Letter From The Editor:
Welcome to NYCPlus
Greetings! And welcome to NYCPlus, New York Citys first general interest magazine for and about New Yorkers in their 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and I kid you not 100s.
News Briefs
Written by Andy Humm
NYC Plus presents a monthly round-up of news and events that have the greatest impact our lives.
REFLECTION
Halfway Through The Ride
By Wickham Boyle
In ancient Rome there was a two-headed God named Janus whose job it was to protect doorways. Janus had an ancillary responsibility as well, which was to look back at the year that passed, and forward at the one to come.
HUMOR
One Mans Exit Strategy
By Kent Doyle
Its not that I dont have a retirement strategy; its that my plan is a bit unconventional and it isnt working out. I know what a 401K is, sort of, but Ive never personally owned one.
COMMENTARY
Aging or Ageism:
Do Words Make a Difference?
By Arthur Y. Webb
A friend of mine said to me the other day that he planned to retire at 59, and was emphatic about not becoming an older person.
MONEY
Rising Interest Rates and Why We Should Care
By Don Conrad and Hammid Firoozeh
A new client of ours recently came into some unforeseen money. With the desire to act wisely and give his cash the opportunity to grow, he told us that he wanted to invest in something safe.
|
PROFILE

Cartoonist...Playwright...Author...
By Jerry Tallmer
Forty-four years ago, when Jules Feiffer was 32 and indispensable as a weekly zeitgeist cartoonist for The Village Voice was indeed the central nervous system of that high-adventure Eisenhower-era breakthrough in journalism he wrote a 35-minute play called Crawling Arnold for Chicagos Second City improvisational troupe.
MEMOIR

By Deborah Emin
Every experience in our lives has a beginning, a middle, and an end. In tracing the trajectory of my experiences as a schizophrenic there was certainly a clear beginning. However, it is only now that the experience has ended that I know its mid-point and its real ending.
ESSAY

By Vivian Gornick
The British art critic, John Berger, in an influential book called Ways of Seeing observed that in our culture: men watch and women are watched. Think about that for a moment.
FEATURE

By Meryl Green
A modern dancer, feet unprotected by pretty pink ballet slippers, by hot tap or cool jazz shoes, seriously abuses her feet throughout her career. It comes with the territory. Allowing the toes to spread wide in support of an aesthetic which embraced rooting deeply into the ground and pushing firmly skyward, our founding mothers sought the more natural look and feel of earth beneath their feet.
|
WORK
Offering Comfort At Both Ends of The Life Cycle
By Laura C. Girardi
Susan Tapleys doctor delivered the disturbing diagnosis in November 2003: He told the divorced 53-year-old grandmother that he had spotted pre-cancerous cells during a routine gynecological exam.
HOME

This is The Life:
The Hallmark Has It All By Timothy Lavin
Visitors to the Hallmark, an upscale senior residence in Battery Park City, could be forgiven for lingering.
M EMORY
Seems a Bit Drafty Around Here
By Stephen Zanichkowsky
Ah, yes, each generation must have its war. My fathers was the Second World War; his fathers was the Bolshevik revolution.
|