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Good morning on this brisk Tuesday.

You know the look.

No scarf, gloves, or hat. Hands balled in pockets.

For the city’s cold-weather deniers, winter is over: They refuse to bundle up anymore, even as temperatures hover around freezing.

“After that first warm day, I was pretty much done,” said Amelia Lembeck, as she walked near Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn yesterday afternoon.

The 22-year-old wore a thin coat, with nothing but the cables of her earbuds around her neck.

She blamed her aversion to winter accessories on her internship duties, which include sorting through the lost and found of three Broadway theaters.

“I just want hats-and-gloves season to be over,” she said.

It was not over yesterday.

It was in the mid 30s, about 15 degrees below normal for this time of year.

Enrico Bazzoni, another denier, wore only a light jacket. His shirt was unbuttoned at the neck.

“I only wore gloves once this year, and a scarf — I don’t wear a scarf,” said the 72-year-old retired chef, as he strolled through Carroll Gardens. “It’s not necessary.”

“It’s beautiful today,” he added. “Fantastic.”

Liz Covington, 28, had forgotten “hat, gloves, scarf, everything,” when she left Bushwick yesterday morning.

She, at least, acknowledged the temperature.

“It’s cold, yeah,” she said. “But I’m over it. We need spring.”

Her sneakers and tennis socks left some skin exposed, for the cause.

Under a new tattoo, her ankle was turning the color of a cherry blossom in the cold.

Read the full story on the city’s cold-weather deniers.

And here’s what else is happening:

WEATHER

Much like yesterday: cold and clear, with a high of 39.

Wednesday should be warmer, and sunny for a spell, before clouds gather and wring out a few showers.

COMING UP TODAY

• Ken Burns talks about the soon-to-air PBS documentary, “Cancer: The Emperor of All Maladies,” at Columbia University. 9:30 a.m. [Livestream]

• A demonstration at Federal Plaza to call for the release of immigrant women and children held at detention facilities in Texas. Noon.

• Chirlane McCray and Chiara de Blasio announce NYC Teen Text, a mental health resource for teens, at Millennium High School in Park Slope. 2 p.m.

• A tour of “Life of Cats,” featuring 90 feline woodblock portraits from the Edo period, at the Japan Society. 2:30 p.m. [$12]

• Students are invited to don 19th-century costumes at a reception for the Met Opera’s “Lucia di Lammermoor.” 6:30 p.m. [$35 for opera tickets, R.S.V.P. for reception]

• A geneticist talks about the 637 species of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and microscopic animals he found on the subway, at the Bell House in Gowanus. 8 p.m. [Free]

• It’s “Mad Men” Dining Week. More than 30 restaurants offer a discounted two-course lunch, or its liquid equivalent, as a farewell to the series. [$19.69]

• Rangers host Kings, 7 p.m. (MSG). Islanders host Wild, 7 p.m. (MSG+).

• For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

COMMUTE

• Subway and PATH

• Railroads: L.I.R.R., Metro-North, N.J. Transit, Amtrak

• Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.

• Alternate-side parking: in effect until April 2, weather permitting.

• Ferries: Staten Island Ferry, New York Waterway, East River Ferry

• Airports: La Guardia, J.F.K., Newark

IN THE NEWS

• Robert A. Durst was denied bail at a four-hour hearing in New Orleans that revealed even more about the subject of “The Jinx.” [New York Times]

• Seven children who died in a Brooklyn fire last weekend were buried in Jerusalem. [New York Times]

• A woman who fell between subway cars on a 1 train in Manhattan became the seventh person to be struck and killed by subway trains this year. [New York Post]

• The new No. 7 line station on the Far West Side of Manhattan will not open until July. [New York Times]

• The city’s new rules for licensed day cares include a limit on how much juice children can drink. [Daily News]

• The last black bank in New York City is struggling to survive in Harlem. [Crain’s New York]

• The city may reclaim nearly $2 million in Hurricane Sandy aid from a maraschino cherry factory after hundreds of marijuana plants were found in its basement. [New York Post]

• An unexpectedly grand sewage pumping station in Gravesend, Brooklyn has been renovated to help clean nearby waterways. [New York Times]

• Scoreboard: Grizzlies attack Knicks, 103-82. Celtics knot Nets, 110-91. Kings cast out Devils, 3-1.

• For a global look at what’s happening, see Your Tuesday Briefing.

AND FINALLY …

Thomas DiFiore, 71, one of several aging gangsters whose cases are in federal district court in Brooklyn, will be sentenced today on an unlawful debt collection charge.

Mr. DiFiore was for a time “the highest-ranking member of the Bonanno organized crime family not behind bars, despite a long record of arrests on charges of kidnapping, assault, promoting gambling and extortion,” The Times reported.

“He is one of the ‘oldfellas,’ Mafiosi whose lives of crime seem to have succumbed as much to the ravages of age as to the relentlessness of federal prosecutors.”

Mr. DiFiore has been describing his medical regimen for the judge; prosecutors acknowledge his health problems but have asked for about a two-year sentence.

Stephanie Clifford and Kenneth Rosen contributed reporting.

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