As we go through our battles in life it can feel like an uphill battle, but when you raise your knees and pump your arms, you push through and make it to the finish line. Mental struggles and racing run a parallel course. It’s okay to ask for help, and it’s okay to talk about what you may be going through. Our hope is to continue this race annually and to keep getting our message across to all those who may be suffering in silence. This truly was a community event, and we came together as a community to raise $18,000 for the Family Service League. Thank you also to all the volunteers who came out on race day to help make the day run smoothly and successfully - specifically all our fellow student-athletes who woke up early to either volunteer or participate in the race. Smith, Coach Vas, and all our teachers at East Hampton High School for their support in promoting the race. Brussell for providing the wonderful music to help get our runners pumped for the race and to Mr. Those sponsors include Truth Training, Tarbet and Lester, Amaden Gay Agency, Men at Work Construction, Handy Hands, Dancehampton, East Hampton Teachers Association, Amagansett Teachers Association, the Rotary Club, the Kiwanis Club, Dan Scotti, Harbor Bistro Mobile Kitchen, Andrew Sabin Family Foundation, Treewise, Springs Fire Department, Body Tech, Compass, East End Land Planning, Gubbins, Ridge Walk, Cashin Coffee, East Hampton Town P.B.A., East Hampton Village P.B.A., Goldberg’s, and Ruddy & Sons. Thank you also to all of the sponsors who donated money toward the Family Service League so we can continue our efforts of offering help and support to those in crisis. We could not be more thankful for all that they did to make this race the success it was. We are truly so lucky to have had the support and guidance from the Old Montauk Athletic Club and Jennifer Fowkes and all the amazing OMAC members who helped us bring this race to reality. We would also like to thank the East Hampton Village Police Department, East Hampton Village ambulance, and the East Hampton Village lifeguards for all their work and effort they put in, especially on race day, that helped facilitate such a wonderful day. Their help and involvement helped to make this race such a wonderful community event. We would like to start by thanking the Village of East Hampton, The East Hampton Village Foundation and Mayor Larsen for sponsoring the race and for the beautiful banners throughout the village that promoted the race as well. Somehow, it felt like the first day of school.We just wanted to take an opportunity to give our thanks to so many people who helped make the Stop the Stigma May Day 5K race so successful. Michele, the brand’s head accessories designer, certainly laid out an array of atypical Gucci accoutrements that befit the brand’s new arty, tender bent: Berets, knit caps, tortoise-shell spectacles, signet rings and suede messenger bags. The show notes, no doubt hastily written and translated, trumpeted the show as a “point of departure” and a celebration of “the idiosyncrasies that define personal style today.” Yet Gucci, one of the marquee names in Milan, was finally making a strong statement, addressing a new generation, and taking risks - tactics necessary to improve its flagging fortunes and eroding relevance in a fast-changing luxury landscape. Familiar Gucci fare - vaguely Seventies suits taut across the shoulders and demonstrative outerwear - mingled sometimes uneasily with shrunken sweaters, lace T-shirts and pajama-like pants. The show will surely be divisive in its unapologetic androgyny - and critiques gentle given the rush job at hand.
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