Tag Archives: news

NYC Beachgoer Punctured by Needle – Eczema is Miraculously Cured

QUEENS, NY–Area man Larry Minacozzi received quite a shock on Sunday when he stepped on a syringe at Rockaway Beach and found that within minutes his chronic skin disease had been cured.

Minacozzi was following a seagull that had taken his sandwich along the crowded Queens shoreline when a sharp pain in his foot caused him to fall to the ground.

“I thought I’d stepped on broken glass or a switchblade,” the forty seven year-old plumber told reporters, citing that such waste is common in the area.

In his scramble to get back on his feet, Minacozzi found a dirty syringe filled with “thick yellow ooze” in the sand.  Shocked, he walked the syringe back to his beach towel a few yards away where his wife, Renee, noticed that her husband’s skin rash, which had covered virtually every inch of his body, was completely gone.

“I didn’t even recognize him,” she said.  “He looked like a new man.  Like someone who didn’t make me want to rip my own eyes out every time I saw his unclothed body.”

Four people on Staten Island and two at Rockaway Beach have also been pricked this summer, but none have experienced the same miraculous healing as Minacozzi.

“I’ve wasted thousands of dollars at the dermatologist over the years,” Minacozzi told reporters as he stared into a hand-held mirror.  “Who knew I only needed to get pricked with a dirty needle on a New York beach to cure a lifetime of excruciating eczema?  Am I the luckiest guy in New York or what?”

The Parks Department reports that it cleans beaches daily but that budget constraints allow for only so much sand maintenance.  “We figured that most people would just stay in the water anyway,” said Site Manager Jerry Salingas.

No plans are being made to increase beach cleanings; however, Minacozzi vows to patrol the NYC beach on his own time in search of other needles, hoping that they may somehow cure his high blood pressure, chronic hiccups and man boobs.

After several tests conducted by the EPA the chemical contents of the syringe remain unknown.

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Brooklyn Cops Nab Cyclists

Red lights no longer optional for Brooklyn cyclists. A great article spied from the Brooklyn Paper…

Dragnet! Cops nab bikers in red-light sting

The Brooklyn Paper (May 12, 2009)

Police cracked down on rule-breaking bicyclists in Fort Greene and Clinton Hill last Friday, issuing tickets for running red lights and then slapping offenders with additional summonses for minor infractions, including one bicyclist who didn’t have a bell.

The dragnet snared 36 bicyclists on the popular DeKalb Avenue bike lane that links the two neighborhoods with Downtown Brooklyn.

Bikers protested that they’re being prosecuted for victimless crimes.

“I admit the red light was a red light,” said Gideon Levy who was busted on DeKalb Avenue near the police precinct building at Classon Avenue. “But when I go through red lights, I always look to see if pedestrians and cars are coming. There should be a similar attitude as with jaywalking. New York can afford to look the other way as long as the bikers are riding safely.”

The red light violation carries a $120 penalty, and this was Levy’s second pedaling punishment this spring.

Back in Fort Greene on Friday, one biker was slapped with $350 in tickets for running a red light on Lafayette Avenue and not properly signaling as he made a turn onto the Carlton Avenue bike lane.

“There have to be rules for bicyclists, but cycling needs to be encouraged,” said the suddenly discouraged Brion Snyder, a music producer from Clinton Hill. “Now I have $350 in fines. It seems irrational since it’s a minor infraction. It’s egregious.”

Cops said the crackdown was long overdue.

“It was targeted towards enforcing traffic laws,” said a police source from the 88th Precinct. “Running a red light is not safe for the cyclist or anyone else in the street.”

The ticket blitz is a bitter irony for bikers who have complained since the lane’s creation last year that vehicles, including officers at the 88th Precinct stationhouse near the corner of Classon Avenue, but especially delivery trucks, regularly block the lane with parked cars along the busy corridor.

Cop sources conceded that the newfound heightened enforcement of the traffic rules came only after motorists and pedestrians mounted complaints about dangerous and illegal maneuvers by their two-wheel loving neighbors.

One driver, himself stopped at a red light in Clinton Hill, said many bikers are a hazard.

“No, they don’t follow the laws,” the driver moaned. “Last week, my car got hit by a bike.”

And with only five motorists getting nailed in last week’s crackdown with citations for obstructing the bikers’ route, word quickly spread among rogue riders that they were under scrutiny — and they quickly heeded the lesson of the suddenly strict enforcement.

“This whole ride I’ve been stopping for red lights,” said Lauren Kelleher, near the corner of Clinton Avenue on Monday afternoon. “My roommate just got a ticket for it!”

But most cyclists act like red lights are stop signs, halting just long enough to see that intersections are clear of traffic.

“I stop, at least a quick stop, just to check,” said Catalina Monsalve.

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Fire on 23rd Street (1.20.09)

There was a fire this morning at the stand on the public space next to Madison Square Park at 23rd and Park. I couldn’t tell if anyone was hurt. Couldn’t really tell much actually, as police and firefighters had it all surrounded. In what continues to be the worst news reporting ever, I don’t even remember what the stand was. I couldn’t tell with all the fire damage. Was it a newsstand? Maybe instead of a news story this can be a reflection of how narrowly focused we can be in our endeavours, walking the same path nearly every day and only really discovering something after it burns.

Burning stand at 23rd Street

Burning stand at 23rd Street

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New York Colder than Antarctica (12.22.08)

I wish I was in Antarctica, where it’s warmer today. I’m not kidding. I checked the temperature. At a frigid 15 degrees (feels like -4), New York City is 20 degrees colder than Antarctica, which at McMerdo station is supposed to be 35 today. You could hop on a cruise ship and find yourself amid soaring glaciers and ice flows and you’d still be warmer than in Times Square.

The coldest temperature ever recorded in Antarctica was -129F and the coldest temp recorded in New York was -52F in 1979. I can’t really believe that but it’s in a USA Today article here.

Weekend NYC Snow

Weekend NYC Snow

Antarctica last week, courtesy of Lindblad Expeditions and photographer Sisse Brimberg

Antarctica last week, courtesy of Lindblad Expeditions and photographer Sisse Brimberg

Snow at Gramercy Park

Snow at Gramercy Park this morning.

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New York Tax Proposal (12.17.08)

“Guess what Paterson plans to tax? All of it.” reads the Metro New York headline. The description below shows taxes on goods which (maybe because I’m reading John Adams right now) is eerily similar to the stamp act and one of the many reasons (soon to be) Americans revolted back then. Sitting on the Path train on my way to work I flipped the page hoping I had mistakenly picked up a copy of The Onion.

The proposed taxes involve an 18% “obesity tax” on non-diet sodas, taxes on taxis, sporting events, beer, movie tickets, cable and satellite TV, and the most ridiculous of all, a state and local tax of 8.375% on Internet movie and song downloads. Thought iTunes songs are 99cents? They could be $1.08 if you live in NYC.

There are many sides to this argument though. And it’s no debate that the state needs to get money from somewhere so it doesn’t have to cut education and health programs the way it is. I’d love to hear what people think.

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