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More than 20 firefighters were injured as they battled for seven hours to extinguish a wind-fueled blaze that killed a woman in a Brooklyn apartment house and forced other residents to flee into the winter chill.
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Fans in New York have a sepia-colored vision of their athletes and teams. It's a city with a memory.
In a town whose brunch culture is indelibly marked by the cocktails-and-crepes diet of "Sex and the City," Restaurant Marc Forgione offers a protein-heavy menu most easily described as "macho."
This is Stany Leblanc's second year as a New York City teacher. It may also be his last.
Yankee first baseman Mark Teixeira reported to Spring Training and joined a Yankee team in an unfamiliar position: underdogs. He sat down with The Journal to talk about how he sees this 2011 squad.
New Jersey Gov. Christie shot to prominence last year by challenging public unions, but he ducked questions about whether he would support Wisconsin-style legislation to weaken union power.
The Museum of Modern Art is offering a preview of Microsoft's yet-to-be-released digital art application, a touch-screen system that allows users to paint or draw with a variety of materials and colors.
The tension between Orthodox Jewish and black communities that exploded in Brooklyn's Crown Heights neighborhood two decades ago have an eerie echo in Baltimore today.
TriBeCa, one of the city's priciest neighborhoods, is full of former artist warehouses that contain multimilion-dollar lofts.
Developer and hotel impresario Ian Schrager finally closed on the sale of his downtown penthouse apartment after the buyer had first lived in the duplex as a rental for nearly one year.
An Italian Renaissance-style mansion that houses an art gallery was sold for $31 million this month, down nearly half from the initial asking price but still the second-highest-priced townhouse sale since the end of 2008.
Lincoln Center's Tully Scope Festival honors New York composer Morton Feldman.
The Paul Taylor Dance Company turns to an online forum for a scholarship competition.
Architect Roger Bartels built this stucco cottage in Rowayton, Conn., because his wife Lisa wanted a place to retire to. It was the couple's third retirement home, each smaller than the last.
Penn Station regulars wonder why their depot can't be more like its classy cousin across town with the high-end shops. After all, 600,000 passengers rush through every day, and lots of them have money.
This week in New York, Fashion week wraps up, baseball Spring training , and couples celebrate 50 years together!
Another New York Fashion Week ticked off the calendar, another opportunity to round up the usually fabulous, occasionally absurd and ridiculous.
Lance Esplund reviews gallery exhibitions of George Condo, Martin Kersels and Ellsworth Kelly.
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