Friday 20 September 2013

Charter Bus and Limousine Service | In NY, NJ, PA, FL and CT | RVP Transportation

POINT TO POINT/CITY TO CITY:

Click Here For Our Fleet

Our specialized luxury services in and around NY,NJ,PA,CT AND SOUTH FLORIDA include all business class ground transportation. This means that whether you need a ride to the airport, corporate limo transportation to an important meeting, or just a way to get from A to B during your business day, we can provide a solution. Our corporate vehicles and limousines are late-model Lincoln Town Cars (mostly black) and 6-8 passenger stretches. For larger groups or conventions around NY,NJ,PA,CT AND SOUTH FLORIDA, we also offer a range of higher-occupancy vehicles such as luxury tour buses and SUV stretch limos. We offer corporate accounts with discounts for preferred clients.
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Friday 13 September 2013

Charter Bus and Limousine Service

PROMS:

COMMING SOON
At RVP Transportation, we understand the importance of prom to you and the preparation involved such as picking the right gown or tux, dinner plans, after party night on the town and of course; the right stretch limousine such as our Hummer limousines, Prom stretch Chrysler 300 stretch limos, Prom stretch Escalade limos, Prom 10 passenger Lincoln Limo or our 34 passenger prom party limo bus. We have many choices of prom limo rentals at RVP Transportation.

AFFORDABLE PROM LIMO PACKAGES

To help assist with your prom plans, let the limo experts at RVP Transportation help you with your choose the right prom limousine transportation to and from your events., We offer all inclusive prom limousine package deals that include tax and gratuity. We want your prom experience to be extra special, because you only graduate from High School once and RVP TRANSPORTATION will make sure to help create all the best memories.
Our highly trained limousine chauffeurs will be there to make certain it's a special night for you and your prom party. Click the links below to visit our limousine gallery for pictures and details and you can check out all prom limousine rental specials.
Prom is a special night for high school seniors because prom is often the first time many have occasion to rent a limousine service. In our TWELVE YEARS, we have seen a lot of proms. We know what you want and need in limousine provider and even now, treat each with the same attention and detail as our first.
Your prom can be a lot of fun if you choose the right limousine or party bus and of course the right limousine company; RVP Transportation has been providing prom limo service in NY , CT, NJ, PA and MIAMI for 12 years now, all of our limousine and limo buses for prom are fully loaded with music systems, CD/DVD players, iPod hook-ups, laser lights, TV screens, comfortable seating and a soda/refreshment bar.
Every year we offer great deals on prom limousine service, discount prom limo packages and the best value in NY,NJ, PA , CT and MIAMIi, our drivers are experienced, licensed and courteous, call RVP Transportation today to reserve you limo or party limo bus for your next school event whether it's prom, winter formal, homecoming or a school event.

Always remember we are fully licensed and insured.
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Monday 9 September 2013

Man in custody after SWAT stand off in Tamarac, BSO says

A man is in custody after a stand-off of more than nine hours with SWAT members, authorities said.
The man had made threats against a family member and barricaded himself inside hisTamarac residence early Monday morning, according to officials at the Broward Sheriff's Office.
Shortly after 2 a.m. deputies were sent to the residence along the 5200 block of Rock Island Road just south of Commercial Boulevard and west of Florida's Turnpike.
The man was taken into custody at about 11:30 a.m., said Keyla Concepcion, a sheriff's office spokeswoman.
The man was believed to be alone and the Sheriff's Office said there were weapons inside with him.
Source : Sun-Sentinel
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Thursday 5 September 2013

New York Today: Number One

A nice place to visit. And live. And work. So said the world.
A nice place to visit. And live. And work. So said the world.
new study of more than 18,000 people in 24 countries by the British market-research giant Ipsos MORI found New York the most popular city on the planet, ahead of London and Paris.
The Internet survey ranked New York the best city for business, second in where they’d “most like to visit” (behind Paris) and the fifth most desired place to live (Zurich was No. 1).
The survey revealed some interesting global preferences. Belgians would much rather visit New York than live here, while Poles said the opposite (they’d rather see Mumbai or Madrid).
The pollsters tried to spin the results for their hometown. “The citizens of the world have spoken and given a massive vote of confidence in London and the U.K.,” Ipsos MORI’s boss told The Telegraph.
But even Britons put London second.
Americans, on the other hand, gave New York top marks.
Here’s what you need to know for Thursday.
WEATHER
As nice as yesterday: mostly sunny with a high of 78.
TRANSIT & TRAFFIC
• Mass Transit [10:15 a.m.] Delays of up to 30 minutes on New Jersey Transit Northeast Corridor trains after a disabled train was cleared.
Subway delays on southbound 1, 2 and 3 trains. Click for latest M.T.A. status.
• Roads: Click for traffic map or radio report on the 1s.
Alternate-side parking is suspended for Rosh Hashana today and tomorrow. Meter rules remain in effect.
COMING UP TODAY
• A parade of candidates on “Good Day New York”: Christine C. Quinn at 7:15 a.m., Joseph J. Lhota at 7:30 and William C. Thompson Jr. at 8:10.
• Later, Ms. Quinn unveils a plan to help immigrant business owners and hosts a town hall meeting with Latino voters in the Bronx. Mr. Thompson promotes a plan to support city college students and their families. Bill de Blasio goes on Al Sharpton’s radio show at 2:20 p.m.
• Fashion Week begins. Some people are getting tired of it.
• Walmart is not in New York City yet, but its striking workers will be, at 10 a.m., to deliver a petition to a member of the chain’s board of directors as part of a nationwide day of protests.
• Live like a king, or a bishop, at a human chess session in Riverside Park, where people play the pieces. 4 to 6 p.m. [Free]
• A summer jam presided over by old-school D.J. Grandmaster Caz at Concrete Plant Park in the Bronx. 4 p.m. [Free]
• Live-stream a concert of experimental-music vocalists: It’s opening night of the Resonant Bodies Festival at ShapeShifter Lab in Brooklyn. [Live-stream free; tickets cost money]
• Time for a new moon (at 7:36 a.m., to be precise).
• Last day to enter the Empire State Building photo contest.
• Free outdoor movie: “Les Roseaux Sauvages” (“Wild Reeds” to you) on the steps of Columbia University’s Low Library. 7:30 p.m.
IN THE NEWS
• The comptroller’s race remains a dead heat, a poll found, with white voters overwhelmingly supporting Scott M. Stringer and black voters similarly inclined toward Eliot Spitzer. [New York Times]
• Anthony D. Weiner got into a shouting match with a heckler at a kosher bakery in Brooklyn. [New York Times]
• He also fulfilled a “lifelong dream” of being a TV weatherman. [Daily News]
• Despite all the new bike lanes and pedestrian plazas, the city says Manhattan car traffic is moving 7 percent faster since 2008. [New York Times]
• An assistant principal at a public high school in Williamsburg raped a female student, city investigators said. [New York Times]
• The police stepped up patrols near synagogues after a six-foot-high menorah in Brooklyn burned to the ground. [WABC Eyewitness News]
• Carmelo Anthony may have caught a fish with his bare hands. [Gothamist]
• Poultry news: nearly 1,200 retired laying hens rescued from a California farm are being flown to New York to live out their lives at East Coast sanctuaries. And a rampaging wild turkey caused $5,000 worth of damage in New Jersey. [Sacramento Bee, Star-Ledger]
• At the United States Open, Rafael Nadal crushed his countryman Tommy Robredo to advance to the semifinals.
• Yankees beat White Sox, 6-5, to sweep series. Mets beat Braves, 5-2.
AND FINALLY…
Ken Delmar, a retired real estate salesman in Connecticut who longed to be an artist, discovered something interesting about paper towels: they’re great at soaking up oil paint.
And so was started his second career, as a painter of portraits on two-ply Bounty towels.
His most ambitious work to date may be a matrix painting of the nine Supreme Court justices. [Click to see the painting.]
It’s in a show of Mr. Delmar’s work that opens tonight at the George Billis Gallery in Chelsea.
Nicole Higgins DeSmet contributed reporting.
New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.
Source : Cityroom
For More Info Please Visit...

Monday 2 September 2013

CONVENTIONS AND MEETINGS

CONVENTIONS AND MEETINGS:

Click Here For Our Fleet

Our specialized luxury services in and around NY,NJ,PA,CT AND SOUTH FLORIDA include all business class ground transportation. This means that whether you need a ride to the airport, corporate limo transportation to an important meeting, or just a way to get from A to B during your business day, we can provide a solution. Our corporate vehicles and limousines are late-model Lincoln Town Cars (mostly black) and 6-8 passenger stretches. For larger groups or conventions around NY,NJ,PA,CT AND SOUTH FLORIDA, we also offer a range of higher-occupancy vehicles such as luxury tour buses and SUV stretch limos. We offer corporate accounts with discounts for preferred clients.

WE ALSO COVER TRANSPORTATION TO AND FROM ALL PORTS ,COMMUTER TRAINS, AND PRIVATE AIRPORTS.
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Saturday 31 August 2013

Charter Bus and Limousine Service | In NY, NJ, PA, FL and CT | RVP Transportation

Florida

Florida A Must For Everyone

Florida is a place built for tourists and families. Be it foreigners or Americans, Florida is a must-visit destination, hence, all-year-round, there are many people who organize Florida charter bus rental vacations here. The identity of the state is centered on nothing else but traveling, fun, shopping, the beaches, outdoor activities and of course, Disneyland. When it comes to variety and choices, you can never run out of them here. Therefore, if you've never been to Florida, it will be worth your time to organize a Florida charter bus rental….simply because it's got everything for everyone.

For instance, the kids will not want to miss out on visiting Disneyland because it's one of the most beautiful one in the world. And for outdoor lovers, there's always the wonderful Everglades to visit. Another place outdoor lovers should visit during their Florida charter bus rental visit is Ichetucknee where the cold spring water will wash all the stress of everyday life away.

And of course, we're not the only ones who believe that the beaches in Florida are superior to any other beaches in the world! The white sandy beaches serve as a beautiful Florida charter bus rental getaway for honeymooners and also families. It stretches on and on….it's akin to a never-ending stretch of sandy jewels under your feet. And that's just the few simple reasons why a Florida charter bus rental vacation is a must for travelers and for people who love the fun yet relaxing atmosphere that only Florida can provide.
Florida Charter Bus

Get Wet In Miami FL

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with sand, sea, fun, love and parties. The beaches along Miami FL never seem to end because this is a city surrounded by the sea, hence, water activities is in heavy demand all-year-round.

Top Miami FL charter bus rental activities include jet skiing, sailing, wind surfing, parasailing, fishing and definitely surfing in Biscayne Bay and Miami Harbor and many other beaches. Whether it's a week-long parasailing package or an hour of jet skiing, it's hard to not relax at this haven.
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For couples, many find themselves organizing a Miami FL charter bus rental honeymoon here on a budget-friendly vacation-cum-honeymoon. It's close to home and lovely in more ways than one. After an amazing day out in the beach, the atmosphere comes alive with music, lights and entertainment. Some choose to drive around while others prefer to hop into one of the nightspots for some fun, and then there are others who would book themselves in for a spa, facial or massage session.

All in all, it's hard to find a bored person in Miami FL.
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Thursday 22 August 2013

New York Today: Water Weather

Remember this? You may need to find novel ways on Thursday to cool off. 
Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times Remember this? You may need to find novel ways on Thursday to cool off.
Today the temperature continues to climb.
It is expected to reach 87 degrees, still a far cry from that scorching stretch of July.
When it gets hot, New Yorkers get soaked. Behold, the beloved park spray shower.
Back in 1926, children cooled off in grand fashion: they dove off a City Hall statue into the fountain below.
But their high dives were officially banned after one boy hit his head in the shallow pool, according to an  article in The New York Times from that year.
Women of old New York seemed to have an even harder time cooling off.
An 1889 Times article described their favored (and likely sweltering) swimming get-up: a bodysuit with a blouse and a skirt over top.
Or, perhaps, a flannel top and a skirt, the writer said, complete with “equestrian tights, made with feet, the latter being of extra heavy weave.”
Here’s what you need to know for your Thursday.

SOURCE : CityRoom

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Wednesday 21 August 2013

Pennsylvania 7th-cheapest state for car owners

Pennsylvania is one of the cheapest states to operate a car, according to BankRate.com.
Dodging potholes on the drive to work? Cursing the price at the pump? Be glad you don’t live in Georgia, because it’s the most expensive state in which to operate a motor vehicle.
Pennsylvania ranked 44th priciest or seventh cheapest, according to a studyBankrate.com released Wednesday.
The average annual tab for gasoline, insurance, repairs, taxes and fees was $2,764 in Pennsylvania, $4,233 in Georgia, and $2,204 in Oregon, the least expensive. Oregon doesn’t have a state sales tax. The national average was $3,201.
What isn’t a bargain in the Keystone State is financing, according to another report, also issued Wednesday, byGoBankingRates.com. At 3.84 percent, as of July 2013, Pennsylvania car owners pay the ninth-most expensive interest rates.
SOURCE : .Bizjournals
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Rvp Tours

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Man dressed all in black, toting AK-47, terrorizes Georgia school

Gunfire terrifies Atlanta-area elementary school, triggers evacuation. Police describe suspect as white man in his 20s, clad in all black, firing off AK-47 rounds


 Dekalb County Police SWAT officers run toward Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy after reports of a gunman entered the school, Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2013, in Decatur, Ga. Superintendent Michael Thurmond says all students at Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy in Decatur east of Atlanta are accounted for and safe Tuesday and that he is not aware of any injuries. 
 

Dekalb County Police SWAT officers arrive at elementary school, responding to call from school office, where shots could be heard in the background.


One person was in custody after shots were fired at an elementary school in Decatur, Ga., but there were no reports of injuries, authorities said.
The gunman was reportedly a white man in his 20s, wearing all black and carrying an AK-47. He surrendered peacefully at Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy outside Atlanta.
Students were led outside to safety as a man armed with a gun was reported at a school in Decatur, Ga.

wsbtv.com

Students were led outside to safety as a man armed with a gun was reported at a school in Decatur, Ga.

RELATED: OAKLAND, CALIF. SHOOTING CAUGHT ON DASHBOARD CAM
Teachers evacuated frightened students to safety in a grassy area away from buildings. Angry and anxious parents were kept at a nearby parking lot, waiting to be reunited with their kids.
Officers take up positions after receiving reports of a gunman at Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy.

wsbtv.com

Officers take up positions after receiving reports of a gunman at Ronald E. McNair Discovery Learning Academy.

Someone in the school office called local station WSBTV to report that there was a shooter on campus. The caller told an assignment desk editor that the gunman wanted the station to be notified. Shots could be heard over the call.
RELATED: GUN PERMIT REQUESTS SOAR IN NEWTOWN: POLICE
Police cars lining streets after gunman fires shots at an elementary school.

David Goldman/AP

Police cars lining streets after gunman fires shots at an elementary school.

County School Board Chairman Melvin Johnson said there had been no reports injuries.
Students stood along a chainlink fence while officers swarmed the school.

SOURCE : Nydailynews

FOR MORE INFO PLEASE VISIT...

RVP TOURS

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Monday 19 August 2013

Prevost Luxury Lounge

New Prevost Party Coach Limousine Bus 55 Passenger Lounge

We have a Large Selection of These 35, 45 and 55 Passenger Prevost Bus Limousine Lounges. This is basically a moving Lounge Like a NYC Club or High end Lounge. Comes Complete with Stocked Bar There is a luxurious suede interior , Lots of Coolers around, Plasma screens, Fiber optic Mood Lighting, Blue Lights, Stainless Steel Ceilings and Restrooms. There is also a Stand up Bar in the Rear of the Bus. Perfect for Corporate Outings, Weddings, or Just a Night out. Leave the Driving to Us. The Party is Your Domain.
• 2 Plasma TVs.
• Walk Up Bar.
• Playstation 2.
• DVD.
• Marble Floors.
• Storage for Endless baggage underneath.
• Passenger Capacity is 35,45 or 55.
• Overhead Storage.
• Fiber Optic Lighting.
• Restroom.

Thursday 15 August 2013

New York Today: Civic Duty

The Gray Lady
People walk by the 'The New York Times' in New York, March 8, 2011. The New York Times Company announced August 3, 2013 that it has agreed to sell The Boston Globe newspaper for $70 million cash to the principal owner of the Boston Red Sox baseball team. The Times, the premier US newspaper, is selling The Globe for a fraction of the $1.1 billion it paid for the Boston newspaper in 1993. The buyer is John W. Henry, principal owner of the Boston Red Sox, The Times said

But something even more mundane apparently caused the New York Times website outage: human error.
At least that's the consensus of IT pros who discuss things on puck.nether.net. One poster says "a self-inflicted wound, having to do with a software update that was rolled out to both the production and backup servers simultaneously," caused the failure.
Gunter Ollmann, chief technology officer at IOActive, says "based upon a couple of screen shots that people have posted it could have been something as simple as a misconfigured DNS server or load balancer. From the underground side, there's no discussions or perps claiming responsibility. I tend to believe that this was likely self-inflicted."
Tom Kellermann, Trend Micro's vice president of cyber security, for one, doesn't buy that explantion.
Kellermann notes that both the paper's web server and internal e-mail server were inaccessible, even after robust security measures taken in the wake of Chinese hackers targeting the New York Times and other big media outlets late last year and earlier this year.
"It's a good spin to blame this on a crappy update or bad management, but I'm leaning toward the fact that they're under attack again," says Kellermann.
Meanwhile, a blog posted on Monday by researchers at security firm FireEye, adds to the intrigue. Researchers Ned Moran and Nart Villeneuve assert that the Chinese hacking collective that cracked into the New York Times' computer network late last year appear to be at it again, mounting fresh assaults with new and improved versions of malicious software.
"After all the attention paid to security to have a web server and e-mail server go down in tandem just doesn't sound right. You usually lose one or the other, and when you lose your e-mail server it's usually from something nefarious," Kellermann says. "So is it hackers from the past returning to haunt them again or new hacktivists attacking them for something they've done or reported recently?"
Darien Kindlund, FireEye's manager of threat intelligence, says he does not believe the Chinese hacking group tied to earlier New York Times hack -- and back in action again -- caused the outage today.
"It goes against against their whole motive," Kindlund says. "They're into this to steal large scale quantities of intelligence and if they were to disrupt their victims it would be clear what's going on and they'd no longer be able to steal any intelligence."
SOURCE : USATODAY
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Thursday 1 August 2013

New York Times Company Posts a 2nd-Quarter Profit

The New York Times Company swung to a profit in the second quarter on stronger circulation revenue and lower operating costs, but continued weakness in advertising weighed on results.
 https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTIPuvz90Ww3tm8pu9CFHkKT5HC4EqVlWTVJaZ4u5SPzLsnGlvBq92Py8NOU2K4P2fclE25M5g
The company reported on Thursday that net income rose to $20.1 million, or 13 cents a share, from a loss of $87.6 million, or 58 cents a share, in the period a year earlier.
Last year’s second-quarter results were hurt by write-downs related to the sales of About.com and the company’s regional newspaper group. Excluding those items, income from continuing operations was $20.1 million, compared with $38.1 million in the period a year earlier.
Total revenue for the quarter declined less than 1 percent, to $485.4 million, from $489.8 million in the second quarter of 2012. Circulation revenue rose 5.1 percent, to $245.1 million, from $233.3 million. But that gain was largely offset by a 5.8 percent decline in advertising revenue, to $207.5 million.
Print advertising at the company’s newspapers, which include The New York Times, The Boston Globe and The International Herald Tribune, declined 6.8 percent, and digital advertising fell 2.7 percent. Digital advertising now accounts for 24.7 percent of the company’s total advertising revenue.
Operating costs declined 3.1 percent, to $431.9 million, from $445.7 million, mainly because of lower compensation and benefits costs, according to the company.
“Our improved results in the second quarter were an organizationwide effort — with contributions from more favorable revenue trends and strong cost performance,” Mark Thompson, the company’s president and chief executive, said in a statement.
The number of paid subscribers to the Web site, e-reader and other digital editions of The Times and The International Herald Tribune grew to 699,000, a jump of more than 35 percent from the period a year earlier. Digital subscriptions to The Boston Globe and BostonGlobe.com rose to 39,000, an increase of nearly 70 percent from 23,000 a year earlier.
Alexia S. Quadrani, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase, said that while she was pleased with the results, she was also aware of the challenges newspapers were facing.
“As nice it is to see slightly better-than-expected numbers, the fact that we are many years into these declines and they still persist just shows you the secular challenges this industry is facing,” said Ms. Quadrani. “The New York Times has a successful digital platform to help offset some of the ongoing newspaper advertising weakness. It’s still a headwind you’re going to try to offset every day.”
Since Mr. Thompson joined The Times in November, he has focused on rebranding The Times as a global operation. In February, the company announced it would sell the New England Media Group, which includes The Boston Globe, Boston.com, The Worcester Telegram & Gazette and Globe Direct, a direct-mail marketing company. Bids for the properties were due in July but a sale has not been announced.
The Times also announced in February that it would rename The International Herald Tribune, its 125-year-old newspaper based in Paris, The International New York Times. It also will unveil a new Web site for international audiences in the coming months.
The company has also continued to increase its plans to charge readers for content. In June, the company started to charge nonsubscribers who want to read more than three articles a day on The New York Times apps for mobile devices.
“We are making good progress and are on track with our strategic growth initiatives,” Mr. Thompson said. “In particular, we are well under way in the ramp-up for the fall rebrand of The International Herald Tribune as The International New York Times and with the development work related to our new paid products.”

Source: NYTIMES



Wednesday 31 July 2013

New York Today: Eyes in the Storm



The Museum of the City of New York needs more Hurricane Sandy photos for a coming exhibition. This one was taken along Avenue C.The Museum of the City of New York needs more Hurricane Sandy photos for a coming exhibition. This one was taken along Avenue C.

Shattered houses, sand-caked cars, felled trees.
Hurricane Sandy printed indelible images on the city’s collective memory.
This fall, an exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York will display many such scenes, captured by both average New Yorkers and professional photographers. The show will be entirely crowd-sourced.
“It’s easy for a lot of people to put this in the back of their mind,” said Sean Corcoran, curator of prints and photographs at the museum.
The show’s intent, he said, was to remind.
Curators are combing through more than 5,000 images — some snapped with iPhones, others with professional cameras — but they want more.
WEATHER
Another perfect day, with a high around 84 degrees and nothing but blue skies. Click for current forecast.
TRANSIT & TRAFFIC
• Mass TransitClick for the latest status.
• Alternate side parking is in effect.
COMING UP TODAY
• On the mayoral trail: John C. Liu hits four boroughs (sorry, Staten Island), visiting senior centers and youth groups. William C. Thompson Jr. receives the endorsement of clergy citywide, and Bill de Blasio tours hospitals under threat of closure. Scott M. Stringer, in his bid for comptroller, meets voters at a Flatbush subway stop.
• Occupy Sandy is organizing a rally outside City Hall at noon to keep the spotlight on Hurricane Sandy victims.
• Firefighter Grill-Off: Brooklyn units compete to see who barbecues best at the Fairway in Red Hook from 12p.m. to 3 p.m. [Free]
• Meet a 13-year-old app developer, Jordan Casey, chief executive of Casey Games, at the Apple Store in SoHo at 6:30 p.m. [Free]
• Google is putting on a street fair in the meatpacking district at noon. Expect gizmos, not gyros. [Free]
• The Brooklyn Public Library and the Norman Mailer Center present adiscussion about that literary icon (and Brooklynite). At the Central Library at Grand Army Plaza at 7 p.m. [Free]
• You don’t have to be a rich man to see the 1971 musical film classic “Fiddler on the Roof” alfresco in Riverside Park. It’s free on Pier 1 at 8:30 p.m. [Free]
• Just downstream, Wes Anderson’s 2012 quirky and magical “Moonrise Kingdom” is playing in Hudson River Park. On Pier 61 at dusk. [Free]
IN THE NEWS
• Anthony D. Weiner released a video rejecting calls for him to drop out of the mayoral race. “‘Quit’ isn’t the way we roll in New York City,” he says. [New York Times]
• Barbara Morgan, Mr. Weiner’s chief spokeswoman, lashed out at a former intern — who yesterday published an account of her internship in the Daily News — in an expletive-laced interview. [New York Times]
• An appeals court upholds a decision preventing the city from limiting the sale of supersized sugary drinks, derailing the mayor’s push for smaller drink sizes. [New York Times]
• Aaron Greene, who was arrested for possession of explosives and accused of plotting to blow up the Washington Arch, gets seven years in prison. [Daily News]
• Some skyscrapers, including Rockefeller Center, cool off the old-fashioned way: giant blocks of ice. The buildings have installed massive ice-making tanks in their basements or rooftops. [CNN]
• Fishermen and others on Long Island are battling what would be the first delivery port for liquefied natural gas in New York State. It would be 20 miles off the shore of Jones Beach. [New York Times]
• There is a giant sand castle in downtown Manhattan. [DNA Info]
• A series of “selfie” photos taken by a man accused of attacking a woman in Carroll Gardens implicated him in the crime, the police said. [DNA Info]
AND FINALLY
On July 31, 1964, the lunar probe Ranger 7 took the first close-up shots of the moon’s surface. The 4,000 photos revealed that the face of the moon waslikely navigable by a manned craft, paving the way for the first moonwalk five years later.
With Ranger’s photos, The New York Times wrote, “Man’s path to the moon had been measurably cleared.”

Mona El-Naggar,  E.C. Gogolak and Nicole Higgins DeSmet contributed reporting.
We’re testing New York Today, which we put together just before dawn and update until around noon.
Source: CityRoom



Tuesday 30 July 2013

Lincoln Executive

The Lincoln "Executive L" Town Car is custom stretched luxury vehicle designed specifically to get you to and from your office and special events safely, quietly and in style.

We are a mature limo company with an excellent reputation for providing premier Town Car and livery car service to clients in NYC and Long Island, New York. Our experienced professional staff is completely committed to ensuring that you fully enjoy your special event.We offer competitive pricing and service that is second to none
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Our custom stretched Lincoln Executive L serice Town Car is a perfect selection if you are looking for a smooth ride with style but not too much flash. We specialize in New York luxury transportation and we have years of experience providing professional livery and stretch limo service for companies in NYC and Long Island, New York. Call Today 718-779-1151





Monday 29 July 2013

One Goal, but Plenty for U.S. to Celebrate in Gold Cup Final

One Goal, but Plenty for U.S. to Celebrate in Gold Cup Final



Brek Shea, far right, tapped in a cross that was intended for Landon Donovan, second from right, in the 69th minute.

CHICAGO — Landon Donovan did not score the goal that clinched a title for the United States in the Gold Cup, a tournament that will be remembered for his return to the national team and the national stage. Nor was he credited with the assist.

Donovan was, however, both the driving force and the creative director behind the goal on Sunday, as he has been for most of what his team has accomplished in the past few weeks.
In a scoreless game marked by sluggish play and a slow pace, the United States broke through against Panama in the 69th minute when Alejandro Bedoya sent a centering pass toward the goal mouth. Donovan ran past the ball, inadvertently pulling a dummy maneuver that froze goalkeeper Jaime Penedo and set up Brek Shea for a tap-in goal.
“I took a mighty swing at it and missed,” Donovan said.
The 1-0 victory secured the fifth Gold Cup title for the United States in front of an announced crowd of 57,920 at Soldier Field.
Just as this tournament marked Donovan’s return, it was an arrival of sorts for his coach, Jurgen Klinsmann. The win was a record 11th in a row for the United States and earned Klinsmann his first trophy since he took over for Bob Bradley two summers ago, a month after the United States lost to Mexico in the last Gold Cup final.
Klinsmann was not on the bench Sunday; he was forced to watch from a suite after he was suspended for his ejection from Wednesday’s semifinal win over Honduras. But he joined his players on the field after the game.
“Watching the game was horrible,” he said. “They gave me a nice Champagne shower.”
Klinsmann added: “It’s always nice to win a trophy. But we want to win in a way that you deserve it, and this was the best team in the Gold Cup.”
The United States had advanced to the final on the strength of a dynamic offense and an aggressive brand of soccer pushed by Klinsmann, scoring a team-record 19 goals in the tournament.
That pace and much of the flair was missing for most of Sunday’s game. Perhaps it was Klinsmann’s absence, the inherent nerves that accompany a final or the opponent — Panama, and not archrival Mexico. There were many Mexico jerseys in the stands belonging to fans surely disappointed that their team had failed to advance.
The final was flat from the start and devoid of quality scoring chances until a DaMarcus Beasley cross in the 56th minute was headed wide by Donovan. Shea replaced Joe Corona in the 68th minute and scored less than a minute later. Panama had mounted little offense before Shea’s strike — it did not register a shot — and that did not change after it.
What this victory means is debatable. As Klinsmann has said, “Concacaf is not the World Cup.” It does ensure that the United States will play the winner of the 2015 Gold Cup for a place in the 2017 Confederations Cup. But only a few players from this squad are likely to be in Brazil for the World Cup next summer.
Donovan’s status had been uncertain since he took a leave of absence from his club and the national team last year. After he was awarded the Golden Ball as the most valuable player of the tournament for his five goals and seven assists, it was almost unthinkable that he would not be selected for next year’s World Cup.
“He earned every compliment he got this tournament,” Klinsmann said. Of Donovan’s status for September’s World Cup qualifiers, he said, “There is a high probability he joins us.”
Panama made its first appearance in a Gold Cup final since 2005, when the story lines were remarkably similar to Sunday’s. Then, the United States was without its coach, Bruce Arena, who was suspended after he was ejected from a semifinal win.
On that day, the United States needed penalty kicks to defeat Panama at Giants Stadium. Ninety minutes were enough Sunday, as the United States claimed its first Gold Cup since 2007. The Americans had lost the previous two finals to Mexico.
There was one negative Sunday. Stuart Holden, who tore his anterior cruciate ligament in 2011 and then reinjured it when he tried to return later that year, left in the 23rd minute after banging knees with Alberto Quintero. Klinsmann said Holden might have another serious injury.
Otherwise, the Americans were looking forward.
“This is not the end,” Donovan said. “It’s the end of the tournament, but hopefully this is just the beginning for a lot of us.”
source: NY Times

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