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Ocean Fun Meets Conservation: New York Aquarium's Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend Starting June 6
Ocean Fun Meets Conservation: New York Aquarium's Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend Starting June 6

Business Wire

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Business Wire

Ocean Fun Meets Conservation: New York Aquarium's Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend Starting June 6

BROOKLYN, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dive into a sea of fun at the New York Aquarium for Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend, a three-day event celebrating the vital role oceans play in our lives and promoting actions to protect marine ecosystems. The event runs June 6-8, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., coinciding with World Ocean Day (June 8) and National Oceans Month. Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend festivities are included with New York Aquarium admission and free for members. 'Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend gives visitors a chance to connect with marine life in meaningful ways while learning how they can be champions for our oceans,' said Leigh Ann Clayton, Director of the New York Aquarium. 'This immersive celebration offers families a perfect opportunity to splash into summer while developing a deeper appreciation for our blue planet and the incredible diversity of life beneath the waves.' Established by the United Nations in 2008, World Ocean Day highlights critical issues like ocean pollution, overfishing, climate change, and the importance of sustainable ocean practices. Ocean Shell-a-bration Weekend aims to unite visitors in cherishing and protecting our ocean ecosystems for future generations. The New York Aquarium is part of the Wildlife Conservation Society, which conducts marine conservation programs across the world, including in the NY Bight, which spans from Cape May NJ to Montauk. The weekend will feature a variety of special activities throughout the aquarium that are all included with admission: Sea Lions in the Big City: Watch the live-animal show, 'Sea Lions in the Big City' at the Aquatheater, showcasing the special bonds between these charismatic marine mammals and their trainers at 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 3:30 p.m., 5:00pm. Penguin Chat: Waddle to Sea Cliffs to observe penguin feedings while learning about amazing penguin adaptations and conservation efforts at 10:15 a.m. and 4 p.m. Ocean parade: Be part of the Shell-a-bration by joining a festive procession through the Aquarium, showing support for our marine environment at 12:45 p.m. and 3 p.m. Wildlife Theater: Dance and sing along while learning the importance of our oceans with a performance of the 'Ocean Song!' at 12 p.m. and 2:15 p.m. Collaborative Art: Add your personal touch to a huge World Oceans Day mural, and color your own fish and then watch them swim in a digital seascape. Costumed Characters: Keep an eye out for costumed marine friends throughout the day WCS Members receive free access, though tickets are required. Land & Sea Membership includes admission to the New York Aquarium, Bronx Zoo, Central Park Zoo, Queens Zoo, and Prospect Park Zoo and helps WCS provide for animals in New York and worldwide. Explore membership options. On Friday, June 6, visitors are also invited to join a Coney Island Beach Sweep on the boardwalk in front of the aquarium. After exploring the exhibits, meet up from 3:00–5:00 p.m. to help clean up the beach, a perfect way to spend the day with marine life and protect their ocean home. Follow the New York Aquarium on social media channels for updates and more: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | YouTube About the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) WCS combines the power of its zoos and an aquarium in New York City and a Global Conservation Program in more than 50 countries to achieve its mission to save wildlife and wild places. WCS runs the world's largest conservation field program, protecting more than 50 percent of Earth's known biodiversity; in partnership with governments, Indigenous People, Local Communities, and the private sector. It's four zoos and aquarium (the Bronx Zoo, Central Park Zoo, Queens Zoo, Prospect Park Zoo, and the New York Aquarium) welcome more than 3.5 million visitors each year, inspiring generations to care for nature. Visit: Follow: @WCSNewsroom. For more information: +1 (347) 840-1242. Listen to the WCS Wild Audio podcast HERE.

He brought 3 whales to Cincinnati, then died on the Titanic. Here's his wild story
He brought 3 whales to Cincinnati, then died on the Titanic. Here's his wild story

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

He brought 3 whales to Cincinnati, then died on the Titanic. Here's his wild story

It's been more than a century since that fateful night when an iceberg ripped into the side of what was thought to be the world's "unsinkable ship," the Titanic. On April 10, 1912, the famed British ocean liner set sail on its maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City. On April 14, the grand ship met its fate, sinking to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. The tragedy claimed over 1,500 lives out of the 2,200 crew members and passengers on board, including a Cincinnati salesman who brought three living white whales, or belugas, to the Queen City in 1877. On June 7, 1877, The Enquirer announced that Albert Akeny "A.A." Stewart, a salesman for Aetna Life Insurance Co. in Cincinnati, had purchased a white whale from the New York Aquarium to bring back to the city. The whale was destined for the Lookout House on Jackson Hill Park next door to the Mount Auburn Incline. Most of the city's inclines were coupled with resorts that offered entertainment and drinks to attract passengers and entice them to spend money, and what's more enticing than seeing a live whale in Cincinnati? Stewart's plan tragically failed, with the first whale dying en route to Cincinnati. While the second whale made it to the city's spectators, the animal also died after three days. The third and final whale arrived in Cincinnati on July 1. Newspaper accounts described her as eight feet in length, weighing about 600 pounds. More than 25,000 onlookers came to see the whale over the next few days, but when a thunderstorm erupted on July 5, the whale became frightened. "She scooted, dived and threshed around the tank like one possessed of a restless devil,' The Enquirer wrote. The whale had settled down and swam for a bit the next day, but she eventually sank to the bottom of the tank and died, putting an end to Stewart's dream of having whales in Cincinnati. Stewart followed his disappointment with a successful career as a sales manager for the Strobridge Lithographing Co. Strobridge Lithography Co., founded in 1847, was most famous for its circus posters, often producing them for The Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey. Stewart helped the company become the premier printers of the posters. The company had offices in downtown Cincinnati, Norwood and even New York City. By the late 19th century, the city had become the "third largest printing center in the country," according to the Cincinnati Art Museum. Due to his successful career, Stewart moved to New York as a wealthy man and part owner of the Barnum and Bailey Circus. But all his successes could not save him from being lost at sea. As a representative for his lithography company, Stewart made dozens of trips abroad, oftentimes traveling first class. Having vacationed in Paris with his wife, the businessman headed back to New York in April 1912 aboard the RMS Titanic. Stewart boarded the Titanic at Cherbourg, France, while his wife, Florence, remained in Italy. John Zaller, the executive producer of Exhibition Hub's Titanic: An Immerseive Voyage, which came to Cincinnati this spring, told The Enquirer that Stewart actually moved his Paris trip around so he could sail on the Titanic, which was a common theme among passengers. Sadly, he died with the ship despite his efforts to help others during the chaos. "He's the example of the rule of the sea: women and children first," Zaller explained. "The chivalry of the era, where he just stepped back and acted reassured, telling other younger children and some women that he knew, 'Don't you worry about a thing, I'll be in the next boat,' knowing there were no more lifeboats." After getting his friends to a lifeboat, Stewart was last seen going back inside the ship. According to the Titanic exhibit, Stewart's last words were heard by Titanic survivor Helen Bishop: "You four kiddies stay together and get in the first lifeboat. I'll be right back here." In a special dispatch to The Enquirer, it said Stewart's name was among first-class cabin passengers, but no mention of him was made among those who were saved. "There seems to be no doubt that Albert A. Stewart, formerly of Cincinnati, was lost on the Titanic," The Enquirer later wrote. The Enquirer described him as a "large, handsome man with an inexhaustible supply of good humor, a capital storyteller and tireless worker." Stewart's widow and family returned to the U.S. a few weeks later, and his estate, valued at $276,974 (which is equivalent to $9 million today), reflects his considerable wealth and influence. A marker in Gallipolis, Ohio, commemorates his legacy, connecting Cincinnati to the Titanic. Aside from Stewart, there were at least eight other Cincinnatians reportedly aboard (or involved with) the Titantic. , 41: Abbing was born in Cincinnati on May 11, 1870. He lived in St. Bernard before becoming a blacksmith and accepted a work contract in South Africa, where he remained for three years. He was returning to Cincinnati on the Titanic as a third-class passenger. There was no mention of his name in the sinking of the ship, and if his body was ever recovered, it was never identified. , 42: Frauenthal was born in Cincinnati on Dec. 1, 1869. However, she and her family later moved to Manhattan, New York, sometime before 1880. In 1912, she was remarried in Nice, France, to Henry Fraudenthal, a renowned physician originally from Pennsylvania. A little over two weeks after they wed, they boarded the Titanic as first-class passengers. On the night of the sinking, Frauenthal, her husband and her brother-in-law were recused, with claims that they were the first to disembark from the Carpathia. , 27: Horwitz was a Forest Avenue resident, born on May 26, 1884, in Cincinnati. She was travelling aboard the Carpathia as a first-class passenger when the ship rescued the survivors of the Titanic. At the time, she had been intending to spend a six-month-long vacation in Europe. , 32: Rosenbaum was born into a wealthy family that settled in Cincinnati, where she was born on June 12, 1879. She moved to Europe in 1907 to work in journalism. While reporting on French fashions in Paris, she decided to return to the United States aboard the Titanic. She was saved from the tragedy, fleeing the sinking ship on a lifeboat. She went on to become possibly the first female war correspondent during World War I. She died in London on April 4, 1975. She was 95. , 31: The grandson of John A. Roebling, who designed the Roebling Suspension Bridge and the Brooklyn Bridge, raced cars. He died in the sinking. He was 31. 24, 46: The couple spent their honeymoon aboard the RMS Titanic. While Lucein did not survive the sinking of the ship, Mary Eloise did and later relocated to Cincinnati. She died in the Queen City in 1940. She was 46. , 73: Martha was the widow of George Nelson Stone, who worked for Cincinnati Bell and other businesses and founded Chester Park amusement park. The Stone family appeared in the 1900 census living in Cincinnati, but when George died a year later, Martha moved to New York. She boarded the Titanic from Southhampton and was spared in the sinking. She died in 1924 at 73 and was buried in Cincinnati alongside her husband. Sources: Enquirer archives and Encyclopedia Titanica. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Man who brought 3 whales to Cincinnati later died on Titanic

‘I'd Always Wanted to Make Biryani, and This Did Not Disappoint'
‘I'd Always Wanted to Make Biryani, and This Did Not Disappoint'

New York Times

time28-03-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • New York Times

‘I'd Always Wanted to Make Biryani, and This Did Not Disappoint'

Good morning. The sea otters were hammering clams open at the New York Aquarium the other afternoon, al fresco dining under a high sun that hinted at warmer days ahead. They looked stoked. We'd fed ourselves roast beef sandwiches from Roll-N-Roaster in Sheepshead Bay beforehand, and were in a similar mood. It was one of those perfect weekend days, a reminder that when it comes to time spent away from work, away from routine, it's a good idea to put food at the center of the leisure — to eat for pleasure, with intent. It needn't be roast beef, though roast beef is awesome. (It needn't be clams, either.) This weekend, as Ramadan comes to an end, it might be chicken biryani (above) showered in pomegranate seeds, to eat with raita and naan. I love Naz Deravian's recipe for its vibrant depth of flavor, and for the way the chicken almost melts into the rice. Featured Recipe View Recipe → It's a process recipe, which means it has a lot of steps. But that's fine on a weekend; more than fine. You can escape into the cooking and feel the pressures of the week that was fade away, replaced by the satisfaction of craft. The results are delicious. (Make sheer korma for dessert.) Onward! You could set yourself up for warm bowls of overnight oats for breakfast, a meal my father would sometimes augment with crumbled bacon and cream, before pouring a splash of Scotch over the whole. You could build a pimento cheese pie for lunch, make chicharrones or bake and assemble a blackout cake. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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