skate City

Opening day at the Prospect Park rink.Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times Opening day at the Prospect Park rink.

Updated 10:18 a.m.

Happy foggy Friday morning.

Good skating weather is coming this weekend, with a possible flurry and temperatures in the reasonable range.

Where can you sip butternut squash and coconut milk bisque during Zamboni breaks?

Brooklyn, of course.

Prospect Park’s new ice-skating complex, Lakeside, is part of a small wave of new rinks that opened up around the city this winter.

The Prospect Park rink has drawn 35,000 visitors since it opened in late December, according to its manager, Upsilon Ventures.

The ice skating rink at McCarren Park in Williamsburg, which closed already after its inaugural season, also drew legions, some 23,000 skaters.

The Prospect Park rink overlooks a lake and is actually two rinks.

One is open air, the other covered by a midnight blue ceiling reminiscent of the starry dome of Grand Central Terminal.

It also has a somewhat enhanced snack bar, the Bluestone Cafe.

The skating rinks will remain open until March, when the 2½-inch-thick ice will disappear, leaving a roller-skating rink and a water play area.

For now, skating is $6 on weekdays, $8 on holidays and weekends. Rental skates are $5.

It’s one of the most affordable rinks in the city.

Here’s a guide to the city’s rinks.

And here’s what else you need to know for Friday and the long weekend.

(Note: We won’t be publishing on Monday, Martin Luther King’s Birthday.)

WEATHER

After early patchy fog, a sunny day ensues, with a high of 46.

Saturday: a chance of light snow or rain, then clearing up. Sunday similar, but a bit cloudier and cooler. Sun and clouds on Monday.

COMMUTE

Subways: Check latest status.

Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

City Buses: Some Manhattan routes still rerouted because of the water main break on lower Fifth Avenue. Check status.

Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect today but suspended Monday.

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

DE BLASIO WATCH

- The mayor makes two announcements, one at a restaurant in Bushwick, Brooklyn, at 1 p.m., one at City Hall at 4 p.m.

- Mr. de Blasio and Speaker Mark-Viverito reached a deal on expanding the city’s paid sick leave law. [New York Times]

- The first poll of the de Blasio era finds New Yorkers optimistic about the mayor and his chances of implementing his policies. [New York Times]

- Mr. de Blasio named a former Bloomberg administration official his new health commissioner. [New York Times]

COMING UP TODAY

- Sharpen your needles. Vogue Knitting Live, at the Marriott Marquis in Midtown, features more than 175 technique and design classes. Through Sunday. [Prices vary]

- The Black Comic Book Festival opens at the Schomburg Center in Harlem with a 5:30 p.m. reception and a panel discussion at 7 p.m. Continues Saturday. [Free]

- New York Encounter, a three-day cultural festival organized by the Catholic movement Communion and Liberation, begins at the Hammerstein Ballroom on 34th Street. 6 p.m. [Many events free]

- Perhaps you thought the holidays were over. Not on Staten Island, where there’s a Jingle Bell Rock dance party at the Greenbelt Recreation Center. 7 p.m. [Free]

- The two-day Zlatne Uste Golden Festival, featuring live Balkan and Roma music and dance filling four stages, kicks off at Grand Prospect Hall in Brooklyn. 7:30 p.m. [$35]

- Closing weekend for “Girl With a Pearl Earring” at the Frick and four photo shows at the I.C.P.

IN THE NEWS

- Human remains found on the shoreline in northern Queens may be those of Avonte Oquendo, the autistic 14-year-old who disappeared in October. [New York Times]

- Gov. Chris Christie hired Randy Mastro, once a deputy mayor in the Giuliani administration and now a defense lawyer, to help handle Bridgegate. [New York Times]

- The M.T.A. made half a billion dollars off riders’ unused MetroCard value over the course of a decade. [New York Times]

- A state assemblyman from Manhattan wants to lower the city speed limit to 20 miles an hour from 30. [DNAinfo]

- New York State is allocating $67 million to build bike and pedestrian paths. [Gothamist]

- Korean leaders in Queens are urging a boycott of McDonald’s because one of its restaurants there has been kicking out older Korean patrons who hang out all day. [New York Times]

- Police officers in every precinct are given a list of places they’re not allowed to go â€" mostly because they can’t be trusted not to take naps there. [New York Times]

- Scoreboard: Nets beat Hawks â€" in London, 127-110. Pacers lap Knicks, 117-89. Rangers top Red Wings, 1-0. Islanders over Lightning in shootout, 2-1. Devils fall to Avalanche in shootout, 2-1.

THE WEEKEND

Saturday

- A winter hike through the forested heart of Staten Island starts at the Greenbelt Nature Center. 10 a.m. [Free]

- More knitting madness: a free workshop at Brooklyn Craft Company in Greenpoint. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

- Learn about Fort Greene’s role in the Revolutionary War on a walking tour of Fort Greene Park. 1 p.m. [Free]

- Broadway singers and Olympic skaters sing and skate, respectively, at a benefit for breast cancer research at the rink in Bryant Park. 5 p.m. [Free, but V.I.P. seats are $50 and up]

- New short films from Israel at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. 6:30 p.m. [Free, no advance reservations]

- Opening of “Not Yet Real,” an installation on critical theory applied to video games, at the Goethe-Institut Wyoming Building in Midtown. 6 p.m. [Free]

- Celebrate David Bowie’s 67th birthday (it was last week, but who’s counting) at Grand Victory in Williamsburg. 11 p.m. [$6, includes Ziggy Stardust face-painting station]

Sunday

- Another natural history hike on Staten Island, this one to Moses Mountain â€" named for Robert, of course, so don’t expect any stone tablets up there. 1 p.m. [Free]

- A discussion for kids about Martin Luther King at Kingsland Homestead (named for a British sea captain, Joseph King, not Martin Luther), in Queens. 2 p.m. [Free]

- Brian Lehrer of WNYC and the radio journalist Farai Chideya discuss “the immediate future of New York City through the lens of Dr. King’s moral compass” at the Apollo Theater. 3 p.m. [Free]

- A spirituals sing-along in honor of Dr. King at the Park Avenue Christian Church on the Upper East Side. 3 p.m. [Free]

- Eat $1 oysters and learn about the past, present and future of oysters in New York, at the Diamond in Greenpoint. 5 p.m. [Free, except the oysters]

Monday, Martin Luther King’s Birthday

- Another discussion for kids about Dr. King, this one at Lefferts Homestead in Prospect Park 1 p.m. [Free]

- Days of service in honor of Dr. King are being held at seven parks across the city on Monday morning. See volunteering guide.

- An evening devoted to the Muppet Gonzo the Great, including rare video clips, at Union Hall in Park Slope. 7 p.m. [$8]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

- And if you’re looking for fun out of the city, The Times’s Metropolitan section has listings for Westchester, Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut.

AND FINALLY…

New York rock history: Here’s an insistent, inane but ultimately indelible piece of fluff by an Elvis-besotted 22-year-old from Astoria, Queens.

His name was Kenny Dino, and the song, “Your Ma Said You Cried in Your Sleep Last Night,” was at No. 61 this week in 1962.

If you’ve never heard it, listen at your own risk â€" it may get stuck in your head all day.

Here it is.

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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Please Be Alert and Aware of Your Surroundings

Dear Diary:

Every morning on my quiet, 60-minute train ride, I am awakened by the same voice â€" a recorded female voice â€" saying, “This is the final stop, Penn Station, New York City! Please be alert and aware of your surroundings.”

There is more than a twist of irony to this forewarning. Once I ascend the steps to the main floor, I see lethally armed troops in camouflage uniforms who rarely appear on alert and aware of their surroundings.

They stand in pairs, and the animated social banter between them, while they frequently check their smartphones, does not suggest a state of high watch. If my vulnerability to unspeakable acts inside Pennsylvania Station is as great as their accouterments suggest, could they not spread out from each other - even 10 to 15 feet - and not talk to each other?

The two-by-two arrangement often coalesces into a fivesome or sixsome. These are even more troubling. They stand in a circle, which is nothing more than looking at and talking to each other. Even the guard dogs are looking at each other.

Perhaps the sweet and assuring voice I hear every morning is telling me to be alert and aware of my surroundings because no one else will.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



The Week in Pictures for Jan. 17

Here is a slide show of photographs from the past week in New York City and the region. Subjects include Gov. Chris Christie at the State of the State address, a water main break on Fifth Avenue, and a vaporium in Lower Manhattan.

This weekend on “The New York Times Close Up,” an inside look at the most compelling articles in Sunday’s Times, Sam Roberts will speak with The Times’s Susanne Craig, Liz Robbins, Michael Powell, Thomas Kaplan, Eleanor Randolph and Clyde Haberman; and Donna Lieberman of the New York Civil Liberties Union. Tune in at 10 p.m. Saturday or 10 a.m. Sunday on NY1 News to watch.

Read current New York headlines and follow us on Twitter.



Big Ticket: 7 Fireplaces and a Hot View for $27.5 Million

A co-op at the Dakota sets a record, according to the listing broker.Suzanne DeChillo/The New York Times A co-op at the Dakota sets a record, according to the listing broker.

An exquisitely restored and renovated co-op at the Dakota that enjoys 100 feet of unobstructed Central Park vistas just above the tree canopy sold for $27.5 million and was the most expensive sale of the week, according to city records.

The residence was listed at $29.6 million in 2012 when its owner, the investment banker and Arts and Crafts collector/scholar Bruce Barnes, who at the time was president of the Dakota’s co-op board, chose to downsize after 17 years there.

The nine-room apartment, with three bedrooms, three baths, two balconies, a terrace off the master suite and a 70-foot-long gallery, is one of the largest at the Dakota, the imposing 1884 landmark at 1 West 72nd Street, designed by Henry J. Hardenbergh, the architect of the Plaza Hotel. The monthly maintenance charges for the unit, No. 63, are $10,326.

The apartment, which has 12-foot ceilings and seven antique fireplaces, makes a gracious impression right from the private mahogany-trimmed vestibule, which yields to a foyer with a fireplace and pocket doors that open onto the 29-foot living room. Along with the library and the master suite, the living room faces west toward the park, while the formal dining room overlooks the courtyard. The 24-foot chef’s kitchen has mahogany cabinetry and two islands, and the family room has built-in bookcases and a window-seat above the courtyard.

The storybook master suite has three floor-to-ceiling windows, a fireplace, a terrace, a honed onyx bath with five vintage showerheads, and an adjacent study with a fireplace. Additional vintage atmosphere emanates from wood shutters framing all 12 windows.

John Burger of Brown Harris Stevens was the listing broker and also represented the buyer, the artist/collector Ydessa Hendeles, who closed her Toronto gallery in 2012. “This sale represents the highest price ever recorded for the sale of a co-op on Central Park West â€" on the entire Upper West Side, in fact,” Mr. Burger said.

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