Rabbi And Mrs. Neuman To Be Honored At Bais Yaakov Ateres Miriam Dinner This Motzaei Shabbos

А smile at the beginning of the day. A warm hello. A concerned "How are you?” These seemingly simple memo­ries of Rabbi Moshe Neuman shlita are what generations of students of the Bais Yaakov Academy of Queens hold dear in their hearts. From the years 1961 to 2011, Rabbi Moshe Neu­man was at the helm of this Queens institu­tion, shepherding it from a school of 27 stu­dents in a tiny building in Corona to a school of close to 850 students in a four-story build­ing in Kew Gardens. Throughout those years, Rabbi Neuman was a consistent and reliable presence for all the girls who learned at Bais Yaakov.

Five days before Rosh HaShanah, the halls of One Police Plaza filled with rabbis, officers, and advocates for a meeting about safeguarding Jewish New Yorkers as the Yamim Nora’im approached. The evening’s agenda was procedural – preparations for the High Holidays – but the atmosphere was a reaffirmation that Jewish life in New York will be defended not just in theory, but in practice.

 On Sunday evening, September 7, a milestone few merit was marked with warmth and simchah as family, friends, and neighbors gathered in the social hall of the Young Israel of Kew Gardens Hills to celebrate the 101st birthday of Mr. Max Marcus. The evening was both a celebration of life and a tribute to a beloved patriarch whose years have been guided by emunah, perseverance, and Torah values.

New Yorkers have long endured sidewalks overflowing with black bags that attract rodents, prompting the Adams administration to launch a “Trash Revolution” - a plan to containerize waste and reduce infestations. With a June 2026 deadline approaching, Queens homeowners in one- and two-family homes are set to receive reimbursement checks covering the full cost of compliance.

New York State and City elected officials, city representatives, and community partners gathered on Sutphin Boulevard in Jamaica for a landmark ceremony: the ribbon cutting of Sutphin Tower, part of the largest HPD/HPS affordable housing project in New York City’s history. Spearheaded by Velocity Management — a frum-owned and operated company — the three-building development delivers more than 1,200 apartments, over 900 of them affordable.