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New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy pledged to fix the train system, yet NJ Transit is still plagued with cancellations, delays and equipment break-downs. What's more, he promised more transparency, but the agency so far is no longer providing the public with access to crucial information about items the board is voting on.
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Early Addition: No more bidding on hot restaurant reservations in Montclair
Good Friday morning in New York City, where the "freeze the rent" crowd has a reason to feel optimistic.
Here's what else is happening:
- The MTA has demoted a safety superintendent who was caught using forged parking placards so he could park outside the transit agency's headquarters.
- There are still a lot of Gilded Age mansions in Manhattan.
- New Jersey Gov. Mikie Sherrill is cracking down on restaurant reservation trading apps, which allowed diners to bid on tables at all the Garden State's hot, buzzy restaurants.
- Not sure if it counts as hot or buzzy, but The Muffins Cafe on the Upper West Side looks like my kind of scene.
- Come on, don't cackle during serious Broadway plays.
- Order some pills off TikTok and find out.
- The pope wears Nikes.
- And finally, waiting patiently:
Teen accused of killing man near Times Square woke him up as he slept on ground: DA
The teenager accused of stabbing and killing a man near Times Square on Monday night found him sleeping on the sidewalk and woke him up before the attack, prosecutors allege.
According to a criminal complaint from the Manhattan district attorney’s office, 17-year-old Jayden Sanchez and two other people approached 39-year-old Leonides Baez around 11:30 p.m. as he slept on the ground outside a building on West 43rd Street near Broadway.
The complaint didn’t specify how exactly the group roused Baez, but prosecutors and police said the encounter quickly turned into a physical altercation.
Surveillance video from the scene showed Sanchez pulling something out of his vest pocket and chasing Baez into a nearby passageway, where he stabbed him in his chest, the complaint stated. Baez sustained multiple stab wounds and was later pronounced dead at Bellevue Hospital, law enforcement officials said.
Sanchez and the two other people fled the scene and boarded the subway at Columbus Circle, according to the complaint. Officers took him into custody on Wednesday evening in Coney Island, where they stopped him after he jumped a turnstile, officials said.
Police later found a scalpel on him, according to authorities, and were investigating whether it was the weapon used in the Midtown attack. Sanchez then told investigators he attacked Baez as part of a social media trend, officials said.
The teen was arraigned in Manhattan Criminal Court on Thursday on charges of murder, assault and criminal weapons possession. He is also charged with several counts of robbery for allegedly stealing cash and other items from newsstands and stores near Times Square throughout April and May.
A judge ordered Sanchez held without bail as his case proceeds. His lawyer did not immediately respond to a message early Friday.
Police said they are still looking for the two other people they suspect in the attack on Baez. His last known address was in Worcester, Massachusetts, according to the NYPD.
Charles Lane contributed reporting. This story is based on preliminary information from law enforcement officials and may be updated.
Cardboard, duct tape and a dream: Welcome to NY’s most ridiculous undergraduate boat race
Although none of the 102 vessels launched at the 37th Roth Regatta were seaworthy, many proved themselves to be mostly pondworthy.
Since the first handmade boat left the shores of Roth Pond in 1989, the race has gone like this: Undergraduates at Long Island’s Stony Brook University launch their boats into the water with the simple goal of rowing 200 yards to the other side. Many, if not most, end up capsizing or sinking, their crews splashing and laughing in the pond.
The high wreck rate is due to a core tenet of the beloved and award-winning campus tradition: All qualifying boats must be built from nothing but cardboard and duct tape. This reliably proves to be a humbling yet delightful test for the school’s many budding engineers.
“It's always fun to see people actually make it across and be like, ‘Wow, what did they fortify their boat with to do that?’ But the wipeouts are just as fun as well,” Stony Brook student Mark Owen said on race day last Friday.
Groups of grinning students marched past him, carrying their vessels aloft.
“A little tape and a little cardboard will get you a long way, apparently,” he said.
[object Object]This year’s theme was video games, so all the ships were painted with various game characters and themes.
To build crowd-favorite "God of War’s" Viking ship, teammates and rugby players Brendan Wisniewski and Jamal Merck estimated they used about 30 rolls of duct tape, and “a lot of time and tears, arguing about how we should tape stuff and how stuff should get cut,” Merck said.
They also trashed their dorm’s garage.
Participants repeatedly reported that engineering majors and assorted creative thinkers were the most valuable teammates, but both Wisniewski and Merck agreed that the biochem major on their team “was the micromanager.”
Several feet away, on a grassy mound serving as the pre-launch area, a white rabbit was let out of a carrier into a Pokémon-themed boat.
“We have a bunny to bless our boat today,” said senior Charlotte Seid, as the bunny, Remy, hopped about their buoyant, liferaft-shaped Pokédex, which had a rampart of carpet tubes affixed to its front.
Remy did not participate in the race.
[object Object]Next to them, in the same shady corner of the mound, Team Kirby gathered around their pink, star-covered vessel, which was adorned with the pink, round Nintendo character’s face.
“We stayed up until like 3 taping up the boat,” Kazi Abthahi said. “But it’s rewarding though, cause it looks really cool.”
The annual Roth Regatta draws hundreds of onlookers to Stony Brook University’s campus, which is the largest public university campus in New York state. But it began as a very small affair.
“One day, my friends and I are just coming back from the library studying, back to Roth Quad where we all lived, and I just said, ‘We should do something with this pond,’” Stony Brook alum Curt Epstein said in a phone interview.
Epstein and his friends were inspired by a Mountain Dew commercial on TV at the time that featured a cardboard boat race, and decided to create their own: The Roth Quad Yacht Club.
Next, they set about creating a proof-of-concept boat, collecting what eventually amounted to $200 from various dorms for materials, and securing the school’s blessing.
[object Object]The first Roth Regatta took place in 1989, and involved 10 boats and a handful of onlookers.
“The most improbable thing in my mind is not that we did it, but that the university actually allowed this,” Epstein said. “ That still to this day boggles my mind. There's any number of reasons and any number of people that could have just said no, and that would have been the end of it.”
Nearly four decades later, the Regatta has become a quirky point of university pride. The rules drawn up by the Roth Quad Yacht Club in ’89 remain largely the same, including that there are still two-person “speedster” boat races and four-person “yacht” boat races.
But other elements have changed: The pond is much cleaner, and the event has grown enormously.
Today, the school also maintains a stash of waders for the students who help get the boats out of the shallow pond after each heat. The boats are then promptly thrown into a sanctioned dumpster.
Also, there’s merch, while it lasts.
[object Object]“We had over 2,000 pieces, all of it gone in under an hour,” said Alleyna Charoo, a member of Stony Brook's Undergraduate Student Government, while firing a T-shirt gun across the pond at a gaggle of jumping undergrads. “People were lining up three hours before it started for it.”
There was also a waitlist to compete this year after last year’s race dragged on a bit too long.
[object Object]The race's competitive aspect, though, is almost an afterthought.
“I think it brings everybody together, you know? Everybody's cheering each other on,” said Ronkonkoma resident and Stony Brook alum June Grippo, who loves the Regatta so much she returns to campus to watch it. “They're, you know, excited for each other and everybody laughs at their mistakes. It's just a good time.”
Many Regatta attendees began wandering off before the winners were even announced. After all, it was finals week.
[object Object]

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