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Two women were shot to death in a murder-suicide on the Upper East Side of Manhattan on Friday morning, according to the police. One of the women, identified by the police as Kathleen Leigh, 65, approached the second woman, identified as Marisa Galloway, 45, shooting her in the head and lower back. Ms. Leigh then shot herself in the head, the police said. Ms. Leigh was pronounced dead at the scene, the police said. Ms. Galloway was taken to Weill Cornell Medical Center, where she later died.
Persons: Kathleen Leigh, Marisa Galloway, Leigh, Galloway Organizations: Honda, Gracie Mansion, New York City, Weill Cornell Medical Center Locations: Manhattan, Gracie
Why fewer people are choosing to have kids
  + stars: | 2024-07-26 | by ( Madeline Holcombe | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
“A lot of people make the assumption because we don’t have kids, we’re not fulfilled,” Becky Hayden said. “We see majorities … saying having a fulfilling life doesn’t have much to do with whether someone does or doesn’t have children,” Minkin said. The reasons people aren’t having kidsThere were many reasons why people said they didn’t have kids, including financial concerns, infertility, or that it just didn’t happen, according to the research. For people younger than 50, the top reason reported for not having children was that they don’t want to. Many of the cons people reported in the Pew survey related to not having children come from the outside.
Persons: Becky Hayden, Seth, we’re, ” Becky Hayden, Ohio Sen, JD Vance, Tucker Carlson, they’ve, Pew reseachers, , , Rachel Minkin, ” Minkin, Dr, Linda Baggett, Baggett, Carissa Strohecker Hannum, Hayden, hasn’t, Minkin, ” Baggett, “ I’m Organizations: CNN, Pew Research Center, Pew, Republican, Fox News, Monarch Wellness Locations: California, United States, Ohio, Manhattan Beach , California, Washington, DC
The conditions are aimed at ensuring that nearby hospitals aren’t overwhelmed by the increase of patients expected after Beth Israel closes. The Health Department said Beth Israel must fund an expansion of the emergency room at Bellevue, the flagship of the city’s public hospital system. Another condition is that Beth Israel must run an urgent care center, open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, for three months. A spokesman for the Mount Sinai hospital system, Loren Riegelhaupt, said in a statement that Beth Israel would remain open and accept patients, for now. Beth Israel was founded in 1889, initially as a dispensary serving mainly Jewish immigrants on the Lower East Side.
Persons: Beth Israel, Loren Riegelhaupt Organizations: NYU Langone Health, The Health Department Locations: Manhattan, Bellevue, Beth, Mount Sinai
Mayor Eric Adams announced the start of a contentious new plan to put a gun-detecting scanner in the subway on Friday and warned that New Yorkers who refused to be scanned would be kicked out of the system. Mr. Adams highlighted the scanner inside the busy Fulton Street subway station in Lower Manhattan, arguing that the technology would help make the subway safer. “Many New Yorkers will be familiar with this type of technology — it’s not new, and it’s being used in big cities across the country,” Mr. Adams said, noting that scanners were already being used at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Citi Field. A new pilot program will involve one scanner that will be moved to different stations over the next 30 days, city officials said. Mr. Adams said it would not cost the city any money.
Persons: Eric Adams, Adams, , Mr Organizations: Yorkers, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Citi Locations: Fulton, Lower Manhattan
There’s a pause before Billy Joel steps onstage each night when he makes the subtle transition from low-key Everyman to world-renowned Piano Man. It’s just a few minutes of “not talking to anybody, not seeing anybody,” he said, mimicking waving off potential distractions. In February, “Turn the Lights Back On,” his first new song in nearly 20 years, joined the set list. Joel, 75, promised to keep the show running as long as there was demand. In total, the run grossed more than $260 million with attendance nearing two million, according to the trade publication Pollstar.
Persons: Billy Joel, It’s, , bellowing, screech, shutdowns — Joel, Joel, ” Dennis Arfa Organizations: Madison, Garden, Locations: Sag, Long, Manhattan
CNN —Disgraced and imprisoned movie mogul Harvey Weinstein “tested positive for COVID and contracted double pneumonia in his lungs,” Juda Engelmayer, Weinstein’s spokesman, said in a statement Thursday. In addition, Mr. Weinstein tested positive for COVID and contracted double pneumonia in his lungs,” the statement said. Engelmayer also confirmed to CNN that Weinstein was transferred to the Bellevue Hospital Prison Ward late on Wednesday night. The New York Court of Appeals overturned a sex crimes conviction against Weinstein in April, but he has remained in custody in New York. In that case, Weinstein was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
Persons: CNN —, Harvey Weinstein “, Juda, “ Craig Rothfeld, Weinstein’s, Weinstein, Engelmayer Organizations: CNN, Prison, New, Manhattan, Attorney’s Locations: Bellevue, New York, Los Angeles
Manhattan prosecutors are urging the judge who oversaw Donald J. Trump’s criminal hush-money trial to uphold his conviction, seeking to cast doubt on the former president’s long-shot bid to overturn the case because of a recent Supreme Court ruling. Instead, the Manhattan prosecutors noted, he was convicted in May of covering up a sex scandal that had threatened to derail his 2016 campaign, a personal and political crisis that did not involve his conduct as president. Mr. Trump’s lawyers, seeking to link the two cases, have mounted a novel argument. In a recent filing to the judge who presided over the Manhattan trial, Juan M. Merchan, they contended that the Supreme Court’s decision had invalidated at least some of the evidence presented in Manhattan, including the testimony of former White House employees and tweets that Mr. Trump sent as president. The Supreme Court, they noted, had held that official acts could be inadmissible as evidence — even if a case concerned private misconduct.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Juan M Organizations: White, Manhattan, White House Locations: Manhattan, Washington
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewThe Manhattan judge who ordered Donald Trump to pay a nearly $500 million fraud judgment has declined — in no uncertain terms — the former president's demand that he recuse himself from the case over a brief hallway conversation. The sum owed by Trump accrues another $1 million in interest every nine days, and had reached $471 million by Thursday. Engoron did not mince words in saying on Thursday that he would not step down over "this 90-second, unsolicited diatribe." Lawyers for Trump and Bailey did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Arthur Engoron, Trump, Engoron, Adam Leitman Bailey, Bailey, defamatorily, Read Organizations: Service, New, Business, Trump, Trump Organization
CNN —Manhattan prosecutors said there is no basis to overturn Donald Trump’s conviction in the hush money case after the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential immunity. Any error, they argued in a filing Thursday, is “harmless” when viewed against “overwhelming evidence” of the former president’s guilt. Prosecutors with the Manhattan district attorney’s office said the conviction should stand. They also noted that Trump’s attorneys didn’t raise objections during the trial to most of the evidence they now question, arguing they can’t now challenge it after the trial. According to Hicks, Trump said it would have been bad for Stormy Daniels’ allegations to have come out before the election.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Hope Hicks, Trump, , didn’t, , , ’ ”, , Hicks, Stormy Daniels, Honig, what's, SCOTUS, Daniels Organizations: CNN, Manhattan, White House, Twitter, Prosecutors, Trump, CNN Prosecutors Locations: Manhattan
Read previewManhattan prosecutors are fighting to keep Donald Trump's September 18 hush-money sentencing on track, saying in a new filing Thursday that it was "harmless error" if evidence he's now immune from entered the case. But Trump would have been indicted and convicted even if evidence the defense calls "official" were removed, the filing adds. AdvertisementThe filing argues that Trump is wrong in now stamping much of the prosecutor's case "official act evidence." But these tweets describe unofficial acts unrelated to Trump's official duties, and for which he has no immunity, the prosecution filing now argues. Lawyers for Trump did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the prosecution filing.
Persons: , Donald Trump's, Attorney Alvin Bragg, Trump, Stormy Daniels, SCOTUS, Donald Trump, Jane Rosenberg, Bragg, Matthew Colangelo, Daniels, Michael Cohen, Hope Hicks, Trump's, Cohen, Madeleine Westerhout, caselaw, Juan Merchan Organizations: Service, Attorney, Business, Trump Organization, Manhattan, White House, Trump Locations: Manhattan
New York CNN —A toxic mix of surging rental rates and vanishing support for renters has catapulted evictions above pre-pandemic levels in some major cities. Evictions have increased most significantly in Sun Belt cities where housing affordability has worsened and where renters often have fewer protections. Other cities, including Minneapolis (+44%) and Columbus, Ohio (+37%), are also experiencing higher levels of evictions than before the pandemic. Three-quarters of the 34 cities tracked by the Eviction Lab had evictions increase between 2022 and 2023. The vast majority of evictions are for issues related to nonpayment of rent, according to the Eviction Lab.
Persons: , Chris Salviati, Kristolyn Lloyd, you’re, ” Lloyd, , Yuki Iwamura, , Lloyd, , ’ ” Lloyd, Diane Yentel, Brett Coomer, Jacob Haas, it’s, Haas, Heather Vargas, she’s, Vargas, ” Vargas Organizations: New, New York CNN, Princeton University ., Broadway, CNN, Bloomberg, Getty, Income Housing Coalition, Princeton’s, Houston, Harvest Time, Houston Chronicle, Investors Locations: New York, Sun Belt, Gainesville , Florida, Houston, Nashville, Fort Worth , Texas, Minneapolis, Columbus , Ohio, Columbus, Las, New York City, Covid, Manhattan, Queens, Texas, Florida, Atlanta, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Harris, South Carolina, Philadelphia, Wilmington , Delaware, Miami, Cleveland, San Diego, Citrus, Califonia,
Washington CNN —A federal judge on Wednesday refused to dismiss former President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against ABC News and George Stephanopoulos over the anchor’s assertion that a jury concluded Trump had “raped” E. Jean Carroll. Trump filed the lawsuit in Florida federal court earlier this year, arguing that Stephanopoulos and the network defamed him when Stephanopoulos said during a contentious on-air interview with Rep. Nancy Mace that a jury found Trump had “raped” Carroll, a writer whose own cases against Trump led to him being found liable for sexual abuse. ABC News did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment. In the Trump-ABC lawsuit, US District Judge Cecilia Altonaga, an appointee of former President George W. Bush, wrote Wednesday that these definitions were different enough to let the case move forced. His analysis necessarily focused on what Carroll had and had not proved at trial, as well as the harm Carroll experienced from (Trump’s) abuse.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, George Stephanopoulos, Trump, , Jean Carroll, Stephanopoulos, Nancy Mace, ” Carroll, Carroll, Trump’s countersuit, Lewis Kaplan, , Cecilia Altonaga, George W, Bush, , ” Altonaga, “ Judge Kaplan, Mace, , ” Altonaga ‘, Kaplan, ” Trump, Altonaga’s, CNN’s Oliver Darcy Organizations: Washington CNN, ABC News, Trump, ABC, CNN, New York Penal, WIN, “ ABC Locations: Florida, Manhattan, Carroll, New York, York
Diverse donors race to help elect Kamala Harris
  + stars: | 2024-07-24 | by ( Fredreka Schouten | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
And Democratic-aligned donors from all those worlds are eager to help Harris get there. That figure marks the year of the sorority’s founding at Harris’ alma mater, Howard University. More than 1.1 million donors have contributed – with 62% of them first-time givers this cycle, Harris’ campaign said. He said he held his first fundraiser for Harris at his Boston-area home during her successful 2016 Senate campaign. But for all the early enthusiasm, the groups supporting Harris say big challenges remain – both in sustaining her campaign’s early financial momentum and in helping blunt looming attacks on her race and gender.
Persons: CNN — Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Harris –, , Harris, , , Glynda Carr, Carr, Biden, they’ve, Harris ’, Alexandra Acker, Lyons, Biden’s, Acker, , ’ ”, Ramesh Kapur, Democratic bundler, Kapur, “ I’m, Shekar, He’s, he’s, don’t, ” Narasimhan, Trump, Chintan Patel, Patel, ” Harris “, ’ ” Acker, Veronica Stracqualursi Organizations: CNN, American, Higher, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc, Howard University, Women Alliance, Democratic, Senate, Fund, Democratic Party, Republican Party Locations: Higher Heights, America, alma, Manhattan, Denver, Harris, United States, Indian, American, Boston, Virginia, Michigan, Wisconsin,
Lewis H. Lapham, the scholarly patrician who edited Harper’s Magazine for nearly three decades, and who in columns, books and later his own magazine, Lapham’s Quarterly, attacked what he regarded as the inequities and hypocrisies of American life, died on Tuesday in Rome. His death was announced by his children. A longtime resident of Manhattan’s Upper East Side, he had been living in Rome with his wife and other family members since January. After a decade as a newspaper reporter and magazine writer, Mr. Lapham was the managing editor of Harper’s from 1971 to 1975 and the editor in chief from 1976 to 1981 and from 1983 to 2006. He offered a blend of high culture and populism: the fiction of John Updike and George Saunders mixed with reports on abortion fights, global warming and the age of terrorism — generally, but not always, with a progressive eye.
Persons: Lewis H, Lapham, . Mencken, Mark Twain, Harper’s, John Updike, George Saunders Organizations: Lapham’s Quarterly, Texaco, Mr Locations: Rome, Manhattan’s, San Francisco
Small banks are feeling misunderstood. Investors worry that those banks could be a crisis waiting to happen. But executives at these firms — which number about 4,100 in total — say there is an important distinction, and some industry analysts concur. They caution that small banks are being lumped in with lenders to the owners of half-empty towers in Manhattan, San Francisco and Chicago, which are in the most trouble. Instead, a majority of commercial building loans by community banks are for smaller buildings — like those housing doctors and local businesses — that tend to be fully leased.
Organizations: Investors Locations: Manhattan, San Francisco, Chicago
A federal judge in Florida on Wednesday allowed former President Donald J. Trump’s defamation suit against ABC News to move forward, rejecting an effort by the television network to dismiss the litigation as spurious. The lawsuit, filed in March, argued that ABC’s star anchor, George Stephanopoulos, defamed Mr. Trump by saying on-air numerous times, in a March 10 segment on “This Week,” that the former president had been found liable for raping the writer E. Jean Carroll. Mr. Trump was found liable last year in a Manhattan civil case for sexually abusing and defaming Ms. Carroll. The jury did not find Mr. Trump liable on a technical charge of rape, which is narrowly defined in New York State law. “But a reasonable jury could conclude Plaintiff was defamed and, as a result, dismissal is inappropriate.”
Persons: Donald J, George Stephanopoulos, Mr, Trump, Jean Carroll, Ms, Carroll, Cecilia Altonaga, Organizations: ABC News, United States, Court Locations: Florida, Manhattan, New York State, Miami
With a knack for brokering luxury properties, Tal and Oren Alexander, brothers who worked as real estate agents, rose as high as the New York City penthouses they sold. They built an image as jet-setting bachelors, filling their social media feeds with photos from Wimbledon, Art Basel and the beach in Mykonos. Their traditional good looks and magnetism attracted ultrarich clients who propelled the brothers past thousands of other agents to the very top of the ranks at Douglas Elliman, one of the largest real estate brokerages in the country. But as the brothers partied and sold co-ops and condos from Manhattan to Miami, they were quietly earning another reputation: Accusations that they drugged and sexually assaulted women were spreading throughout the world of high-end real estate. By 2022, they had co-founded their own real estate brokerage, Official.
Persons: Tal, Oren Alexander, Douglas Elliman, Oren Organizations: New, Art, Douglas Locations: New York City, Wimbledon, Art Basel, Mykonos, Manhattan, Miami, United States
Consumer need for speed in package delivery, which has reached its apex with same-day shipping, has placed retailers in a tough spot when it comes to managing transportation costs. Retail executives surveyed say as more — especially younger — consumers demand same-day delivery, the financial payoff isn't there. Roughly three-quarters (76%) of retail executives surveyed by AlixPartners said delivery cost on a per-package basis has increased since last year, and three out of four said home delivery does not add to profitability. 1 priority for last-mile delivery. To save on delivery costs, retailers are moving away from reliance on single carriers in last-mile delivery.
Persons: AlixPartners, Marc Iampieri, Iampieri Organizations: UPS, FedEx, Retail, Carriers, Teamsters Locations: Manhattan, New York City
Carly Still had been working as a gardener in the Hudson Valley when she decided to move to the city 13 years ago. She happened onto a part-time position at the Met Cloisters, in Upper Manhattan, where she encountered many plants for the first time — ones with curious common names like skirret, weld and costmary — and others that she knew too well, or thought she did. Among the familiar ones were several that she had removed whenever she came upon them in her old job. Stinging nettle (Urtica dioica), for example, is tricky to garden around in cultivated areas, as anyone who has accidentally grabbed a handful while weeding or brushed bare skin against it will attest. She also recognized greater burdock (Arctium lappa), broadleaf plantain (Plantago major) and even some dandelions in the Bonnefont Cloister Herb Garden, one of three main gardens at the museum of medieval art that opened in 1938 as a branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Persons: Carly Still, Organizations: Metropolitan Museum of Art Locations: Hudson, Upper Manhattan
Montaque cofounded Group Black in 2021 with the goal of directing $500 million in advertising money to Black-owned media in its first 18 months. With the pledge, Group Black laid out a plan to steer money to Black media owners and acquire media companies. Bough, Group Black's chief strategy officer, was a former Mondelēz and PepsiCo marketer who presented the CNBC reality show "Cleveland Hustles." Various outlets reported that Group Black mounted bids for media companies including the Sports Illustrated publisher Arena Group, the Paramount-owned BET, Vice Media, and Vox Media. Seven former employees described Montaque as an energetic leader but said he was ultimately ineffective in executing Group Black's mission.
Persons: Travis Montaque, Weeks, Montaque, Bonin, Black, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Richelieu Dennis, Dennis, Ursula M, Burns, Randy Brooke, Ursula Burns, Seth Kaufman, Moët Hennessy, Gamble, Ziff Davis, offsites, Gamble —, Spokespeople, Derrick Johnson, Lionel Hahn, Todd Brown, It's, Christopher Kenna, I'm, Samantha Skey, Black's Travis Montaque, Arturo Holmes, Vivek Shah, Bough, Sheila Marmon, Media's Refinery29, Erika Goldring, Richelieu Dennis who's, Kirk McDonald, GroupM Organizations: Black, Cannes Lions, Business, Black's, SHE, Cola, Walmart, PepsiCo, CNBC, Xerox, Getty, Moët Hennessy North America, Procter, Gamble, NAACP, Urban Edge Network, Corporate America, Association of National Advertisers's Alliance, Inclusive, Multicultural, Diversity Media, Penske Media Corp, Zeta, Fox, Everyday Health, Sports, Arena Group, Paramount, BET, Vice Media, Vox Media, Galore Media, Mirror, Marmon, Media Locations: GroupM, America, Soho, Manhattan, Santa Monica, Cannes
Critics say DEI programs are discriminatory and attempt to solve racial discrimination by disadvantaging other groups, particularly White Americans. These diversity training efforts emerged around the time that affirmative action began by executive order from President John F. Kennedy. Despite the backlash against DEI programs and initiatives, many companies are standing firm in their support for DEI. And 71% of people surveyed said they think DEI training is important to “creating a positive workplace culture.”What does DEI look like at work? Thrivent’s DEI training teaches employees how to understand and bridge cultural differences in the workplace, Baker said.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Tim Burchett, CNN’s Manu Raju, Joe Biden, Harris, ” Burchett, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, Susan Rice, , ” Rice, didn’t, Bill Ackman, Elon Musk, it’s, Daniel Oppong, , Lyndon Baines Johnson, George Floyd’s, Dominique Hollins, WĒ360, John F, Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Hollins, ” Hollins, Ipsos, ” Kelly Baker, Thrivent’s, Baker, Thrivent, ” Baker, Ella Washington, ” Washington, Washington, Christopher Rufo, Ryan P, Williams, , ” Williams, Tesla, ” Musk, Musk, Mark Cuban, ” What’s, Ron DeSantis, Republican State Sen, Dave Murman, Sen, Danielle Conrad, ” Conrad, ” CNN’s Athena Jones Organizations: CNN, Democratic, Tennessee Republican, Chronicle, Higher Education, Pew Research Center, Elon, White, Equity, Civil, DEI, Opportunity Commission, Academy of Management Learning, Education, Colleges, Minneapolis police, Companies, College, University of Florida, of Governors, Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business, Georgetown’s, Student Equity, Disability, Center, Women’s Center, Resource Center, Center for Multicultural Equity, , Manhattan Institute, New York Times, Claremont Institute, SpaceX, Musk, SEC, Dallas Mavericks, Florida Gov, Higher, Republican State, Nebraska, Nebraska Democratic Locations: Black, Texas, Florida, U.S, Washington, America, ” Cuban,  Texas, North Dakota, North Carolina , Tennessee, Utah, Nebraska
Some leading business executives say they don’t know quite what to think of Vice President Kamala Harris. She has been meeting with groups of corporate executives roughly every two months at her residence in Washington, according to two executives who have met with her. When a state dinner was held for President William Ruto of Kenya in May, Ms. Harris spoke with businesspeople about economic topics including access to labor and worker training, one attendee said. And a month earlier, she attended an event at the Colette Club on Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan arranged by Charles Phillips, a business executive and a longtime backer. Before about 30 Black business leaders — a group with which she has tried to build particularly strong relationships — Ms. Harris spoke for roughly 40 minutes, without notes or a teleprompter, on economic topics including job creation, inflation and global trade, and then took questions.
Persons: Kamala Harris, William Ruto of, Harris, Charles Phillips, , , Mr, Phillips, Organizations: Democratic, Club Locations: Washington, William Ruto of Kenya, Midtown Manhattan
Swiping through photos of the renovated Manhattan apartment her parents had just purchased for her, I felt a twinge of longing. AdvertisementBeing a public school teacher can make New York City really expensiveI pay for my own rent, utilities, healthcare, food, clothes, entertainment, and other expenses — which add up in New York. As a result, I budget and invest my money seriously because, let's face it, I'm not rolling in cash as a 23-year-old public school teacher. My parents' approach means I'm thoughtful when spending moneyDespite challenges, though, I appreciate that my parents encourage my financial independence. But ultimately I know my parents' expectations are fair and well-intentioned.
Persons: I'm, they're, Uber Organizations: Service, Netflix, NYC Locations: Manhattan, Pittsburgh, New York City, New York
CNN —New York’s attorney general urged the Supreme Court on Wednesday to stay out of Donald Trump’s hush money criminal case, arguing the nation’s highest court should not grant a novel request by Missouri to pause his sentencing hearing and lift the gag order imposed on the former president in the case. Earlier this month, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, a Republican, asked the Supreme Court for permission to file a complaint against New York to pause Trump’s September sentencing hearing and lift the restrictions on his speech – arguing in part that New York was infringing on the right of Missouri voters to hear from presidential candidates. “Allowing Missouri to file this suit for such relief against New York would permit an extraordinary and dangerous end-run around former President Trump’s ongoing state court proceedings and the statutory limitations on this Court’s jurisdiction to review state court decisions,” she wrote. For now, a limited gag order barring Trump from publicly speaking about prosecutors, court staff and their families remains in place at least until Trump is sentenced. CNN’s Lauren del Valle contributed to this report.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Andrew Bailey, Letitia James, , James, Trump’s, , Bailey, Trump, ” James, Stormy Daniels, CNN’s Lauren del Valle Organizations: CNN, New, Republican, Missouri, , Trump Locations: Missouri, New York, Manhattan
I took my family, including two kids and a dog, on ferries to get from Vermont to the Hamptons. Whether we drive or ride boats, it's a pretty long trip, but the ferry has other benefits. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementMy family — me, my husband, our 8- and 3-year-old daughters, and our wire-haired dog, who's 14 years young — recently took a trip to the Hamptons. We could've driven down from our home in Vermont through high-traffic New York City and then out to Long Island via the Long Island Expressway and Montauk Highway.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Hamptons, Business Locations: Vermont, New York City, York City, Long, Montauk, Manhattan
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