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QC10162014

16 The QUEE NS Courier • october 16, 2014 for breaking news visit www.queenscourier.com COMMUNITY RALLIES TO FIND DRIVER IN QUEENS BOULEVARD HIT-AND-RUN BY ANGY ALTAMIRANO aaltamirano@queenscourier.com @aaltamirano28 A Woodside community is looking for the driver involved in a hit-and-run on Queens Boulevard that has left one man clinging to life. According to officials, on Oct. 9 at about 1:35 a.m., the victim, who is still unidentified, was struck on the westbound center lane of Queens Boulevard and 60th Street by a dark-colored Ford SUV as he attempted to cross the thoroughfare. The driver fled the scene. Currently the victim, described as a Hispanic male in his 20s or 30s, is in critical but stable condition at Elmhurst Hospital, authorities said. Members of the surrounding Woodside neighborhood gathered on Oct. 10 at the intersection to call on the public to help identify the driver involved in the incident. “The person that struck the young man and left him to die on this street should turn themselves in right away and face the consequences of his/her actions, because what this person did was leave a young man to die,” Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer said. “It’s one of the worst things that one human being can do to another.” Van Bramer’s Justice for Hit-and-Run Victims Act, created after the councilman’s district faced three fatal hit-andruns last year, was signed into law on Oct. 6 by Mayor Bill de Blasio. It allows the city to establish civil penalties of up to $10,000 to drivers who are found guilty of fleeing the scene of a hit-and-run. The bill will take effect starting Dec. 29. “Accidents are horrible and terribly unfortunate,” said Jerry LoMonte, resident of the Big Six Towers co-op apartment buildings, located across the street from the collision site. “Leaving the scene of the accident is horrible and criminal, and we need to protect ourselves against that.” Also present at the Friday morning rally was Elizabeth O’Hara, director of Towers Play-N-Learn nursery school, which is also located across the street of where the hit-and-run occurred. She was joined by six students holding signs that read “Please Slow Down, I have small feet,” and “Please stop at the crosswalk.” O’Hara asked drivers to slow down while driving on Queens Boulevard and to stop at the crosswalk before getting to the red light. “At various times Queens Boulevard has been referred to as the Boulevard of Death but the truth is Queens Boulevard is surrounded by life,” Van Bramer said. “We have got to come to a place where A Woodside community is looking for the driver involved in a hitand run on Queens Boulevard that has left one man clinging to life. THE COURIER/Photo by Angy Altamirano this boulevard is no longer viewed as the Boulevard of Death but instead the Boulevard of Life.” The hit-and-run investigation is still ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 800-577-TIPS (8477). The public can also submit their tips by logging onto the Crime Stoppers website or can text their tips to CRIMES (274637), then enter TIP577. All calls are strictly confidential. KOREAN CULTURE CELEBRATED IN KISSENA PARK DURING ‘SENIOR OLYMPICS’ BY ERIC JANKIEWICZ ejankiewicz@queenscourier.com/@ericjankiewicz Hundreds of elderly Korean Americans gathered in Kissena Park on Oct. 10 to celebrate their culture with music, food and a series of games called the “senior Olympics.” “It’s a great event to get all the seniors together in an outdoors environment,” said Christina Choy, president of the YWCA of Queens. The YWCA, which was started by Korean-American families in the 1970s, hosted the event, and this was the 17th year the event was held. “They’re all here to enjoy the event, get a free lunch and celebrate the Korean culture,” Choy said. She began to explain the need for outdoor activities when she spotted U.S. Rep. Grace Meng in the crowd. “Oh my God, is that Meng? She’s kind of famous for us. She married a Korean,” Choy said before running off to ogle Meng. Five hundred seniors, walkers and all, prepared for the Olympic games with a lunch provided by the YWCA while three Korean woman played national Korean folk music. The day’s events consisted of 10 games, including a Korean one where the player throws arrows into a bucket. THE COURIER/Photo by Eric Jankiewicz


QC10162014
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