Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Sutton Place"


3 mentions found


Judith Sheindlin, better known as TV’s Judge Judy, is putting her Manhattan home, a duplex penthouse with a wraparound terrace and scenic East River views, on the market for the first time in more than a decade. The asking price for the apartment, at 14 Sutton Place South, in the Sutton Place enclave, is $9.5 million, according to the listing brokers, Tom Postilio and Mickey Conlon, a team at Compass. Monthly maintenance is around $10,130. “We’ve enjoyed this jewel of an apartment,” Ms. Sheindlin said in an email. “Time to simplify,” she added, with typical directness.
Persons: Judith Sheindlin, Judy, Tom Postilio, Mickey Conlon, “ We’ve, ” Ms, Sheindlin Organizations: Manhattan, Compass . Locations: Sutton
“We are warning parents to disable social media apps such as Instagram, X and TikTok from their children’s phones,” Rabbi Daniel Nevins, the head of school at Golda Och Academy in West Orange, N.J., wrote to community members Tuesday. “Graphic and misleading information is flowing freely, augmenting the fears of our students.”The Jewish Community Center of Central New Jersey put out similar guidance. “What we’re finding is that people are looking for ways to help, they’re looking for resources,” the center’s executive director, Mike Goldstein, said. Seth Golob, director of the Jackson Religious School and Family Engagement at Sutton Place Synagogue in New York City, told parents that limiting social media “is a tall task, and not one person’s responsibility. However, the stuff coming out is horrific, and all we can do is our part in trying to keep our children safe.”
Persons: , Daniel Nevins, , Mike Goldstein, Seth Golob Organizations: Golda Och Academy, Jewish Community Center of Central, Jackson Religious School, Sutton Place Locations: New York, New Jersey, Israel, West Orange, N.J, Jewish Community Center of Central New Jersey, Sutton, New York City
New YorkFashion designers love the jump from homo sapiens to home, which liberates them from necklines, hemlines, and everything in between. One thinks of the über-modernist Halston, the floors and furniture in his Paul Rudolph townhouse sheathed in lean industrial gray, flocks of white orchids sailing in the stillness. Or of the changeless Bill Blass , the masculine classicism of his poised Sutton Place living room an escape from the WASP shmattes demanded by his East Side clientele. Or of the quixotic Karl Lagerfeld , chasing one period vision after another through serial homes decorated to the nth degree, costly statements of style that bored him once done. These postwar men were actually following in female footsteps.
Total: 3