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Town Of Oyster Bay Town Board Holds
Public Hearing On Construction Safety Training
JENNIFER

The Town of Oyster Bay Town Board on Oct. 4 held a public hearing on the addition of new construction site safety training requirements to the Building Construction chapter in the town code.
The addition to the town code would require what’s known as in the field OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Admin istration) 30 training. The OSHA act was passed in 1971 and the administration was created to ensure safe and healthy condi tions for workers by setting and enforcing standards through providing training, edu cation and resources and other means.
“ is amendment has to do with con struction work and construction sites,” town attorney Frank Scalera said. “The purpose that’s set forth in this statute... is this provision, this section are intended to promote the safety of minor and major construction projects... These provisions are designed to protect workers employed, or otherwise engaged at construction sites, and to make sure they have received adequate safety training, that contractors performing construction work has essen tial safety training... and essential training systems to prevent injuries and to protect workers injured.”
If the law was passed, it would require contractors performing jobs in the Town of Oyster Bay to receive OSHA 30, a 30-hour safety training class. Presently, all public works contracts require OSHA 10, a 10-hour training course.
“The benefits of OSHA 30 training is that construction workers or demolition workers... that they know how to recognize and avoid common workplace hazards,” Scalera said. “In addition, it also will train workers to learn about the guidelines such as OSHA Hazard Assessment, to assess a workplace and perhaps be more vigilant in reporting things that may be a safety concern. It will add first aid training to these workers in the OSHA 30 class, fire watch requirements, they’ll learn more about personal protective equipment, electric safety and emergency plans for their fellow employees.”
Not only do the construction workers have the benefit of being able to protect themselves and their coworkers, the training
will also benefit residents in the town by pro viding safer conditions that they may walk or drive past.
“What this amendment does is that the applicant or the permit holder, the person who goes for the building permit at the building department or the planning and development department, if their construction project or site is greater than 35,000 square feet but less than 50,000 square feet, that will be deemed under this law a minor construction project,” Scalera explained. “A minor construction project would mean that the employees working on the project would be required to get OSHA 30 training. The local law also proposes and identifies a major construction site, and that would be construction sites 50,000 square feet and over. For those types of sites, the bigger ones, the employees would likewise have to have OSHA 30 training, however it would require what is called an individual entitled site safety designee. That individual would be the supervisor to ensure everybody on the bigger site has OSHA 30 training and follows OSHA 30 training.”
This law would not apply to sites under 35,000 square feet.
Vincent Alu, the vice president of Laborers Local 66 and a resident of Massapequa said the town attorney gave a “perfect evaluation” of this legislation.
“The mission statement of OSHA is the health and safety of the American worker,”
Alu said. “I just want to add a couple statistics that I was looking up while I was preparing. In 2020, the Bureau of Labor Statistics for Occupational Safety and Health in Construction [found that there were] 4,764 fatalities, 21 percent of them (1,008) in construction. We have 1,798 OSHA compliance officers in the nation. That’s a 50-year low. That works out to one inspector for every 82,000 American workers on 10.1 million worksites. It’s very tough for OSHA to police this industry, so to speak.”
Alu, who took OSHA 500 and OSHA 510, is a certified OSHA instructor.
“The legislation is pretty self explanatory and it offers the town a wonderful tool for the tool box when handling these sites,” Alu said. “Thirty-five thousand square feet is the average size of a neighborhood pharmacy type store and 50,000 square feet would require a designated competent site safety manager.”
Alu explained that already in New York City, a construction worker is not allowed on a work site without OSHA 30 training.
“It’s working its way eastward with Northwell Health, MTA and a lot of our bigger clients in the building trade,” Alu said. “For me as a lifelong resident, an OSHA instructor and an [officer of Laborers Local 66,] this makes tremendous sense.”
The class is also available online for $200, and it is not a pass or fail class. It just needs to be attended.
“Some of our bigger clients like North well Health or the MTA are requiring refreshers,” Alu said when asked if the cer tification is a lifetime certification. “I think it’s really helpful, as a lifelong construction worker. There’s things that just blurred the edges sometimes. And the effort of getting these jobs done, it’s miraculous some times. To build a hospital on Community Drive, it is short of a miracle to get that done.”
Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino thanked Alu and Scalera for explaining OSHA 30 during the meeting.
“We understand all the points you’re bringing across and we’re all about safety and protecting the public,” Saladino said.
Scalera asked that the town board keep the record open for 30 days so the public could comment. The law has not yet been passed.
Also during the Town of Oyster Bay Town Board meeting:
The town board voted to receive Saladino’s proposed budget for 2023.

The budget will be considered during budget hearing meetings on Oct. 18 at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.
“Despite the national economy expe riencing the highest inflation rates in 40 years, this is the fifth consecutive tax-freeze budget proposed by my administration,” Saladino said.
City In Glen Cove Is Down From Moderate To Susceptible Fiscal Stress Per State Comptroller Report
GLEN COVE/ OYSTER BAY RECORD PILOT STAFF
glencoveoysterbayrecordpilot@ antonmediagroup.com
Twice a year, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli releases the fiscal scores of municipalities and school districts. Reports within the past three years have shown the City of Glen Cove to be in moderate fiscal stress. But the latest report, released on Sept. 27, finds that the city is susceptible to fiscal stress.
Glen Cove is among the 20 local governments ending fiscal year 2021 designated in some form of fiscal stress, down from 30 a year ago.
“The infusion of aid from the federal
government and robust local sales tax revenues helped to put local governments on solid fiscal ground in 2021,” DiNapoli said. “Still, municipalities shouldn’t assume this will last. Inflation remains a major concern and sales tax growth is slowing in many areas. With the end of extraordinary federal aid, and a possible recession looming, local governments need to plan carefully to avoid fiscal cliffs in the future.”
The state comptroller uses a method called the Fiscal Stress Monitoring System, which was developed and launched in 2013, to “evaluate fiscal stress from a budgetary solvency perspective and provide a score to reflect the ability of a local government or school district to generate enough revenues to meet expenditures,” according to the Fiscal Street Monitoring System manual. Financial and environmental indicators
the system uses to measure fiscal stress includes fund balance levels, operating deficits, cash on hand, fixed costs and short-term cash flow borrowing; as well as tax base and population growth, reliance on state and federal revenues, poverty levels.
The system has three categories of fiscal stress; significant stress, moderate stress and susceptible to stress.
The system weighs individual indicators, such as year-end fund balance, operating deficits, use of short-term-cash flow, cash position and fixed cost, according to their relative importance. An entity’s performance on each of these indicators is evaluated on a 100-point scale, with the sum of the points yielding the overall fiscal stress and environmental stress score.
Local Government Fiscal Stress Designations:
Significant Fiscal Stress: 65-100
Moderate Fiscal Stress: 55-64.9
Susceptible to Fiscal Stress: 45-54.9
No Designation: 0-44.9
Two years ago, the City of Glen Cove received a score of 60, and then 61.7 the following year, meaning the city was in moderate fiscal stress. Currently the City of Glen Cove has a score of 50.4, meaning the city is in susceptible fiscal stress.
“My administration and I will continue to maintain proper budgeting practices, continually address deficit fund balances with the intent of growing reserves, maintaining services, eliminating non-essential and wasteful spending, and implementing new sources of revenue to continually improve the city’s financial condition and ensure the stabilization of taxes for years to come,” City of Glen Cove Mayor Pam Panzenbeck said.
Saladino Invites Residents To Supervisors 5K Run Slated For Saturday Oct. 15
Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino announced that the Annual Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor’s 5K Run is slated for Saturday, Oct. 15 at 9 a.m. The 3.1 mile course will wind through the heart of the hamlet of Oyster Bay and participants are encouraged to bring their family and stick around afterwards for all the fun at the Oyster Festival.

“The Supervisor’s 5K Run, held in partnership with the Greater Long Island Running Club (GLIRC), is a unique event that has become an important tradition in the lives of hundreds of runners from throughout the community,” Saladino said. “It is widely known for its scenic and challenging course through historic Oyster Bay. It also serves as the official kickoff event to the annual OysterFest, which will make its highly anticipated return for the first time since the pandemic.”
Runners who wish to participate in the event can register at www.glirc.org. The fee to register is $35 for pre-registration and $40 on the day of the race, which will take place from 7:15 to 8:45 a.m. at the Community Center in the Townsend Square parking lot off East Main Street in Oyster Bay. All registrants will receive a commemorative sweatshirt. There will be a $5 pre-registration discount for all Town of Oyster Bay residents. Those who have pre-paid can pick up their race packets on Friday, Oct. 14 at Runner’s Edge, located at 242 Main St. in Farmingdale from noon to 5 p.m. All proceeds will benefit the Life Enrichment Center in Oyster Bay. For more information about the event, residents can isit www.oysterbaytown.com or call the Town of Oyster Bay Parks Department at 516-797-7945.
—Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
Fall Oyster Bay Harbor Cleanup Rescheduled To Oct. 22
Fun environmental initiative provides great volunteer opportunity for students
Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Councilwoman Laura Maier invite residents to participate in the Fall Oyster Bay Harbor & Beach Cleanup, which has been rescheduled for Saturday, Oct. 22 at the town’s North Shore beaches. The event, held rain or shine, is co-spon sored by the Town of Oyster Bay, the North Oyster Bay Baymen’s Association (NOBBA) and Friends of the Bay. Volunteers—in cluding individuals, groups, families and friends—should meet at Theodore Roos evelt Memorial Park. off Larrabee Avenue
in Oyster Bay, near the waterfront gazebo beginning at 9 a.m. Community Service Certificates are available upon request for students seeking to fulfill volunteer requirements.
“This great environmental cleanup initia tive features volunteers and Town employ ees rolling up their sleeves and working side-by-side to remove litter and debris from the beaches and shoreline areas along Oyster Bay Harbor,” Saladino said. “We in vite residents of all ages to pitch in and help make a difference in our community.”
Volunteers are invited to participate in the cleanup, which will run from 9 a.m. to noon. The central meeting place will be Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park launching ramps and waterfront gazebo off of Larrabee Avenue, Oyster Bay. Additional locations for the clean-up include Theo dore Roosevelt Beach in Oyster Bay, Stehli Beach in Bayville and Centre Island Beach in Bayville. Typically, in year’s past, harbor and beach clean-up events have resulted in about forty thousand pounds of debris collected by volunteers.
Maier stated, “Each year, countless amounts of paper, food, plastics and other trash are discarded on beaches or dumped overboard from recreational and commer cial vessels. Allowing this litter to remain on our shorelines will only lead to increasingly worse damage for the environment.”
Individuals and groups who are interested in registering for this environmental cleanup should visit www.oysterbaytown.com or contact the town’s Department of Environmental Resources at 516-677-5943.
Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
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Town Of Oyster Bay Partners With Community Group To Collect Peanut Butter

Residents invited to ‘spread the love’ to help stock local food pantries
Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Councilman Tom Hand announced that the town will partner with the Massapequa Farmingdale Men’s Club to host a peanut butter collection drive. Throughout the month of October, residents are invited to donate new, unopened and sealed peanut butter to help replenish local food pantries and support families in need. Drop-off containers are located at Town Halls North and South, as well as at the Town Ice Skating Center.
“We are proud to partner with this great organization to help ‘spread the love’ and stock local food pantry shelves with this very popular product,” Saladino said. “Pea nut butter has a long shelf life, provides many nutrients and doesn’t require refrig eration, making it among the most highly requested items from local food banks. We thank the Massapequa Farmingdale Men’s Club for again putting our local communi ties first with another wonderful initiative to help others.”
The Massapequa Farmingdale Men’s Club mission is to provide and encourage involve ment in education, charitable and social programs for the men of local communities, and to support the local and wider commu nity with activities and contributions.

“The Massapequa Farmingdale Men’s Club has been assisting local food banks for more than five years, especially during the most trying times at the height of the
COVID pandemic,” Hand said. “Like all of the organization’s endeavors, proceeds from this event go entirely to help those in need.”
The Peanut Butter Collection Drive will run through Nov. 15. Drop-off bins are located during regular business hours at Town Hall North, 54 Audrey Ave., Oyster Bay, Town Hall South, 977 Hicksville Rd., Massapequa, and the Town of Oyster Bay Ice Skating Center, 1001 Stewart Ave, Bethpage.
“Our organization has worked to help the local and greater community for sever al years, and we are thrilled to once again partner with the Town of Oyster Bay to sup ply this much-needed item to local food pantries,” Men’s Club President/Founder Tom Sabellico said. “We’ve run many successful food drives and have found over the years that local food banks like peanut butter, thanks to it being easy to use; it keeps a long time, provides a variety of nutrients, is high in protein and is enjoyed by all age groups.”
Visit www.massapequafarmingdalemensclub.com for more information about the Massapequa Farmingdale Men’s Club and their mission. For more information about the Peanut Butter Collection Drive and other town programs, visit the town’s website at www.oysterbaytown.com or call 516-624-6380.
—Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR
To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.
THURSDAY, OCT. 13
Glen Cove Tree Planting
In conjunction with TD Bank and the Arbor Day Foundation, the City of Glen Cove will host tree planting. It will be hosted at Morgan Memorial Park on Germaine Street in Glen Cove from 9 a.m. to noon.
SATURDAY, OCT. 15
BubblePop Presented by the Long Island Children’s Museum
Children in grades first through fifth grade, from 11 a.m. to noon, will become bubble scientists at the Glen Cove Public Library and will learn about the unique physical properties of bubbles. Experiment making bubbles and take home a bubble print.
This program is limited to Glen Cove Public Library card holders.
SATURDAY, OCT. 15 -
SUNDAY, OCT. 16
Oyster Festival
The Oyster Festival is a project of the Oyster Bay Rotary Club and run by the Oyster Bay Charitable Fund. Activities include live entertainment, ships, top-notch artisans, pirate shows, midway rides and the iconic

oyster eating and shucking contest. And of course, the food court, where volunteer chefs and culinary pros work side by side, cooking and serving dozens of unique oyster, clam and other seafood concoctions along with traditional festival fare.
THURSDAY, OCT. 20
Zombie Makeup with Chris Vivas
Teenagers in grades six and up are invited to the Glen Cove Public Library, 4 Glen Cove Ave., to learn how to create spooky zombie looks with makeup artist Chris Vivas just in time for Halloween. Program is limited to Glen Cove Public Library card holders. Visit www. glencovelibrary.org for more information.
SATURDAY, OCT. 22
YOLO Strong’s 10th Anniversary “Party with a Purpose”
Help raise funds for the YOLO Strong Foundation, an organization that supports
local medically fragile, terminally ill and special needs children, at the Mill River Club, 103 Mill River Rd. in Oyster Bay. The event will honor healthcare heroes Sharon Goodman and Jennifer Simonetti, as well as the creators of the Bee Mindful program. which supports children with neurodiver ity, at Cohen’s Children’s Medical Cen ter. The event will be held from 7 p.m. to midnight and there will be dinner, dancing and 50/50 raffles. Tickets are a tax-deduct ible price of $150, and there are corporate charitable bundles available.
MONDAY, OCT. 24
Virtual movie talk: The Films of Alfred Hitchcock
On Zoom at 7 p.m., the Oyster Bay-East Norwich Public Library is hosting a movie session to discuss the films of Alfred Hitchcock, who is probably the most famous film director who ever lived. For five decades, first in England and then in Hollywood, he made fifty-four films, including The Thirty-Nine Steps. This presentation looks at his achievements as “the master of suspense,” and through dozens of film clips, examines his extraordinary creativity as one of the 20th century’s greatest film makers. Registration has already begun. Register online at oysterbaylibrary.org with a valid email address to receive a link.
SUNDAY, OCT. 30
Halloween Costume Brunch Buffet
Put on your spooky costume and celebrate Halloween at The Mansion at Glen Cove, 200 Dosoris Ln. in Glen Cove. Take pictures with decorations and enjoy The Mansion at Glen Cove’s famous holiday buffet brunch. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The ticket price for adults is $52 and the ticket price for kids is $25. Visit www. themansionatglencove.com/halloweenbuffet-brunch/ to make a reservation.
North Shore Kiwanis Dog Show
The North Shore Kiwanis is hosting the second annual Kiwanis Dog Show. Dogs will parade in costume at the Garvies Point Dog Park at 1 p.m.., and all proceeds will provide local children with winter coats and clothing. Visit northshorekiwanisli.com to register your dog for the event or to become a sponsor.
ONGOING EVENTS
Oyster Bay Market:
Born in 2020 during the height of the pan demic, the Oyster Bay Market is a biweekly market that operates on Sundays from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the municipal lot of Audrey Avenue over by the bandstand (74 Audrey Ave.) The market is a food-driven market that also supports local small businesses, artisans, not for profits and community organizations. Upcoming dates: Oct.16, Oct.30, Nov.13.







































Cuomo, D’Amato And The Scalia Revolution
Italian Americans in New York Politics: Part B

Cuomo rallied to win the primary and the general election against Lew Lehrman.
JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
By defusing a potentially explosive situation in the Forest Hills housing crisis, Mario Cuomo’s star rose exponentially in Democratic Party circles. Hugh Carey, who was elected governor in 1974, named Cuomo as his Secretary of State.
Carey was re-elected in 1978. This time, Cuomo was elected as lieutenant gover nor. In 1982, he ran for governor in the Democratic Party primary against his old foe, then-New York City Mayor Ed Koch. The latter, fresh off a 1981 re-election landslide win, took the early lead. Koch appeared invincible. The mayor, however, made a string of rhetorical blunders, including ridiculing upstate New York life.
In 1984, Cuomo delivered the keynote speech at the Democratic Party’s national convention. His “Family of America” address invigorated a Democratic Party faithful now facing another landslide defeat at the hands of Ronald Reagan.
Cuomo became an overnight sensa tion, appearing on the covers of national magazines. He was easily re-elected in 1986. A native of Queens County, Cuomo was very much a homebody. He enjoyed being governor of New York and never had any desire to run for president. He turned down a 1988 run and after being re-elect ed again in 1990, Cuomo said no to a 1992 run. Cuomo was popular, but he also had a chip on his shoulder. Ahead of his time, he criticized George Washington and Andrew Jackson as men on horseback who “did nothing” for him.
Cuomo, as Harry Truman warned politicians, stayed in the game too long. In 1994, he lost a bid for a fourth term to George
Pataki. By then, the suburbs, reeling under property tax increases, turned against the governor. When Cuomo’s son, Andrew, ran for governor in 2010, the latter made a property tax increase cap a feature of his campaign. You can be sure that the younger Cuomo was being tutored by his father.
Running parallel to Cuomo’s rise was that of Alfonse D’Amato. Both Cuomo and D’Amato were products of middle-class upbringings. Both attended law school, Cuomo at St. John’s, D’Amato at Syracuse. In 1980, D’Amato, then an unknown Town of Hempstead supervisor, took on Senator Jacob Javits in the Republican Party’s senatorial primary. The times were ripe for such a run. Javits was a leading liberal now facing a GOP electorate that for decades had been trending right. That same year, Reagan, after two attempts, won the GOP’s presidential nomination.
D’Amato easily defeated Javits in the pri mary. For the general election, the latter accepted a run on the Liberal Party line. In a three-person race, D’Amato edged
Mario Cuomo

out the Democratic Party’s nominee, Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman by a 45-44 percent margin, with Javits getting the remainder of the vote. (Maybe Javits wanted D’Amato to win.)
In Washington, D’Amato started out as a conventional conservative, voting consistently for the Reagan agenda. He maintained close ties with the state’s Conservative Party and was a strong sup porter of the state of Israel. D’Amato even
earned a nickname, “Senator Pothole.” He became known as a solon who delivered the goods, the opposite of his more cere bral Democratic colleague, Daniel Patrick Moynihan. The joke was that if the issue were, say, immigration, Moynihan would give a lecture on immigration policy in the 19th century, while D’Amato would procure a green card.
D’Amato was re-elected in 1986 and 1992. As state politics moved left, D’Amato

alienated his conservative base, voting for sanctions against South Africa, against the nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court and in 1993, while backing President Bill Clinton’s gays in the military idea. By 1998, D’Amato’s luck ran out. He was defeated for re-election that year by Charles Schumer.
D’Amato’s place in modern history remains that he is the last pro-life Republican candidate to win statewide

elections. During his tenure, he also maneuvered to have Rudolph Giuliani, then an unknown New York attorney, to be named U.S. District Attorney for its south Manhattan district. The two didn’t get along and D’Amato bitterly regretted his earlier support. Still, the senator helped turn the wheels of modern New York history. Giuliani’s high-profile pros ecutions translated into political success. He ran—and lost—the race for mayor of New York in 1989, before defeating David Dinkins in a 1993 rematch.
As mayor, Giuliani achieved the previously unthinkable: He tamed New York’s crime epidemic. Re-elected in 1997, Giuliani gained further fame as “America’s mayor” for his Gary Cooper-like courage on Sept. 11, 2001. However, his liberal stances on abortion and immigration prevented him from any success in GOP presidential politics.
Before and after World War II, Nassau County remained Republican. Only it was, at first, a different GOP. From 1967 to 1983, Joseph Margiotta was chairman of the county GOP. In 1972, he hosted a huge rally for President Richard Nixon at the Nassau County Coliseum. The president was impressed. “This is the biggest and best rally, Joe Margiotta, I have ever seen,” Nixon enthused.
Pundits compared the county GOP to Cook County Illinois’s Democratic Party machine. Under the reign of County

Executive Thomas Gulotta, overspending caught up with the party. The Nassau Interim Finance Authority, a New York State public-benefit corporation was created to assist the county’s finances. The county couldn’t govern itself.

In 2001, Glen Cove Mayor Thomas R. Suozzi was elected. A fiscally prudent Democratic Party put the county’s fiscal affairs in order.
The most significant Italian American in American politics was not an elected official. Antonin Scalia, also a native of Queens County, was elevated to the Supreme Court in 1986 by President Ronald Reagan. Scalia wasn’t just an other justice. For decades, he actively championed a literalist reading of the U.S. Constitution, rejecting the reigning idea that the document was a “living thing,” adaptable to the times. Scalia’s reading was both literalist and devoted to “original intent,” a cause long advocated by con servative critics. Scalia also rejected the view that the Declaration of Independence should be part of judicial interpretation. This put him at odds with not just liberals, but such conservatives as Harry Jaffa and George F. Will. Scalia died in 2016. However, the election of his fellow New Yorker, Donald Trump, paved the way for three more conservative justices on the court. The recent overturning of the Roe vs. Wade decision on abortion dramatizes that Scalia’s originalist approach has legs to it.

Baseball’s Network
















When you think of a ‘Field of Dreams” the greenery of an Iowa cornfield comes to mind and for good reason. It’s baseball. But what if I told you that there’s another Field of Dreams even closer? Would you believe it’s just off the New Jersey Turnpike in a warehouse district outside of New York City? Well it’s true.
That’s where the home of the MLB Network is located, in the former MSNBC world headquarters in Secaucus. Now well into its 14th year, the network has established itself as the full-time pre-eminent authority of America’s pastime.


Having recently spent an entire evening with the MLB Network crew, one quickly realizes just how many people it takes to put this programming on the air. And just how good they are at it. Of course it doesn’t hurt to have state-of-the-art facilities and everything you could possibly need at your fingertips.


It all starts with the crown jewel and centerpiece of the Network–Studio 42. This full-size replica of a ballpark (Philadelphia Citizens Bank Park to be exact) named after the immortal Jackie Robinson allows true-toform demonstrations at a moment’s notice. As a side note, second base in Studio 42 is located exactly where Don Imus used to do his morning show on MSNBC years ago. This 8000-square foot studio has become vital to their coverage and a fan favorite.
A running theme at MLB Network is their mission to pay homage to the game itself and the greats who have played it. Whether it’s Studio 42 (Robinson), Studio 21 (Clemente) or Studio 3 (Babe Ruth), history can be found everywhere you turn within the facility. For all the fun and excitement each day brings, their mantra remains the same. The games are the real star here and will always dictate the direction of the broadcast.
MLB Tonight is the flagship program and a 14-time Emmy winner for the network and for good reason. This nightly foray is like organized improv, pardon the oxymoron, but it’s true , you never know what will happen next. Most times neither do they. And that freshness is what keeps viewers coming nightly. Production meetings and rundowns be damned, it’s LIVE television and they go with the flow. It’s a late night talk show of sorts and has become the go-to place for baseball’s biggest moments. Whether it’s Pujol’s 700th or Judge’s 62nd home run, people know to check in with MLB Tonight (MLBT) for the latest coverage and much more.
One of MLBT’s most popular trios is that of Greg Amsinger, Harold Reynolds and Dan Plesac. These guys take the freewheeling style to the next level. Whether it’s breaking down a game-changing play or debating ketchup or mustard on a hot dog, these guys bring it every time out in a fun, educational and sincere manner. It’s obvious these three are true friends off the air as well, because they
are. On the golf course or with their wives socializing or the time spent on the set, they are a very close-knit group and that chemistry translates well on the air. It’s like watching the games and having a beer with your buddies. Debates, jokes and commentary are on full display.

Amsinger is a broadcast veteran and like the ringleader at a frat party, he knows how to stir the pot, keep the conversation moving and most of all, get the best out of his guys. This Midwest native bleeds Cardinals Red but his extensive knowledge of the game is so deep, one forgets he is only in his early forties. Surrounded by a mountain of baseball cards on his desk, Amsinger’s office is often the hub of activity during the preparation for that night’s broadcast. Bouncing thoughts and ideas off each other, a lot of times this is where a nugget becomes reality. Amsinger is a baseball purist and has a profound respect for the game. Always open to new ideas, he sees baseball’s future as a bright one as MLB goes more digital in an attempt to bring the game to the next generation of fans.
Without a doubt, Reynolds is the heart and soul of the network. As one of the original hires, Reynolds brings the same
ethic

and passion to his broadcasts that he did in his decade-plus major league career. As a Mariners icon, Reynolds played the game hard but always with a smile on his face. Over the years not only has he mentored the young players of today, but viewers are a lot smarter because of his work. When we speak of Studio 42, it should be noted that Reynolds helped design the studio during the network’s launch. And why not as it has become a second home to him each night. His days often start at 8 a.m., a full 12-plus hours before the broadcast. It starts with a phone call to his director or video engineer Nick, to start pulling up plays for that night’s show. His keen eye made him effective at the plate and now on television. His “42 Demos” are legendary and Reynolds is all over the building making use of the network’s resources. As a past Roberto Clemente Award winner, Reynolds is still in the communities speaking to the kids and helping people whenever he can and all without a lot of fanfare.
What you see is what you get when it comes to Dan Plesac. Genuine, insightful and natural are the three qualities that come to mind. As a legendary closer for the Brewers, he went into Chicago television before coming to MLBN over a decade ago. Similar to his colleagues, Plesac is passionate about the game and seeing it played right. His analysis of pitching is always spot-on and more to the point very often becomes fact moments after he speaks it. It never ceases to amaze viewers that Plesac is usually at least three steps ahead of the game in his analysis and brings clarity to the proceedings.
These three gentlemen together are creating magical Must See TV on a regular basis and quickly becoming the standard that studio shows will be measured by.
To a person, no one ever imagined 20
years ago that there would be a 24/7 network dedicated strictly to baseball. Plesac, Reynolds and the other players on staff never even considered this an option during their playing days, but wished it was available. The information now available daily is good for the fans, players and most of all the game in general.





One of the unheralded secrets to the success of the MLB Network is the editorial freedom enjoyed by its various programs. Nowhere on television, be it ESPN or a local station, can you find such openness and spontaneity in their content. In most cases, within minutes of an idea being hatched, it becomes on-air content. Nobody is afraid to take chances and the vast majority of the time it works. The camera will always be a truth sayer, the camaraderie you see is real and the overall family atmosphere at MLB Network is palpable.
Whether it’s the nuts and bolts of the control room, the cubicles of video production or the on-air talent, everyone works as a team and the final product reflects it. While many have been offered a chance at greener pastures, it’s the substance, people and shared experiences that keep them at MLB Network.

As we immerse ourselves in the action of the postseason, then the deals of the hot stove, followed by the sunrise of spring training, remember that MLB Network will be there for it all. Of course they will, after all, they are baseball’s Network of Record.
Get



CAROLINE CAMPBELL:
KATHARINE MCPHEE
MICHAEL FEINSTEIN

COLUMNS
Remembering My Student Loan
My parents weren’t sending me to Princeton.
Not that it mattered because I never had the grades to get into Princeton anyway. But I planned to go to college after graduating from Alfred G. Berner High School in 1975. Having taken a journalism class in my senior year, it hooked me. It was what I was meant to do. Many schools had journalism as a major, but my parents didn’t have the money to send me to any of those schools.
No, I was going to join the ever-growing legion of Long Islanders heading to Nassau Community College for their first two years. Although the tuition was affordable compared to places like CW Post and Adelphi, it was still out of my parent’s ability to pay. After all, they provided me with continued room and board after high school for as long as I needed.
Like most Long Island teenagers, I had a job at the brand spanking new Sunrise Mall and I only got 20 hours a week. That barely covered my weekend (and occasional weekday) partying.
I scraped together the tuition money for the first semester by cashing in a few savings bonds and whatever I had in my bank account. However, the well ran dry reasonably quickly when I had to show up at the
LONG ISLAND LIVING Paul DiSclafani pdisco23@aol.com
bursar’s office with the tuition for the spring semester in January of 1976.
Now what?
So, I did what many other Long Island teenagers whose parents weren’t footing their college tuition bill did. I applied for and received a student loan.
It was my only choice at the time. Every semester after that, I pieced together whatever cash I could and kept adding to the student loan. After two years at Nassau Community, I chose to finish my communications degree at the New York Institute of Technology, the only reasonably priced four-year institution within the shores of Long Island.
Based on the information I read before signing those loan papers, I understood that the borrowed
money would require a monthly repayment starting six months after graduation. Sometime in June of 1980, I received a package in the mail that included five payment booklets, each containing 24 pages of coupons (one coupon each for two consecutive years) that could be torn out and returned inside an envelope (which I had to provide), along with a check for $43.15. I remember carefully tearing out those coupons and writing the date and check number on the stub that remained stapled into the book. Every time I completed one of those pre-printed booklets, I felt a feeling of accomplishment. I held onto the stubs for fear of someday being thrown in jail if I ever was accused of missing a payment and needed the proof.
I honestly don’t remember how much I ended up borrowing or the interest, but I remember having to write out a check every month for the next 10 years for $43.15. When I got married in 1984, I took over writing the checks for my wife’s loan (she went to Farmingdale and then CW Post) and performed the same ritual for her coupons. Only her payments were for $50.67.
When I detached that last coupon sometime in 1990 and wrote out that final payment of $43.15, I felt a sense of accomplishment I had never experienced before; although now
married and having 28 more years to go on a 30-year mortgage, this was different. This was mine. I borrowed the money and was about to pay it all back. I still have the letter from Wachovia confirming that my loan had been repaid. Same for my wife, whose last payment of $50.67 came a few years later.
I may not remember what I had for breakfast yesterday, but I remember writing out 120 checks for $43.15. And the satisfaction that came with licking that last stamp.
Paul DiSclafani’s new book, wA View From The Bench, is a collection of his favorite Long Island Living columns. It’s available
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000

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Working Together With Our Neighbors, We Showed We Have The ‘Power To Feed Long Island’
September was Hunger Action Month, a time for all of us to step up and fight back against hunger in the United States.
At PSEG Long Island, we have been fighting hunger all summer long, with our second annual “Power to Feed Long Island” initiative. Partnering with Island Harvest and Stop & Shop, we held food drives in six supermarket parking lots across Long Island, collecting donations of nonperishable food and personal care items that Island Harvest distributes to families via its network of local food banks. This network includes St. Rose of Lima in Massapequa, Healthy Harvest Food Pantry at the Safe Center in Bethpage and St. Bernard’s in Levittown, as well as dozens of others across Long Island.
Hunger is a year-round problem on Long Island, however it is especially keen in the summer months, when school is not in session to provide free meals to students whose families are struggling financially.
After exceeding our 21,000-meal goal last year, we set a goal this year
CORNER

to collect the equivalent of 30,000 healthy meals for families in need. Long Islanders opened their grocery bags, their wallets and their hearts to help each other. I am humbled to say that we collected the equivalent of 42,666 healthy meals, exceeding our goal by nearly 43 percent and more than doubling last year’s goal.
I want to thank our partners at Island Harvest and Stop & Shop for their support and I want to thank every single Long Islander who came out to make a difference for their neighbors. We saw some amazing
generosity in the past three months.
At one location, a man handed a volunteer a $50 dollar bill as a donation. He engaged the volunteer in conversation about the collection drive and the need. Before he walked away, the volunteer told him that his donation will support 100 meals. He nodded and walked away. But halfway to his car he turned around, walked back, and handed the volunteer an additional donation—two $100 dollar bills.
As another donor was heading into the grocery store, a volunteer handed her one of our reusable shopping bags and shared information about the Power to Feed Long Island collection drive.
The woman responded that she was on a tight budget and was going to do her best with the money she had to shop for herself and her husband. When she came out of the store, she handed over several cans for the food drive and told the volunteer that even though she was struggling, she also wanted to help others.
This is what Long Islanders
do—and it’s what PSEG Long Island does, too.
Being strongly involved in the communities where we live and work is part of PSEG Long Island’s mission. Our employees have always been committed to making Long Island a better place, and they have volunteered for many years to help Island Harvest fight food insecurity. Having seen the toll the pandemic inflicted on families for the past two years, we felt very strongly that partnering with Island Harvest and Stop & Shop to help close that “summertime gap” in food donations was one way we could make a real, powerful difference for our neighbors.
Though we exceeded our goal this summer, hunger continues to be a pressing issue in our area, and we know there’s more work to do. I know I speak for our employees when I say that we look forward to the next opportunity to help support our neighbors and make Long Island and the Rockaways a better place.
David Lyons is the interim president and COO of PSEG Long Island

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COLUMNS

The More Things Change
As it has famously been stated, the more things change, the more they stay the same. This adage can be easily applied to people, places and things. For the purposes of this column, it applies to all three regarding the town of Brookville.

Just last week, I asked my husband to stop on the northwest side of Brookville Road so I could take a photograph of an old stable. The entire property had been surrounded by fencing while bulldozers reclined upon the sprawling lawn. Behind the stable was a gorgeous Victorian home and what appeared to be either a barn or a garage.
I quickly snapped shot after shot of the old buildings, mainly because I find beauty in the familiar and because I have a real love for vintage items, especially architecture. When I finished, I mumbled to Hubby, “I’ll bet the property gets leveled next week.” Hubby disagreed, stating that he thought perhaps the property owners were just going to clear the old brush that appeared due to years of disuse.
We passed the property earlier yesterday and saw that the entire stable had been dozed into the ground. Today, the old manse was torn in half, while the garage was missing its entire front. “I knew it,” I muttered as we drove past. I was grateful for the photographs, but I felt a deep resistance to the change. The area had looked pristine and country-like for decades,
which was familiar and comforting. On Brookville Road alone, however, there are several properties that have either removed multiple trees from their yards or have knocked down old farmhouses to make room for larger, more modern homes.
While the newer homes are beautiful, they tend to take away from what was once a pastoral, genteel area. I’ve often wondered whether the builders realized how these changes affected the face of the community and how hard the community members fought to keep it “familiar”. The history of the village, as well as its overall appearance, has been a constant for Long Island for hundreds of years.
The Town of Oyster Bay purchased a parcel of land from the Matinecock
(Algonquian) people in the mid-17th century. Those who settled in the area were of English and Dutch descent, as well as a great many Quakers. The area was referred to as “Wolver Hollow” because wolves often gathered at the nearby brook. After the Civil War, the name of the area was officially changed to Brookville, which for centuries had been recognized as a farming and woodland community. However, in the early 20th century, the area became known as Nassau’s North Shore Gold Coast due to the influx of wealthy New Yorkers who built extravagant mansions upon the land. Some of those landowners were the Posts (of cereal fame), the financier Edward F. Hutton and Alfred Vanderbilt, who owned Belmont racetrack. One interesting note about those mansions: The DeSeversky Center at New York Institute of Technology was formerly known as Templeton, a mansion of businessman Winston Guest. The mansion was used as one of the settings for the 1981 romantic comedy, Arthur, starring Dudley Moore.
Brookville was incorporated in 1931 to halt development of the area by these concerned estate owners. At that time, Brookville only encompassed a long, thin parcel of land along Route 107. The Post Estate was sold in 1947 to Long Island University for their C.W. Post campus. Wheatley Hills to the north was annexed into the village in the 1950s, which doubled
Brookville’s size. As a side note, it is also home to one of the oldest existing church congregations in the United States: The Brookville Reformed Church. The push for preservation of the community in order to prevent residential and commercial over-development was vital to residents of the village, as the rest of the county was developing exponentially.
For the most part, Brookville has remained as rural as it always was. However, as landowners move away or pass on, one can see more building in an area where it was once frowned upon. As some properties fall into various states of ruination, it is my fondest hope that the area remain as bucolic as it ever was, but change is inevitable. As mansions are rebuilt and properties are cleared, I remain hopeful that the rustic look of Brookville remain an unchanged, beautiful aspect of the Long Island landscape.
Patty Servidio is an Anton Media Group columnist.


Boy Scouts Of America Celebrate 100 Years Of Camp
Scouting and camp alumni invited to ticketed event on Oct. 22





The Theodore Roosevelt Council, Boy Scouts of America will celebrate 100 years of Camp Wauwepex/Schiff Scout Reservation in Wading River on Saturday, Oct. 22.
Camp Wauwepex, the Native American word for “place of good water,” was initially leased to the Nassau County Council in 1921 for $1 a year by William K. Vanderbilt and Henry Payne Whitney, two of the wealthiest residents on Long Island’s Gold Coast. In 1926, with the financial support of generous donors, the council bought the current camp property at a price of $300 an acre. In 1979, with a gift from the Schiff family, it was renamed John M. Schiff Scout Reservation and recent property enhancements include a state-of-the-art 7,100-square foot dining hall, dedicated in 2015.

“We are proud to celebrate the rich history of Schiff Scout Reservation and Scouting on Long Island and look forward to welcoming alumni and friends as we share fond memo ries of our beloved camp,” said Chris Coscia, Scout Executive and Chief Executive Officer of the Theodore Roosevelt Council.

Situated within 550 wooded acres sur rounding a 32-acre pond, Schiff is an ideal site and hosts hundreds of unit camping trips, themed events, and a year-round program for Scouts of all ages throughout the year.
The Centennial Celebration will com memorate the anniversary of the camp in conjunction with the Annual Fall Festival. More than 1,000 Scouts, volunteers, parents,
and alumni are expected to attend and take part in activities, aquatics, camp tours, view historical memorabilia, and more. A special opening presentation, “A Salute to The Legacy of Wauwepex” will honor individuals and groups who have made contributions to support the camp property and highlight the camp’s history. Alumni are invited to join us for the day from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. for a special program of events. Advance registra tion is required, $25 per adult includes tours, lunch, and a commemorative patch. Visit trcbsa.org/schiff100 To learn more or register to attend.

The Theodore Roosevelt Council namesake pays tribute to the first Council Commissioner and the 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. Headquartered in Massapequa, the orga nization is one of the nation’s oldest Scout Councils, and is home to the nation’s first Eagle Scout, Arthur R. Eldred, from Rockville Centre. With the help of more than 2,500 adult volunteers, the Council serves nearly 6,500 youth between the ages of 5 and 20 by providing programs within Scouting Cub Scout Packs, Scouts BSA Troops, Exploring Posts, and Venturing Crews in accordance with the mission of the Boy Scouts of America to prepare young people to make ethical and moral choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout Oath and Scout Law. Visit www.trcbsa.org for more information.
—Submitted by the Boy Scouts of America


























HERE FOR EVERY MOMENT OF EVERY LIFE

At Catholic Health, exceptional medical care and personalized support is inspired by every one of you.
Our Faith puts all your needs and comfort first. So, our innovative medical care is always delivered with unmatched compassion. It’s because we understand that we’re not treating just patients, we’re treating someone’s family, best friend, and neighbors to us all.

Learn more at chsli.org

Breast Cancer Awareness
In 2019, the latest year for which incidence data are available, in the United States, 264,121 new cases of female breast cancer were reported among women, and 42,280 women died of this cancer. For every 100,000 women, 130 new female breast cancer cases were reported and 19 women died of this cancer.

Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the United States, exceeded only by heart disease. One of every four deaths in the United States is due to cancer.
SYMPTOMS
There are different symptoms of breast cancer, and some people have no symptoms at all. Symptoms can include:
• Any change in the size or the shape of the breast.
• Pain in any area of the breast.
• Nipple discharge other than breast milk (including blood).
• A new lump in the breast or underarm.
If you have any signs that worry you, see your doctor right away.
RISK FACTORS
Some main factors that affect your chance of getting breast cancer include:
• Being a woman.
• Being older. Most breast cancers are found in women who are 50 years old and older.
• Having changes in your BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes.
LOWER YOUR RISK
You can do things to help lower your breast cancer risk.
• Keep a healthy weight and exercise regularly.
• Choose not to drink alcohol, or drink
alcohol in moderation.
• If you are taking hormone replacement therapy or birth control pills, ask your doctor about the risks.
• Breastfeed your children, if possible.
• If you have a family history of breast cancer or inherited changes in your BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes, talk to your doctor about other ways to lower your risk.
• Staying healthy throughout your life will lower your risk of developing cancer, and improve your chances of surviving cancer if it occurs.
FAST FACTS
• Each year in the United States, about 264,000 women get breast cancer and 42,000 women die from the disease.
• Men also get breast cancer, but it is not very common. About 1 out of every 100 breast cancers diagnosed in the United States is found in a man.
• Most breast cancers are found in women who are 50 years old or older, but breast cancer also affects younger women. Other than skin cancer, breast cancer is
the most common cancer among American women. Mammograms are the best way to find breast cancer early, when it is easier to treat and before it is big enough to feel or cause symptoms. Ask your doctor when you should get a mammogram.
Visit www.cdc.gov/cancer/breast to learn more.
—Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Breast Cancer Hotline Volunteers Sought
Breast cancer survivors can help others coping with breast cancer by becoming volunteers with the Adelphi NY Statewide Breast Cancer Hotline & Support Program. The four-day training program will take place on consecutive Tuesdays in November (Nov. 1, 8, 15 and 22) from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Zoom. Attendance at all four sessions is necessary.
This in-depth training includes presentations by nurse navigators and social workers on basic breast cancer education, active listening skills, and tips on engaging the community.
Those who complete the training will have opportunities to provide support and guidance on the hotline; attend community outreach events to support underserved communities; deliver educational presentations and speaking engagements; assist with local and national press and media; and help with fundraising efforts.
To reach the Adelphi NY Statewide Breast Cancer Hotline, call 800-877-8077.
Meet Greenberg’s Newest Surgeon
Greenberg Cosmetic Surgery and Dermatology welcomes Dr. Jason M. Weissler.
Weissler completed his plastic surgery residency at the prestigious Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, the number one hospital in the world, according to U.S. News & World Report and Newsweek During his plastic surgery training, Dr. Weissler gained extensive firsthand expe rience in both aesthetic and reconstructive plastic surgery alongside the nation’s leading plastic surgery experts.
Following the completion of his plastic surgery residency, Weissler was invited to complete an Aesthetic Surgery Fellowship endorsed by the American Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery with Dr. Louis Bucky. During his residency, he gained multidisciplinary experience using the most innovative and advanced surgical techniques in face, eye and neck lift pro cedures, facial rejuvenation, rhinoplasty,
breast surgery, and body contouring.
Weissler is a New York native. He attended the highly competitive combined B.S./M.D. Early Selection Program at The George Washington University where he earned his undergraduate and medical degrees. In addition to his distinguished education, he completed a one-year Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at The University of Pennsylvania Division of Plastic Surgery and published numerous articles in plastic surgery’s leading sci entific journals. His academic excellence led him to one of the nation’s elite Plastic Surgery residency programs at the Mayo Clinic, culminating with him serving as Chief Resident. Weissler was also selected as one of the first Plastic Surgery Chief Residents to be honored with the title of Instructor.
Weissler is continually recognized for his academic achievements and research as well as his sophisticated surgical training.
He has authored over 45 peer-reviewed research publications in the highest respected journals and has presented his work across the world. His academic accolades and elite training have led him to be an invited reviewer for the Aesthetic Surgery Journal, cosmetic plastic surgery’s top journal.

The philosophy that the “needs of the patient come first” has been an integral part of Weissler’s development as a Plastic Surgeon. Having trained at the Mayo Clinic, his mission is always to deliver the highest quality care through the latest and most advanced techniques. He is pas sionate about providing exceptional care to meet each patient’s diverse needs and recapture the beauty of self-confidence by providing quality and natural results.
Visit www.GreenbergCosmeticSurgery. com to learn more.
—Greenberg Cosmetic Surgery and Dermatology
Jason M. Weissler, M.D.Liver Disease Has Many Causes






















Many of the causes of liver disease are not preventable as they are caused by hereditary or autoimmune factors. However, there are factors which can be modified to prevent progression of known liver disease.
Alcohol is known to cause liver disease. Excessive alcohol intake over a long period of time can lead to the development of fatty liver, cirrhosis, liver failure and even liver cancer. In people with underlying liver disease of any cause, alcohol is even more dangerous. Small amounts of alcohol taken on a daily or weekly basis can lead to more rapid disease progression. People with hepatitis C, hepatitis B, fatty liver or any other type of chronic liver disease who drink alcohol are at a greater risk of disease progression than those who minimize or abstain from alcohol use. What constitutes alcohol intake? I am often surprised by patients who tell me that they do not drink alcohol but only drink beer and wine. It is a common misconception that hard liquor such as whiskey and vodka are the only alcohols which are dangerous to a person with liver disease. Beer and wine are alcoholic beverages! Therefore, to prevent liver disease prevention, alcohol intake must be minimized in those with liver disease, especially women who are at greater risk of disease progression with even small amounts of alcohol ingestion.


Cigarette smoking has also been






associated with the development of scarring of the liver. People with liver disease who smoke are more likely to progress to cirrhosis. Liver disease now joins heart, lung and cerebrovascular diseases as being adversely affected by cigarette smoking. To take this to the next level, we still do not know the effect of secondhand smoke on liver disease progression. Perhaps just being around people who smoke may be detrimental to one’s liver health. To prevent liver disease progression, it is important to stop smoking.
The use of marijuana has also been associated with greater amounts of liver scarring and disease progression. For similar reasons therefore as with cigarette smoking, people with liver disease should avoid the use of marijuana.

Diet is perhaps the most important factor that can be modified to prevent liver disease progression. Weight gain





and obesity are independent risk factors for the development of liver disease. Any liver disease will be worsened by excessive weight gain and poor dietary choices. More than 50 million Americans have fatty liver disease and many others with all forms of liver disease have fat deposition in the liver. This fat will lead to more fibrosis. Because of this, I am often asked about the best diet for the liver. My response to that question is that a good healthy, heart diet, low in fat and high in fruits and vegetables, is best for the liver. Avoidance of high carbohydrate desserts and avoidance of alcohol will lead to a healthier liver. Exercise is also critical to mobilize fat and burn off calories.
There are also medical interventions


which can prevent liver disease. Vaccination is the key to this. Vaccines are currently available to prevent hepatitis A and B. All children are currently vaccinated against hepatitis B. The current recommendations are that all people with any type of liver disease be tested for immunity to hepatitis A and B. If they are not immune, vaccination should be offered.
While liver disease may not be preventable, simple modifications in diet and exercise coupled with avoidance of cigarettes and alcohol can slow disease progression and lead to a healthier liver, not to mention an overall healthier lifestyle.


















































October Is Down Syndrome Awareness Month





In every cell in the human body there is a nucleus, where genetic material is stored in genes. Genes carry the codes responsible for all of our inherited traits and are grouped along rod-like structures called chromosomes. Typically, the nucleus of each cell contains 23 pairs of chromosomes, half of which are inherited from each parent. Down syndrome occurs when an individual has a full or partial extra copy of chromosome 21.
This additional genetic material alters the course of development and causes the characteristics associated with Down syndrome. A few of the common physical traits of Down syndrome are low muscle tone, small stature, an upward slant to the eyes, and a single deep crease across the center of the palm—although each person with Down syndrome is a unique individual and may possess these characteristics to different degrees, or not at all.
HOW COMMON IS DOWN SYNDROME?
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately one in every 772 babies in the United States is born with Down syndrome, making Down

One in 772 babies are affected.
syndrome the most common chromosomal condition. About 5,100 babies with Down syndrome are born in the United States each year.


DOWN SYNDROME HISTORY
For centuries, people with Down syndrome have been alluded to in art,




literature, and science. It wasn’t until the late nineteenth century, however, that John Langdon Down, an English physi cian, published an accurate description of a person with Down syndrome. It was this scholarly work, published in 1866, that earned Down the recognition as the “father” of the syndrome. Although other people had previously recognized the characteristics of the syndrome, it was Down who described the condition as a distinct and separate entity.
In recent history, advances in medicine and science have enabled researchers to investigate the characteristics of people with Down syndrome. In 1959, the French physician Jérôme Lejeune identified Down syndrome as a chromosomal condition.
Instead of the usual 46 chromosomes present in each cell, Lejeune observed 47 in the cells of individuals with Down syndrome.

It was later determined that an extra partial or whole copy of chromosome 21 results in the characteristics associated with Down syndrome. In the year 2000, an international team of scientists successfully identified and catalogued each of the approximately 329 genes on chromosome 21. This accomplishment opened the door to great advances in Down syndrome research.
WHAT CAUSES
DOWN SYNDROME?
Regardless of the type of Down syndrome a person may have, all people with Down syndrome have an extra, critical portion of chromosome 21 present in all or some of their cells.
The cause of the extra full or partial chromosome is still unknown. Maternal age is the only factor that has been linked to an increased chance of having a baby with Down syndrome resulting from nondisjunction or mosaicism. However, due to higher birth rates in younger women, 51 percent of children with Down syndrome are born to women under 35 years of age.
There is no definitive scientific research that indicates that Down syndrome is caused by environmental factors or the parents’ activities before or during pregnancy.
The additional partial or full copy of the 21st chromosome which causes Down syndrome can originate from either the father or the mother. Approximately five percent of the cases have been traced to the father.
Visit www.ndss.org to learn more.

—National Down Syndrome Society





Glen Cove Hospital Ranks Among Best Rehab Centers





Glen Cove Hospital has received “American’s Best Physical Rehabilitation Centers 2022” ranking award from Newsweek, the premier global news magazine. This prestigious honor places Glen Cove Hospital among the leading acute inpatient physical rehabilitation programs in the country—and one of the top nine in New York State. It is the only program on Long Island to be recognized. The list included 255 rehab centers in 25 states.
Newsweek’s report is the second national analysis in two months to recognize Glen Cove’s outstanding rehab program. U.S. News and World Report’s Best Hospital 2022-2023 list also ranked Glen Cove 47th in the nation for its rehabilitation center, which provides comprehensive care to 1,600 patients annually.
Newsweek’s report provides important guidance to patients, families and medical providers in need of acute inpatient rehabil itation. More than a million Americans will undergo surgery to replace a knee or hip joint. Many others will sustain a musculoskeletal or neurologic injury. Physical therapy and other treatments can significantly affect recovery, but finding the most appropriate rehabilita tion facility can be a challenge.
Newsweek teamed up with the global
Glen Cove Hospital has received “Ameri can’s Best Physical Rehabilitation Centers 2022” ranking.
data research firm Statista Inc., which considered quality of care, service, follow-up care and accommodations and amenities. The rankings were based on a peer survey from thousands of medical experts. In addition, key performance indicator data in 15 different measures published by the U.S. Centers for Medicaid Services were analyzed as well as accreditation distinctions.

Physical Therapy Tips

Physical Therapy (PT) has many benefits for children and adults of all ages and circumstances. Motivating your child to actively engage in PT in a home setting can be a challenge.
STRATEGY
• Children love to play games and have fun and PT by itself can seem like a lot of work. Develop games that involve movements that mimic the requirements of your child’s PT program. If your child is playing a game, they are much more motivated to participate in “PT like” activities.
• Involve siblings and friends. After all, you play games with others. Create a list of six fun games. Hang it on the wall and num ber them. Have the child roll the dice. The number rolled determines the game. Roll dice again to determine frequency.
• Reward your child’s good effort by allow ing them to play their favorite game—the reward doesn’t have to be PT related.
FUN GAMES (SECRET PT)
1. Pop the Bubbles
Get out a bottle of bubbles. Have your child stand on one foot and pop the bub bles with the other foot before they hit the ground. Pop 10 bubbles and then switch feet. Repeat three times. This helps to im prove balance and hand-eye-coordination.

2. Bear Walking
Pretend you are a bear and walk on all fours (hands and feet, not knees). Walk across the room; make it a race. Repeat five times. Stretches hamstrings. Make up other animals just for fun (for variety), and then return to bear: jump like a frog, hop like a bunny, etc.
3. Sticker Hunting
Purchase a variety of stickers that can be placed on the borders of your child’s foot. Position the stickers so that the ankle has to be moved (up/down or in/out) in order to see the sticker. The parent calls out the sticker to be found and the child moves their foot to reveal the sticker. Repeat up/ down motions five times. Repeat in/out motions five times. This increases flexibility in ankle.
4. Stomp the Pillow
Have the child step into the center of a squishy pillow and stand there. Then toss them a ball (or balloon) and and have them toss it back without stepping off the pillow. Repeat 10 times. This improves balance reactions and their ankle and foot strength.
5. Open Sesame!
With child in a standing position, instruct them to lift one foot off of the floor when you say “Open Sesame! (ses-ah-mee)”. As they lift their foot, a secret passage is revealed and you run your hand (toy truck, train, animal) along the floor underneath
Physical therapy can be helpful to all ages.
their foot. Be sure they don’t close the passage while your hand is in there. Repeat five times and switch feet. Encourages ankle dorsiflexion (foot up toward face).
6. Hip-Hop-Scotch
Crisscross two pieces of three-foot masking tape on the floor. Have your child face you while standing in one of the four quadrants formed by the tape. Call out directions: Forward/Sideways/Backward/Diagonal. The child jumps with two feet in the direction instructed. Give 10 instructions. Repeat two times. Works with thighs/calves and improves balance.
7. Elevator Boy/Elevator Girl
Your child is in control of the elevator and

is responsible for getting the people who ride it to the floor they want to go to. Place a series of stickers vertically in clear space on a wall. Your child stands with their back against the wall and next to the stickers. You call out what floor (sticker) that you want the elevator to go to. The child begins to squat to lower the elevator while keeping their back against the wall. Move the elevator up and down five times. Repeat twice. Strengthens legs and midrange quads.
BONUS PT TIP
1. Dancing Giants
Play music that your child enjoys and start dancing together as if you were giants (Lifting knees high with big steps). After 60 seconds, then dance as if you were dainty little fairies. Continue to change by using your favorite characters...cat, dog, snake, monster, cartoon character. Dance for five minutes. A more advanced version of this is the Just Dance game for the Wii. Builds endurance.
2. Commerical Breaks
While watching TV with your child, use the commercial breaks to do stretching exercises together. Not only will you get better compliance, you will also feel better by the end of the commercials.
—Abilities First
Sandra Lindsay Named To Public Health Leadership Role
Northwell Health announced that Sandra Lindsay, RN, MBA, DHSc, the first American to be vaccinated in the fight against COVID-19 and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, has been appointed vice president of public health advocacy.

Lindsay spent 29 years in nursing, most recently serving as director of nursing critical care at Long Island Jewish (LIJ) Medical Center in New Hyde Park. She led from the front lines of the pandemic, both during the First Wave from March-June 2020 and then volunteering to become the first American vaccinated with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine on Dec. 14, 2020.
Her vaccination resonated around the globe, thrusting Lindsay into the spotlight as an advocate for vaccination to protect against COVID. As a woman of color and proud Jamaican immigrant, Lindsay’s message also struck an authentic tone with communities of color and Caribbean peoples alike. Her ID badge and scrubs reside at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. For her community health efforts, President Joe Biden awarded Lindsay with the Presidential Medal of Freedom during a White House ceremony in July.
Sandra LindsayLindsay emigrated to the United States from Jamaica in 1986, graduated from Borough of Manhattan Community College in 1993 as valedictorian of her nursing program and joined Lenox Hill Hospital one year later as an oncology nurse. While continuing her education, she served as a critical care nurse manager at Lenox Hill before transitioning to LIJ.
When the pandemic struck New York State in March 2020, Queens quickly
became the epicenter and no hospital treated more cases than LIJ. She oversaw expansion of the hospital’s intensive care unit capacity by 212 percent to care for critically ill COVID-19 patients. Lindsay saw the opportunity to get vaccinated nine months later as a game-changer, so she volunteered to be the first at Northwell. By a quirk of timing, Lindsay was acknowledged as the first person in the U.S. to receive the Pfizer vaccine—an internationally-celebrated turning point in the deadly pandemic—transforming her into a global figure overnight and conferring her with the authority to address global health. Her latest appointment is a continuation of her evolution from frontline clinician to spokesperson and health advocate.
“I plan to work collaboratively with my colleagues to positively influence social and health issues that are priorities for our communities in New York, throughout the U.S. and globally,” said Lindsay. “I chose a career in health care because I believe in raising the health of everyone. I plan to advance the mission at Northwell Health of compassionate and equitable care.”
Lindsay served as grand marshal of New York City’s Healthcare Heroes Parade in 2021 and grand marshal of NYC’s African
American Day Parade in September. She participated in the 2020 New Year’s Eve ball drop in Times Square, President Biden’s 2021 Inaugural and gave the commencement address at Lehman College in the Bronx in May. She has been awarded the 2021 Outstanding Americans by Choice recognition from the U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services, the 2021 Robert Nesta Marley Humanitarian Award, the American Nurses Association’s 2021 President Award and named USA Today Woman of the Year in March. In August, the Jamaican native who helped organize a shipment of COVID relief supplies to the island nation, received the Order of Distinction/Commander Class as an outstanding ambassador of Jamaica.
After graduating with an associate degree from Borough of Manhattan CC, Lindsay earned her Bachelor’s in nursing from St. Joseph’s College, a Master of Science degree from Lehman College, an MBA from Hofstra University, and in 2021, a Doctor of Health Sciences degree with a concentration in global health and organizational behavior and leadership from A.T. Still University (MO). Lindsay is a resident of Port Washington.
—Northwell HealthAWARENESS.

Five Reasons To Have Your Eyes
Checked: Blurry Vision Isn’t One Of Them
As we age, our eyes are increasingly susceptible to a number of ocular conditions. One such condition—AgeRelated Macular Degeneration (AMD)—im pacts nearly 22 million people in the U.S. alone. This disease causes the blurring of an individual’s central vision and is typically caused by the aging of the macula—the part of the eye responsible for the sharpness of vision. It is the leading cause of vision loss for older adults.
The unfortunate reality of AMD is that 30 percent of eyes diagnosed with the disease could have been treated if diagnosed early. But 78 percent of patients do not seek treatment until their vision is irreversibly damaged.
Dr. Mohamed Abou Shousha, an ophthal mologist at the University of Miami’s Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, and founder and CEO of the vision technology company, Heru, shares five risk factors that could indicate the presence of this condition.



1. YOUR AGE
As the name suggests, aging is one of the leading causes of AMD. In fact, AMD impacts one in eight adults over the age of 60. As you age, it is important you ask your doctor to test your eyes for indicators of AMD.
2. FAMILY HISTORY
If a family member has been diagnosed with AMD, it is likely you could be as well.

Studies have shown that if you have a close relative with AMD, such as a sibling or parent, you are 15 to 20 percent more likely to develop the condition.
3. OVERWEIGHT? SMOKE?

If you are overweight and smoke, you have key risk factors that make you especially vulnerable to the disease.

4. YOUR EYES DO NOT ADJUST TO THE DARK
Dark adaptation is a measure of the time it takes for your eyes to adjust when moving from bright lights to areas with dim lighting. If adjusting to the dark takes longer for you than normal, it could be an indicator of AMD.
5. YOU HAVE DIFFICULTY SEEING AT NIGHT






If you notice difficulty driving at night, have trouble seeing pedestrians walking along underlit streets, or fail to notice that final step on the staircase, this could indicate the presence of AMD.
Many risk factors could indicate ocular conditions.



“Most individuals suffering from AMD do not know they have it until the disease has progressed significantly,” said Dr. Abou Shousha. “Early detection is a key to preventing permanent vision loss and that can easily be done with regular eye examinations, coupled with healthy living.”
The American Optometric Association (AOA) recommends an annual eye exam for adults 65 years and older and every two years for adults 18 to 64 years of age. Those intervals could change based on risk factors and on the recommendation of a physician.

—Heru

National Bullying Prevention Awareness Month
As reported on the Indicators of School Crime and Safety report, about 20 percent of students ages 12 to 18 reported being bullied. Among students ages 12 to 18 who reported being bullied during the school year, 15 percent were bullied online or by text. National Bullying Prevention Awareness Month is a monthlong observance to educate and raise awareness about bullying and cyberbullying prevention. Addressing and preventing bullying is something that everyone can do, every day.
ADDRESS BULLYING AT SCHOOL
Educators and teachers can create a safe, supportive learning environment and a classroom culture of positivity, inclusiveness and respect. They can reward students for positive social behavior. Schools can communicate bullying policies at their school to parents, students, teachers and staff and follow through on them. Monitoring bullying ‘hot spots’ around the school campus can also help prevent bullying.
TALK ABOUT BULLYING AT HOME
Parents and caregivers can talk with their
children about their school and digital life, and the many roles children can play in bullying. By asking open-ended questions, they can talk about their children’s experience and communicate expectations about appropriate behavior—in person and in their digital world. Parents are the primary role models for their children, and when they model the behavior they expect from their children, they teach through actions.
SUPPORT YOUR COMMUNITY
Mentors can also model kindness, inclusivity, and respect. They can ask open-ended questions of their mentees and listen without judgement. Providing positive reinforcement to children and teenagers can help protect them from bullying and other risky behaviors. They can also provide support to all kids involved, and help make sure the bullying doesn’t continue and its effects are minimized.
GET HELP
Youth who experience bullying can reach out to a trusted adult to talk about it and get support. If they’re being cyberbullied, they can capture screenshots. They can block the people who are bullying. If they witness

bullying, they can change the conversation and deflect it. If they feel they can do it, they can stand up for the person being bullied, either on their own or with friends as a group. If they don’t feel safe doing that, they can reach out to the person being bullied to let them know that they don’t agree with it. If youth witness cyberbullying, they
shouldn’t participate or share the posts or texts. They can learn more about how bystanders are essential to bullying prevention. They can also talk to a trusted adult for advice.
Visit www.stopbullying.gov to learn more, —U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
HEALTHY YOU CHECKLIST
ACTIVE.
ADEQUATE SLEEP.
MAMMOGRAPHY
SELF CARE.










Recently Sold
This beautiful Old Brookville estate on more than two and a half acres of spectacular grounds at 90 Hegemans Ln. sold on Aug. 1 for $1,630,000. Drive up the extended private driveway as it curves past the vast and pristinely manicured front yard field. As you make the turn at the top of the driveway you are greeted by the graceful charm of this beautiful home. The courtyard area is complemented by mature landscaping, a trickling pond and a large detached three-bay garage. The serene resort-like oasis in the backyard with heated swimming pool, large back porch and stone patio is the ideal spot for entertaining. Inside this sprawling home you will find six bedrooms including a large master wing, seven bathrooms, a grand extended living room, large formal dining room, library/home office, a finished basement/game room and five wood burning fireplaces. Located in the highly desirable village of Old Brookville, this hidden sanctuary is steps away from well-known Youngs Farm. It is in close proximity to luxury shopping and dining. It is an easy commute to Manhattan and is located in the North Shore School District.
HOME & DESIGN Check Trees For Asian Longhorned Beetles


he U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and its partners are asking residents across Long Island, particularly in Nassau and Suffolk counties, to check their trees for the Asian longhorned beetle (ALB), an invasive insect, and the damage it causes. It is a critical time of year to look for the ALB because it’s when people are most likely to see adult beetles.
“Checking trees for the pest and the damage it causes is how you can help us eliminate the beetle from the United States, and protect more trees,” said Josie Ryan, APHIS’ National Operations Manager for the ALB Eradication Program. “The sooner we know where the insect is, the sooner we can stop its spread.”
USDA and its partners are working to eradicate the tree-killing beetle in New York. The ALB is an invasive wood-boring beetle that attacks 12 types of hardwood trees in North America, such as maples, elms, buckeyes, birches and willows. Infested trees do not recover and eventually die. Infested trees also become safety hazards since branches can drop and trees can fall over, especially during storms.
In its larval stage, the insect feeds inside tree trunks and branches, creating tunnels as it feeds, then adults chew their way out in the warmer months, leaving about 3/4-inch round exit holes.
The adult beetle has distinctive markings that are easy to recognize:
• A shiny black body with white spots that is about 1” to 1 1/2” long.

• Black and white antennae that are longer than the insect’s body.


• Six legs and feet that can appear bluish in color.
Signs that a tree might be infested include:
• Round exit holes in tree trunks and branches about the size of a dime or smaller.



• Egg sites that are shallow, oval or round wounds in the bark where sap might weep.
• Sawdust-like material called frass found on the ground around the tree or on the branches.


• Branches or limbs falling from an otherwise healthy-looking tree. The public has a vital role in helping to stop the spread of the ALB and eliminating it from infested areas.


This stately and traditional brick colonial on two acres in the Village of Upper Brookville sold on Sept. 23 for $2,000,000. It is located at 124 Piping Rock Rd., one of the most beautiful streets on all of the North Shore. As you step inside you are welcomed by a grand marble entrance foyer with lots of natural light. A separate wing of the home features a gracious music room, gallery and a den with an onyx fireplace. The updated kitchen opens to breakfast area leading to a sun room and backyard. Host dinner parties in the formal dining room adjacent to the living room with large windows. This home has five bedrooms and three bathrooms. The exterior has an expansive patio, gardens, an in-ground pool and level fenced-in grounds. The garage is oversized. This home provides the owner with spacious rooms, a great layout flow and terrific options for entertaining. This home is in the Locust Valley School District and close to private schools too. This home was constructed in 2015.


If you think you found a beetle or tree damage try to photograph the ALB or tree damage. If you can, capture the beetle in a durable container and freeze it, which helps preserve the insect for identification. Then report it.If you live in an ALB quarantine area, keep the tree-killing pest from spreading. Follow state and federal laws, which restrict the movement of woody material and untreated firewood that could be infested.
For more information about the ALB and the eradication efforts, visit www.AsianLonghornedBeetle.com. For local inquiries or to speak to your USDA state plant health director, call 866-702-9938.

—The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)


Homes shown here represent closed sales, sold by a variety of agencies and are selected for their interest to readers by the Anton Media Group editor. Except where noted, data and photos are provided courtesy of Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, Inc. and Zillow.

Steve Vai’s
BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com





Calling Steve Vai restlessly creative is an understatement.


It’s a personality trait he’s carried with him from when he was hired by the late Frank Zappa to start transcribing for him at the tender age of 18, just as he was matriculating at the Berklee College of Music up in Boston. And it’s something Vai has continued to carry with him during his ascendancy to guitar hero status as both a well-respected solo artist as well as recording and touring with Zappa, David Lee Roth, Alcatrazz, Public Image Ltd. and Whitesnake. The pandemic only served to











inflame the Carle Place native’s creative itch. While he was holed up in Harmony Hut, the self-described “man cave” Vai calls the recording studio he constructed in his southern California home, the 62-yearold fret master busied himself with a number of projects. Not only did he stream a pair of programs, Alien Guitar Secrets (about guitars and music) and Under It All (focusing on esoteric spiritual principles he’s studied throughout his life), but there was plenty of music recorded. Two shoulder surgeries derailed a still-unreleased solo acoustic project that started with a song called “Candle Power.”

Early Influences
Convalescence led to Inviolate, the Long Islander’s tenth studio outing and first since 2016’s Modern Primitive. The decision was arrived at while coming to grips with an unwavering reality.
“I discovered during lockdown that I missed touring,” he said. “I wanted to get back out on tour. We did a European tour over the summer—fantastic. I’m ready to go. I just love touring, so that’s where we’re at now.”
The current record found Vai connecting a number of musicians ranging from former Roth bandmate Billy Sheehan to drummers Vinnie Coliauta and Terry Bozzio. Also joining in the fun are longtime collaborators Dave Weiner and Philip Bynoe. The guitarist also got to connect with Swedish bassist Henrik Linder, who has toured with David Foster and Maroon 5.
“There is a piece on the album called ‘Apollo in Color’ that has Henrik Linder on bass and he’s just this freakazoid that I’ve had my eyes on for years,” Vai said. “I was just waiting for the right song to


see if he’d be interested. I sent it to him and he was all over it. He’s got fantastic chops.”
Eager to get back on the road, Vai is especially pleased to be coming back to his old stomping grounds despite calling Los Angeles home for the past four-plus decades.

“It’s always a hoot [coming back],” he said. “It’s a little bit of a push because there are a lot of people to see in a short period of time. But I cut my teeth on Long Island in high school playing all the bar circuits in the ‘70s. It was a fantastic time. Whenever I’m on Long Island, it’s the feeling you get when you’re on what feels like your home turf. I’ve been living in California for 42 years, it feels like home, but it feels like a second home whenever I set foot in New York. And they’re so vastly different that when you’re on your home turf that’s 3,000 miles away, you’re there. You’re in the environment of it and it’s not California.”
As part of his homecoming, Vai was more than happy to share some early influences with Long Island Weekly.
Original Motion Picture SoundtrackWest Side Story (1961)

“That had incredible composition, drama and theater. And that lit me up. It was a mystery until I hit that note on the piano in my aunt’s house when I was four. At that point, I immediately got it. That was the first epiphany.”
The Mothers of Invention

- Freak Out! (1966)
“I didn’t know Zappa from anything. I was in the music department of a department store and I saw the Freak Out! album cover and I bought it based on that. I listened to it and I was like, ‘What the heck?’ The thing I really liked about it was that it had compositional roots in it and none of the other music of the time had that to a degree. But Zappa was really merging all that stuff.”
Led ZeppelinLed Zeppelin II (1969)

“Then there was the fateful day when my sister came home with Led Zeppelin and that was it. My rock and roll roots were expanding and I was completely stunned an attracted to the energy of rock music. It was the song
‘Heartbreaker’ and the guitar solo. The most bad-ass, amazing thing in existence to me and I just became an intense Jimmy Page and Led Zeppelin fan.”
Igor Stravinksy
(June 17, 1882 to April 6, 1971)


“Three pivotal pieces of music are Stravinsky’s ballets.



‘The Rite of Spring,’ ‘Petruska’ and ‘The Firebird.’ It was easy to identify that the composer was doing what I was feeling when I was four-years-old and hit the piano for the first time. I would listen to it and I knew exactly what
IW



they were doing. I didn’t know how they were coming up with it or getting it. On a purely analytical basis, I kind of understood the language they were using. The music and the way it makes you feel was the heart. When I really listened to classical music, I was more into contemporary composers like [Iannis] Xenakis, [Györgi] Ligeti, [Luciano] Berio or [Igor] Stravinsky, [Edgard] Varèse, Elliott Carter. And some romantic stuff. I didn’t really like [Gustav] Mahler until a little later and then I really got it..”
Queen - Queen II (1974)

“
Queen II was big.
When I heard that, it was just so epic sounding, theatrical, huge, free, loud and melodic. It was just so great.”
Steve Vai will be appearing on October 30 The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington. Visit www.theparamountny.com or call 631-673-7300 for more information.
This
HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis
ByARIES (March 21-April 19). “It’s not that bad” hardly describes what you were going for when you started out. If you land on “not that bad,” feel free to scrap the project, abandon the mission and start over with a new plan. is celebra tion called your life can’t energize in situations that are merely tolerable. You were meant to be inspired.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re asked to play a role that’s an uncomfortable t. If it is, nonetheless, part of the bigger picture of who you want to be, you may keep enacting it until it’s more comfortable. But if it’s simply not giving you the space to be you, draw the line; switch the script; opt out. You get to be who you want to be, so claim it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). It’s easy to get hooked on things that feel good to you even though they may not actually be good for you. When you notice a pattern forming that you’re not sure is aligned with your highest and best, pause to consider what pain you’re avoiding. You deserve to feel good. Is there a better way to go about it?
CANCER (June 22-July 22). Your mind is busy and chatty this week and will rattle on like a tireless ticker tape if you let it. For greater well-being, quiet your thoughts. e fewer judgments you have, the happier you’ll be. Physical exercise helps, and so will the immersive sort of projects that require strong concentration.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). ere are those in your life whose sole purpose, it would seem, is to press your buttons. Even after you walk away, your mind lingers in the irritation they seem to so amply supply. You can change the channel in a breath. Just breathe. It’s a cliche for a reason. It remains the best way to reconnect to the moment.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Problems will get sorted, though not quite as quickly as you’d like. It’s only natural to feel frustrated. It may help to steer that energy toward another emotion. For instance, could you get curious about the prob lem? Your interest has magical properties. ings will change just because you were curious about them.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Not every planet has a parent star. On those planets that roam freely through the galaxy without a predicable trajectory, day never breaks and night never stops. You’re a bit of a rogue planet yourself this week, unbound from the usual orbits, a heady courage driving you toward unknown constellations.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). e craving to be appreciated isn’t weakness; it’s human. How do we know who (or if) we are without the mirror of others? You will give a quality attention that makes people feel seen. ey may not be used to this a rmation. ey will love you for it, and you’ll love what you learn and receive in the experience.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’re a giver, so it feels strange to play it cool, but do it anyway and get fantastic results. You’ll lie back and let customers, friends and love come to you. e relationship dynamic will favor you and be stronger because the other person reached. It’s good for all, since people cherish what they have to work for.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Storytelling is a social skill that enhances many areas of your life. Your ability to present stories well impacts the way people interact with your work. Good stories are a part of how you support your people. Even your relationship with yourself is enhanced by the story you tell yourself about who you are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your ability to identify how you are feeling will sensitize you to the feelings of others as well. When people feel understood, they trust and bond with you. Strong teams are forged in shared feeling. Use the most speci c word possible to describe emotions. e more accurate the word, the greater its impact.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll go after what you want with a single-minded drive. To the untrained eye, your methods may seem contradictory -- passionate one minute, seemingly disinterested the next... Only the truly savvy see through this into your enormous skill set. You’re strategic, fun and committed to the dance.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS:
Imagine if you had all the support you needed, if people celebrated you in your favorite ways, if you felt secure in relationships and rich in love... Life would be a dream, right? Keep your eye on the vision because it comes together for you as you move toward the ideal. Your gratitude and cheerfulness practice keeps you dancing in the sunshine. You’ll delight in the creations of others and contribute to the larger conversation in commercial and artistic ways. You’re also lucky in sports.
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND WORD FIND

alternative theme of the puzzle.
Let’s go out
Solution: 21 Letters
WORD FIND
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have com pleted the puzzle, there will be 21 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Let’s go out
Solution: 21 Letters
Aida Alto Architecture Aria Attraction Awards
Bass Beer Bill Choir Clap Cough
Crowd Date Dawn Design Domingo Drama Drinks Duet Encore Finale Floor show Friends
Aida Alto Architecture Aria Attraction Awards Bass Beer Bill Choir Clap Cough
Crowd Date Dawn Design Domingo Drama Drinks
Happy Horns Hotel Jigs Lift Melba Mezzo Music Performance Piano Pits Pubs
Rage Saga Sails Seats Soloists Song Studio Sweets Trumpet
Sweets Trumpet
Solution:Entertainmentprecinct
Solution:Entertainmentprecinct
Creators Syndicate
Creators Syndicate
737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
BRIDGE
Bidding
Date: 10/12/22
Date: 10/12/22
By Steve Beckerwith the principle of first mention ing the higher-ranking of two fivecard suits, regardless of the highcard content of the two suits. Bid ding diamonds first and hearts next would indicate fewer hearts than diamonds and could result in your winding up in the wrong contract.
4. Two clubs. Here you’re too good to raise to two spades, since with your trump fit and two dou bletons, your hand is worth about 11 points.
shows 13 to
distribution
irre vocably
side to
If partner does anything but
to three notrump, you will
three-card spade
2. Two spades. This shows six to 10 points and trump support, which is precisely what you have. It is better to avoid a two-diamond response, because partner might expect you to have a somewhat bet ter hand and would not, for the moment at least, be aware that you had adequate support for spades. By raising spades directly, you place the decision on whether to continue bidding exactly where it belongs — in partner’s lap.
3. Two hearts. This is in keeping
In-between hands such as this are best described by bidding a side suit first and then raising partner’s suit at your next turn. If you hap pen to play “limit” raises, as most now do, an immediate jump to three spades, indicating 11-12 points with spade support, is also acceptable.
5. Four spades. The immediate raise to four serves two purposes. First, you should have a good chance for game, even though you don’t have many high-card points. Second, and equally important, is the bid’s pre-emptive value. Given your dearth of high card points and your six-card trump support, there is a substantial danger that the opponents can make a game or find a good sacrifice in hearts or clubs. If all goes well, your fourspade bid might be just enough to block them out.
Weekly





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Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, dis ability, familial status, age, marital status, sexu al orientation or disability in connection with the rental, sale or financing of real estate. Nassau also prohibits source of income discrimination. Anton Community News papers does not know ingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect hous ing discrimination, call Long Island Housing Services’ Discrimination Complaint Line at 800660-6920. (Long Island Housing Services is the Fair Housing Agency of Nassau and Suffolk Counties.)






































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Downtown Businesses Decorate For Autumn
Autumnal displays adorn business storefronts and seasonal flowers were planted throughout downtown Glen Cove just in time to celebrate the new season. Thanks to the Glen Cove Downtown Business Improvement District, downtown business owners can purchase plants and ornamentals at wholesale prices, making it simpler to decorate for fall. As a result, nearly a dozen downtown establishments were instantly transformed over the course of one day.
According to Patricia Holman, executive director of the Downtown B.I.D., an assortment of hardy mums, kale, hay bales, cornstalks, pumpkins and gourds were purchased from WPW Growers and distributed to downtown businesses on Sept. 23.

“Our members are able to decorate their storefronts for the fall season,” Holman said. “You might notice them in front of businesses such as The Regency Assisted Living, La Bussola and Glen Cove Fitness.”

La Bussola Ristorante on School Street uses the plants and ornamentals to decorate the front and back entrances, as well as to enhance the outdoor seating area.
“I think the convenience of it is wonderful,” Carlo Lubrano, owner of La Bussola, said of the service provided by the B.I.D. “I don’t have to spend a lot of time deciding what to get – everything is right there for me to choose, and I can pick it up just minutes from my restaurant. I hope that a lot of other downtown businesses are taking advantage of this service because
COSMETIC SURGERY

it adds beauty to the downtown as the seasons change.”
The Downtown B.I.D. also purchased over 1,000 mums and cabbages, which were planted throughout the downtown area by the B.I.D.’s landscaper, Testa Landscaping. Areas maintained by the Downtown B.I.D. include the landscapes around the Brewster Street garage and the Pulaski Street garage.
Since the Downtown B.I.D. was created in 1997, it has given high need to ventures that outwardly enhance the area. These incorporate the maintenance of over 20 landscapes, walkway upkeep, establishment of flowers and seasonal adornments, light pole banners, litter removal and Christmas ornaments, along with many other activities that are carried out
to keep the downtown area looking clean and feeling safe.
Contact the Glen Cove Downtown Business Improvement District at 516-759-6970 or info@ glencovedowntown.org for further information.
—Submitted by the Glen Cove Downtown Business Improvement District






























Fall can be a very exciting time, with the season changing, the weather cooling and the holidays looming ahead. It is also the perfect time to think about how you can finally deliver on your commitment to doing something for yourself. Back to the gym, back to the diet, the new season brings with it the impetus to look better and feel better.
Utilizing only the latest and most advanced surgical approach, your recovery is fast and the sooner you act, the sooner you’ll look fantastic. Get ready for your winter vacation or spruce up for the holidays with SmartLipo MPX®, the most advanced technique in liposuction available. This technology is light years ahead of competing liposuction systems with less bruising and a shorter recovery time. If you have been considering a Tummy Tuck post-pregnancy or weight loss, this procedure will have you in great shape in a very short period of time and you can show off that terrific figure at the upcoming holiday parties.
It is often a combination of services that produces the best result, many times including breast augmentation, breast lift or breast reduction, with the appropriate procedure determined by each individual’s body. Several packages are designed to address your specific needs. Ultimate Breasts includes breast augmentation, breast lift, breast reduction – separately or in combination--







for the most beautiful, natural looking results.
If childbirth has made some changes to your body that you would like to correct, the Mommy Makeover package provides the right combination of tummy tuck, liposuction, breast lift or implants as well as cellulite treatments to transform the body back to its youthful aesthetic. About Face turns back the hands of time with the appropriate combination of facelift, eyelid lift, rhinoplasty, chin reshaping and more. If this isn’t the time for a surgical procedure, a Liquid Facelift requires just 20 minutes to restore and contour the cheeks, eyes, jawline and lips to refresh and rejuvenate the face. My cutting-edge device Morpheus8 remodels collagen on the face and body to eliminate fine lines and wrinkles while improving skin tone, texture and laxity for a more youthful appearance. CoolPeel is the coolest new way to rejuvenate crepey skin on the face and neck achieving the benefits of CO2 without the extensive downtime.
Now that the kids are getting back to school, this is the perfect time to have the cosmetic procedure or treatment that you’ve always wanted and start on the path to a younger looking you! Schedule your complimentary consultation today, call 516-364-4200 or visitwww.GreenbergCosmeticSurgery.com.
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NEW WASHERS & DRYERS

AN
Olmsted On Long Island Oct. 22-23 Features Free, Expert Led Tours Of Parks, Gardens And Open Spaces


The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF) and Planting Fields Foundation announce What’s Out There Weekend: Olmsted on Long Island Oct. 22-23, featuring free expert-led tours of parks, gardens, estates, cemeteries, and open spaces de signed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., the father of landscape architec ture best known as the co-designer of New York City’s Central Park and the United States Capitol grounds, and his successor firms.
The event is part of the national recognition of this year’s bicentennial of the birth of Olmsted, Sr. and follows the Oct. 20-21 Olmsted Symposium: Situating the Residential Projects of the Olmsted Firm at Planting Fields.
During this weekend of engaging tours, expert guides will provide rich stories, personal anecdotes, and keen observations about each site, landscape architecture, and garden design designed by the Ol msted firm over a seventy-five-year period. All tours are free, but
a printed guidebook for What’s Out There Weekend: Olmsted on Long Island that includes the tour sites (available for purchase in a printed format and free as a downloadable PDF). TCLF will also add all the tour sites to What’s Out There Olm sted, a profusely illustrated digital database featuring more than 325 North American Olmsted-designed
Tour Schedule – All tours are free, but attendance is limited andregistration is required.

Saturday – Oct. 22

• Locust Valley Cemetery | 9 - 10:30 a.m. | led by Amy Driscoll (Locust Valley Cemetery)
• Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park | 10 - 11:30 a.m.| led by Patricia O’Donnell (Heritage
• Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve | 11 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.| led by Jessica Brassler (The Caumsett Foundation)
• Dosoris Cemetery | 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m. | led by John Melillo (Dosoris Cemetery)
• Memorial Cemetery of St. John’s Church | Noon - 1:30 p.m.| led by Patricia O’Donnell (Heritage Landscapes LLC)
• Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory | 12:30 - 2 p.m.| led by Daniel Miller (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
• The Creek | 2 - 3 p.m.| led by Thomas Dunne (Independent Historian and Author)
Sunday – Oct. 23
• Bayard Cutting Arboretum | 910:30 a.m. |led by Kevin Wiecks (Bayard Cutting Arboretum)
BE INSPIRED

• Munsey Park Incorporated Village| 10 - 11:30 a.m.| led by Andrew Cronson (Village of Munsey Park)
• Lattingtown Gold Coast Estate | 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. | led by Henry P. Davidson III
• La Selva | 12:30 – 2 p.m.| led by Debra Del Vecchio (La Selva)

• Conklin Amphitheater (Seminary of the Immaculate Conception) | 2 – 3:30 p.m.| led by Bruce Baumann (Seminary of the Immaculate Conception) and Stephen Ubertini
• Oheka Castle | 4:15 - 5:45 p.m. |led by Paul Mateyunas (Gold Coast Historian)
Coming Soon


• Nassau County Civic Center
• Welwyn Preserve
What’s Out There Weekend: Olmsted on Long Islanddovetails with TCLF’s webbased What’s Out There, the nation’s most comprehensive searchable database of historic designed landscapes. The database currently features more than 2,500 sites, 12,000 images, and 1,200 designer profiles.What’s Out Thereis optimized for iPhones and similar handheld devices, and includesWhat’s Nearby, a GPS-enabled feature that locates all landscapes within a given distance, customizable by mileage or walking time.
“The Olmsted influence on the shape of the nation includes designing great parks, entire neighborhoods, city park systems, and more, and an exceptional body of work survives on Long Island,” said Charles A.
Birnbaum, TCLF’s President & CEO. “We are pleased to partner with Planting Fields to make accessible and raise the visibility of this unique and irreplaceable legacy of great landscape architecture.”
Planting Fields Foundation President and CEO Gina J. Wouters stated: “We are delighted to partner with TCLF to publicize What’s Out There Weekend: Olmsted on Long Island. This series of expert-led, guided tours of some of Long Island’s lesser-known historic gardens, parks, and estates designed by the Olmsted Firm, immediately follows our October 20-21 Olmsted Symposium at Planting Fields. We hope that these two interrelated events will serve to highlight the enduring appeal and historic importance of the Firm’s singular
The North Shore Kiwanis Dog Show Is In Full Swing 2022
The second annual Dog Show sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of North Shore will take place on Oct. 30 . The location selected is the Dog Run at Garvies Point in Glen Cove because it is a perfect place for the

canines to strut their stuff in front of the judges. It is a fun event to show case your best friends and all pro ceeds will go to buy winter coats for needy children in the community.
Visit the Kiwanis website at www.


CORRECTION
northshorekiwanisli.com/events if you are interested in participating and for full details. Pictured are last year’s entries.
vision in creating places. Long recognized as a place of recreation, I am thrilled to have Planting Fields Foundation serve as the catalyst for creating greater awareness and celebration of the collective heritage of Olmsted on Long Island. We are grateful for our close collaboration with all our site partners, and especially to TCLF for sharing our commitment to creating access to the history and legacy of these distinctive locations.”
What’s Out There Weekend: Olmsted on Long Islandis made possible by the generous support of the Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation. Visit www.tclf.org to make a reservation.
In the Sept. 28 edition of the Glen Cove Oyster Bay Record Pilot, the incorrect website was listed at the bottom of the article. The correct website to learn more about the North Shore Business Network is northshorebiznetwork.com.
(Photo courtesy North Shore Kiwanis)GLEN COVE
LEGAL NOTICE
ENS Universal Arts LLC.
Art. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 7/12/22. Office: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 15 Michaels Ln, Glen Head, NY 11545. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. 10-26-19-12-5; 9-28-212022-6T-#234952-GCOB/RP
OYSTER BAY
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU
PHH Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff AGAINST Peter Ruggles; Tammy Ruggles; et al., Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered February 1, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on October 26, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 76 Singworth Street, Oyster Bay, NY 11771. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 27 Block 7 Lot 98. Approximate amount of judgment $302,526.10 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 002536/2017. The auction will be conducted pursuant to the COVID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the Tenth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.” Mark Ricciardo, Esq., Referee LOGS Legal Group LLP f/k/a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792
Dated: September 2, 2022 10-12-5; 9-28-21-2022-4T#234937-GCOB/OB
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF LEGAL POSTPONEMENT OF SALE
SUPREME COURT NASSAU COUNTY
AURORA LOAN SERVICES, LLC, Plaintiff against MORTON BIALSTOCK, et al Defendant(s) Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP, 1400 Old Country Road, Suite 103N, Westbury, NY 11590.



Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered June 30, 2010, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on
October 19, 2022 at 2:30 PM. Premises known as 19 Tiffany Rd, Oyster Bay, NY 11771. Sec 26 Block A Lot 752, 753. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Laurel Cove, in the Incorporated Village of Oyster Bay Cove, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York.
Approximate Amount of Judgment is $1,314,234.37 plus interest and costs. Premises
will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 009398/2008.
The foreclosure sale will be conducted in accordance with 10th Judicial District’s Covid-19 Policies and foreclosure auction rules. The Referee shall enforce any rules in place regarding facial coverings and social distancing.
If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court Appointed Referee shall cancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”
Sale was originally schedule for 9/21/22 Heather Crosley, Esq., Referee NSRJN021 10-12-22 1T# 235276
GCOB/OB
LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING CALENDAR
NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING BY THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
Pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 246, Section 24612 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is hereby given that the Zoning Board of Appeals has scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town Hall Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New York, on OCTOBER 20, 2022, at 7:00 P. M., to consider the following appeals:
BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS
APPEAL NO. 59-793AMENDMENT
EAST NORWICH CHRISTOPHER FASULO: Amend Specific Plan as presented for Appeal No. 59-793 and granted by Decision of the Zoning Board of Appeals, dated December 10, 1959, for the submittal of new plans. S/s/o Furman Pl., S/o Joseph Ln., a/k/a 16 Furman Place, East Norwich, NY
OCTOBER 10, 2022 BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, OYSTER BAY, NEW YORK 10-12-22 1T# 235208
GCOB/OB
VILLAGE OF LATTINGTOWN
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the fiscal affairs of the Justice Court of the Incorporated Village of Lattingtown for the period beginning on June 1, 2021 and ending on May 31, 2022 has been examined by Skinnon and Faber, an independent public accounting firm, and that the report prepared in conjunction with the external audit has been filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons.
Dawn Gresalfi Village Clerk Dated: October 12, 2022 10-12-22 1T# 235299 GCOB/OB
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the registered voters of the OYSTER BAY WATER DISTRICT in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, that an election will be held within said District, at the Oyster Bay Community Center, located at 31 Church Street, Oyster Bay, New York, on Tuesday, December 13, 2022, between the hours of three (3) o’clock in the afternoon and nine (9) o’clock in the evening, for the purpose of the election of a Water Commissioner for said District for a term of three (3) years commencing January 1, 2023, which position is currently held by Michael F. Rich III, whose present term of office will expire December 31, 2022. Said election is called pursuant to Sections 211 and 212 of Article 13 of the Town Law of the State of New York.
Applicants for absentee ballots must submit a written application which may be obtained at the office of the Water District at 45 Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New York. Such application must be received by the District at least seven (7) days before the election if the ballot is to be mailed to the voter, or the day before the election if the ballot is to be delivered personally to the voter or his or her agent.
Section 213 of the Town Law of the State of New York provides that no person shall be entitled to vote for improvement district commissioners unless he or she is a registered voter who shall have resided in the improvement district for a period of thirty days preceding any election of commissioners.
FURTHER NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Commissioners of the Oyster Bay Water District has adopted a resolution providing that candidates for the office of Water Commissioner shall file their names with the Oyster Bay Water District Office Manager at least thirty days prior to the date of the District election, and, in addition, such nomination must be submitted in petition form subscribed by twenty-five registered voters of the Oyster Bay Water District.
October 6, 2022
Robert J. McEvoy Richard P. Niznik Michael F. Rich, III Commissioners 10-12-22 1T# 235306 GCOB/ OBLEGAL NOTICE VILLAGE OF MATINECOCK BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
PUBLIC NOTICE
A public hearing and meeting will be held before and by the Board of Zoning Appeals of the Incorporated Village of Matinecock, Nassau County, New York, at the Portledge School-Gilmour Library, 355 Duck Pond Road in the Village, on October 26, 2022 at 6:00 P.M.
The hearing will be on the appeal of Monique and Robert Marmorale, owners of a 2.99acre parcel of land located at 254 Oyster Bay Road in the Village, designated as Section 23, Block K, Lot 708 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map, and located in the Village=s R-2A (2-Acre) zoning district.
The Appellants seek variances to permit the following construction:
1.Swimming pool which has a westerly side yard setback of 21.5 feet rather than the required 50 feet;
2.Swimming pool patio which has a westerly side yard setback of 14.3 feet rather than the required 50 feet.
The above application and plans are on file at the offices of Humes & Wagner, Attorneys for the Village, 147 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, New York, (516) 676-4600 where they may be seen by appointment only Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. until the time of the hearing.
All interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at said time and place. If any individual requires special assistance to attend, please notify the Village Attorney at least 48 hours in advance of the hearing.
Linda Gardiner Chairwoman 10-12-22 1T# 235322 GCOB/ OBLEGAL NOTICE VILLAGE OF MATINECOCK BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS PUBLIC NOTICE
An adjourned and continued public hearing and meeting will be held before and by the Board of Zoning Appeals of the Incorporated Village of Matinecock, Nassau County, New York, at the Portledge School – Gilmour Library 355 Duck Pond Road in the Village, on October 26, 2022 at 6:00 P.M.
Special Use Permit to allow the construction of a new, two-story Wellness Center and accessory site improvements, all as shown on the revised plan entitled “Site Plan…” prepared by Northcoast Civil, L.S. & P.E., P.C., and last dated September 8, 2022.
The above plans are on file at the offices of Humes & Wagner, Attorneys for the Village, 147 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, New York, (516) 676-4600 where they may be seen by appointment only Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. until the time of the hearing.
All interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at said time and place. If any individual requires special assistance to attend, please notify the Village Attorney at least 48 hours in advance of the hearing.
Linda GardinerChairwoman 10-12-22 1T# 235323 GCOB/
OB
LEGAL NOTICE VILLAGE OF MATINECOCK BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS PUBLIC NOTICE
A public hearing and meeting will be held before and by the Board of Zoning Appeals of the Incorporated Village of Matinecock, Nassau County, New York, at the Portledge School –Gilmour Library 355 Duck Pond Road in the Village, on October 26, 2022 at 6:00 P.M.
The hearing will be on the application of Portledge School, owner of a 62-acre parcel of land located at 355 Duck Pond Road in the Village, designated as Section 23, Block K, Lots 712 & 713 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map, and located in the Village=s R-5A (5-Acre) zoning district.
In compliance with the conditions of a decision of the Board of Zoning Appeals dated January 14, 2021 which granted approval to the Applicant to amend
its special use permit to allow a modification and realignment of the internal roadway system to the westerly side of the property, as shown on the plan entitled
“Portledge School Conceptual Campus Plan…” prepared by PGA/ELA Architects & Landscape Architects and dated October 8, 2020, the Applicant seeks approval of the following:

1.Lighting and phototmetrics plan entitled “Lighting Plan…” prepared by Peter Gisolfi Associates, LLP last dated June 10, 2022.
The above plan is on file at the offices of Humes & Wagner, Attorneys for the Village, 147 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, New York, (516) 676-4600 where they may be seen by appointment only Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. until the time of the hearing.
All interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at said time and place. If any individual requires special assistance to attend, please notify the Village Attorney at least 48 hours in advance of the hearing.
Linda Gardiner Chairwoman 10-12-22 1T# 235324 GCOB/ OB
LEGAL NOTICE
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF OLD BROOKVILLE 201 McCOUNS LANE OLD BROOKVILLE, NEW YORK 11545 (516) 671-4664
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a continued public hearing will be held by and before, the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Incorporated Village of Old Brookville on October 26, 2022 at 6:30 P.M. at the Village Hall, 201 McCouns Lane in said village.
The continued hearing will be on the application of 5055 Northern Boulevard LLC, owner of a 0.472 acre parcel of land located in the Village and known as 5055 Northern Boulevard.
Said property is designated as Section 22, Block 27, Lot 27 on the Land and Tax Map of Nassau County and is located in the Village’s R-2A (2 Acre) residential zoning district.
The Applicant seeks a determination (a) that the Building Inspector’s August 29, 2017 determination denying a building permit was in error, on the ground that Village Code Section 300-10(F) is not applicable because the property was lawfully operating as a service station, and was not a “non-conforming use”, and therefore was permitted to resume operations, (b) in the alternative, that the said determination was in error because the previous service station use was not abandoned (as per the Village Code) while it was undergoing physical upgrades to the service station necessary for such service station use, and (c) also in the alternative, in the event the said determination is sustained, granting a use variance to allow the use of the property for a gasoline service station with accessory structures and uses.
All interested person may be heard at the date and time of the public hearing. Written comments may be submitted to the Board of Appeals at any time until the close of the hearing, or thereafter as may be permitted by the Board..
The Board of Appeals, as putative Lead Agency, has not yet conducted any review pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act.
The above application is on file, and is open to public inspection between the hours of 9:30 am and 12:30 pm each weekday until the date of the hearing.
By Order of the Board of Appeals
John Golden, Chair 10-12-22 1T# 235327 GCOB/ OB
LEGAL
By Order of the Board of Water Commissioners of the Oyster Bay Water District.
Dated: Oyster Bay, N. Y.
The adjourned and continued hearing will be on the application of Portledge School, owner of a 62-acre parcel of land located at 355 Duck Pond Road in the Village, designated as Section 23, Block K, Lots 712 & 713 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map, and located in the Village=s R-5A (5-Acre) zoning district.
The Applicant seeks to amend it
Last Call To Board The Ida May Project
















































































This is the last year visitors to the Oyster Festival, Oct. 15 and 16, can see the oyster harvester Ida May on land. Since 2010, people attending the fes tival have been walking through the Ida May Project (IMP) boat shop, located in the big blue building J on West End Avenue, to witness the progress and learn about traditional boat building for the last dozen years checking out her progress.
Appropriately, the oysters that are the featured food at the festival, need oyster harvesters to deliver them to the public.

For over a dozen years volun teers have been building the ship, two days a week, even during the pandemic, the work continued inside the boat shop, following safety precautions. Currently they are working five days a week as they push to completion.

It has been amazing to see how the boat has progressed from a wooden skeleton to the full-sized ship with a pilot house that you will see in total for the last time
from land. Once it is in the water, sometime during November and December, this winter, according the weather and the schedule – the lower half the boat will be hidden from view, submerged.












The volunteers have been wonderful, including retirees from corporate jobs, and professions, locals who love wood and boats, and even a few very dedicated
high school students. They form a cohort of committed craftsmen and women too. New volun teers are always needed, and are welcome. No prior experience is necessary, just come to be boat shop and sign up.
In the food court, Greek Cove of East Norwich will be serving the IMP customers. This year artist Susan Bello has designed a new
commemorative IMP t-shirt. You can wear it to the 2023 parade, when the boat is finally launched and ready for the Waterfront Center to use to provide marine education, recreation and tours shouting out the history of this great deep-water harbor.
The Oyster Festival is a project of the Oyster Bay Rotary Club and run by the Oyster Bay Charitable













Fund, a 501(c)3 non-profit orga nization whose mission includes providing a family friendly event, promoting the beauty, history and resources of Oyster Bay and supporting local charities through fundraising activities during the festival.















































The Western Waterfront on West End Avenue, where the IMP is located, is your connection to tours on the bay aboard the oyster sloop Christeen, and dockside tours on the fireboat John J. Henry as well as visiting the Ida May where, for a donation you can sign your name on a plank that will be used in finishing the ship. There will even be pirates. The Kings of the Coast Pirates will offer buried treasure hunts twice per day, free: at 12:30 and 3:30 p.m. You can expand your waterfront experi ence by coming to the festival from NYC to Oyster Bay aboard the fireboat on Friday Oct. 14 with the return trip on Monday Oct. 17. Guests are welcome to take either or both one-way rides. Visit www:1931fireboat.org for further details.

SCHOOL NEWS
OYSTER BAY HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT COUNCIL MEMBERS KICK OFF BREAST CANCER AWARENESS FUNDRAISER
In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, members of the Oyster Bay High School Student Council in the Oyster Bay-East Norwich Central School District are raising money to support the Susan G. Komen Foundation and its important breast cancer research.
Student Council President Ian Lubin, along with senior class liaison Jaiya Chetram and Angela Maldonado began by selling paper pink ribbon hearts at the high school’s open house on Sept. 28. Those who bought a heart wrote a message on it. The Student Council will continue its fundraiser by selling the paper hearts throughout the
month of October with all proceeds going towards the Susan G. Komen Foundation.
In addition, the Student Council will be encouraging all Oyster Bay High School students and staff to wear pink on Wednesdays to help raise awareness.
—Oyster Bay-East Norwich Central School DistrictLOCUST VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS’ ART PIECES CHOSEN BY CORNELL UNIVERSITY
Locust Valley High School seniors Meghan Mandra and Clare Simon had their art pieces selected by the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Nassau County as gold and bronze level award winners, respectively, as part of its Student Art Competition.

Mandra’s green and golden floral piece and Simon’s forest scene painting will be featured in the cooperative’s 2023 Nassau Gardening Calendar and Guide as the December and October images, respectively. Both pieces were displayed at the Family Fun Day at the CCE’s East Meadow Farm (832 Merrick Ave.) on Saturday, Oct. 1 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Mandra was inspired by artists Robert Kushner and Anne Salas and their use of botanical variety and gold in their works. She also tried to use materials that were already available in her art teacher Melanie Mooney’s classroom with the goal of conserving supplies. “For me the intersection of nature and art is important,” Mandra said.
She made two layers of pink and blue paint before going over them both with green and attaching gold tin foil to the wood board surrounding the flowers.
Simon’s forest landscape piece will fittingly be used for the October section of the CCE’s calendar as the painting incorporates warm autumnal colors and leaves scattered on the ground. She added texture to the piece by attaching leaves, tree bark and grass from her own backyard.
“Many of my pieces are paintings that have something to do with nature, the earth, or the environment in general,” Simon said. “This was an exciting piece for me because I hadn’t done a full landscape before but I very much enjoyed doing it and I think I’ll be doing some similar things in the future.”
Both girls were grateful to their teacher Ms. Mooney for her encouragement through the process.
—Submitted by the Locust Valley Central School District
The North Shore Key Club In Action For Mommas House
The North Shore High School Key Club for their 2022-23 Major Emphasis Project (MEP) will be assisting the Glen Cove Mommas House.
The mission of Mommas
House is to provide housing and support services to young mothers and their children. Since 1986, when the first residence opened, Mommas House has grown with multiple sites current-
ly established in Nassau County. Through a variety of events planned each month, the Key clubbers will open their hearts to young mothers and their children. As their first project in


September, the North Shore Key Club had a food drive on Sept. 18 at Holiday Farms in Glen Head.


The Kiwanis Club of North Shore President John Kle, Past President Leslie Kle & member Barbara
Black, were on hand to deliver the food to the Glen Cove residence. Pictured are the Key Club and Kiwanis volunteers in action.
—Submitted by the North Shore Key Club






