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Northeast Journal - St. Petersburg, Florida Journal | Newspaper
  • Home
  • Our Team
  • Our Story
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  • Content
    • All
    • Cover Story
    • Animals Rule
    • Goodness InDeed
    • Green page
    • History
    • Journal Entry
    • Miscellaneous
    • Monuments and Landmarks
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  • Inspired by the Mission: Hundreds Help Paint Community Mural
    July 24, 2024
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  • Halley’s Comet 1910 Visit Stirs Up St. Pete
    July 24, 2024
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  • Historic Preservation Has Positive Impact on Local Economy
    July 24, 2024
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All, Places/Events

Our Neighborhood School Is Back in Session

September 10, 2019 by The Northeast Jounal No Comments
Our Neighborhood School Is Back in Session

North Shore Elementary PTA and Friends of North Shore Elementary (FNSE) worked tirelessly over this summer with the faculty and staff of our historic school to ensure a flawless start to the 2019-2020 school year for our students. Leading up to the beginning of the school year, both of these groups supported several important teacher, family, and student programs.

The Squire Session is an opportunity for incoming kindergarteners to meet teachers and each other and have a pre-school assessment. The PTA provided breakfast and coffee for parents, held a uniform swap shop, offered a selection of spirit gear, and gave parents an opportunity to join PTA.… Read More

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Reading time: 3 min
All, Spotlight on the Arts

Paper Reimagined at the Museum of Fine Arts

by Gay Wasik-Zegel No Comments
Paper Reimagined at the Museum of Fine Arts

Can you imagine a world without paper? In my small home office, I am surrounded by jotted notes, framed certificates, calendars, business cards, posters, stamps, greeting cards, and books … all indications of how closely paper is interwoven into the fabric of daily life. The Museum of Fine Arts St. Petersburg’s touring exhibit, Above the Fold: New Expressions in Origami takes the familiar medium of paper and transforms it in ways that help the viewer see a realm of new possibilities. “This is one of the MFA’s most ambitious installations, and our guests will be able to experience origami as never before,” says the museum’s executive director, Kristen A.… Read More

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Reading time: 3 min
All, Cover Story

Reinvention at the Museum of History

by Will Michaels No Comments
Reinvention at the Museum of History

The St. Petersburg Museum of History is about ready to again reinvent itself. I had the honor of once serving as the museum’s executive director and as a trustee on its board. I thoroughly enjoyed my time there. The museum gave me to an opportunity to apply my education in anthropology, and it was while there that I began writing the history column for the Northeast Journal back in 2004.

At the time I was with the museum it was also undergoing a major renovation. A new entrance and gift shop were fashioned off 2nd Avenue NE. The Strum Family Gallery was created, now where Schrader’s Little Cooperstown renowned Signed Baseball Exhibit and Collection is displayed, and the administrative offices were moved from the front of the museum to a new wing on the back of the museum.… Read More

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Reading time: 6 min
All, Cover Story

St. Pete Bees Create Quite a Buzz

by Gary Smith No Comments
st. pete bees create quite a buzz

On a steamy Friday morning downtown, we were standing on the rooftop of the most unlikely of venues: the Museum of Fine Arts. The air was thick with tropical moisture and the sun was pounding us. Just a typical August day in Florida.

We had just climbed the 20-foot ladder to the top, and we were collectively awestruck, taking in a magnificent, million-dollar view of Tampa Bay, the boats at the St. Pete Yacht Club Marina, and the high-rise condos all around us.

While we were busy enjoying the view, Matt and Allison Davis of Noble Nectar brought our attention to why were there in the first place.… Read More

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Reading time: 6 min
All, Why We Love the 'Burg

Young, Creative, and Business Savvy

July 22, 2019 by Lynn Lotkowitz No Comments

Drive down ever-changing Central Avenue, and at the corner of 11th Street you can’t miss the cluster of 23 royal palm trees, the sunshades, or the beach sand. The space serves as the outdoor patio for Intermezzo Coffee and Cocktail, a chic, stylish venture owned by Jarrett Sabatini, a 25-year-old entrepreneur who lives downtown on the edge of the Old Northeast.

A 2016 graduate of the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, Jarrett is one of the growing number of young, creative entrepreneurs who are adding to downtown’s high energy, and changing the landscape of St. Pete. Intermezzo’s hip vibe and minimalist decor with big windows overlooking the street bring to mind a trendy city feel, and that is exactly Jarrett’s goal.… Read More

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Reading time: 3 min
All, Monuments and Landmarks

Coming Soon: Your New St. Pete Pier™

by Kristin Brett No Comments

The St. Pete Pier is one of the largest construction projects the city has ever undertaken, totaling 26 acres of downtown waterfront development.  If you live or work near downtown, you no doubt have seen some of the new Pier’s structures and supports starting to spiral upwards. They are the walls and framing for buildings, the support for solar panels at the Marketplace, and beginning framework for the Janet Echelman floating sculpture.

Construction is now at a feverish pitch with overnight concrete pours for the Pier Head building floors, and the entire Pier District is an active construction site. An average of over 200 workers are on site, working 10+ hours a day, six days a week.… Read More

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Reading time: 4 min
All, Cover Story

Shorecrest Headmaster Launches Children’s Book

July 19, 2019 by Gay Wasik-Zegel No Comments

Like the fictional Albus Dumbledore of Hogwarts School of Wizardry, Mike Murphy – headmaster of Shorecrest Preparatory School – also has a bit of magic up his sleeve.

His work shines throughout the school’s campus and in the pages of his new children’s book.

Recently, while recovering from knee surgery, Mike’s interests in travel, space (he had just been to Cape Canaveral), and his penchant for storytelling provided the perfect blend of ingredients for the creation of a children’s adventure series. The ideas came together so quickly that he was able to write not one, but three books, in rapid succession.… Read More

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Reading time: 5 min
All, Cover Story

Horticulturist Extraordinaire: Sunken Gardens Says Goodbye to Bill O’Grady

by Janan Talafer 4 Comments

It was a flower. It was alive and wonderful. It gave the gardener hope and made him want to work even harder. And so he does – he toils day and night, tirelessly tending to his jungle of a garden.

– The Little Gardener, Emily Hughes

Bill O’Grady is a plant whisperer. Show him a plant and most likely he knows the plant’s common name, botanical Latin name, and country of origin. A passion for gardening runs deep. He’s also an avid collector. Which plant or flower of his favorite? “That’s like asking a parent which is his favorite child,” says Bill.… Read More

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Reading time: 7 min
All, Animals Rule, Uncategorized

For the Love of Dogs

May 27, 2019 by Howard Pollack 1 Comment

Dogs, as well as many other pets, become part of the family in most households. They share time, shelter, food – and most importantly, love and companionship. And once you have had the opportunity to share all that with a loyal pet such as a dog, it brings you much joy and happiness and can help to cure depression among other afflictions. Just the simple act of petting your pooch can stimulate positive chemical reactions in your system that make you feel better.

Dogs are used in children’s hospitals and senior centers alike to bring warmth and joy to the sick and infirm.… Read More

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Reading time: 5 min
All, Spotlight on the Arts

‘Lady and the Bard’ in My Backyard

by Gay Wasik-Zegel 1 Comment

We sat on the porch, my neighbors and I – The stories grew wings, the time seemed to fly.

Shakespeare was a well-known bard, a storyteller intent on passing down traditions through the spoken word. My Northeast Park neighbors, Jimmy and Michelle Moore – a.k.a. Lady and the Bard – also use spoken words, along with their unique blend of folk, blues, and jazz to remind listeners of an oft-forgotten America. Oh, the stories I heard as we took a step back in time and spent a Sunday afternoon on the back porch…

Michelle’s Story

Michelle began singing in her church choir at the age of nine.… Read More

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Reading time: 5 min
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