School here and they told us there would be Cleveland Police a patrolling, extra patrols in the area after a 12yearold girl rushed back to school yesterday afternoon after class was dismissed and told everyone here that someone had tried to get her into their vehicle. This is the intersection at west 44th and hyde where a 12yearold girl says that a man possibly in a black jeep liberty like this one beeped the horn. The young girl says the man told her to get in. So she took off and biked back to her could. As lyn lincoln preparatory schol they called the police. Brianna jones lives in the neighborhood where the girl said she was approached. She said she thinks she has seen that vehicle in the neighborhood before. I think maybe they just saw something that they liked and they just wanted to pick her up. Im not saying it is a good thing, but i feel like i dont think they are being intentional about it. Reporter so police did search the area yesterday, did find the suspect. The best clue
Published May 4, 2021
After years of hard work, the community of Sol Naciente and the Village of Once, El Salvador, has a new well and clean running water pumped into the homes of 38 families.
What began as a mission trip of Molloy College and Dominican College to help the village of Amityville Dominican Sister Flor Buruca, blossomed into a beautiful relationship between its people and the building of a new well.
The problem was that Sol Naciente - a community of displaced people - had been sharing well water with a neighboring town. Villagers did not have access to the existing well every day because it was drying up. They walked miles to get the water three to four times a week and the storage of the commodity was often unsanitary.
Son Starts GoFundMe For Mom Displaced In Long Island Fire - Levittown, NY - "Last Saturday was a living nightmare." - James Capuano, whose mother's home was destroyed, and her landlord killed in a devastating fire.
Published Dec 3, 2020
From the streets of New York City to service trips to El Salvador, Edward Cramsie thanks Sister Diane Capuano, an Amityville Dominican, in a reflection written for the most recent issue of the Dominican Youth Movement Newsletter. Here is the reflection.
Before I even attended a single class at Molloy College, the first person I met was Sister Diane Capuano. From the moment I met Sister Diane, I knew that she was the embodiment of the Four Pillars of Dominican Life and she immediately became a role model in my life. We initially spoke for 20 minutes on the different service programs that Molloy had to offer and she wanted to start me off with a Midnight Run. From there, I traveled with Molloy on numerous service trips to El Salvador, West Virginia and New Orleans. Each trip I grew deeper in faith and friendship with other students and counselors and I could never truly put my finger on why these connections became so meaningful to me. One day af