FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  MAY 27, 2021 • THE QUEENS COURIER 49 
 Victoria’s 
 SECRETS  
 Victoria 
 SCHNEPSYUNIS 
 vschneps@gmail.com 
 tweet me @vschneps 
 A week of celebrations 
 What a week! 
 I  delightedly  celebrated  
 seeing my old  
 friend  Geraldo  Rivera once  
 again support the group I founded, 
  relished my grandson’s graduation  
 from law school at NYU 
 and then had the bittersweet celebration  
 of my grandchildren’s  
 birthdays on the day of my late  
 daughter Lara’s birthday, too! 
 Th  e week began and ended  
 with memories of my daughter  
 Lara, who was born on May  
 23. Lara was brain damaged at  
 birth, but taught me more than  
 any person on Earth. 
 She  was  developmentally  
 a 3-month-old and her birth  
 pushed me into a world of helping  
 her — hoping fi rst for a  
 cure and then for care. My late  
 husband and I dreamed that a  
 place  on  Staten  Island  called  
 Willowbrook  State  School 
 with a newly built infant rehabilitation  
 program for babies  
 would off er hope. It did for a  
 short time. 
 I lived in a high-rise community  
 with other young  
 women who warmly said  
 to me, “Th  ere but for the  
 grace of God go I. How can  
 I help you, Vicki?” 
 And  so  in  my  living  
 room  we  founded  WORC 
 (Women’s  Organization  for  
 Retarded Children). Th e name  
 has changed to  Life’s  WORC 
 and the organization provides  
 help and hope to thousands of  
 children like Lara. 
 Going back to the early 1970s,  
 we sent busloads of volunteers to  
 Willowbrook and raised money  
 for the 5,400 people living there.  
 Within a year of Lara being at  
 Willowbrook, Governor Nelson  
 Rockefeller slashed the funding  
 for the school and the helpless  
 people living there were in  
 crisis due to the lack of staff   to  
 care for their needs. Aft er all, my  
 Lara had to be fed, diapered and  
 bathed, needing total care. 
 My  many  volunteers  and  I  
 became  marchers  and  picketers  
 demanding the return of the  
 funds. But no one was listening  
 until a cub reporter named  
 Geraldo Rivera brought his passion  
 and power of the press to  
 our cause through his brilliant  
 TV coverage that shamed  
 and outraged the  
 city. 
 Sean Hannity and Geraldo Rivera kicked offff   the 33rd  
 Annual Geraldo Rivera Golf Classic, joined by honorees  
 Peter Klein, E. Christopher Murray, Janet Koch, Lynne  
 Koufakis, and Erica Rivera. 
 My  late  husband  Murray  
 Schneps believed that only a federal  
 class action lawsuit could  
 save our Lara and her fellow residents. 
  Th  anks to Geraldo’s persistent  
 and persuasive coverage,  
 the parents of the people living  
 at Willowbrook agreed to sign  
 on to the litigation. 
 Th  e court battle was won and  
 Lara and her “friends” were now  
 provided with funds to move  
 into small group homes with day  
 programs to help with rehabilitation  
 opportunities. 
 Today, networks of organizations  
 allow others like Lara to  
 live a life of dignity and the ability  
 to be the most they can be. 
 Lara led me on a path that I  
 would never have imagined for  
 myself and Geraldo inspired  
 me  to  want  to  be  in  the  
 news  business  —  that’s  
 how  I  started  my  fi rst  
 newspaper on the same  
 sofa as I started Life’s  
 WORC. 
 It  made  my  heart  
 sing on Monday when  
 I saw Geraldo and his  
 beautiful  wife  Erica 
 and their friend  Sean  
 Hannity kick off   the  
 33rd Annual Geraldo  
 Rivera  Golf  Classic 
 at the  Old  Westbury  
 Golf and Country Club.  
 For almost 50 years now,  
 Geraldo has supported Life’s  
 WORC in their eff orts to provide  
 a quality of life  
 to people who desperately  
 need it as do  
 their families. 
 Yes,  Lara,  your  
 infl uence  has  lived  
 on beyond the years  
 God gave you on this  
 Earth. Happy birthday, 
  my beloved. 
 But  the  spotlight  
 for the rest of the  
 week  was  on  my  
 grandchildren  and  
 their celebrations. 
 My beloved, late  
 husband  Stu Yunis 
 would  have  been  
 beaming with pride  
 at  his  strapping,  
 brilliant  grandson  
 Zach’s  graduation  
 from  law  school  at  
 NYU, as his dad Jim  
 Broner  did  a  few  
 decades before. 
 It was a comfortable celebration  
 in the Broner home, with all  
 of us watching the virtual graduation  
 ceremony on the 60-inch  
 TV in the living room. We toasted  
 with  champagne  as  Zach’s  
 photo  crossed  in  front  of  us.  
 Th  anks to the TV clicker, we  
 stopped the graduation and took  
 multiple photos of him on screen  
 and in person! What joy! 
 Later in the week my 9-yearold  
 granddaughter  Addy and  
 12-year-old  granddaughter  
 Morgan shared their birthdays  
 and  we  relished  our  Chinese  
 food  at  our  family  dinner  
 celebration. 
 What a way to end a wonderful  
 week! How grateful I am! 
 Zach’s virtual graduation  
 celebration was still great! 
 Zach at his graduation dinner  
 at Peter Luger Steak House. 
 Having a blast celebrating  
 Morgan and Addy’s birthdays! 
 
				
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