The East Hampton School District plans to offer a dual-language program in English and Spanish to native speakers of either language starting in kindergarten in the 2019-20 school year.
The East Hampton School District plans to offer a dual-language program in English and Spanish to native speakers of either language starting in kindergarten in the 2019-20 school year.
Stephen Taylor of Springs, who had a long and varied career in computer technology, writing, film criticism, and academia, died on April 26 at the Hamptons Center for Rehabilitation and Nursing in Southampton. He was 80 years old. Death was attributed to cardiopulmonary arrest.
Justine Barch Marco, who had a career in the fashion industry in New York City and Florida and later an antiques and interior design business in Bridgehampton, died on March 26 at Rosary Hill Home in Hawthorne, N.Y., at the age of 73. She was diagnosed with cancer three years ago.
The East Hampton Library’s grandfather clock, with its imposing presence and beautiful bell-like tones, takes us back to another time, but not much seems to have been known about it until just a few years ago.
Now They’re Cooking!
Kids 3 to 6 and their grown-ups will learn how to make quick cucumber pickles in a cooking workshop on Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Children’s Museum of the East End in Bridgehampton. The cost is $19, which includes museum admission, $5 for members.
The race, coming up on June 15, has always “combined the excitement of an elite field with the everyday runner.” So far, more than 1,000 have signed up.
While the Maidstone Market still appears to be the team to beat in the 7-on-7 soccer league, it is being challenged by two younger squads.
A look back at the Ross Gload-era Bonac baseball team and the heyday of boys track.
Men’s slow-pitch and soccer ramp up, while Bonac tracksters head to the state qualifier meets Friday and Saturday.
The Bonac on Board to Wellness 5K, a rite of spring, attracts 600-plus middle schoolers, while East Hampton’s Ryan Fowkes and Kal Lewis of Shelter Island go down to the wire in the 1,600.
These are more like suggestions and guidelines than recipes. Right now you should be finding spinach, arugula, baby lettuces, radishes, asparagus, and kale at your local farmer’s market or your own garden.
Jeffrey Sussman has dug up an all-star roster of low-life scum for our reading pleasure, but at least they had some style.
There seem to be new cafes and restaurants popping up everywhere you turn, and they are often intermeshed with the movement in local, sustainable farming that has grown up here.
I hope I can become a successful, knowledgeable, and mindful gardener; it would just go so nicely with my love of cooking.
HIFF focuses on caddies, Montauk Library celebrates female composers, Brazilian jazz at SAC, chamber music at Perlman
Solo shows at Duck Creek and Drawing Room, new gallery in Amagansett, big show in Sag Harbor church, Frank Wimberley in Chelsea, much more
“Framing John DeLorean” will be screened by the Hamptons International Film Festival on June 8 at Guild Hall. Distributed by Sundance Selects, it will open in limited release in theaters and video on demand on Friday, June 7.
The Victor D’Amico Institute of Art, affectionately known as the Art Barge, has announced its summer classes, which will begin Monday with studio painting.
A distillation of Tony Oursler's "Tear of the Cloud" projections at Riverside Park in October will soon manifest itself at Guild Hall. "Water Memory" will be a museumwide exhibition devoted to the theme of water and how it has functioned as a vehicle for magical thinking throughout history.
Noel Coward’s 1930 play "Private Lives" is a tricky one. Written in three feverish days in a Shanghai hotel while Coward was bedridden with the flu, it has a sparky energy that’s laced with cruelty.
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