Kathleen King

Kathleen King passed away on Saturday, July 17, 2021 at the age of 64. Beloved Mother of Lisa Riccardo and Joseph Pizzonia, mother-in-law of Louis and Natalie. Cherished Grandmother of Brooke, Avery, Kendall, Milania, Audrina and Delaney. Loving Sister of Ann, Patricia, Teresa, Geraldine, Thomas, Danny, Robert and the late John. Dear Aunt of many loving nieces and nephews. Mass of Christian Burial offered at Miraculous Medal Church on Wednesday, July 21, 2021 10:30 AM. Interment followed at Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Griffin, Arthur J. (Deacon)

Beloved husband of the late Ann T. Griffin, loving brother of Maureen Griffin and John Griffin, brother-in-law of the late Joan Griffin and Alice Quinn, dear adopted father of Sean Gannon, and cherished companion of Carmella Dolfi.

Arthur was born on December 6, 1941 to Elizabeth & John Griffin. He attended St. Mary’s Winfield Catholic School in Woodside, N.Y. and then graduated from Bishop Loughlin HS. He entered into the Christian Brothers, but later left to obtain his Masters Degree from Manhattan College and Fordham University.

Art worked as a teacher at Christ the King Regional HS in Middle Village, NY. After leaving, he worked at the Joseph P. Kennedy home, where he and his wife, Ann, helped find many working positions for children who lived there. He worked for many years as a counselor for Catholic Charities, helping people with addictions, homelessness and offering assistance to those in need.

Art was ordained a Catholic Deacon and was assigned to Transfiguration Church in Maspeth, N.Y. There, he helped form “Project HOPE” – an acronym for Help Our People Eat. Here, he organized a great group of men and women to make sandwiches and deliver food to people on the streets of Maspeth, Elmhurst and Woodside. He was able to get community groups and businesses to contribute to the project. In his words, he was fulfilling Christ’s orders – “feed my people, take care of the poor.”

Art was a proud member of the County Tyrone Society, marching in every St. Patrick’s Day Parade along Fifth Avenue in Manhattan from age 5 through 77. All of the neighbors on 66th Street could hear him practicing his fife the week before the 17th of March each year.

He loved life, God and sports. He ran the NYC Marathon in his early days, continued to play softball with the over-70 group in Nassau County, and still bowled weekly with Catholic Charities. He leaves behind a loving family and friends, extending from the US to England. Ireland and Spain.

Mass of Christian Burial offered at Transfiguration Church on Monday, July 19, 2021 at 9:30 AM. Interment followed at St. Andrew’s Cemetery, Sag Harbor, NY under the direction of Papavero Funeral Home, 72-27 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, NY 11378.

Local artist draws inspiration from Aztec Two-step 2.0

She has a website with over 100 greeting cards and numerous books. Over the course of her career, she’s sold thousands of greeting cards. For Rosie Rinsler, being an artist isn’t just a profession but a lifestyle that she’s cultivated over the course of her entire life.

“Art is my passion, my joy, my love and my therapy,” said Rinsler, who does whimsical, up-beat, colorful, and detailed artwork. “I have three missions in life; to be a successful artist, to make the love of my life happy and help people with mental illness – to give them inspiration and let them know that life can still be beautiful.”

It started out as just a way for her to build some income on the side about twenty years ago. Rinsler and her partner started out with a printer, cutting machine, envelopes, and a bright idea. Her thought was that large art pieces take a lot of time to produce and need to match the decorum of a room, but greetings cards have universal appeal and people always need them. “They don’t have to match anything and instead of buying just one, they might grab 10 or 20.”

Aztec two-step 2.0 is her favorite band of all time and she used to frequently send them greeting cards as a gift. One day, the lead musician came up to Rosie and commissioned her to make a psychedelic, 60s-esque drawing as cover artwork for their new album. Rinsler said, “I came home and worked for hours and hours until I made seven different album covers for them to choose from.”

The album is comprised of songs written by the classic duo Simon and Garfunkel, reimagined in a new way. The band started playing songs in 1972 and Rinsler would begin seeing them a year later after she heard about them while taking art classes at Cornell University. She was only 15 years old at the time.

Rex Fowler and Neal Shulman, the band’s two musicians, started the folk-rock duo after a chance meeting during an open stage at a Boston coffee house. They’ve produced numerous songs and spent a lifetime of making music together. He spoke highly of Rinsler, stating “I’m a huge fan of Rosie’s work. Her art is whimsical and uplifting in a way that has a 60’s sensibility, which is where our music is rooted.”

The band has been an inspiration to Rinsler throughout her entire artistic career. One of the musicians in Aztec two-step 2.0 was also part of another band called The Nutopians that produced covers of John Lennon music. She made greeting cards for them as well. Rinsler said, “They would call me every week – tell me they sold like hotcakes – and ask me to send more.”

Queensboro FC names Andres Emilio Soto of Modern Spaces official real estate broker

As preparation continues for Queensboro FC’s inaugural 2022 season, the incoming USL club is focused on building a field of local partnerships and connections. One of the most recent is a unique kind of partnership, naming Andres Emilio Soto the club’s official real estate broker.
Andres is the Senior Managing Director of Modern Spaces, a LIC-based real estate group. The partnership will highlight Modern Spaces, with discounts for QBFC fans on Andres’ services. Proceeds will be donated to the Jamaica Center for the Arts and Learning (JCAL), an arts center for accessible arts education in Queens.
“I am really excited about this partnership! I’m able to merge my life-long passion for soccer, and my career, real estate, into one amazing opportunity,” said Andres Emilio Soto. “Queensboro FC is building something very special in Queens and it’s amazing to be part of it.”
Soto is a Queens native, raised in Jackson Heights. “My dad is from Colombia and my mom is from Argentina, so by default I had to play soccer,” he said. “I started to play in the leagues around Queens, and played for College Point United in the Long Island Junior Soccer League, one of the few Queens teams.”
Soto jumped around the borough, playing for multiple high schools and academy teams. His love of soccer has continued throughout his life, and he became a Queensboro FC ambassador, a group of volunteers that meet with QBFC staff and offer ideas as the club continues to grow.
“The ambassador program is a volunteer job that meets bi-weekly with the club. They fill us in with news and ask for hard feedback about what we think the club should do. It’s our job to spread the good word about Queensboro FC,” said Soto.
The ambassador program is a great place for partnerships to grow as well. When he got to meet some members of the front office, Soto got right to the point.
“I’ve been in real estate for 15 years, 90% of my work is in Queens, and I’m a massive soccer fan,” he told them. “Let’s make something happen.”
The biggest aspect of Andres’ role with the club is providing education and information about real estate in the borough and city.
“A lot of people reach out to me to buy homes, and when I start asking them certain questions, they don’t know how to answer,” he said. “I’m happy to provide as much help as I can for free, because it should be free. Everyone should have an equal playing field.”
Affordable housing and accessibility have been big issues in Queens, and the partnership between Queensboro FC and Modern Spaces will be a useful tool in getting information to people, especially in an area as diverse and expansive as Queens.
Andres will run open informational sessions about the do’s and don’ts of real estate, and will teach how to market yourself whether you are selling, buying or renting. “I look forward to helping everyone with all their real estate needs and to giving back to the borough I was born and raised in,” said Soto.

Brooklyn Public Library launches ‘Brooklyn Resists’ lecture series

This past Wednesday, the Brooklyn Public Library in collaboration with the Center for Brooklyn History held the first event in the ‘Brooklyn Resists’ series. The series is designed to be a public history initiative, drawing Brooklynites into critical conversations about American history through a number of virtual roundtable discussions with experts throughout the summer.

Wednesday’s event was titled “A Look at Reparations” and featured an in-depth conversation about national, local, and individual plans that could help repair the inequalities wrought by slavery in the United States.

The event featured three well-respected panelists: Robin Sue Simmons, the commissioner of the National African American Reparations Commission and a former Illinois City Councilwoman who instituted a reparations program; Marcia Chatelain, a Georgetown University Professor who studies slavery, memory, and reconciliation; and David Ragland, a non-profit organizer and pastor. The program was moderated by Aaron Morrison, an award-winning multimedia journalist and national race and ethnicity writer for The Associated Press.

“Today’s lecture looks to unpack an intense and emotional conversation,” explained Marcia Ely, the Vice President of the Center for Brooklyn History and one of the organizers behind the ‘Brooklyn Resists’ series. “What do reparations look like now with such a wide range of forms, putting down roots in pockets across the country. What might they look like in the future? Whose job is it to untangle the messy set of questions involved.”

Throughout the event, the panelists discussed the symbolic need for reparations and the tangible change that such programs could bring about.

“I think a reparations framework has to start with an acknowledgement of a harm,” Professor Chatelain said. “But there also has to be an understanding that harm can never be fully repaid, and that motivates the flexibility to try to achieve something in one’s lifetime.”

Chatelain continued: “The two examples that are often used in conversations about the precedent for reparations are the tragedy of the Holocaust and the responsibility that the German government took for it. It isn’t about putting a value on harm but it’s also about making sure that one can’t forget that harm happened. In the United States the example we often point to are the victims of Japanese incarceration during World War II who received reparations.”

Robin Sue Simmons built on the idea, discussing her experience passing a reparations bill in Illinois that used money from a new cannabis sales tax to supply affordable housing to those affected by redlining.

“We had to look very hyper local so that our reparations policy was specific to our town,” Simmons said. “We are now moving forward in a reparative way. I hope other communities can do something similar.”

David Ragland agreed, saying: “I think people simply have too limited an idea of what reparations mean. We talk about how reparations can repay the moral harm of slavery but also remedy the institutions that still perpetuate that harm today. There is a cost to racism and we are squandering our potential as a nation by keeping people down.”

At the talk’s conclusion, the panelists encouraged listeners to continue the conversation by visiting the National African-American Reparations Commission website (https://reparationscomm.org/ ) and reading the bill currently proposed by the House of Representatives to study reparations (H.R. 40).

An entire recording of the event is available on the Center for Brooklyn History facebook page.

Future events in the ‘Brooklyn Resists’ series will focus on the Civil War, the Civil Rights Movement, and the recent Black Lives Matter movement. Currently the events are scheduled to be held virtually, but the Brooklyn Public Library hopes to organize some in-person panels in the near future.

Make or Break Time

It’s been well documented in this column and throughout town that the New York Yankees have been baseball’s disappointment in the first half of the 2021 season.
The Yankees issues are well documented.
They are too reliant on right-handed power and lack the athleticism and balance that is needed to field a championship team in 2021.
Despite their obvious flaws and issues, the Yankees have a pulse because of two reasons: a winning West Coast road trip and the fact that Major League Baseball has two Wild Card teams.
The Yankees are 4.5 games behind the Oakland A’s for the second Wild Card and eight games back of the Boston Red Sox in the American League East.
Personally, I don’t see a viable path for the Yankees overcoming the deficit in the division. However, if you want to hold onto that dream, pay close attention over the next two-and-a-half weeks.
Coming out of the All-Star break, the Yankees will play the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays eleven times before the month of August.
If the Yankees have any prayer of making the division race competitive, they have to play their best baseball of the season starting on Thursday.
The Yankees need a big second half if they’re to simply qualify for the postseason, because in the first half, they’ve were nowhere close to resembling a playoff team.
Think about three of their losses right before the All-Star break. In the soul-crushing losses the Yankees yucked up not one, not two, but three ninth-inning leads, including leads of four and five runs against the Angels and Astros, respectively.
To add insult to injury, the other loss was against the crosstown Mets.
It will be difficult to change the fabric of the Yankees lineup midseason, but it’s time to see if the team that was supposed to slug their way to the American League pennant can actually find a way to do exactly that.
There is no tomorrow, not just for Yankees manager Aaron Boone, but for this Yankee core as we know it. By the end of July, you’ll know as a fan if there will be an August or September worth fighting for.
Put up or shut up time indeed.

You can listen to my podcast “New York, New York” on The Ringer Podcast Network, which can be found on Spotify and Apple Podcasts every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning.

Pete Alonso defends his Home Run Derby crown

Major league Baseball’s All-Star Break festivities got underway in Denver, Colorado on Monday night, with some of the league’s biggest bats facing off in the Home Run Derby. After last year’s ASG and derby were cancelled due to the pandemic, Mets slugger Pete Alonso looked to defend his 2019 title against a field of new challengers.
With the event taking place high in the Rocky Mountains, baseballs were sure to fly out of the park at record paces, distances, and speeds.
In the first round, Alonso was matched up with Salvador Perez of the Kansas City Royals and the two displayed just how far the ball could fly. Alonso started off on fire, absolutely destroying every ball, setting a record for homers in the first round with an incredible 35. Perez put up a valiant effort and impressed with 27, but it wasn’t enough to get him past the defending champion.
In the following first-round matchup, Angels sensation Shohei Ohtani took on Nationals youngster Juan Soto, with the winner playing Alonso for a spot in the finals.
Ohtani ran away with the All-Star Break headlines, taking part in the derby only to start on the mound and lead off for the AL in Tuesday’s game.
Soto was up to the challenge, as both hit 22 balls out of the park and another six out in the one-minute bonus round. The winner was decided in the first ever “swing-off,” with each getting three swings to add to their total.
Soto came up clutch, hitting all three of his chances over the wall. Ohtani missed on his first swing, ending the round.
In the semifinals, the two heavy-hitting NL East stars faced off, but Alonso was already in his groove while Soto was tired from his first round. He only managed 15 homers, not nearly enough to put him past Alonso, who stepped up to the plate dancing to his music, ready to swing for the fences. He truly made Coors Field his own as he pumped up the crowd and got them cheering for him as got ready for his hacks.
It didn’t take long for Alonso to eclipse Soto, hitting 16 balls into the crowd to punch a ticket to the final round. His opponent would be Baltimore’s Trey Mancini, who continued one of baseball’s most remarkable comeback stories.
Mancini overcame stage-3 colon cancer and at many times thought he’d never step on the field again. Now after beating cancer and making a comeback, he took part in the derby in front of a packed stadium cheering him on.
Mancini didn’t seem to expect to keep pace with Alonso, but he shocked everyone with an incredible 22-home-run round to end his night. Alonso stepped up to take his final hacks, but by the end of his bonus time he had hit 23 to clinch a second straight title.
Alonso and Mancini hugged at the plate, congratulating each other for their great contest. Alonso held his trophy high, the third player to repeat as champion. We’ll have to see if he’ll return next year, as he eyes a “Three-Pete” to tie Ken Griffey Jr.’s record of three Derby wins.

Make or Break Time

It’s been well documented in this column and throughout town that the New York Yankees have been baseball’s disappointment in the first half of the 2021 season.
The Yankees issues are well documented.
They are too reliant on right-handed power and lack the athleticism and balance that is needed to field a championship team in 2021.
Despite their obvious flaws and issues, the Yankees have a pulse because of two reasons: a winning West Coast road trip and the fact that Major League Baseball has two Wild Card teams.
The Yankees are 4.5 games behind the Oakland A’s for the second Wild Card and eight games back of the Boston Red Sox in the American League East.
Personally, I don’t see a viable path for the Yankees overcoming the deficit in the division. However, if you want to hold onto that dream, pay close attention over the next two-and-a-half weeks.
Coming out of the All-Star break, the Yankees will play the Boston Red Sox and Tampa Bay Rays eleven times before the month of August.
If the Yankees have any prayer of making the division race competitive, they have to play their best baseball of the season starting on Thursday.
The Yankees need a big second half if they’re to simply qualify for the postseason, because in the first half, they’ve were nowhere close to resembling a playoff team.
Think about three of their losses right before the All-Star break. In the soul-crushing losses the Yankees yucked up not one, not two, but three ninth-inning leads, including leads of four and five runs against the Angels and Astros, respectively.
To add insult to injury, the other loss was against the crosstown Mets.
It will be difficult to change the fabric of the Yankees lineup midseason, but it’s time to see if the team that was supposed to slug their way to the American League pennant can actually find a way to do exactly that.
There is no tomorrow, not just for Yankees manager Aaron Boone, but for this Yankee core as we know it. By the end of July, you’ll know as a fan if there will be an August or September worth fighting for.
Put up or shut up time indeed.

You can listen to my podcast “New York, New York” on The Ringer Podcast Network, which can be found on Spotify and Apple Podcasts every Monday, Wednesday & Friday morning.

Staying healthy while traveling

The benefits of travel are enumerable, and I’m seeing many social media posts from friends and family who are venturing back onto planes and trains this summer. However, as anyone who has traveled in the past 10 years knows, travel has always had its downsides, even pre-pandemic.

What increases the risk of catching a virus or infection during air and train travel?
Surprisingly, it’s not what you may think. Most people tend to focus on the air quality. While it’s true that infections can be spread through air droplets, a plane’s air is actually filtered more than a movie theater’s or sporting event venue’s.
According to a study in 2007 by Charles Gerba, professor of environment microbiology at the University of Arizona, it’s the surfaces on the airplane that create the greatest risk of picking up bacteria and viruses. The surfaces that harbor the most microbial pathogens are tray tables, bathrooms, and seats – especially arm rests.
If you could avoid contact with your face after touching the surfaces on an airplane, you could significantly reduce transmission. However, it is almost impossible not to touch your face.
In medical school, during one lab, the professor put a powder that could only be seen with UV lighting on our books. At the end of class, the professor used an ultraviolet light and confirmed that everyone had touched their face at least once – and most of us repeatedly.

Preventing viruses and infections
The most reasonable approach is to carry antimicrobial wipes to clean the surfaces of the hand rests and tray tables. Wash your hands after using the bathroom. Use hand sanitizers before you eat. You might also put a napkin over the tray table to avoid touching the surface.
Fortunately, most infections are not life-threatening, but rather a short-term inconvenience.

Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE) risks
More serious is a DVT, which is also referred to as “economy class syndrome,” because it occurs most often when sitting for long periods of time in cramped spaces. The risk of a DVT is increased by as much as two to four times on long-haul flights.
DVTs are more likely for travelers who have other risk factors, such as obesity, heart failure, cancer, increased age or recent major surgery. A 2001 New England Journal of Medicine study found that flights greater than 3600 miles cause increased risk of a DVT and PE. This limits the risk to mostly international flights and those traveling from the east coast to Hawaii. Unfortunately, DVTs and PEs can be life-threatening, if untreated.

Prevention of DVTs
When on a flight of more than five hours, make sure you walk or move around every one to two hours. Hydration is also critical to decrease clot risk. Another easy solution is below the knee compression stockings, which have been shown to decrease risk dramatically.

What about the role of stress?
Travel increases stress for many. Acute stress tends to increase the risk of hypercoagulability, or clots, and thus the risk of cardiovascular disease.
Chronic stress may also cause people to be more susceptible to infection, including the common cold.
Biofeedback, which involves deep breathing and meditation, is a great way to reduce both chronic and acute stress while traveling.
Though there are no guarantees, take these precautions to minimize the risks of infection, DVT/PE and increased stress. Also, take it to heart the next time you hear the captain and flight attendants tell you to sit back, relax and enjoy the trip.

Health equity requires diversity in clinical trials

Covid-19 has laid bare America’s health inequities.
More than one in 555 Black Americans have died from Covid-19, according to the latest data from APM Research Lab. Latino Americans are about twice as likely to die from the virus as whites.
Countless health and economic disparities contribute to this unequal toll. Fixing these inequalities will require systemic changes across our society.
One important place to get started is clinical trials, studies in which scientists test a new drug or medical device on people to evaluate whether it’s effective. Ensuring that diverse groups are included in clinical trials leads to a better understanding of how a therapy will work. Without that knowledge, people of color end up at an even greater loss.
Lacking access to clinical trials can also have a direct impact on an individual’s health. For patients with aggressive diseases like advanced-stage cancer, sometimes a trial drug offers the best shot at a longer life.
Communities of color have historically faced barriers to trial participation, with African Americans, who make up about 13 percent of the U.S. population, accounting for only 5 percent of enrollment in clinical trials. Latinos make up 18 percent of the population, but only 1 percent of participants.
Luckily, using lessons learned from the pandemic, drug and diagnostic companies are exploring ways to reach under-represented communities. Covid-19 vaccine makers Moderna, for instance, slowed down clinical trial enrollment to increase representation of minority groups. Pfizer increased its trial size to include more minorities.
Ultimately, Black and Latino enrollment in both trials came close to their share of the total U.S. population.
This bolstered confidence that the vaccines would work across all demographics. Being able to point to diverse representation helps reassure communities that may be skeptical about receiving the vaccine, which is essential to ending this pandemic.
While Covid-19 vaccine trials mark progress towards equity, there is more that companies, research institutions, and regulators can do.
More trial organizers could make participation logistically easier. Ideas include shipping drugs to patients’ homes and gathering results through online reporting or wearable technology.
Documenting minority representation in clinical trials should also become standard practice. Between 2011 and 2020, most clinical trials reported the age and sex of all of their participants, but only 58 percent reported race, and just 34 percent reported ethnicity, according to a February JAMA study.
Federal agencies like the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration could develop policies and processes that expand clinical trial sites and trialists, implement innovative clinical development tools and approaches to help companies meet diversity benchmarks and communicate meaningful demographic information to regulators, patients and physicians.
Finally, the biotech industry needs to diversify its own workforce. Last year, the Biotechnology Innovation Organization published its first-ever report on diversity in the industry, finding that only 16 percent of companies had women CEOs and just 11 percent had non-white CEOs.
Building a more diverse biotech workforce calls for educational investments to attract diverse students to science, technology, engineering, and math. At companies, it will require new hiring practices, mentoring programs to support diverse future leaders, and policies that reward woman- and minority-owned businesses in the supply chain.
We’ve come far, but we can – and must – do better. Last year will be remembered as one of the most challenging in our lifetimes. Let’s make this one memorable for bringing true diversity to biomedical research.

Dr. Michelle McMurry-Heath is the president and CEO of the Biotechnology Innovation Organization. Rahul Dhanda is the president and CEO of Sherlock Biosciences.

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