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City lights.


The following is adapted from a regular column, "From the Pastor's Desk," appearing in the parish bulletin of Epiphany Parish in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
.

The news media, both print and TV, are preoccupied by the things that go wrong. The sudden violent act, the disaster, the pathologies of life claim disproportionate attention. A dominant or regular disposition to goodness requires too wide an angle for the narrow focus of the TV camera or the limited space of a news article. But New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 abounds in examples of the day-to-day, year-to-year practice of virtue, examples we often fail to notice.

My leg injury of last May has kept me out of the subway: too many stairs. But I found an interesting world in the city's buses. The mix of people, their stoic endurance in traffic jams, and the steady patience of the bus drivers carry their own inspiration. The drivers don't have steel rails to guide their multi-ton vehicles. Each moment requires steady attention and careful control in the flood of trucks, cars, taxis, bicycles, and rollerbladers. There is no idle moment save when, like a miniature Queen Mary Queen Mary, Queen Marie, or Queen Maria may refer to: Queens
Britain

England

  • Mary I of England (1516–1558), queen regnant of England, was the daughter of Henry VIII of England (by his first wife Catherine of Aragon), and the
, the bus sweeps up to its curbside wharf and exchanges passengers to and from the street. Then the patient wait for people with canes, purse fumblers, and those who want out when they find they are on a "Limited" bus. A big salute to our city's bus drivers - saints of patience not yet properly canonized can·on·ize  
tr.v. can·on·ized, can·on·iz·ing, can·on·iz·es
1. To declare (a deceased person) to be a saint and entitled to be fully honored as such.

2. To include in the biblical canon.

3.
.

A dominant disposition to goodness is found in many other places in our city, very frequently among the men and women of the NYPD NYPD New York City Police Department (since 1845; New York City, NY, USA)
NYPD New York Play Development
. A week ago I was chatting with some of the men of Emergency Service Unit, Truck One, opposite the rectory. One of their smaller trucks rolled up and Ken Winkler Winkler may refer to:
  • Winkler, Manitoba, a Canadian city
  • Winkler (novel), by Giles Coren
  • Winkler (crater), a crater on the Moon
  • Winkler (surname), people with the surname Winkler or Winckler
See also
 and Mark DeMarco jumped out.

Mark shook out a wet rubber suit. "A little applause for Ken," he said. "He just pulled someone out of the river." At the pier at the end of 23rd Street, someone had heard a splash and phoned 911. A police helicopter arrived and dropped a life ring, which the thrashing figure pushed away. Ken, already suited up, dove into the murky water. When his 100-foot line ran out, he called for more line. Another was quickly attached, and in another fifty feet he reached the struggling figure, who spouted water at him and told him to get lost. But Ken persisted and soon his line tenders had both back on shore, along with the rejected life ring. All in a night's work!

Ken had initially failed a scuba diving test (he didn't know how to swim How to Swim is a cartoon made by the Walt Disney Company in 1942. In this cartoon, Goofy provides an educational treatise on swimming and diving with questionable results. ). So on his own time he went to the YMCA YMCA
 in full Young Men's Christian Association

Nonsectarian, nonpolitical Christian lay movement that aims to develop high standards of Christian character among its members.
 and learned to swim, passed the test, and is now a certified "Dive Master" who teaches scuba diving to ESU officers. Ken lives with his wife, Alice, on Staten Island, with their two children, a five-year-old who is in first grade at Saint Charles's school, and a one-year-old. Ken went to Our Lady of Perpetual Help school Our Lady of Perpetual Help School in Vancouver, British Columbia, is a Catholic elementary school. The school opened in 1927, ran by the Sisters of Charity of Halifax.

The school, along with the O.L.P.H.
 and Xavierian Academy in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn Coordinates:  Bay Ridge is a neighborhood in the southwest corner of the New York City borough of Brooklyn, USA. , then spent a couple of years at Kingsboro Community College. He entered the department in October 1981. Alice joined in January 1982. They met, worked together, and dated; in 1988 they were married.

Alice today is a detective in the Staten Island "Crimes Against Persons" squad. "How do you deal with two little kids?" I asked. "We juggle schedules as best we can, and when that doesn't work we alternate with Larry Oliveti on Truck One and his wife - she's a sergeant on Staten Island."

Not a pulse-throbbing story, but what it shows is that there's a lot of commitment in this city, of dominant disposition to goodness and a deep respect for what life is all about. A big salute to Ken and Alice, to Mr. and Mrs. Larry Oliveti, and their partners in blue.
COPYRIGHT 1994 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:anecdotes about life in New York, New York
Author:Byrne, Harry J.
Publication:Commonweal
Article Type:Column
Date:Dec 2, 1994
Words:649
Previous Article:Kiss of the Wolf.(Brief Article)
Next Article:Ho, ho, ho. (1994 holiday reflections on U.S. politics) (Editorial)
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