The Briefly for September 5, 2018 – Is The World Ready for Aaron Sorkin's Lee Harper's 'To Kill A Mockingbird' on Broadway?
Half the G train is shutting down this weekend, and every weekend until Columbus Day. Buses will replace the G train between Bedford-Nostrand Ave and Court Square.
Brooklyn's Windsor Terrace tops New York City's affordable neighborhoods, as weighed by Localize.city. Second place on the list is Roosevelt Island.
Aaron Sorkin's "To Kill A Mockingbird," "King Kong," and "The Cher Show" are three of the new shows coming to Broadway this year.
The best art exhibits to see at New York City museums this fall, according to amNY.
A woman on probation for animal cruelty pushed a probation officer down the stairs of her Jackson Heights home last week. Elizabeth Grant was convicted of 108 counts of animal cruelty for failing to take care of her 54 cats and dogs.
An ambulette collided with an electric scooter in the Bronx early Tuesday and killed the 25-year-old driver of the scooter and hurt a 42-year-old passenger.
Eater pays tribute to Kenny Shopsin of Shopsin’s General Store.
The Church of God of East Flatbush is getting into the real estate business. The church purchased two blocks on land for $8 million seven years ago and will build a new church and 531 units of affordable housing.
With the new school year restarts the debate about the SHSAT. The New York Times solicited stories from its readers about the admissions test.
Two years after Governor Cuomo ordered an investigation of racial bias in prisons, no findings or recommendations have been made.
Manhattanites are raising funds for laundry gift certificates to help homeless students this school year.
Executive Producer Dick Wolf is at it again.
Will he or won't he? Mayor de Blasio hasn't endorsed a candidate for Governor.
At least 15 men who were near Ground Zero on 9/11 have been stricken with breast cancer, defying astronomical odds. Nearly 10,000 people have suffered cancers linked to the toxic dust and smoke form the attack.
George C. Parker is one of many men who "sold" the Brooklyn Bridge so the potential buyer could build toll booths since it's construction in 1883. 135 years later and still no tolls.
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