Police Seek Driver in Concourse Hit-And-Run
By David Greene
BRONX, NEW YORK, March 5- Police are looking for the heartless driver who ran-down a 61-year old man who was crossing the busy Grand Concourse.
Investigators were called to the Grand Concourse at Field Place, in the confines of the 46th Precinct, where police and paramedics discovered the victim in the roadway at just before 7 a.m. March 2. The still-unidentified victim was rushed to St. Barnabas Hospital where he remains in grave condition.
Police say the victim was crossing against the light, when the vehicle traveling southbound, struck the man and sped off.
An investigator from the NYPD's Highway One stood in the roadbed and photographed the scene with a 3-D imaging camera as two lanes were shutdown in each direction along the Grand Concourse, between E. 183 Street and E. 184 Street.
A single shoe belonging to the man was left behind on the street.
Detectives working the case are said to be looking for a light colored or gray sedan with front end damage.
Meanwhile, police sources say a Bronx woman is cooperating with investigators and will only face insurance fraud charges, in exchange for her cooperation in locating the driver wanted in connection with a fatal hit-and-run crash in Brooklyn on March 3.
Sources close to the investigation say Bronxite Cindy Jasmin, 31, was questioned by Brooklyn detectives at the 47th Precinct on Sunday, March 3. Jasmin reportedly reported the car stolen and with her cooperation police are now looking for the driver, Julio Acevedo of Brooklyn.
Police say Acevedo was behind the wheel of the 2010 BMW when it struck a taxi carrying a pregnant woman and her husband on Kent Avenue, as they headed to a hospital on Sunday.
The Orthodox couple were killed and their newborn baby died the following day.
Anyone with any information regarding either crash is asked to Call CRIMESTOPPERS at (800) 577-TIPS, and all calls remain confidential.
Translate
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Monday, March 4, 2013
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Heart Like a Lion
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Heart Like a Lion: Medal winners 4 from Lyons Mane S tar in Colgate Games By Michael Horowitz CO-OP CITY, BRONX, NEW YORK, March 4- Four mainstays in the...
Heart Like a Lion
Medal winners
4 from Lyons Mane Star in Colgate Games
By Michael Horowitz
CO-OP CITY, BRONX, NEW YORK, March 4- Four mainstays in the Lyons Mane Track Team emerged with medals in the Colgate Women's Games finals, which were held at the New Balance Track and Field arena in Manhattan.
Lauren Lyons, who has her sights set on a future Olympics berth, emerged in first place in the 200-meter dash, despite a nagging back problem that held her score down in the final round.
Lauren, a vivacious 15-year-old student at Cardinal Spellman High School, compiled a total of 72 points to win the competition in the 200-meter dash and a $1,000 grant for her college education.
Brittany Okon, an 18-year-old student at Bronx Community College, finished first in the 55-meter dash, compiling 68 points in the overall competition for youngsters her age and also winning a $1,000 educational grant.
In the 400-meter dash, Brittany Briggs, a 16-year -old student at the Frederick Douglass Academy High School, accumulated 56 points in the competition for youngsters in her age group, finishing second and winning a $500 educational grant for college.
In the competition for middle-school youngsters, Zuri Straker finished in fourth place in the 55-meter dash, accumulating 40 points in the process.
Donald Lyons, a former track competitor who runs the Lyons Mane Track Club, expressed pride in the accomplishments of the four local youngsters, who won medals in the esteemed Colgate Women's Games competition.
Over the years, Lyons has nurtured the four medal winners, watching them grow in mind, body and spirit.
“I am extremely proud of each of the girls from our club who won medals in this year's Colgate Women's Games competition,” Lyons stressed this week. “The Colgate Women's Games brings together some of the finest female athletes for an extremely spirited competition. I am proud of what all of the youngsters in our group have accomplished in a wide variety of ways.”
To learn more about the Lyons Mane Track Club, contact Donald Lyons at (718) 671-3129.
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Sonia Supreme
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Sonia Supreme: Pride of the Bronx Sonia Sotomayor Writes of her Early Years By Howard Goldin Book review of “My Beloved World” New York: Alfr...
Sonia Supreme
Pride of the Bronx Sonia Sotomayor Writes of her Early Years
By Howard Goldin
Book review of “My Beloved World” New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2013. $27.95
BRONX, NEW YORK, March 3- It is rare that a sitting Supreme Court Justice writes an autobiography/memoir. Sonia Sotomayor, nominated to the Supreme Court in May 2009 by President Barack Obama and approved by the U. S. Senate several months later, has written a volume telling of her life’s experiences until her first judicial appointment in 1992. The book was published in early February 2013.
Her memoir, although it includes her education at Yale Law School, her experiences as Assistant District Attorney in New York County and her subsequent work at a private law firm, does not focus on her judicial philosophy. As she tells the readers, “I know some readers will be inclined to sift this chapter [nineteen] for clues to my jurisprudence. I regret to disappoint them, but that’s not the purpose of this book.” (p. 172).
Most of the story takes place in the Bronx, her place of birth. The names of world famous celebrities are not dropped in the 315 page volume as her early years were peopled by family, friends, neighbors and acquaintances who resided in the Bronx.
Her mother and father, natives of Puerto Rico, were part of a large migration to New York City in the 1940’s. Sotomayor introduces the reader to them and to her many other relatives in the Bronx and in Puerto Rico. Her story, told honestly, tells of individuals who, like all others, are a mixture of good and bad, neither saints nor demons.
The earliest positive influence upon her was her grandmother [Abuelita]. Her grandmother’s upbeat personality, warmth and concern for Sonia were a source of strength and happiness to the young girl and remain a sweet memory to the present.
Although both parents worked, their continual arguments, many caused by her father’s alcoholism, were painful to the young girl and her younger brother, now a physician. During her childhood, her mother’s emotional distance from her, only recently greatly lessened, was another cause of sadness for the youngster.
She fully explains the impact of her Catholic school education at Blessed Sacrament, elementary school, and Cardinal Spellman, High School. As with the experiences with her family and neighborhood, she allows the reader to experience the positive and negative of all facets of her childhood years.
An overriding concern to the young girl and her family was her being stricken with juvenile diabetes. The disease was more mysterious and frightening when Sonia was a child than it is today, and it affected her life up to the present in various ways.
Sotomayor details adult experiences as well as those of her childhood years. She relates her feelings regarding her higher education at Princeton University, a then unusual site for a Latina from the South Bronx. She also details her time at Yale Law School and at her first criminal justice position, Assistant District Attorney in the office of Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau and her work at Pavia & Harcourt, a private law firm. In a more personal vein, she speaks about her marriage and divorce.
Her aspirations to become a lawyer began while being mesmerized watching the television program Perry Mason while a child in the Bronx. They were solidified by her internal thought processing regarding her goals for the future and by individuals who inspired and encouraged her.
Readers who are/were Bronx residents can visualize Sotomayor at places they have seen, the Bronxdale Houses, Co-Op City, stores in Hunt’s Point and Third Avenue at 149th Street, Yankee Stadium, Blessed Sacrament, and Cardinal Spellman. Whether the scenes are familiar or not, the circumstances of her early existence are not unique. With that realization we can more easily fathom the book’s purpose, to inspire and encourage those who only know Sotomayor as one of nine justices on the Supreme Court.
In the preface, she admits she opens her early life and feelings to the public so that “Some readers may find comfort, perhaps even inspiration, from a close examination of how an ordinary person, with strengths and weaknesses like anyone else, has managed an extraordinary journey.” (p. 8).
Sotomayor’s impressive and inspiring life story has struck a chord with readers as her memoir is currently in first place in the New York Times Best Sellers List of hardcover, non-fiction volumes.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Bronx-News-Author-on-the-Fast-Track
Author writes and sells from experience at a rapid pace
By Rich Mancuso
BRONX, NEW YORK, March 2- Author and poet Lucian A. Sperta-Nunez started to write when he was younger. The soon to be 50-year old, and resident of Pelham Bay lost interest in what he was writing because there was that insecurity. Now, 15 years later, a copulation of his poems and works are being published at a rapid pace.
He has published 10 books in less than a year, mostly on Amazon and available on digital, Kindle and paper back. Authors and writers are accustomed to seeing their works culminate with a best seller listing with the New York Times. However, in this era of technology, Sperta is adjusting to getting noticed as a top 100- seller on Amazon.
“I can’t sleep at night,” says the mild mannered author. “I turn off the light, have the pen and pad near me, write, click and save.” With minimal sleep, he prepares, and boards the nearby 6 train on Buhre Avenue at 4am. Then he resumes and writes, on the journey to work as a fulltime care coordinator for the New York Institute of Community Living in East New York.
The job can be a mental challenge. Sperta tends to those addicted with substance abuse, alcohol, and the abused. The day is a challenge and the reward and outlet comes with his writing about topics from past and current experience. Like any writer, the biggest challenge is constant proofreading and frustration when a common typo is missed.
Two of his most recent works, “Fahishah” and “Al-Fitan” are on that Amazon list. The latter is a compilation of Sperta’s poetry of the last year. There are poems in both works that relate to experiences of overcoming addiction and abuse as a child.
Many compilations have appeared in magazines, paper back, and sold in Barnes and Nobles book stores.
Yes, writing to this author is indeed an outlet that is getting noticed. The events and experiences that in his words were, “The angry little kid that was in treatment made me, write poems.” Twice, “Yesterdays Rain” hit the Amazon Top 100, and that was also an accomplishment and unexpected.
“Reviewing these books,” he says, “I never thought it would reach the top 100. I was playing around on my computer, came across Amazon and said ‘Oh my God, my book is there.’” Wars and current event themes are about living his adult life, whereas the ranting and raving come from experiences as an abused child and being “That angry little kid that was in treatment.”
Creativity does play a role in the words and the rapid pace of getting his works published. However, those experiences, more so the present, are quickly putting this author on the map. Currently, Sperta has another work almost complete and he writes frequently about his pet cat, “Pepper.”
He writes about a pigeon in “Fahishah.” The titles of works are unique. “I wanted to get titles that were not common but related to what the book is about,” he says. While some look at pigeons as a nuisance, on his way to work Sperta noticed something that inspired the poem, “Don’t watch Over Me.”
“One flew and another was grieving. One did not leave the other from his side and I wrote a poem and took pictures and was inspired. Maybe it triggered my history of childhood loss. A pigeon was dead talking to a pigeon that was alive. That is how the poem is written.”
One of his favorite recording artists, the late Donna Summer and her song, “MacArthur Park” is based on a poem in “Al-Fitan.” He uses the title of the song in some of the stanzas.
“With my life story going through it,” he says. “It talks about how I was abused. It is a long poem but so deep to write. It brought back to my teenage years of drugs, alcohol and sex and one of those things that was more hard core.”
Yet, writing from experience has become an outlet. “The internet was overwhelmed and I did not have the mindset,” says Sperta. “It was too much and too complicated. and I think now, because I am older and more settled and recovered.”
That partly explains finishing one work and moving on to the next after facing reality that writing was his call to ease the pressure and pain. It has become a second job, more than a hobby and this quiet and reserved author does not seem concerned about the financial reciprocation.
Writing and getting sold on the internet can be an arduous process and getting paid takes time.
“Even if I come up with ten poems, I am going to publish it,” comments Sperta. “Its’ 12:48AM, I got up and a title just came to my head called, “Weeping Willow.” Sometimes I allow the poems to lose themselves. I already wrote two of them. It’s a tree that appears to be sad and glorious at the same time.”
He says, “Sadness like that came to me like, “Boom”….describes where I am, this person who is weeping but strong at the same time.” Sperta continues to work on the 13th chapter of memoirs that describe fear and trembling. And still to be complete, “Missing Time on the 6 Line” that is more than poetry, rather his persona and experiences in the home and on the outside.
“I didn’t want people to see me just as a poet who was going through these trials and tribulations. I wanted people to see my other side. “And of course, Sperta continues to write about “Pepper.”
The writer born in East Harlem can be reached at his web site: http://lsperta.wix.com/alazim or lsperta@optimum.net or on Facebook author and Poet Lucian A. Sperta-Nunez.
Email Rich Mancuso: Ring786@aol.com
By Rich Mancuso
BRONX, NEW YORK, March 2- Author and poet Lucian A. Sperta-Nunez started to write when he was younger. The soon to be 50-year old, and resident of Pelham Bay lost interest in what he was writing because there was that insecurity. Now, 15 years later, a copulation of his poems and works are being published at a rapid pace.
He has published 10 books in less than a year, mostly on Amazon and available on digital, Kindle and paper back. Authors and writers are accustomed to seeing their works culminate with a best seller listing with the New York Times. However, in this era of technology, Sperta is adjusting to getting noticed as a top 100- seller on Amazon.
“I can’t sleep at night,” says the mild mannered author. “I turn off the light, have the pen and pad near me, write, click and save.” With minimal sleep, he prepares, and boards the nearby 6 train on Buhre Avenue at 4am. Then he resumes and writes, on the journey to work as a fulltime care coordinator for the New York Institute of Community Living in East New York.
The job can be a mental challenge. Sperta tends to those addicted with substance abuse, alcohol, and the abused. The day is a challenge and the reward and outlet comes with his writing about topics from past and current experience. Like any writer, the biggest challenge is constant proofreading and frustration when a common typo is missed.
Two of his most recent works, “Fahishah” and “Al-Fitan” are on that Amazon list. The latter is a compilation of Sperta’s poetry of the last year. There are poems in both works that relate to experiences of overcoming addiction and abuse as a child.
Many compilations have appeared in magazines, paper back, and sold in Barnes and Nobles book stores.
Yes, writing to this author is indeed an outlet that is getting noticed. The events and experiences that in his words were, “The angry little kid that was in treatment made me, write poems.” Twice, “Yesterdays Rain” hit the Amazon Top 100, and that was also an accomplishment and unexpected.
“Reviewing these books,” he says, “I never thought it would reach the top 100. I was playing around on my computer, came across Amazon and said ‘Oh my God, my book is there.’” Wars and current event themes are about living his adult life, whereas the ranting and raving come from experiences as an abused child and being “That angry little kid that was in treatment.”
Creativity does play a role in the words and the rapid pace of getting his works published. However, those experiences, more so the present, are quickly putting this author on the map. Currently, Sperta has another work almost complete and he writes frequently about his pet cat, “Pepper.”
He writes about a pigeon in “Fahishah.” The titles of works are unique. “I wanted to get titles that were not common but related to what the book is about,” he says. While some look at pigeons as a nuisance, on his way to work Sperta noticed something that inspired the poem, “Don’t watch Over Me.”
“One flew and another was grieving. One did not leave the other from his side and I wrote a poem and took pictures and was inspired. Maybe it triggered my history of childhood loss. A pigeon was dead talking to a pigeon that was alive. That is how the poem is written.”
One of his favorite recording artists, the late Donna Summer and her song, “MacArthur Park” is based on a poem in “Al-Fitan.” He uses the title of the song in some of the stanzas.
“With my life story going through it,” he says. “It talks about how I was abused. It is a long poem but so deep to write. It brought back to my teenage years of drugs, alcohol and sex and one of those things that was more hard core.”
Yet, writing from experience has become an outlet. “The internet was overwhelmed and I did not have the mindset,” says Sperta. “It was too much and too complicated. and I think now, because I am older and more settled and recovered.”
That partly explains finishing one work and moving on to the next after facing reality that writing was his call to ease the pressure and pain. It has become a second job, more than a hobby and this quiet and reserved author does not seem concerned about the financial reciprocation.
Writing and getting sold on the internet can be an arduous process and getting paid takes time.
“Even if I come up with ten poems, I am going to publish it,” comments Sperta. “Its’ 12:48AM, I got up and a title just came to my head called, “Weeping Willow.” Sometimes I allow the poems to lose themselves. I already wrote two of them. It’s a tree that appears to be sad and glorious at the same time.”
He says, “Sadness like that came to me like, “Boom”….describes where I am, this person who is weeping but strong at the same time.” Sperta continues to work on the 13th chapter of memoirs that describe fear and trembling. And still to be complete, “Missing Time on the 6 Line” that is more than poetry, rather his persona and experiences in the home and on the outside.
“I didn’t want people to see me just as a poet who was going through these trials and tribulations. I wanted people to see my other side. “And of course, Sperta continues to write about “Pepper.”
The writer born in East Harlem can be reached at his web site: http://lsperta.wix.com/alazim or lsperta@optimum.net or on Facebook author and Poet Lucian A. Sperta-Nunez.
Email Rich Mancuso: Ring786@aol.com
Friday, March 1, 2013
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Riverdale-Jaspers-baseball
Bronx News (Bxnews.net): Riverdale-Jaspers-baseball: Jasper Named Top-30 Candidate for Senior CLASS Award RIVERDALE, NEW YORK, March 1- Manhattan College second baseman Nick Camastro (...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)