New York's orange and blue license plates will be replaced starting July 1 by red, white and blue plates featuring the Statue of Liberty, state officials said today.
A minor earthquake, measured at 2.7 on the Richter scale, hit suburban New York City early Tuesday.
Cardinal John J.
The Manhattan district attorney's office, saying it is still gathering evidence, today was given until Jan. 16 to prepare its case against Bernhard Goetz, who is accused of shooting four teen-agers in a subway car.
Surging into the millions, New Yorkers took to the streets Friday for an Independence Day observance marked by a joyous, unified spirit.
The business climate in Los Angeles certainly appears to be agreeing with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, the New York law firm best known for its expertise in hostile takeovers.
Two gunmen Wednesday robbed a shop of an estimated $350,000 in cash and jewelry in Manhattan's Diamond District, police said.
Women protesters picketed the New York Times today, demanding that the newspaper drop the titles "Miss" and "Mrs." as discriminatory against women.
Columnist Mike Royko's sympathy with Bernhard Goetz (Editorial Pages, Jan. 18) is a legitimate immediate reaction to the New York subway shooting.
An estimated 3,000 homeless City University students are using streets, subways and shelters as dorms, and the city should provide temporary off-campus housing to handle the growing number of needy undergraduates, officials said today.
It's springtime, but the whole city is turning brown. The color is everywhere.
A federal grand jury today indicted Shearson Lehman Bros.
The British have always had a fascination with American cops-and-robbers shows.
Eastman Kodak, Rochester, N.Y., reported that the Justice Department has requested additional information on its proposed acquisition of Sunnyvale, Calif.
A teen-ager committed suicide by swallowing a pint of gasoline, making him the 18th youngster in New York City's northern suburbs to take his own life since early 1984, authorities said today.
Three Moorpark students will be competing today in the interscholastic polo competition at Cornell University in New York.
Subway service was disrupted for about 30 minutes before the morning rush hour Tuesday after an anonymous telephone caller claimed to have placed a bomb on one of the tracks, authorities said.
Five police officers have been indicted on charges ranging from assault to misconduct following complaints of brutality that forced a high-level department shake-up, a prosecutor announced today.
A doctor described as a terrorist and accused of treating a radical after the botched $1.6-million Brink's robbery in New York four years ago has been captured with another revolutionary, the FBI announced Friday.
Los Angeles-based First Interstate of California will occupy about 75,000 square feet of space in the new Fifty-third at Third Building currently being developed in New York by the Gerald Hines Interests.