Soon, we will all live underwater thanks to the mighty king tide! "Soon" being a relative term, of course. Today and tomorrow, the waterways around the city will be swollen to about two feet higher than their normal level, thanks to a rare all-natural phenomenon known as a king tide.
Supercharged King Tide Is Coming To Wash Away The City
Brooklyn Woman's Death Result Of Feud Between Gangs
As police try to find the suspect whose Friday afternoon shooting from a Brooklyn rooftop left a woman dead and another woman and an 11-year-old girl injured, the slain woman's family remains bereft. Zurana Horton, 34, was killed when picking up a child from P.S. 298 in Brownsville, at Pitkin Avenue and Watkins Street, and apparently died trying to shield other youngsters. One of Horton's children told the Post that she actually walked by the crime scene, not realizing her mother was the victim, "I was wondering where my mother was. I found out later [the body] was my mother. My little sister [Alexis] said, ‘Mommy died. She got shot.’"
Hurricane Bill Couldn't Keep Boards, Blaine Out of the Water
Hurricane Bill washed out one of the last weekends of the summer for most beachgoers after state parks officials closed down most beaches due to the dangerous conditions brought on by effects of the storm. But when surfers got wind of the fact that sea was foaming like a bottle of beer, they simply told the State Parks Department, "The waves are comin', but we ain't got no fear." Officials said that 2,000 surfers, some from as far as California, showed up at Montauk—the most ever counted out there. And one Long Beach manager told Newsday, "You're supposed to have a pass. The surfers refuse to come out of the water when they're waved in to check their beach passes."

