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Search resuls for: "Dodai Stewart"


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Emmanuel Thingue laughed as he nimbly scampered up the jungle gym to have his photograph taken. At 61, he was the oldest person on the playground equipment at Lincoln Terrace Park in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn. But Mr. Thingue, a landscape architect who recently retired from the New York City Parks Department after 30 years, had a special connection to the space: He designed it. Over his career, Mr. Thingue designed more than 30 New York City parks and won awards and accolades for his work. Spend an afternoon with Mr. Thingue, and he will tell you how parks improved his life when he was a boy.
Persons: Emmanuel Thingue, scampered, whooped, Thingue Organizations: New York City Parks Department, New Locations: Lincoln Terrace, Crown, Brooklyn, New York City
Coming to a street corner near you: a sleek new litter basket, the latest weapon in New York City’s generations-long war on trash. The new receptacle, which will replace the green wire mesh litter baskets seen across the city, has three parts: a concrete base (so it’s tough to tip over); a hinged metal lid; and a removable, relatively lightweight plastic basket that sanitation workers will lift and empty. “The wire litter baskets are iconic, but they are well past their useful life in New York City,” said Jessica Tisch, the city’s sanitation commissioner. “They are vestiges of a different time.”Ms. Tisch noted that the wire baskets were made up of a series of holes: “That’s the fundamental design feature which allows the rats to get in them,” she said.
Persons: , Jessica Tisch, Ms, Tisch Locations: New York, New York City
DMs From New York City
  + stars: | 2023-06-26 | by ( Dodai Stewart | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +4 min
Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart DMs From New York CityNew York City can be a study in overstimulation. Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart Dodai StewartI am sure you have seen them. In a city that shouts and blares, these are little whispers, with voices as varied and distinctive as New Yorkers themselves. Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart Dodai StewartSometimes it’s hard to comprehend what a city really is, beyond densely stacked gleaming towers and throngs of faceless, busy strangers. New York is just a bunch of people, and they want to talk.
Persons: Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart Dodai Stewart Organizations: New York City New, New Yorkers Locations: New York City, New York City New York City, overstimulation, New York, New, Brooklyn Heights, Manhattan
All afternoon, people lined up for Shelly Flash’s specialties: jerk cheese nachos and jerk chicken dinner tacos — that’s chicken, coconut rice, black beans, sweet plantains, pickled slaw, chipotle aioli and jerk sour cream inside a soft tortilla. The Jamaican taco business, 2 Girls & a Cookshop, is owned by Ms. Flash was a schoolteacher before the pandemic but last year decided to make food a full-time gig, she said. The city’s Black population has declined by nearly 200,000 people in the past two decades. “I love this organization, focusing on the businesses and the Black people that are here and saying, ‘Hey, we’re still here.’”
Persons: Shelly Flash’s, chipotle, Jataun, Flash, , “ I’ve, it’s, , , we’re, Organizations: Weeksville Heritage Center Locations: Jamaican, Brooklyn
Larry Desgaines sat on a piece of cardboard atop a damp rock near the mouth of a large sewer drain in Queens on a recent Friday evening. In the water, which, improbably, did not stink of sewage, two men in a canoe sat very still. As the sun dipped behind Roosevelt Island, another man sitting by the entrance of the tunnel banged on a metal pipe with a stick. The canoe’s frontman, wearing a Tyrolean hat, yodeled: “Willkommen!” He drew out the final syllable, and his voice amplified and echoed in the tunnel. As the song ended, the canoe disappeared into the sewer, leaving only echoes behind.
Persons: Larry Desgaines, , , Roosevelt Locations: Queens, New York City
Christian Cooper and Amy Tan came to birding from very different paths. Cooper had found refuge in birding as a child, long before the Central Park incident that brought him to national attention. For Tan, birding was a more recent discovery, prompted by a need for an outlet away from political events. The conversation will be hosted by Dodai Stewart, a birding enthusiast and a Metro writer for The New York Times. We’ll also tell you how you can start birding as part of The New York Times summer birding project.
Persons: Christian Cooper, Amy Tan, Cooper, Tan, , Dodai Stewart, We’ll, Alan Burdick, Jenna Curtis Organizations: Metro, The New York Times, New York Times, The Times, Cornell, of Ornithology
Seven Underappreciated Birding Spots in New York
  + stars: | 2023-06-06 | by ( Dodai Stewart | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Birding in New York City is easier than you might think. “The best place to bird in New York is exactly where you are right at that moment,” said Martha Harbison, a writer and vice president of the Feminist Bird Club. “I’ve observed 20 species from my own window. But there are plenty of underappreciated birding locations in New York City, and many are accessible by public transportation. Bryant Park, Manhattan
Persons: , Martha Harbison, “ I’ve Organizations: Feminist Bird Locations: New York City, New York, Brooklyn, , Manhattan, Park, Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Queens, Pelham, Bryant Park
“I’m sorry to have to report the end of an era,” Bobby Horvath, a wildlife rehabilitation specialist, wrote on Facebook Tuesday night. “Pale Male passed away tonight in our care.”Pale Male, a red-tailed hawk who took up residence on the ledge of a ritzy Manhattan apartment building 30 years ago, was the subject of hundreds of newspaper articles, at least three books and an award-winning documentary film and also counted Mary Tyler Moore among his fans. But whether the bird Mr. Horvath declared dead was actually Pale Male remains a mystery. Pale Male, an apex predator living in the most populated city in the United States, was the original New York City celebrity bird, predating Barry the barred owl, the “hot” Mandarin duck and Flaco the eagle-owl. He was named for his light-colored feathers by birder and author Marie Winn, a longtime columnist for The Wall Street Journal who followed his progress in print for over a decade and penned a book about him, “Red-Tails in Love,” making him something of a local celebrity.
On a recent Wednesday afternoon, as the sun turned the stained-glass skylight of a Midtown penthouse into a dazzling display of jewel tones, Prosecco was poured into flutes. A saxophonist and a violinist who had met moments earlier decided to play a Charlie Parker tune together. Nearby, a pink-haired painter from Cyprus was explaining her most recent work, hung on the wall behind her. The penthouse once housed a pipe organ and a stuffed buffalo head. A shimmering fireplace made of onyx and crystals, over five feet tall, has survived to this day.
What’s in Our Queue? ‘Standing Up’ and More
  + stars: | 2023-01-04 | by ( Dodai Stewart | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
What’s in Our Queue? ‘Standing Up’ and MoreMika Cotellon/NetflixI’m the writer at large on The Times’s Metro desk, covering life in New York City. I was raised in New York and love my hometown, but I also love to travel and am often drawn to entertainment from other locations, lifestyles and cultures. Here are five things I’ve been into lately →
That said, “They need money,” Ms. Britt acknowledged. “They need money to deal with the house. They need money to deal with the issues with the city and the taxes. If we get weak: Look at that building. If we feel like we can’t go on anymore: Look at that building.”
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