Looking for a little Sunday afternoon music to soothe the soul? On Sunday, February 28, at 4 p.m., the Hamptons Youth Quartet performs the music of Mozart, Dvorak and a few other favorites in a Facebook Live concert hosted by the Southampton Cultural Center. The four talented teen string musicians are violinists Kristina Georges and Tessa Arnzen, viola player Julian Misut and cellist Charlotte Arnzen. The event is free, but donations are welcome. For more information, visit Southampton Cultural Center’s Facebook page or scc-arts.org.
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Manager Thierry Balihuta is at Home with the Sag Harbor Cinema
When the newly refurbished Sag Harbor Cinema opens its doors, presumably sometime this spring, and patrons are finally able to settle into the comfortable, brand new seats for a state-of-the-art film experience in one of its three theaters, they just might encounter a familiar face running the place — especially if they have been regular customers of the nearby UPS Store. That’s because Thierry Balihuta, 33, who joined the staff last fall as the cinema’s manager, most recently managed the Sag Harbor UPS Store where he could be relied upon to help customers ship parcels, design brochures or produce marketing materials.
A 1905 Novel for Our Place and Time
My love for local history began when I was archiving the collection at the Sag Harbor Historical Society’s Annie Cooper Boyd House on Main Street. By March 2018, when the Suffolk County Historical Society mounted the Eastville Community Historical Society’s exhibition of tintypes celebrating African Americans and Native Americans, I was compiling a bibliography of local primary resources on Native American history. I wanted to learn as much as I could about the first peoples who lived here. I kept thinking we are all living on stolen land, and I couldn’t reconcile myself to it.
Marine Geologist Pens Tale of Two Lost Ships for Young Adults
They gathered on the dock in the Port Du Cadiz in the south of Spain: three archeologists, two college students, three captains, one cook, one engineer, two scuba divers, one able-bodied seaman and Laurie Zaleski, a marine geologist, who had just signed up for the adventure of a lifetime. The 2004 months-long mission to locate a pair of 200-year-old shipwrecks using multibeam sonar was among the first of its kind. And they were sailing, quite literally, into uncharted waters.