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Catherine was an attractive, outgoing woman who liked Latin American music and loved to dance. A graduate of Brooklyns Prospect Heights High School in 1954, she was also interested in history and politics and could debate on many issues. I remember that she loved to talk politics and knew a great deal about what was going on, said her younger brother, Bill Genovese, recently. She was a Renaissance woman, interested in a lot of different subjects, he said. By 1963, she had moved to Queens. She rented an apartment located on the second floor of a commercial building on Austin Street in the Kew Gardens section of Queens, a quiet, mostly residential area. She shared her space with a girlfriend, Mary Ann Zielonko. Catherine later got a job as a bar manager in Evs Eleventh Hour Club, a small neighborhood tavern on Jamaica Avenue and 193rd Street in the Hollis section of the borough. The bar was about five miles from her apartment, and she drove her red Fiat to the restaurant nearly every night. She worked late, sometimes into the early morning hours. It made her nervous to return to her apartment in the dark, but it was something that could not be avoided and being a city girl her whole life, Catherine had the typical resiliency and determination of a native New Yorker.
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On weekends, she would come to visit the family in New Canaan, said Vince, but it was never enough. Of course, now after what happened, I wish it was more. Catherine was always busy with her career and running back and forth to Connecticut and New York City. She wanted to visit Italy and dreamed of one day opening an Italian restaurant with her father in New Canaan. Her parents worried about her living in Queens, but accepted it as part of city life and as what she wanted. But her heart was never far from her family. I believe she found an inner peace when she spent weekends with us in Connecticut, said Vince, She was full of life. The city was one part of her, New Canaan was another. |



