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8 The QUEE NS Courier • october 23, 2014 for breaking news visit www.queenscourier.com Queens ‘Zombie Ride’ to encourage safe biking BY ANGY ALTAMIRANO aaltamirano@queenscourier.com/@aaltamirano28 Wheels big and small will be going round and round this weekend through western Queens. Advocacy organization Kidical Mass NYC will be hosting its third family bike ride and the first in Queens on Saturday, Oct. 25, through parts of Long Island City and Astoria. The event, called “Zombie Ride,” will be a five-mile bike ride starting at the waterfront at Gantry Plaza State Park at the intersection of Center Boulevard and 47th Avenue. The ride is open to intermediate-level bike riders or children ages 7 and up with good street-riding skills. Children in baby seats and on cargo bikes are also welcome LAGUARDIA NOW $2 OFF Expires 12/31/14 With coupon only $2 OFF Any Ride To Manhattan/Queens Minimum $20 Not to be combined with any other offer NEWARK NOW $5 OFF Expires 12/31/14 With coupon only KENNEDY NOW $3 OFF Expires 12/31/14 With coupon only 23-03 Astoria Boulevard • Astoria • 718.204.5861 “LI# B01506” to be a part of the event. “We want to make an opportunity to get kids to go around a city you walk, ride buses and drive in. It’s another way to get around,” said Hilda Cohen, one of the co-founders of Kidical Mass NYC. “A lot of parents want to do this but are intimidated about it. It’s really a great way to see your city.” The ride, which is named in the spirit of Halloween, will then continue through the Long Island City neighborhood and make its first stop at the rooftop garden Brooklyn Grange. After taking a rest stop at coffee shop COFFEED, the group will pass the Museum of the Moving Image and head back toward the waterfront to finish the ride at Socrates Sculpture Park, which will be hosting its Fall Festival. The young participants will also receive “spooky” treats such as zombie tattoos. “The name of the event has nothing to do with anything dangerous,” Cohen said. Kidical Mass NYC, which is the New York-based branch of the original Kidical Mass founded in Oregon, pays tribute to the national cycling event called Critical Mass. Since starting in August, rides have taken place once a month in Brooklyn and Manhattan, bringing together about 40 participants, including adults and children. Now organizers have expanded the reach into Queens, hoping to attract residents from the other boroughs. “Queens is the next big borough,” said Cristina Furlong of the organization Makes Queens Safer, who is helping Kidical Mass NYC organize the Queens event. “Queens is starting to get noticed.” Members of the 108th and 114th precincts will also be in attendance on Saturday to provide extra security for the riders. “By being visible, I hope we influence some people that might be considering cycling with their children and show them that it’s safe,” Furlong said. According to Cohen, although the event aims to show families that biking through their neighborhoods is a safe alternative to driving, the main goal of the day is to have fun. “We’re trying to make everything fun and exciting, which is exactly what biking is and it shouldn’t be something dangerous,” Cohen said. “This is just a means to enjoy our city with our kids.” The “Zombie Ride” will begin at 10 a.m., with riders beginning to gather at 9:30 a.m. Cohen encourages those interested in participating to RSVP via the group’s Facebook page in order for every participant to receive their Halloween treats. Helmets are required for children 13 years old and under by law, and are recommended for everyone else, according to organizers. For more information visit www.facebook.com/kidicalmassnyc. Photo by Rabi Abonour WHITESTONE COMMUNITY TO HONOR LATE RESIDENT WITH STREET RENAMING THE COURIER/Photo by Eric Jankiewicz BY ERIC JANKIEWICZ ejankiewicz@queenscourier.com @ericjankiewicz A street in Whitestone will soon bear the name Robert C. Lohnes in honor of the late resident who dedicated himself to serving his neighborhood. Community Board 7 unanimously voted to make 145th Street between 15th and 17th avenues Robert C. Lohnes Way. Family members and Boy Scout troop 235 attended the meeting on Oct. 20 to talk about Lohnes, who served as the troop’s scout master for over three decades. “He served because he was needed by his community,” Lohnes’ wife Maggaly said. She said that her husband helped the community in any way he could, and others who came to speak about Lohnes echoed that sentiment. He worked for the Whitestone Community Volunteer Ambulance Service and was also involved in the Girl Scouts. A representative from Assemblyman Edward Braunstein’s office said, “He was an individual who fully dedicated himself to his country and community.” Lohnes’ son, whose name is also Robert, traced his father’s desire to help people all the way back to the beginning of his career when he joined the U.S. Naval Reserve. Lohnes held a master’s degree in criminal justice and social relations from John Jay. He went on to join the NYPD, where he worked from 1962 to 1996. The street renaming, Lohnes’ wife said, is appropriate for someone who dedicated so much time to the Whitestone community. “He was loved by everybody,” she said. “He deserves that and more.”


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