New York Photos of the Week
In McCarren Park, aerialist Seanna Sharpe instructs Millie Biswas during a cloud trapeze class. (Daniella Zalcman for The Wall Street Journal)
New York police near the scene of shooting on the boardwalk in Brooklyn' Brighton Beach in which one woman was killed and four men were wounded on Thursday evening. (Michael Nagle for The Wall Street Journal)
Santiago Granda dips his dog in water spraying from a fire hydrant in Williamsburg, Brooklyn on Wednesday. (Philip Montgomery for The Wall Street Journal)
David Tankersley played with his Cavalier King Charles spaniel 'Harley Davidson" on the Hudson River Greenway near West 145th Street in Manhattan Monday. (Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal)
The scallops, photographed at The The Dutch located at 131 Sullivan Street in New York, NY. (Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal)
U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner (D., N.Y.) addressed a news conference in New York, Monday. Mr. Weiner admitted sending sexually suggestive photographs to women online but said he doesn't plan to resign from Congress because of the scandal. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)
Tourists disembarked from The Beast after a high-speed ride from 42nd Street to the Statue of Liberty, powered by jet engines that let the boat perform all sorts of fast loops and 360-degree turns. (Daniella Zalcman for The Wall Street Journal )
'Best Buddies Friendship Bear," a piece of pop art by Romero Britto, brightened the plaza in front of the Time Warner Building in Manhattan' Columbus Circle after its unveiling at the location Wednesday. (Natalie Keyssar for The Wall Street Journal)
A school bus stopped in the middle of South 2nd Street in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn to allow children to get sprayed by water from a broken fire hydrant Friday. It is predicted that temperatures will reach 96 degrees fahrenheit by days end throughout the Greater New York area. (Philip Montgomery for The Wall Street Journal)
A boy walked past a dead fin whale that washed up in Atlantic Beach, N.Y., Wednesday. Scientists performed a necropsy Thursday on the whale and found it likely was hit by a ship. (Zuma Press)
Jamie Gleason, a Citywide Monuments Conservation intern, worked on the Temperance Fountain in Tompkins Square Park Thursday in New York. (Michael Nagle for The Wall Street Journal)
Alexander and Andres Grayson check out a simulated crime scene at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice' CSI Experience Booth on Sunday. The booth was part of the 2011 World Science Festival Street Fair in Washington Square Park. (Natalie Keyssar for The Wall Street Journal)
A worker Tuesday surveys the completed Rainbow City at the High Line park' newly opened second section. (Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal)
Filmaker Marc Singer in his Brooklyn Heights apartment this week. 'Dark Dyas" will open July 1, at Cinema Village. (Natalie Keyssar for The Wall Street Journal)
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