FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details! Also Serving Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Roslyn Estates, Flower Hill, East Hills, Greenvale and Albertson Est. 1877 An Anton Media Group Publication Vol.146,No.12October26–November1,2022 www.Roslyn-News.com $1.00 Postmaster: Send address changes to Long Island Community Newspapers, P.O. Box 1578, Mineola, N.Y. 11501. Entered as periodicals postage paid at the Post Office at Mineola, N.Y. and additional mailing offices under the Act of Congress. Published 51 weeks with a double issue the last week of the year by Long Island Community Newspapers, 132 East Second St., Mineola, N.Y. 11501 (P.O. Box 1578). Phone: 516-747-8282. Price per copy is $1.00 Annual subscription rate is $26 in Nassau County. The Roslyn News (USPS 471-100) Candidate Profiles For Local Races (Page 4, 6, 9) Calendar of Events (Page 10) North Shore Juggernaut Rolls On (Page 10) Sad News: Famed Bookstore To Close (Page 14) That Time Again SPECIAL ELECTION COVERAGE ANTON AN ANTON MEDIA GROUP SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT OCTOBER 26 NOVEMBER 1, PROFILES IN OPEN HOUSES AND TIPS FOR VISITING PLUS FSA enrollment QCCC 60th anniversary Sacred Heart from a student’s perspective INSIDE: Your local candidates Where to vote ANTON MEDIA SPECIAL OCTOBER 26 NOVEMBER 2022 VOTER’S GUIDEINSIDE PROFILES IN EDUCATION • VOTER’S GUIDE Competitive races across the North Shore 2110 Northern Blvd. • Room 210 • Manhasset, NY 11030 228514 S ROY SOBEL WILL SHOW YOU WHAT HE DOES “DIFFERENTLY” TO GET YOU THE MOST MONEY THINKING OF SELLING YOUR HOME? ROY SOBEL Premier Properties www.roysobel.com R s ROY SOBEL Realtor, Licensed R.E. Broker sobelgroup@aol.com Cell 516-236-7118 O ce 516-621-6300
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Long Island Local To Be Inducted In New York State Baseball Hall Of Fame
Lou Bernardi to join legendary players, coaches, writers in HOF
One of Herricks High School’s busiest alumni will soon join the New York State Baseball Hall of Fame.
Lou Bernardi, 34, Herricks Class of ‘06, found out last month that he’ll join the ranks of legends like like Mickey Mantle, Keith Hernandez, and even former NYS Governor Mario Cuomo as part of the New York State Baseball Hall of Fame’s Induction Class of 2023.
Fellow members of the Induction Class of 2023 include author Erik Sherman, Long Island Baseball’s Mike Leiderman, former major leaguer and current broadcaster for the Seattle Mariners Dave Valle, World Series winning manager Jack McKeon and former major leaguer Bob Aspromonte.
A 2011 graduate of New York Institute of Technology, where he played four seasons for the Bears and studied criminal justice, Bernardi played professionally after college with the St. George Roadrunners of the Golden Baseball League. He has also served as a volunteer coach and a mentor in numerous student leagues along the way.
Bernardi is now in his 12th year coaching collegiate baseball, and has been a member of Head Coach Michael Notebaert’s coaching staff as the Mariners’ Pitching Coach and Recruiting Coordinator at the United States Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point since the 2019 season.
In his five years at USMMA, Bernardi won the USMMA Athletics’ Power of Inspiration Award and SAAC’s Mark J. Paradiso Service Award, among other honors, and was named Collegiate Baseball Newspaper’s 2021 NCAA Pitching Coach of the Year for all three divisions after he helped lead the Mariners to the 2021 Skyline Conference Championship, the first in Academy history.
In a phone interview, Bernardi told Anton Media Group that he’s thrilled about his induction, which he admitted he wasn’t expecting for a few more years.
Bernardi said that part of what he does in his current job is reach out to community leaders and organizations about his team; he also serves as a recruiting coordinator, in addition to coaching pitchers.
After spending time with teams ranging from Division I to Little League, Bernardi said, he always gives the same advice to other ambitious young people.
“Whether I’m talking to players or coaches, my message is actually the same: it’s to trust the process,” he said.
“As a young coach, I was a volunteer for four years, working crazy hours, making no money. I grinded it out, I paid my dues,
and 13 years later I have a great job.”
He chuckled and added, “It’s not always a glorifying and gratifying occupation, but I stuck it out, with huge support from my
family and friends.”
When asked who he’s been rooting for this past Major League Baseball season, Bernardi admitted, “I actually don’t root
for any specific teams. I root for specific players, and I always root for players who do the right thing on and more importantly off the field.”
Thespian Honor Society Induction
On Thursday, Oct. 13. 16 Roslyn High School students were inducted into the International Thespian Honor Society. The induction ceremony included student performances, reflections, and the Thespian Oath of Acceptance.
The newly inducted students include Lily Ahearn, Ella Cook, Alyx Corrado, Riley Danbusky, Nicoletta D’Elia, Kira
Diament, Julia Fogel, Elyssa Ghalchi, Uma Khurrum, Jamie Lumetta, Katie Murray, Niko Quadri, Davi Rozenberg, Nina Rozenberg, Eliana Stuhl-Phelps, and Natalie Zavulun.
“Our new inductees are blazing a trail for theatrical greatness here in Roslyn,” said Royal Crown Players Director and club advisor Ms. Christina Cinnamo.
“I wish to thank our Thespian/Royal Crown Players student officers and prior inductees for leading the ceremony with grace and eloquence. The growth of our troupe will surely help us reach new artistic heights. Congratulations to everyone!”
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 3
Bernardi marching with the Italian American Baseball Foundation in this year’s Columbus Day Parade in New York City. (Photos courtesy of Lou Bernardi)
Bernardi in action during his time playing for the St. George Roadrunners.
—Submitted by the Roslyn Public Schools
Thespians and their citations (Photo courtesy the Roslyn School District)
New York State Senate District 7 Candidates
BY AMANDA OLSEN aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
Carle Place, East Hills, East Williston, Elmont, Floral Park, Flower Hill, Franklin Square, Garden City, Garden City Park, Glenwood Landing, Great Neck,
New
Gardens, Great Neck Plaza, Greenvale, Harbor Hills, Herricks, Hicksville, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Manhasset,
Manorhaven, Mineola, Munsey Park, New Cassel, New Hyde Park, North Hills, North New Hyde Park, Old Westbury, Plandome, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, Port Washington, Port Washington North, Roslyn, Roslyn Estates, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock, Saddle Rock Estates, Sands Point, Searingtown, South Floral Park, Stewart Manor, Thomaston, University Gardens, Westbury, and Williston Park.
Jack Martins, (R) (challenger)
Whether you identify as a Republican, Democrat or Independent, we know that New York is headed in the wrong direction. We feel less safe in our own communities. With the ever-increasing cost of living, inflation, and taxes, we each feel less secure in our futures, for ourselves and our children. Small businesses are struggling with ever increasing costs and red tape. We need to repeal cashless bail, provide judges with discretion in sentencing criminals, support law enforcement, curb out of control state spending and regulations, and provide relief to middle class New Yorkers. We need to recognize and respect parental rights and take steps to ensure that state and local policies do not undermine those rights. We must also redouble efforts to protect our environment, protect our sole source aquifer, ensure clean drinking water, and commit to protecting and restoring coastal wetlands. Lastly, and importantly, we must work to restore civil discourse, understanding that government works
best when we work together.
As a State Senator, I passed six ontime budgets with increases capped at 2 percent; enacted the state’s first property tax cap; provided funding for local communities, villages, and school districts; and enacted legislation protecting Long Island’s sole source aquifer.
Ann Kaplan, (D) Incumbent
As a second-term State Senator, I’m proud to have written and passed nation-leading legislation that makes New York a safe haven for reproductive rights for women from anti-choice states, that bans dangerous and untraceable ghost guns from our community, and that has permanently capped property taxes for my constituents. I will continue to champion women’s reproductive rights, common-sense gun safety legislation, and middle class tax relief.
Further, public safety has always been a top priority for me. I’ve worked to provide record-breaking funding for law enforcement and public safety improvements. I’ve delivered common-sense fixes to bail reform, closed the repeat offender loophole and gave judges more discretion to keep our community safe. I’ve introduced legislation to give $500 million in grants to our police, to make sure our law enforcement officials have the tools and resources they need to keep our community safe.
Finally, I’ll continue to advocate for the state to pick up a greater responsibility for issues like school funding and road repaving to lower property taxes for Long Islanders. I have a proven track record of delivering on the issues that matter most to our community and look forward to continuing to deliver for Long Island families.
New York State Assembly District 13 Candidates
BY JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonnews.com
Ruka Anzai, R (challenger)
Bio: My name is Ruka Anzai. I am a homeowner in Jericho with kids going to school in Nassau County, with a background in engineering working for the federal government as an IT professional. As your next Assemblywoman, I’ll vote to repeal the “Cashless bail” laws and keep thugs behind bars. My opponent Charles Lavine has sponsored and passed these laws so violent criminals are let free from police stations within hours of being arrested now in Nassau County. Charles Lavine also voted to erase the criminal record of those convicted of domestic violence and arson. These policies are slowly eroding our way of life on Long Island.
If elected: As your next Assemblywoman I will work to Make Property Tax Rebate Permanent, extend the gas tax holiday and fight to reverse the $1 Billion commuter tax (aka congestion pricing—soon roundtrip LIRR tickets to Manhattan will cost $34). I will
support Assembly bills for government funding representing small businesses. I believe we will rebuild our communities to keep our Children safe at school and keep our towns and cities clean. I believe we all want Nassau County to be a safe community so all our kids can grow here and be a success in life, and we can work together to achieve this.
Assemblyman Charles Lavine, D (incumbent)
Bio: Lives in Glen Cove. Married to Ronnie, retired public school teacher and Planned Parenthood volunteer. Graduate University of Wisconsin and New York Law School. Public defender in New York City, practiced law in Queens and Manhattan. General counsel to North Country Reform Temple. Counsel to Glen Cove Industrial Development and Community Development Agencies. Planning board member. Served on City Council. As Assemblymember, served as Chair of committees on Ethics, Elections and Judiciary. Headed bipartisan task force that wrote the Speakers’ Policy on Sexual Harassment, Retaliation and Discrimination, a national model.
President of New York Chapter of National Association of Jewish Legislators and member of its national board of directors. Author of early voting law and Scott J. Beigel Unfinished Receiver Act outlawing do it yourself “ghost guns.”
If elected: Will continue to work across political aisle to protect the lives and safety of New Yorkers. Our legislative focus must be on defending and protecting democracy, our environment, education,
healthcare and growing our economy. Am proud to have helped bring record state spending back to our Long Island schools.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP4
New York State Assembly District 13 covers Roslyn, Sea Cliff, Glen Cove, Bayville, Centre Island, Cove Neck, Laurel Hollow, Woodbury, Plainview, Syosset, Jericho, New Cassel and Westbury.
(Photo courtesy Assemblyman Charles Lavine.)
(Photo courtesy Ruka Anzai)
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 9 We’re not just your local newspaper, we’re a member of your community Glen Head, Glenwood Landing, Muttontown, Sea Cliff, Oyster Bay Cove, East Norwich, Bayville, Locust Valley 132 East Second Street, Mineola, NY 11501 • 516-747-8282 AntonMediaGroup.com • Advertising@AntonMediaGroup.com Fresh content delivered to your mailbox each week! Local Politics • School News • Community Calendar • Local Sports Entertainment • Puzzles & Games • Events & Happenings • Classi eds Order online: antonnews.com/subscription or CALL 516-403-5120 TODAY! Don’t Miss a Single Issue! Also Serving Glen Head, Glenwood Landing, Muttontown, Sea Cliff, Oyster Bay Cove, East Norwich, Bayville, Locust Valley An Anton Media Group Publication Vol.50,No.23April12,2022 www.GlenCoveRecordPilot.com $1.00 Glen Cove Now: Participate in the first Teen Idol vocal contest (See page 4) Oyster Bay Now: Local volunteers planted dune grass at TOBAY (See page 12) School News: Oyster Bay students learn how ornithologists identify various birds (See page 14) TERMITES? We Can Knock Them Out! services only. Special er Only $100 DISCOUNT* 800-244-7378 INSIDE Springtime! golf locations on Long Island. Springtime GOLF ON Backyard Movie Color Our Town Oyster Bay recognized for its beauty and historical landmarks (See page 3) 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service® Bob Sztorc, Agent 516-676-4141 bob.sztorc.btyz@statefarm.com Se Habla Español Insurance is not commodity like gasoline... Buy Quality. elizabeth@elizabethmarkovic.com 516.252.8841 O: 516.517.4751 Professional and passionate. Use PROMO CODE 1YXT2022 to add a FREE YEAR! Only $2600 for one year & Bigforchanges the SAT Sail away with me Hofstra re-openingcamp Children A Bright Future Serving . . . GUIDEWINTERANTONMEDIAGROUPSPECIAL 2022 DINING Valentine takeoutoptions Crockpot comfort food Local bakers conquercoffee cake market RESTAURANT DAVENPORT Landmark... christenings,communions,graduations,rehearsalanniversaries,engagementparties,businessfunctions banquet SpecialOccasionDinnerPackages NowAcceptingReservationsValentine’sDay MEDICINE PROFILES IN CHILDREN’S ANTON GROUP Marcus Hyde 11042 516.627.5113 www.longislandeyesurgeons.com DENTALHEALTH MONTH $1mforAlzheimer’s Foundationchristenings,anniversaries,engagementparties, NowAcceptingPLUS!45 + SPECIALTHEMED SUPPLEMENTS TOO! (Nassau County Delivery Only)
York State Senate District 7 covers Albertson, Baxter Estates, Bellerose, Bellerose Terrace,
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Incumbent Anna Kaplan (D) (submitted by the Anna Kaplan campaign)
Challenger Jack Martins (R) (submitted by the Jack Martins campaign)
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New York State Assembly District 16 Candidates
Incumbent Gina Sillitti (D) and Vibhuti Jha (R) are running in the general election for New York State Assembly District 16. NYS Assembly District 16 covers Port Washington, Great Neck, Manhasset and Roslyn.
Prior to Sillitti’s election in 2020, she
BY JULIE PRISCO
worked in local government for nearly 20 years. She has brought state funding to our schools, local governments, and our police and first responders. Sillitti has fought for our environment by protecting our drinking water, securing funds for shoreline restoration,
Vibhuti Jha (Republican-Conservative Party)
If elected: As a person who has immigrated to the United States, I am keenly focused on preserving the American Dream for families who call Long Island home. I am ready to take my experience as a successful business and finance professional to fix what’s wrong in Albany. Extreme socialists have passed Cashless Bail Laws, which have freed killers, drug dealers and gang members, to the utter disregard of the law-abiding citizens. I will work towards reversing the dangerous bail laws. Long Islanders need real tax relief. i will push to make the gas tax rollback permanent instead of it being an election time gimmick. I will also fight to reverse the $1 billion commuter tax , aka congestion pricing.
In addition, we need to restore the policies that made America the most prosperous country in the world where people aspire to migrate to at any given point in time. Becoming prosperous and achieving success cannot be vilified and foiled via failed socialist policies. I will work towards ensuring the policies that enables us to fulfill the Amercian Dream we all aspire to achieve. Beware of those who talk about offering things for FREE to lure us in believing a false doctrine.
—Submitted by Vibhuti Jha
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sewer projects, and infrastructure upgrades. Vibhuti came to the US in 1991 with the American Express Bank, to build and develop Indo-U.S. business relationships. Vibhuti has his undergraduate degree in Economics and minor in Politics and Psychology from
Fergusson College in Pune, India. He has his Masters in Economics with University of Pune followed by PhD from Bhagalpur University. He subsequently completed MBA in International Management from IMI India , an affiliate of IMI, Geneva.
Gina Sillitti (Democrat-Working Families Party)
If re-elected: Protecting our rights, funding for outdated infrastructure, and public safety are the most pressing issues.
While reproductive rights are currently protected in New York, it’s only because our elected officials fought to secure those rights. I was proud to vote for legislation that protects women and their doctors from retaliation. Protecting our rights also extends to the voting booth and I am committed to making voting easier, not harder.
With the impacts of climate change being felt more and more, I will fight for money for resiliency projects to help protect us in the future. This includes shoreline restoration, drainage to prevent flooding, and preparing for the next storm. I strongly encourage everyone to vote “Yes” on the Environmental Bond Act to help pay for these critical projects.
Gina Sillitti. (Contributed photo)
Gun violence is the leading cause of death among children in our nation. This is unacceptable. While New York leads the nation in common-sense gun safety measures, there is more we can do to get illegal guns off of our streets and keep our children safe. I am proud to have the support of law enforcement and I look forward to working with them on critical public safety issues affecting our community.
—Submitted by Gina Sillitti’s Campaign Team
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Village Proclamation For Local Restaurant
Recently, Village of Roslyn Mayor John Durkin and Trustee Marshall Bernstein walked across the street from village hall to the Jolly Fisherman Restaurant to present a proclamation.
The proclamation reads as following: “WHEREAS, this is to honor Fred Scheiner, restaurateur, pilot, activist, husband and father, as well as a mainstay in the life of the Village of Roslyn. Mr. Scheiner owned and operated The Jolly Fisherman & Steak House Restaurant from 1957 until his death on June 5, 2022.
WHEREAS, not only did Fred run the longest continually operating restaurant in the Village, he worked for social justice and a more equitable world throughout his adult life. Among his many acts of
kindness and charity, Fred worked with the INN, an organization that feeds and shelters the neediest Long Islanders. Fred also worked on the great causes of racial equality and transparent government.
WHEREAS, Fred and his family’s presence here has made our historic village a better, more livable place. Although Fred is no longer with us, his spirit will live on in every happy dinner his family continues to serve.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, for his contribution to the economic vitality of Roslyn, his generosity to the less fortunate on Long Island, his commitment to equality in the U.S., I declare June 5 as Fred Scheiner Day in the historic Village of Roslyn.”
—Submitted by the Village of Roslyn
How would you like to cover school sports?
Anton Media Group is looking for sports nuts to help expand local school sports coverage. Writers can submit profiles about star players or cover an intense sports game. We ask writers to submit high-res photos of players/games. This is an unpaid, volunteer position with the opportunity to be published in our award winning newspaper.
Please contact editorial@antonmediagroup.com if you are interested in this opportunity.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP8
Roslyn Mayor John Durkin and Trustee Marshall Bernstein with members of the Scheiner family. (Photo courtesy the Village of Roslyn)
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ELECTIONCOVERAGE
Nassau Today: Two-Party County, One-Party State
BY JOE SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
Even more than the Civil War, World War II is the dividing line in American history. America went into the war as one type of nation—isolationist, innocent, ambivalent over the world itself, Anglo Saxon Protestant in spirit, a galaxy of small towns and rural areas punctuated by an occasional large city—and came out as something entirely different: leader of the Free World, guilt-wracked if not hateful towards its past, devoted to spreading democracy and human rights throughout the world, multicultural and secular, its once-vital cities now yielding to suburban sprawl.
Nassau County was no different. Rural and hierarchical before the war, the birthplace of suburbia afterwards. One thing hadn’t changed. Nassau County remained Republican. Prior to the war, that rarely mattered. The population, compared to mighty New York City, was small. When the city and state became Democratic in the pivotal election of 1932, the latter party only needed overwhelming majorities in the five boroughs to win the day. The rest of the state could be as Republican as it wanted.
After the war, Nassau continued to elect moderate Republicans. Most prominent was Russell Sprague, who served from 1938 to 1953, a pivotal era in the county’s history.
In the 1950s, the flight to suburbia was generally a matter of convenience: Who wants to live in a walk-up on Baxter Street when you can purchase a ranchstyle house in Deer Park?
The year 1962 was key. That year, whites became a minority in the New York City public school system, accelerating the drive to suburbia. In New York—and America-—the crime rate spiked significantly, remaining that way ever since. The flight to suburbia was now a matter of life and death. The pathos of that revolutionary age was captured in a William F. Buckley, Jr. column.
“It does not seem to occur to anyone…that the exodus of white middle-class families from the cities…is…an indication of the lengths to which people intend to go in order to avoid certain conditions. It is…useless to moralize about it: the people who dominate America have written their position on the matter of forcible integration with their feet. The father who is willing to leave a city where he grew up, where he holds down his job, to endure the expenses of moving, of re-acclimation, of buying…a new home,
is expressing himself about as directly as anyone can.”
New York City—lost! That won’t happen here. Crime and opposition to the counterculture drove the wheel. Conservatism, Nassau County-style, peaked in both 1970 and 1980. In the former year, James Buckley, the columnist’s older brother, won a three-man race for a U.S. Senate seat. Buckley won a plurality in both Queens and Richmond (Staten Island) counties. He also won big in Nassau. Ten years later, the GOP finally held a primary for Jacob Javits’ senate race. Alfonse D’Amato, an unknown Town of Hempstead supervisor, easily unseated Javits in the primary before prevailing in his own three-man race. D’Amato, too, mopped up on his Nassau County home turf.
Was Nassau County that Republican? From 1968 to 1988, it voted Republican in every presidential election. The county also elected such progressives as Lester Wolff and Thomas Downey to Congress.
And was Nassau that conservative? Feminism was born in suburbia, a reaction by women who toiled at home while their husbands made big money in the big city. Housework, with its modern amenities, wasn’t the same as drawing buckets of water from the river each morning. Still, boredom set it.
The 1970s turned out to be as
the presidential level. The well-oiled GOP machine crashed on the rocks during the administration of Thomas Gulotta. The party’s big spending ways caught up with it. The county’s finances were placed under the supervision of the Nassau Interim Finance Authority (NIFA).
In 2001, Thomas Suozzi became the first Democrat since Eugene Dickerson to be elected as supervisor.
Dickerson had served from 1962 to 1970.
Since then, the supervisor’s job has changed hands, musical-chairs style, between a Republican (Edward Mangano), a Democrat (Lauren Curran) and back to a Republican (Bruce Blakeman.) The Nassau County legislature, established in 1993 through a court order, has remained Republican.
revolutionary as the previous decade. Women’s Liberation, a reaction also to the “Men’s Lib” of the early 1960s, hit full stride with the Roe vs. Wade decision legalizing abortion. The Democratic Party suddenly had a new constituency: College-educated suburban women jealous to protect that new-found right.
The Nassau GOP, meanwhile, fell into a tailspin. In 1983, the party had a clear edge in voter registration. A decade later, Nassau was becoming a blue lake. The presidency of George H.W. Bush represented the turning point. Elected to preside over a third Ronald Reagan term, Bush raised taxes, signed a civil rights bill that was immediately attacked as quota legislation and went to war with Iraq over the latter’s invasion of Kuwait. As important, the Bushies had to contend with Webster vs. Reproductive Health Services, a 1989 Supreme Court decision, one that did not outlaw Roe, but allowed states to make restrictions on the abortion procedure. Bush was defeated in Nassau County by Bill Clinton and New York has never again been competitive on
The Nassau County of 1940 has long disappeared. As has the Nassau of 1980. The 1965 and 1980 immigration bills have given the county a large Asian and Hispanic population. Since minorities tend Democratic, this has resulted in a great boon for that party both in New York and nationwide. The white electorate also is more liberal, due to the effects of both legalized abortion and legalized same-sex marriage.
The GOP, for their part, are unfazed by the county’s demographic changes. They remain convinced that Asian and Hispanic voters will swing Republican, attracted by the party’s pro-free market, traditional values, and anti-crime agenda.
As important has been the rise in property taxes. How can young people dream of a Long Island future? When Andrew Cuomo was elected governor in 2010, he signed legislation that would cap property tax increases at two percent, a move designed to keep such people on the island. Will it work?
Nassau County looks to remain a two-party county in a one-party state. To win a statewide election, the GOP would need huge majorities in both Nassau and Suffolk counties to offset the Democrats’ overwhelming edge in the five boroughs. And that looks to be an uphill climb.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 3AFULL RUN
ELECTIONCOVERAGE
A Gubernatorial Cheat Sheet
ISSUE Top priorities
Kathy Hochul (D)
“With a full term, I will continue to focus on public safety, affordability and building an economy that works for all New Yorkers.”
“Public safety, cost of living and education. Repealing cashless bail, firing DAs who don’t enforce the law, cutting taxes across the board, creating good paying jobs, lifting the cap on charter schools, implementing school choice [voucher] programs, and more.”
“My focus as a member of Congress was always to do the work for people in my district and make sure that I delivered. And I did.” (NY1, June 2022)
Abortion Gun control Property taxes
Directed state agencies to coordinate a public information campaign, including developing a Patient Bill of Rights. Directed the state to update existing regulations to make medication abortions more accessible during telehealth visits; urged Facebook to combat misinformation online. (2021-2022)
Opposed taxpayer funding of abortions via Affordable Care Act (Jan 2015). Opposed abortion after 20 weeks, except in cases of risk to maternal life (May 2015). Proposed including embryos/fetuses in 14th Amendment protection (Oct 2017). Sponsored bill to “protect ‘infant survivors’” of abortion (March 2019).
“I will continue ghting to protect a woman’s right to choose and to make her own informed healthcare decisions. We must stand together, now more than ever, to protect women’s rights.” (August 2018)
“On Day One, Alison will be ready to save our state alongside our next Governor, Congressman and veteran Lee Zeldin.”
Police
“In New York, we’re taking bold steps to protect the people of our state. I am proud to sign a comprehensive bill package that prohibits the sale of semiautomatic weapons to people under 21, bans body armor sales outside of people in select professions, closes critical gun law loopholes and strengthens our Red Flag Law to keep guns away from dangerous people—new measures that I believe will save lives.” (June 2022)
Announced $475 million in tax relief for eligible low-income New Yorkers and families; signed a legislative package aimed at expanding tax relief for New York homeowners, particularly those 60 and over. (2022)
“I was proud to sign on to the amicus brief in support of the New York State Ri e and Pistol Association’s case and in defense of these law abiding New Yorkers. While Kathy Hochul, the former A-rated NRA Member of Congress, becomes more a walking identity crisis each passing day, she better not make her next move on this yet another assault on law-abiding New Yorkers.”
Plans to cut taxes “across the board.”
“There is a scourge of gun violence in our country due to the pervasiveness of illegal rearms. Year after year, our neighborhoods are ooded with illegal guns and ghost guns, tormenting families and law-abiding citizens every day, but yet the national response does not change.” (June 2022)
Unknown
Unknown
Cannabis
“My administration is wholly committed to providing the tools our partners in law enforcement need, including the largest state public safety investment in a generation: $227 million ... I’m proud to announce $50 million in public safety funding [to] ensure all facets of the criminal justice system have the tools and resources needed to keep New Yorkers safe.” (Sept 2022) “The era of denigrating our police is over. We support you 100 percent.” (New York Post, June 2022)
“With the ‘Cannabis Conversations’ campaign, we’re following through on our commitment to provide New Yorkers with the information they need to safely navigate the new Cannabis Law. Education is the best tool to keep New Yorkers healthy as we continue to ramp up this safe, inclusive, and equitable industry.” (April 2022)
Proposals: Repeal Cashless Bail and Less is More Act; Remove District Attorneys who don’t enforce the law; Amend Raise the Age to give judges more discretion in Adolescent Offender cases; Give judges discretion when setting bail; Increase penalties on looting businesses; Enact a Law Enforcement Bill of Rights; Hire additional police of cers statewide; Oppose any effort to Defund the Police; Keep quali ed immunity.
Voted in favor of the federal Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act of 2019 for cannabis and hemp businesses; rated 67 percent by the National Cannabis Industry Assoc. and 42 percent by NORML (2019).
Unknown
Unknown
“It is incumbent upon us to create a socially responsible cannabis industry here in New York State that ensures jobs and opportunity for minorities who have long been subject to unfair enforcement when it comes to cannabis use.” (June 2022)
“New Yorkers are feeling the attacks on their wallets with higher taxes, rising costs and many other out-of-control scal policies.” (Oct 2022)
“With nearly 25 years of experience in the NYPD, I know what it takes to take back our streets. We must end the procriminal policies, FIRE Hochul & vote for Lee Zeldin.” (Twitter, Sept 2022)
“It’s a crime and it’s illegal.” (Twitter, Sept 2022)
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP4A FULL RUN
Lee Zeldin (R)
Alison Esposito (R)
Antonio Delgado (D)
Here are some of the latest stances on top
issues from New York’s Democrat and Republican candidates for Governor and for Lieutenant Governor, respectively.
Unless otherwise stated, the
content above was compiled from candidates’ websites and social media accounts, or via Vote411.org.
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ELECTIONCOVERAGE
Big Picture Ballot
All of the candidates in our coverage area, with the exception of the Governor and Comptroller, have been evaluated on five key issues: reproductive rights, gun control, immigration, healthcare reform, and the environment. Whenever possible, positions were obtained directly from the candidates themselves or their websites and social media. When necessary, positions were pulled from justfacts.votesmart.org or legislative voting records. If no information was available, issue is marked N/A. Bold indicates incumbent.
U.S. SENATE Charles Schumer
Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform-For Environment-For Joe Pinion
Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights-_N/A Gun Control- Against Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform-N/A Environment-N/A
NYS ATTORNEY GENERAL Leticia James Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For
Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-For
Michael Henry Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 2 Jackie Gordon Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- Against Environment-For
Andrew Garbarino, Republican, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Against Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- Against Environment- Against
U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DISTRTICT 3
Andrew Zimmerman Democrat:
Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- For Environment-For
George Santos Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Against Immigration-Against
Healthcare Reform- Against Environment-Mixed
U.S. REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 4
Laura Gillen Democrat: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- Mixed Environment-Mixed
Anthony D’Esposito Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- Mixed Environment-Against
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STATE SENATOR DISTRICT 5 John E. Brooks
Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- Mixed Environment-For Steven Rhoads, Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
STATE SENATOR DISTRICT 6
Kevin Thomas Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For
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Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-For
James Coll
Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
STATE SENATOR DISTRICT 7
Anna Kaplan Democrat, Working Families: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- mixed Environment-For
Jack Martins Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Mixed Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- Mixed Environment-Mixed
STATE SENATOR DISTRICT 8
John Alberts Democrat: Reproductive Rights- N/A
ELECTIONCOVERAGE
Gun Control- For Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
Alexis Weik Republican, Conservative:
Reproductive Rights- mixed Gun Control- Against Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-Mixed
STATE ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 9
Steven Dellavecchia Democrat:
Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- For Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
Michael Durso Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Against Immigration-Mixed Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-Mixed
ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 13 Charles Lavine Democrat, Working Families:
Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- Mixed Environment-For
Ruka Anzai Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare reform- N/A Environment-N/A
ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 14 Dustin Ginsberg Democrat:
Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- For Environment-For
David McDonough Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Against Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- Against Environment-Mixed
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ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 15 Amanda Field
Democrat: Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- For Environment-For
Jake Blumencranz Republican, Conservative:
Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-For
ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 16 Gina Sillitti
Democrat, Working Families:
Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-For Healthcare Reform- For Environment-For
Vibhuti Jha Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 17 Paul Kaminsky Democrat
Reproductive Rights- N/A Gun Control- N/A Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-N/A
John Mikulin
Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Against Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- N/A Environment-Against
ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 19 Sanjeev Jindal Democrat:
Reproductive Rights- For Gun Control- For Immigration-N/A Healthcare Reform- For Environment-N/A
Edward Ra
Republican, Conservative: Reproductive Rights- Against Gun Control- Mixed Immigration-Against Healthcare Reform- Against Environment-Mixed
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Statewide Ballot Measure:
Raising Green For A Greener New York
The “Clean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act of 2022”
Ballot Language
“To address and combat the impact of climate change and damage to the environment, the “Clean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act of 2022” authorizes the sale of state bonds up to four billion two hundred million dollars to fund environmental protection, natural restoration, resiliency, and clean energy projects. Shall the Environmental Bond Act of 2022 be approved?”
Description – The purpose of this proposal is to authorize the creation of state debt and the sale of state bonds in the amount of up to four billion two hundred million dollars ($4,200,000,000) for certain capital projects for the purpose of making environmental improvements that preserve, enhance, and restore New York’s natural resources and reduce the impact of climate change. If approved by New Yorkers in a majority vote this fall, the proposal would allow the State to borrow up to $4,200,000,000 to provide funding for capital projects for the following: restoration and flood risk reduction (at least $1,100,000,000), open space land conservation and recreation (up to $650,000,000), climate change mitigation (up to $1,500,000,000), and water quality improvement and resilient infrastructure (at least $650,000,000).
The proposal also would allow the state to refund the debt to take advantage of lower interest rates if the opportunity arises. To
Pros – Strengthen Our Economy: New York’s environmental programs support hundreds of thousands of good jobs across many industries including construction, agriculture, outdoor recreation and tourism. These programs also leverage billions in federal, local and private dollars, which New York can’t afford to lose.
Protect clean air and water: The pandemic has once again demonstrated that clean air, clean water and access to nature are vital in protecting public health. Environmental programs help provide what every New Yorker needs: safe water to drink, clean air to breathe and green space where they live.
Advance environmental justice: Low-income families and communities of color suffer disproportionately from air pollution, exposure to toxins and lack of green space. Environmental justice programs help address these inequities
accomplish this, the proposal authorizes the state comptroller to issue additional state bonds in sums up to or exceeding the amount of the bonds initially issued to refund, to advance refund, or otherwise repay part or all of such bonds prior to the scheduled dates of their maturity.
Expand green space and restore natural habitats: New York’s environmental programs create parks, protect family farms, revitalize waterfronts and restore habitats for birds, fish and other wildlife.
Reduce climate risks: Millions of New Yorkers are at risk from flooding, heat waves, and food and water shortages. By putting the Bond Act on the 2022 ballot, we can cut harmful pollution and help protect communities from the growing risks of global warming.
Cons – The $4.2 billion made available by the 2022 Environmental Bond Act would not provide funding sufficient to fully support the state’s green energy transition under the CLCPA. Other sources of funding will be needed.
$300 million in unallocated funds may be viewed as a weakness, unless there is accountability and transparency regarding where these funds are spent.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP8A FULL RUN
ELECTIONCOVERAGE
(Text via Vote411.org)234687 M
Photo credit Alex Nuñez
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ELECTIONCOVERAGE
Seven Election Facts: Why Your Vote Matters
BY LEAH RODRIGUEZ specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
Voting is a right often taken for granted in the U.S. Americans vote in much lower numbers compared to other developed countries and American youth have one of the lowest voter turnouts in the world.
Marginalized groups haven’t always had the right to vote and laws still try to silence their voices. Not all governments exercise democracy either. Citizens around the world don’t always have the freedom to appoint their leaders.
Participating in local and federal elections is one way for people to support policies that serve their communities’ needs and ensure they have a say in the decisions that benefit society.
Ahead of the next election, here are seven facts to get excited about your role in the electoral process.
1Young people play an important role in elections.
Research suggests that if young people voted as much as older citizens, elected
officials would be more likely to prioritize the policy issues that are important to them.
Young people make up more than one-third of eligible voters, which means they hold a lot of power if they exercise their right to go to the polls. Generation Z, people between the ages of 18 and 23, are also more ethnically and racially diverse than previous generations.
Young people are historically the group least likely to vote for several reasons, either because they lack encouragement and information or they think they won’t make a difference and find the process too complicated. That’s starting to change.
Tufts University’s Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) estimated that 31 percent of eligible people ages 18 to 29 voted in the 2018 midterms—a record turnout at the time.
Almost twice as many millennials voted in 2018 compared to 2014.
2A single vote can make or break an election.
Over the past two decades, more than a dozen races were decided by a single vote or ended in a tie. If enough people vote
in your district or county, your ballot can increase your preferred candidate’s chances of winning an election and help get policies passed that reflect your values and your community’s needs.
3Taking time off isn’t always realistic, but more companies are giving employees flexibility to exercise their civic duty.
In the 2014 midterm elections, 35 percent of people didn’t vote because of a scheduling conflict. Voting can take as short as 10 minutes or as long as several hours, but in almost half of the country, employees are entitled to take time off to vote. Companies in more than 22 states are required to provide paid time off to vote and in August 2020, several high-profile companies announced they’ll offer more flexibility on Election Day.
4
Registering to vote is a big step into adulthood and it’s possible to sign up before 18.
Voting is considered a rite of passage when adolescents turn 18, but many states actually allow registration earlier. Residents in some states can preregister to vote as young as 16
to ensure they are already registered by their 18th birthdays. Select states also let 17-yearolds participate in primary elections
5
Voting doesn’t have to be inconvenient—many citizens can now vote by mail.
In many states, voting in the 2020 presidential election was as simple as dropping off an envelope at the post office. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, states across the country modified their absentee and mail-in protocols. Meanwhile, five states mandated that everyone vote by mail in the election to avoid the virus’ spread.
6
Democracy can’t function without full participation and early voting improves turnout.
The rules vary state by state, but when residents have the option to vote early, they can head to the polls at a time that’s convenient for them and avoid lines. South Dakota and Minnesota open up early in-person voting with an absentee ballot as early as 46 days before the general election.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP10A FULL RUN
LESS CRIME. LOWER TAXES. EARLY VOTING STARTS OCT. 29 Repeal bail reform that freed killers and dangerous criminals Reject radical police “defunders” and their pro-crime agenda Stop runaway spending and taxpayer giveaways to stamp out in ation
Paid for by Friends of Senator Jack Martins
BACKED BY CRIME FIGHTERS 235507 M
see SEVEN FACTS
on page 11A
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Six Steps To Get The Most Out Of A Campus Visit
Checking out a college campus near you is a great idea, even if you don’t know what you want to major in or what type of college you want to go to. College visits can give you a sense of what might be important to you in a college and what college life is all about. Here are six suggestions for planning your visit and getting the most out of it.
1Decide where and how Find out what colleges are nearby and think about planning a visit. There may be programs at your school that arrange group trips to colleges. You could also get a group of friends together and visit the campus by car or public transportation. A family trip is another option, and it allows you to involve your family in the process.
2
Prepare for your visit
Before you set out, get a map of the college campus (the college’s website usually has one) and pick out places of interest. Call the college’s admission office to schedule a guided tour of the campus or to ask about the best times to visit.
3
Take your own tour
Just wandering around the campus on your own or with friends can be the best way to get a feel for what a college is like.
4
Explore college facilities
Ask a student where the best place to eat is and have lunch there. Visit the library. Check out the gym or the theater. Ask an admission officer if you can tour a dorm and a classroom. Find the spots on campus where students gather; hang out there and get a feel for the character of the college.
5
Make connections
Talk to current students. Ask the students at the next table or sitting on a nearby bench what they like best about the college or what they like best about being in college in general.
6
Make notes
During your visit, write down some notes about your experience. What did you see that excited you? Do you feel you could explore the library for days? Can you picture yourself on stage in the theater? Do you want to get a closer look at the equipment in a lab? Are there aspects of the college that you don’t like? If so, what are they?
What now?
When you visit a college, just relax, observe and have fun. There’s no pressure.
—College Board
Campus Visit Checklist
Visiting a college campus helps you get a sense of what a college — and life at that college — is like. This can help you decide whether the college is right for you.
When planning your campus visits, make sure to allow time to explore each college. While you’re there, talk to as many people as possible. These can include college admission staff, professors and students. Below are some other things you can do while visiting. Note that some activities, such as meeting with an admission officer or staying overnight in a dorm, might need to be set up in advance.
Gather Information
Find out what you need to do to apply and see if the college’s class and major offerings are what you want:
· Take part in a group information session at the admission office.
· Interview with an admission officer.
· Pick up financial aid forms.
· Sit in on a class that interests you. If classes aren’t in session, just see what the classrooms are like.
· Meet a professor who teaches a subject that interests you.
· Talk to students about what they think of their classes and professors.
· Get the names of the people you meet and their business cards so you can contact them later if you have questions.
Explore the Campus
Get a feel for student life and see if this college is a place where you will do well:
· Take a campus tour.
· Talk to current students about life on campus and the college.
· Check out the freshman dorms and stay overnight with a student, if possible.
· Visit the dining hall, fitness center, library, career center, bookstore and other campus facilities.
· Talk to the coaches of sports that you may want to play.
· Walk or drive around the community surrounding the campus.
Check Out Campus Media
Tune in to learn what’s happening on campus and what’s on students’ minds:
· Listen to the college radio station.
· Read the student newspaper.
· Read other student publications, such as department newsletters, alternative newspapers and literary reviews.
· Scan bulletin boards to see what daily student life is like.
· Go to the career center and learn what services it offers.
· Browse the school’s website and any campus blogs.
Questions to Ask During Your Visit
Here are some questions you may want to ask your tour guide or students you meet on campus:
· What are the best reasons to go to this college?
· What’s it like to go from high school to college?
· What do you do in your free time? On the weekends?
· What do you love about this college?
· What do you wish you could change about this college?
· Why did you choose this college?
· What is it like to live here?
—College Board
3BPROFILES IN EDUCATION • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022
Be prepared and enjoy your visit.
New York Tech Mini-Research Grants Program Expands To Focus On Girls In STEM
Reinforcing its commitment to undergraduate research and to building a pipeline for students to pursue science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields, New York Tech is expanding its Mini-Research Grant Awards (MRGA) program to focus on attracting girls to STEM studies. This expansion is made possible by funding from the American Association of University Women (AAUW). Harlem Village Academies in New York City, and Brentwood High School and Uniondale High School on Long Island have committed to participating in the expanded program.
“We’re proud that New York Tech’s commitment to undergraduate research and to diversifying the STEM pipeline at all academic and socioeconomic levels encourages research activity among high school students, and we are optimistic about welcoming more girls into the program, thanks to our high school partners and our generous funders,” said Niharika Nath, Ph.D., New York Tech professor of biological and chemical sciences, who founded and leads the MRGA program.
In 2021, New York Tech’s MRGA program received 127 research project submissions from high schools throughout the New York metropolitan area and beyond and awarded 30 research projects from 20 high schools with grants of $300. The awards, also made possible through the support of Voya Foundation, are applied to expenses incurred by the high school researchers during new or continuing research in STEM and related disciplines during the academic year. The participants must have plans to compete in a science competition and present their work at New York
Tech in May 2023.
In addition to the $300 grant, high school awardees will experience tours of New York Tech’s New York City and Long Island campuses, interact with undergraduate student clubs, and engage with a research robot that facilitates engagement and learning activities.
Also part of the MRGA review committee are Rosemary Gallagher, D.P.T., Ph.D., associate professor of physical therapy, Wenjia Li, Ph.D., associate professor of computer science, and Amy Bravo, senior director of Career Success
and Experiential Education. New York Tech undergraduate and graduate students also will assist in the grant review process, which will take place in January 2023.
“Opening the pipeline for underrepresented populations in STEM education and career opportunities is key to removing barriers for students,” said Rebecca Grella, Ph.D., a scientist and educator at Brentwood High School.
Applications for the sixth annual Mini-Research Grant Award for high school students are now being accepted.
—New York Institute of Technology
4B OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • PROFILES IN EDUCATION
Dua Hanif (left) and Isabel Chilpe and Amanda Sanchez
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SAT Program Results Show Increased Participation
As schools and communities continue to recover from impacts of the pandemic, SAT testing capacity and SAT test-taking have increased. The 2022 SAT Suite of Assessments Annual Report shows that 1.7 million students in the high school class of 2022 took the SAT at least once, up from 1.5 million in the class of 2021. Most of these students took the SAT through SAT School Day, the in-school program that dramatically expands access and equity. And as SAT test-taking rebounds, College Board survey results continue to show more than 80 percent of students want to be able to send their scores to colleges.
SAT School Day
Nearly 1.1 million students in the class of 2022 took the SAT through the SAT School Day program, which provides schools, districts, and states a way to offer the SAT to juniors and seniors in school, on a weekday, often at no cost to students. Overall, more than 63 percent of SAT takers in the class of 2022 took the SAT on a school day, the highest percentage to date, compared to 62 percent of the class of 2021, and 49 percent of the class of 2020. SAT School Day participation has increased more than 18
percent over the past year, up from 930,000 in the class of 2021.
“Students want to take the SAT to show what they’ve learned and to connect with scholarships and colleges,” said Priscilla Rodriguez, senior vice president, College Readiness Assessments at College Board. “Thanks to partnerships with schools,
districts, and states, and with the vital support of educators, SAT School Day helps make it possible for students from all backgrounds to access the SAT to raise their hands and be seen.”
Mean Scores
The average SAT total score declined
slightly for the class of 2022—1050 compared to 1060 for the class of 2021. In the class of 2022, 43 percent of SAT takers met or exceeded both the Evidence-Based Reading and Writing (ERW) and Math college readiness benchmarks, which indicate a high likelihood for success in credit-bearing college coursework.
Participation for the class of 2022 continues to be impacted by lingering effects of the pandemic, so we caution comparing these performance results to previous classes.
PSAT/NMSQT
Approximately 3.6 million students participated in the PSAT/NMSQT in the 2021-22 school year, up from 2.06 million in the 2020-21 school year which was greatly affected by the pandemic.
The PSAT/NMSQT is the only qualifying test for the National Merit Scholarship Program, an academic competition for recognition and scholarships. PSAT-related assessments also provide students with benefits like connection to free, personalized SAT practice on Khan Academy; more than $350 million in scholarship
6B OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • PROFILES IN EDUCATION
see SAT on page 10B
Rabbi Dr. Je rey Kobrin | Rosh HaYeshiva/Head of School Ira M. Miller | Dean Rabbi Dr. Noam Weinberg | Principal
Students design an individualized, academically rigorous course of study that expands their knowledge and inspires them to rise to the challenge – building their intellectual curiosity, playing to their personal strengths, and establishing foundational skills for lifelong success. An extensive, high-level Judaic Studies core curriculum in Talmud, Tanach, Machshava, and Jewish history instills a strong foundation and love of Jewish life –enhanced by advanced Talmud seminars, Hebrew language, and advocacy for Israel. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2022 | 10:00am - 1:00pm Open Campus Day at North Shore Hebrew Academy High School 400 N. Service Road, Great Neck, NY 11020 Signature Programs empower students to pursue their passions and set themselves up for success in cutting-edge fields. Opportunities include 360 STEAM; Business and Entrepreneurship; Data Science; Science Research; Art, Architecture, and Fashion Design; Co-ed Beit Midrash; Independent Studies; and more. Our school builds a community of achrayut by making a commitment to helping others through meaningful chesed experiences – from causes that a ect our school and Jewish community, to nationwide and global issues. Please RSVP. www.nsha.org/opencampus Website. www.nsha.org Phone. 516.487.2424 An extraordinary Yeshiva high school where students are empowered to pursue their passions and reach higher What inspires you? Find it at North Shore Hebrew Academy High School. 234789 R
7BPROFILES IN EDUCATION • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022
Filling Out The FAFSA Form
Filling out the FAFSA form can be a straightforward and easy process. Below are some tips to help you along the way.
Creating an Account
We strongly recommend you create your account before starting your FAFSA form. Your account username and password combination, called your FSA ID, gives you access to certain information online and allows you to sign your FAFSA® form and promissory notes electronically. While you can get your FSA ID as you’re completing the FAFSA form online, getting it ahead of time and using it to fill out the FAFSA form on fafsa.gov cuts down on errors and delays.
If you’re a dependent student, one of your parents whose information is reported on the FAFSA form will also need an FSA ID so that your parent can sign your application electronically. If your parent doesn’t have a Social Security number (SSN), your parent won’t be able to create an FSA ID (which requires an SSN). This means you’ll have to select the option to print a signature page when you get to the end of your FAFSA form on fafsa.gov.
Gathering the Documents Needed to Apply
The FAFSA questions ask for information about you (your name, date of birth, address, etc.) and about your financial situation.
Depending on your circumstances (for instance, whether you’re a U.S. citizen or what tax form you used), you might need the following information or documents as you fill out the FAFSA application:
· Your Social Security number (it’s important that you enter it correctly on the FAFSA form!)
· Your parents’ Social Security numbers if you are a dependent student
· Your driver’s license number if you have one
· Your Alien Registration number if you are not a U.S. citizen
Federal tax information, tax documents, or tax returns, including IRS W-2 information, for you (and your spouse, if you are married), and for your parents if you are a dependent student:
· IRS Form 1040
· Foreign tax return or IRS Form 1040-NR
· Tax return for Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, or Palau
· Records of your untaxed income, such as child support received, interest income, and veterans noneducation benefits, for you, and for your parents if you are a dependent student
· Information on cash; savings and checking account balances; investments, including stocks and bonds and real estate (but not including the home in which you live); and business and farm assets for you and for your parents if you are a dependent student
Keep these records. You may need them again. Do not mail these supporting records to FAFSA.
Getting Help
If you need help filling out the FAFSA form, use
FAFSA Application Noteworthy Changes
The beginning of the 2023–24 FASFA cycle has started on Oct. 1. The application is available until June 30, 2024. Some funds are limited, so it’s a good idea to apply as soon as possible.
As part of the planned phased updates outlined in the FUTURE Act and FASFA Simplification Act, changes were made to the FAFSA form.
Changes for 2023-24 include:
· Removal of questions related to Selective Service registration,
· Removal of the drug conviction questions and corresponding eligibility worksheet,
· Removal of associated help text, validation logic, edits, comments, and messaging related to the Selective Service and drug conviction questions, and
· Addition of a demographic
survey with questions related to gender, ethnicity, and race.
For a complete description of all the changes to the 2023–24 FAFSA form, refer to the Summary of Changes for the Application System Guide (https://fsapartners.ed.gov).
Federal Student Aid (FSA) has also announced that it has fixed a previously known issue affecting dependent students who used the IRS DRT in their initial application and later tried to change their status to “independent” in subsequent transactions. Students who were initially determined to be dependent and used the IRS DRT, or whose parent used the IRS DRT, had been unable to submit a correction in which their dependency status was now “independent.” This issue has now been resolved and users should no longer encounter this problem.
Students can apply online via fafsa.gov.
these free tools:
In the online FAFSA form, select the white question mark icon next to a FAFSA question to view a “tool tip” that provides information about how to answer that question.
You can visit the “FAFSA Help” page, where you can view trending FAFSA topics, browse FAQs, search for more information, or select “Contact Us.”
Once you select “Contact Us,” you’ll have the option of emailing us with your question or, during business hours, chatting (in English or Spanish) with live technical support staff.
Contact the financial aid office at the college or career school you plan to attend.
Starting Your FAFSA Form and Providing Your Basic Personal Information
The FAFSA form is available on Oct. 1 for the next school year. Fill it out as soon as possible on or after Oct. 1 to meet FAFSA federal, state, and school deadlines.
Listing Colleges and Career Schools
While completing the FAFSA form, you must list at least one school to receive your information. The schools you list will use your FAFSA information to determine the types and amounts of aid you may receive.
Determining Your Dependency Status
The FAFSA form asks a series of questions that determine whether you are a dependent or independent student for purposes of applying for federal student aid. If you are a dependent student, you must report parent information, as well as your own information, on your application.
Signing and Submitting the Form
Before your FAFSA form can be processed, you’ll need to sign and submit the application. Here are some tips as you finish your FAFSA form:
Be sure to sign with your FSA ID (your username and password) so your FAFSA form will be processed as quickly as possible. (If you log in to the form by providing your FSA ID, you won’t be asked for it again when it’s time to sign. However, if you’re providing parent information, one of your parents will be required to sign your application.)
While your online FAFSA form will be processed much quicker if you (and your parent if you’re a dependent student) sign your FAFSA form with your FSA ID, you have the option to print out, sign, and mail in a signature page to the address listed on the page.
Visit www.studentaid.gov for more information.
—Department of Education
8B OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • PROFILES IN EDUCATION
9BPROFILES IN EDUCATION • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 Newburgh, New York Mount Saint Mary College Service and experience Spark SUCCESS Visit the Mount this fall! While you are here, you’ll learn about: More than 80 programs leading to a variety of exciting careers How service and hands-on learning enhance your education Clubs, sports, and other opportunities outside the classroom Student support services with a personal touch Register for your visit at msmc.edu/visit Upcoming Events Open House – Sunday, Nov. 13 Open House – Sunday, Dec. 4 Individual tours available ATLANTIC OCEAN PA NJ NY MA VT NH CT RI Syracuse Philadelphia New York Boston Hartford Albany Newburgh Mount Saint Mary College N 235390 M
Art And Culture Converge At Seaford Middle School
opportunities; and information about their potential to succeed in Advanced Placement®.
Digital SAT
As announced earlier this year, students testing in international test centers in March 2023 will take the digital SAT. Students in the U.S. will take the digital SAT starting in March 2024.
“The digital SAT will be easier to take, easier to give, more secure, and more relevant,” said Priscilla Rodriguez. “We’re not simply putting the current SAT on a digital platform— we’re taking full advantage of what delivering an assessment digitally makes possible. We’re listening to educators and students and we’re adapting to meet their evolving needs.”
paper-and-pencil test, and nearly 90 percent of testing staff said administering the digital SAT was as good or better than the paper-and-pencil version.
The digital SAT will also be more secure. Right now, if one test form is compromised, it can mean canceling scores for whole groups of students.
A digital SAT means every student will have a unique test form, making it practically impossible to share answers.
After transferring the design onto linoleum, Hailey Doris used a lino cutting tool to carve the skull.
Seaford Middle School sixth-graders learned some new artistic techniques while also expanding their knowledge of other cultures.
Students learned about Day of the Dead, a Mexican holiday in the fall in which families welcome back the souls of deceased relatives and symbolized by sugar skulls. Teacher Stephanie Lucia taught students about the customs and traditions associated with
Day of the Dead before having them make their own sugar skulls using printmaking techniques.
First, sixth-graders traced the skull design before transferring it onto linoleum. They used lino cutting tools to carve it before eventually stamping it onto paper and adding colorful designs.
—Seaford School District
The digital SAT will be far shorter, closer to two hours than three, and despite the reduced length of the test, students will have more time per question. Reading and writing passages will be shorter, with one question tied to each—which is particularly meaningful for English language learners and students with disabilities.
The digital SAT has been piloted and studied with thousands of students around the world, and more than 80 percent of students said the test experience was better than the
With the transition to digital tests, College Board is addressing inequities in access to technology. Students will be able to use their own laptop or tablet, or a school issued device. If a student doesn’t have a device to use to take the SAT on a weekend, College Board will lend them one for use on test day. College Board’s new digital testing application was built with access in mind. The app works even if the internet drops, and a student won’t lose work or time if their battery dies.
As part of the digital SAT score report, every student will get information about careers as well as two-year and four-year college options.
Students will still have access to free practice resources on Khan Academy. And students taking the SAT Suite will continue to connect to scholarships and the College Board National Recognition Programs.
—College Board
10B OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • PROFILES IN EDUCATION
SAT from page 6B NYIT.EDU/ANTON Register Today FALL OPEN HOUSES Oct. 30, New York City Nov. 12, Long Island Nov. 19, New York CityDOERS. MAKERS. INNOVATORS. There’s a place for you at New York Tech. TOP 25 BEST UNIVERSITIES IN THE REGION U.S. News and World Report TOP 10% of U.S. colleges for return on investment Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce 100+ HIGHLY RANKED DEGREE PROGRAMS and areas of specializations 235394 M
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OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • PROFILES IN EDUCATION Champions play (and learn) here! At Queensborough, the possibilities are infinite. Apply now for Winter & Spring 2023! Spirited.
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7Registration complications keep people away from the polls, but signing up online can help guarantee citizens can cast a ballot. In 2018, college students in Fairfax County, VA, who participated in a study reported that they didn’t mail in their absentee ballots because they didn’t know where to buy stamps. Voters who want to avoid any snail mail mishaps and live in any of these 39 states have the option of registering online. Online registration not only minimizes administration costs and data entry errors, but it also improves state voter list accuracy.
—Leah Rodriguez writes for Global Citizen. Reprinted with permission.
ELECTIONCOVERAGE
General Election: November 8, 2022
Find out where and how to vote
This year’s general election is on Tuesday, Nov. 8. Although you can still request an absentee ballot application through Nassau County Board of Elections, completed electronic applications were due prior to Oct. 24. Absentee ballot applications can still be hand-delivered to the Board of Elections office in Mineola prior to Monday, Nov. 7. In-person early voting at 27 designated polling locations across Nassau County will take place between Saturday, Oct. 29 and Sunday, Nov. 6.
Early voting dates and times are:
• Saturday, Oct. 29 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
• Sunday, Oct. 30 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
• Monday, Oct. 31 from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m.
• Tuesday, Nov. 1 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
• Wednesday, Nov. 2 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
• Thursday, Nov. 3 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
• Friday, Nov. 4 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
• Saturday, Nov. 5 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
• Sunday, Nov. 6 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Local early voting sites include:
• Oyster Bay Ice Rink (1001 Stewart Ave., Bethpage)
• St. Paul’s Recreation Center (295 Stewart Ave., Garden City)
• Glen Cove City Hall (9 Glen St., Glen Cove)
• The Great Neck House (14 Arrendale Ave., Great Neck)
• Hicksville Levittown Hall (201 Levittown Pkwy., Hicksville)
• Massapequa Town Hall South (977 Hicksville Rd., Massapequa)
• Nassau County Board of Elections
(240 Old Country Rd., Mineola)
• Michael J. Tully Park (1801 Evergreen Ave., New Hyde Park)
• Oyster Bay Community Center (59 Church St., Oyster Bay)
• Plainview Mid-Island Y JCC (45 Manetto Hill Rd., Plainview)
• Port Washington Library (1 Library Dr., Port Washington)
• Gayle Community Center (53 Orchard St., Roslyn Heights)
• St. Frances De Chantal Church (1309 Wantagh Ave., Wantagh)
• Yes We Can Community Center (141 Garden St., Westbury)
Visit the Board of Elections’ website for the full list of early voting locations across the county.
Every polling place is accessible to voters with physical disabilities. Any eligible voter who resides in Nassau County may vote. Any voter who has been issued an absentee ballot is not permitted to vote on a voting machine
at an early voting site or on Election Day, but may vote by affidavit ballot. Any eligible voter may vote at any of the above locations during the times listed except on Tuesday, Nov. 8. On Election Day, voters must go to their designated polling place. If you vote during early voting, you will not be permitted to vote on Nov. 8, or on a subsequent day.
On Nov. 8, polling locations will be open from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. Any person duly registered to vote should have been sent info. Visit the state’s polling place lookup tool (www.voterlookup.elections.ny.gov) and type in your home address to receive your assigned polling location.
Visit the Nassau County Board of Elections website (www.nassaucountyny. gov/566/Board-of-Elections) for more information, including election results, campaign finance reports, political calendar, election laws, poll worker training, voting machine instructions and more.
—Compiled by Christy Hinko
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 11AFULL RUN
EARLY VOTING 234093 M Get Results. Sign Up Today! Thinking about lower property taxes? Apply online atmptrg.com/anton or call 516.715.1208 Maidenbaum Property Tax Reduction Group, LLC – 483 Chestnut Street, Cedarhurst, NY 11516 SEVEN FACTS from page 10A
& DESIGN
How Elections Affect The Real Estate Market
Elections always affect the real estate market. Whether or not you follow national politics, all homeowners should pay attention to the results of an election. During any election, and especially during a presidential election, there are shifts in all industries, especially the real estate industry.
There is a tendency for buyers to come out more during election years in order to take advantage of the slower increase in home prices.
It can be an ideal time to place your home on the market. If your home is priced correctly and the price is not overambitious, you may experience a bidding frenzy.
The flip side is that some buyers may interpret an election year as a year of uncertainty. These buyers tend to be more cynical and look at home purchase as a risk during this time. It may affect your tax credits and deductions allowable, up or down. All buyers should be aware of the most current government incentives that can help determine changes in supply and demand and be able to spot any false trends in the market.
Being in the real estate field both as a licensed salesperson for more than 24 years and as a homeowner, I’ve experienced major shifts in the market, most commonly every 10 years or so.
The key is to balance the timing of when to sell and when to purchase in order to get the best outcome.
Nicholas Colombos Founder | The Colombos-Dooley Team
The Founding Agents of Long Island Compass Greater New York Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Recently Sold
This home at 20 11th St. in Carle Place sold on Sept. 27 for $715,000. It is an amazing, mid-block three bedroom, two bathroom home in the Carle Place School District. This home features gas heat, an all-new open and spacious kitchen with new appliances, lots of counter space, a breakfast bar and cathedral ceilings in the eat-in-area. This home has hardwood floors and sliding doors leading to the backyard. It has a new split system on the first floor for air conditioning. The spacious living and dining rooms have a fireplace. The primary bedroom is on the first floor. There is a separate laundry room. The driveway offers spacious parking and the backyard is fenced-in. This home is bright and airy.
This charming four bedroom cape-style home in the Carle Place School District sold on Oct. 4 for $610,000. It has been meticulously maintained by its owners. This home at 106 Roosevelt Ct. in Carle Place boasts gleaming hardwood floors, central air conditioning with a new motor replaced last year, an updated kitchen with a large eat-in-kitchen area and pantry and stainless steel appliances. The full bathroom is updated. The windows and roof were replaced in 2012. The hot water heater was replaced in 2019. The home has a first floor primary bedroom, gas heat, a designated laundry area in a spacious full basement and a detached one-car garage. The yard is fully fenced in and has in-ground sprinklers. This home is located near shopping, public transportation and has easy access to the major highways.
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.
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dawnserignese@danielgale.com
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danielgale.com
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WE LOVE OUR PETS
Black Cats: A Halloween Symbol
BY JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonnews.com
You could consider me a fan of black cats. I’ve had cats since I was eight-years-old, and I got my black cat when I was in middle school. I thought he was so cute, and I always admired how much of a scaredy cat he is despite being a symbol of superstition, Halloween and even a witch’s familiar. Considering it’s Halloween, I thought I’d do some research into the history of black cats and how they got wrapped up with superstition, and where all that superstition leaves them today
Bastet: Among the Deities in Ancient Egypt
According to the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum, cats were very important to ancient Egyptians and were considered semi-deities. Often, they were thought to be the physical form of the Goddess Bastet, otherwise known as Bast. Bastet was the goddess of protection, pleasure, and the bringer of good health. She had the head of a cat and a slender female body,” an article from the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum reads. It is also true that cats protected crops and hunted rodents. According to the website, Ancient Egypt Online.
Because cats had a ready supply of food close to human settlements, and living there could help them avoid larger predators, they developed a symbiotic relationship with humans. Eventually, they were welcomed inside homes. Humans respected them for being affectionate while also being intelligent and skillful predators.
“At the height of Bast’s popularity killing a cat, even accidentally, was punishable by death,” the Ancient Egypt Online article read.
The Middle Ages: Not a good time for black cats
A legend about a mysterious creature called Cat Sìth began to circulate around Scotland. While occasionally being known to bring good fortune, Cat Sìth was feared by most people. Many believed the Cat Sìth was responsible for stealing the souls of the unburied dead and that they preyed on funeral parlors and places where the body is laid to rest. The Cat Sìth may be the first folklore responsible for the modern day association between black cats and Halloween.
During a Celtic festival called Samhain, which marked the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter, it was believed that the Cat Sìth would bless any house that left a saucer of milk out for it to drink. Houses that did not leave milk out were cursed in a way that left the udders of the victim’s cow to go dry.
“In the 12th century, it was believed that during satanic rituals the devil would descend as a black cat,” a blog post from the online pet store Chewy read.
“Some believed a black cat crossing your path in the moonlight was a sign of an upcoming epidemic. In Italy, a black cat lying on the bed of a sick person
meant that person would die.”
The Witch Familiar
When the Puritans settled in Salem, MA. the fear grew.
“Witches and cats were also famously entwined in the European witch trials of the Middle Ages and those in Salem, Massachusetts,” an article from Petfinder read. “Heretics suspected of witchcraft were often identified by the fact that they owned a cat — or other animal — that was believed to do the witch’s bidding.”
While people accused of being witches were suspected of having many different “familiars,” cats were associated with evil more than other animals because of their independent and nocturnal nature.
The movie Hocus Pocus and the television show Sabrina The Teenage Witch, which featured a black cat as the companion, also helped to popularize the modern association of witches and black cats.
Black Cats today
Today, black cats are loved by many. In fact, because I’m a nerd, I’m part of two Facebook groups full of people who love their black cats. But unfortunately, some superstition does remain. The animal adoption groups the Lange Foundation in Los Angeles and Furkids in Georgia told CNN that black cats have a harder time getting adopted than other cats because of the superstition. But to see if this was true on a local level, I reached out to North Shore Animal League America, which is located in Port Washington. “Black cats have been the center of superstition and folklores for centuries,” said Diane Johnson, the vice president
of shelter adoptions at North Shore Animal League America “It really has potential for adopters to avoid black cats for no reason.”
However, the rumor that black cats do not get adopted as much as other cats isn’t true, at least not for North Shore Animal League America. “With dogs and cats, the norm is that all of our animals get adopted,” Johnson continued. “Some take longer than other. Older animals take longer than younger animals. Animals that have conditions like diabetes may take longer to find a home than an animal thats young and healthy.”
It is also believed that Halloween can be a dangerous time for black cats, as some people wrapped up in legends and superstition might hurt them.
Fact checker website Snopes found that the legend of black cats being scarified by “satanic cults” during Halloween is just that, a legend. But it may be true that some people adopt black cats just to use them as a living Halloween decoration only to abandon them after the holiday; the same experience chicks and bunnies have around Easter. Johnson has been in animal welfare since 1983, and she remembers that shelters would pull black cats off the floor around Halloween out of fear that someone would adopt them just to hurt them. But that is no longer the case. For all animals, North Shore Animal League America has protocols in place to make sure people are adopting for the right reason and that adopted animals find safe homes.
And, Johnson added, there are currently plenty of cats of all colors are available for adoption.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 13AFULL RUN
Bastet or Bast was a goddess of ancient Egyptian religion.
(Photo courtesy Gunawan Kartapranata via wikimedia commons)
My black cat, Stanley. (Photo by Jennifer Corr)
VIP Penthouse Party with Puppies Can’t make it in person? Join us virtually! Watch the livestream of our VIP Celebration of Rescue from NYC. First 50 Virtual Celebration of Rescue guests to log in on November 16 will receive a Home Chef gift card with three delicious home-delivered meals. 420 Park Ave S New York, NY 10016 6:30pm - 9:30pm Ticket Price $350 Ticket Includes: Unlimited Drinks Quality Time with Adorable, Adoptable Puppies Culinary Delights Live Music Instagrammable Photobooth FOR MORE INFORMATION: 516.373.3496 events@animalleague.org SCAN THE QR CODE TO RSVP! NORTH SHORE ANIMAL LEAGUE AMERICA’S 230439 R
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000
Publishers of Glen Cove/Oyster Bay Record Pilot Great Neck Record Manhasset Press Nassau Illustrated News Port Washington News Syosset-Jericho Tribune The Nassau Observer
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234687 M VIP Penthouse Party with Puppies WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2022 For one special evening, we are asking animal lovers nationwide to support Animal League America and help us continue our no-kill mission to Rescue, Nurture, Adopt, and Educate. 420 Park Ave S New York, NY 10016 6:30pm - 9:30pm Ticket Price $350 Ticket Includes: Unlimited Drinks Quality Time with Adorable, Adoptable Puppies Culinary Delights Live Music Instagrammable Photobooth Can’t make it in person? Join us virtually! Watch the livestream of our VIP Celebration of Rescue from NYC. First 50 Virtual Celebration of Rescue guests to log in on November 16 will receive a Home Chef gift card with three delicious home-delivered meals. FOR MORE INFORMATION: 516.373.3496 events@animalleague.org SCAN THE QR CODE TO RSVP!
JOE GATTO Comedian
best known for his work on Impractical Jokers, Adopter Our Host: Virtual Appearance By: BETH STERN Animal League America National Spokesperson, Board Member, and Foster Parent 229591 R
Julie Sun.
BY JULIE PRISCO
Julie Sun is being recognized for her dedication and commitment to Cross Country and Track teams. Sun is a senior at Great Neck North High School and is a top contributor to the Cross Country and Track teams.
Although Sun began participating on the cross country and track teams in middle school, her love of the sport bloomed in high school.
“My love of the sport started when I
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Student-Athlete Of The Month
Great Neck North High School Senior Julie Sun
started high school,” said Sun. “Being around such a competitive, dedicated team fueled my passion and obsession with both improving myself and winning.”
Sun’s desire to improve herself both physically and mentally led her to become a strong and vital teammate on North High’s Cross Country and Track teams. In addition to Sun’s strong athletic career, she is a talented flute player. Sun and four other North High students were named Semifinalists in the 2023 National Merit Scholarship Competition and she was selected for the 2022 New York State School Music Association All-State Conference taking place in December.
With practice and hard work, Sun has achieved many goals on the team while maintaining her grades and succeeding in other extracurricular activities in
school. Throughout Sun’s long career as a student-athlete, one of her most memorable moments was during a Cross Country and Track meet in her junior year of high school
“A memorable moment was during Counties of my junior year in the 4x800; the last meet of spring season,” said Sun.
According to Athletic Net, in the 4x800 relay race Julie Sun and teammates Janeidy Da Silva, Maya Ohebshalom, and Natasha Khazzam ran a 9:55.89. This was a new personal record for Sun.
“Pretty much my entire team and I managed to set personal records, and what made it so memorable was how cohesive we were together and how smoothly the meet went.”
When athletes set a new personal record in a sport they are passionate about, fellow teammates and coaches are proud. During the Counties in Sun’s
junior year of high school, the majority of the team set new personal records which were cause for a massive celebration.
“We managed to end with a huge number of personal records and ran under 10 minutes for the first time,” said Sun. “I was just so proud and happy of what we managed to accomplish at that meet.”
As a senior in high school, it’s time to think about college and other tricky questions about the future. With it still being early in the 2022-2023 school year, Sun has time to figure out some answers to those daunting questions, but one thing she is certain about is continuing to run.
“I do plan on continuing [cross country and track], but it all depends on the quality and atmosphere of the team,” said Sun. “Either way, I definitely will run consistently in the future.”
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 15AFULL RUN OF THE MONTH ATHLETE SPORTS
(Photos provided by the Great Neck School District)
Congratulations, Julie Sun, you’re a top student-athlete! Long Island’s premier orthopedic group, we provide sideline team physician coverage and athletic training services to more than 20 high school sports programs – and offer a Walk-in Sunday Sports Medicine and Recovery Clinic for young athletes. Orlin & Cohen is proud to support our community’s best high school athletes, just as we support all athletes’ orthopedic needs. Visit our Sunday Sports Medicine and Recovery Clinic 3480 Veterans Memorial Highway, Bohemia 516.536.2800 orlincohen.com Locations across Nassau and Suffolk OC954_Julie_Sun_Athlete_Month_10x5.5.indd 1 10/13/22 11:01 AM 230688 R
This
HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis
By Holiday Mathis
By Holiday Mathis
ARIES (March 21-April 19). While it’s not possible to control what other people want, it’s certainly within your realm to entice the senses, spark interesting ideas that are fascinating to engage with and generally create the sort of atmosphere people want to be around. is week, you’ll use your skills to attract and persuade.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). e week will bring a wealth of ideas, from the brazen to the bizarre to the brilliant. eoretical knowledge can do nothing for you, though; the real test is in the application. It’s better to pick one and try it out than to know of a thousand you don’t act on. It’s also an ideal week for network ing. You’re naturally charming and curious.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Keep working on your idea until it requires very little, if any, explanation. You’ll know when it’s ready because it will be very easy to relay -- you will not have to fan the spark of understanding for too long before it catches on. Leonardo da Vinci suggested, “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”
CANCER (June 22-July 22). ough you’re not exactly a mind reader, your empathy and intuition allow you to make pretty good guesses about what’s happening for others this week, and you’ll make your moves accordingly. You realize that what others demonstrate is likely only the tip of the iceberg of what they are really feeling.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ve extended yourself to understand and contribute to people’s worlds. Not everyone can get out of themselves in this way. It takes con dence and intellectual exibility. It takes courage and an inner core of security. Because you’ve often been the one to leave comfortable realms, you’re expanded. You become a bit of everything you learn.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). When you work alone, it can be di cult to determine how you compare with others in the marketplace. You welcome the insights of those who can help you see it from another perspective. ese are the opinions that will help you to grow. In doing so, you won’t lose a thing. Everyone you’ve ever been is inside you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). ere is nothing more exhilarating than generosity. As you contribute to the lives of others, you will become aware of the di erence you are making. And so, the act of giving doesn’t imply sacri ce, rather it often results in unexpectedly receiving quite a lot in return.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Optimism is the fountain of youth. Hope regener ates your cells and restores your spirit. People you reach out to may be reserved until they understand what you want and how they can help. So make it easy for them -- talk about what you need to move forward.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Using your imagination as a ight machine, you can go wherever your inner pilot desires. It takes more mental discipline than you’d think to keep the journey aloft, though when you learn to fortify and fuel your imagination, it really will take you anywhere you want to go.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Tension is the basis of all music. It holds the string; it pins the melody to its resolution or irresolution. Tension keeps the action taut. Don’t be afraid of the missteps and unresolved connections. Chances are, they hold the most exquisite tension. Without con ict, no stories exist. Embrace it.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Once you’ve mastered a task, there is a very short window of time in which you enjoy repeating your success to good e ect. But you’ll need a new challenge soon enough. is week brings reminders to savor where you are in the journey. ere is no stage inherently better than another. ese are the good old days.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). e nature of the opportunity won’t be indicated in its title -- only in the work itself. To know if an opportunity is right for you, look at what skills are being honed inside it. Will the job a ord you a chance to ll in the gaps of your knowledge, sharpen your talent or strengthen your weakness?
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
A simmering passion catches re. Now, the changes happen quickly and with the emphasis of reworks. And though the love of someone special will fuel you at times, more often it’s your own desire to learn and become. Giving others an experience will become a priority. You’ll develop talents you’ve had all along but haven’t tended for years. A parade of new people come into your world, and it’s a mixed bag, though you’ll come to love what these new relationships teach you.
COPYRIGHT
the puzzle, there will be 18 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
CREATORS.COM
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND WORD FIND
Beautiful Adelaide
Solution: 18 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 18 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Beautiful Adelaide Solution: 18 Letters
Aldgate Arts Calm Cavan Chidda Cosy Croydon Dorset Vale Downs Draper Eastwood Elizabeth Fair
Firle Grange Hawthorn Hove Kudla Leabrook Lockleys Lynton Marino Moana Noarlunga Centre Pinera
Aldgate Arts Calm Cavan Chidda Cosy Croydon Dorset Vale Downs Draper Eastwood Elizabeth Fair
Firle Grange Hawthorn Hove Kudla Leabrook Lockleys Lynton Marino Moana Noarlunga Centre Pinera
Prospect Reynella Ripen Salisbury Plain Show Skye Soil Sturt Styles Virginia Vista West
Prospect Reynella Ripen Salisbury Plain Show Skye Soil Sturt Styles Virginia Vista West
Solution:Headingforthehills Date: 10/26/22Creators Syndicate 737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
Solution:Headingforthehills Date: 10/26/22Creators Syndicate 737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
By Steve Becker
At the first table, declarer put up dummy’s ace and returned a club, planning to ruff one or two of his club losers in dummy. But East had no trouble diagnosing South’s intention. He won the club with the king and played the ace and another spade. Declarer eventually lost two more clubs and finished down one.
At the second table, South antici pated that the defenders would switch to a trump if he played the ace and another club. So instead of taking the first trick with the ace, he played low from dummy. This simple maneuver rendered the defense helpless.
The holdup play, whether it is used by declarer or a defender, is one of the most effective plays in bridge. It comes in a variety of forms and, properly applied, can completely alter the outcome of a deal.
Today’s hand, from a national championship, provides an unusual example of the holdup play. At both tables, declarer wound up in four spades, and both Wests led a club.
If East, after winning the club, returned anything but a trump, South would win and ruff two clubs in dummy to finish with 11 tricks. So East played the ace and another trump, just as his counter part had at the other table — but this time, to no avail.
Declarer won the second trump, cashed the A-K of hearts and ruffed a heart. When the opposing hearts divided 3-3, South claimed the rest of the tricks, using the stillpresent ace of clubs as an entry to collect dummy’s two good hearts.
Not playing dummy’s ace of clubs at trick one, inconsequential as it might seem, thus made a two-trick difference in the outcome.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP16A FULL RUN HOROSCOPES
INTERNATIONAL WORD FINDINTERNATIONAL WORD FINDHOROSCOPES
CONTRACT BRIDGE
FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019 CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236 CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER FOR RELEASE SATURDAY, OCT. 29, 2022 Duck soup ©2022 King Features Syndicate Inc. North dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH ♠ Q 4 ♥ K 9 8 3 2 ♦ K J 8 4 ♣ A 5 WEST EAST ♠ 7 3 ♠ A 2 ♥ Q 10 7 ♥ J 5 4 ♦ A 9 7 3 ♦ Q 10 6 5 2 ♣ Q 10 8 2 ♣ K 9 4 SOUTH ♠ K J 10 9 8 6 5 ♥ A 6 ♦ ♣ J 7 6 3 The bidding: NorthEastSouthWest 1 ♥ Pass1 ♠ Pass 2 ♦ Pass4 ♠ Opening lead — two of clubs.
is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have pleted
© 2022 Australian Word
Games
Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
© 2022 Australian Word
Games
Dist. by
Creators
Syndicate Inc.
2022
Weekly Sudoku Puzzle
Enter digits from 1 to 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 17AFULL RUN
Answer
to last issue’s
Crossword Puzzle
Answer
to last
issue’s Sudoku Puzzle
AUTO / MOTORCYCLE
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Equal Housing Opportunity 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.
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Congressional Third District Race
BY FRANK RIZZO frizzo@antonmediagroup.com
With Thomas Suozzi (D–Glen Cove) retiring after his third term ends on Dec. 31, the Third Congressional District race pits Robert Zimmerman (D/Working Families), 68, against George Santos (R/Conservative), 34. Santos lost to Suozzi in 2020 and was not contested in the primary this year. Zimmerman beat out four other candidates in the primary. As of the Sept. 30 deadline, per the Federal Election Commission, Zimmerman has raised $2,257,145 since January, spent $1,645,425 and has $611,720 on hand. The respective figures for Santos are $2,511,970, $2,040,357 and $603,791. The district covers all of the northern portions of Nassau County as well as northeast Queens and northwest Suffolk.
George Santos
The Whitestone, Queens resident works in finance and investing.
“I’m just fighting for the right to protect the American Dream that my parents came to this country in search of. The same dream that I see wither away under the failed leadership of the folks running the country today,” he said in an interview.
He added, “I’m running for the people. I just want to deliver common sense solutions so people could stop hurting.”
In congress, he wants to help mitigate inflation by “ending the war on the safe extraction of energy in the United States. We need to bring back prosperity through economic growth in the energy sector.”
Santos has received a long list of endorsements from law enforcement agencies and wants to work with local government to repeal and abolish the New York bail reform laws and the criminal justice reforms.
Santos has been criticized for his stand on abortion, and has been quoted as
supporting a national ban. He accused of the Democrats of fear mongering on the issue.
“I do not get questions about abortion, because abortion is not on the mind of a single person at night when they go to sleep,” he asserted. “What’s at the top of their minds is, can they afford their rent and mortgage? Can they afford their electric bill? The cost of heating their home this winter is going to be three times higher. So the questions are about the everyday common sense issues.”
“[The Democrats’] track record is atrocious and they can’t defend the Biden, Pelosi and Schumer agenda,” Santos charged. “It’s not about what I want, it’s about what the people want, and I want to be that messenger for them.”
Robert Zimmerman
Zimmerman, of Great Neck, owns a marketing communications company. He got his start in politics serving on the staff of Long Island congressmen and later earned appointments by Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. He has also been a member of the Democratic National Committee.
According to his website, Zimmerman served for 20 years on the board of the American Museum of Natural History as a government representative. He is the president of Great Neck B’nai B’rith and the American Jewish Congress Long Island Division.
He has earned endorsements from Suozzi, as well as Governor Kathy Hochul and Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand and former NYC Police Commissioner Bill Bratton.
Regarding the issues, his website states, “Robert has proudly been a leading voice in advocating for Planned Parenthood, LGBTQ+ rights, Medicare for All, gun
violence prevention, restoring the SALT deduction, a truly safe and secure Israel and a two state solution in the Middle East, comprehensive immigration reform, defending voting rights, and taking on those that deny the climate crisis.”
New York State Senate District 7 Candidates
BY AMANDA OLSEN aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
New
Landing, Great Neck, Great Neck Estates, Great Neck Gardens, Great Neck Plaza, Greenvale, Harbor Hills, Herricks, Hicksville, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Manhasset, Manhasset Hills, Manorhaven, Mineola, Munsey Park, New Cassel, New Hyde Park, North Hills, North New Hyde Park, Old Westbury, Plandome, Plandome Heights, Plandome Manor, Port Washington, Port Washington North, Roslyn, Roslyn Estates, Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock, Saddle Rock Estates, Sands Point, Searingtown, South Floral Park, Stewart Manor, Thomaston, University Gardens, Westbury, and Williston Park.
Jack Martins, (R) (challenger)
Whether you identify as a Republican, Democrat or Independent, we know that New York is headed in the wrong direction. We feel less safe in our own communities. With the ever-increasing cost of living, inflation, and taxes, we each feel less secure in our futures, for ourselves and our children. Small businesses are struggling with ever increasing costs and red tape. We need to repeal cashless bail, provide judges with discretion in sentencing criminals, support law enforcement, curb out of control state spending and regulations, and provide relief to middle class New Yorkers. We need to recognize and respect parental rights and take steps to ensure that state and local policies do not undermine those rights. We must also redouble efforts to protect our environment, protect our sole source aquifer, ensure clean drinking water, and commit to protecting and restoring coastal wetlands. Lastly, and importantly, we must work to restore civil discourse, understanding that government works
best when we work together.
As a State Senator, I passed six ontime budgets with increases capped at 2 percent; enacted the state’s first property tax cap; provided funding for local communities, villages, and school districts; and enacted legislation protecting Long Island’s sole source aquifer.
Ann Kaplan, (D) Incumbent
As a second-term State Senator, I’m proud to have written and passed nation-leading legislation that makes New York a safe haven for reproductive rights for women from anti-choice states, that bans dangerous and untraceable ghost guns from our community, and that has permanently capped property taxes for my constituents. I will continue to champion women’s reproductive rights, common-sense gun safety legislation, and middle class tax relief.
Further, public safety has always been a top priority for me. I’ve worked to provide record-breaking funding for law enforcement and public safety improvements. I’ve delivered common-sense fixes to bail reform, closed the repeat offender loophole and gave judges more discretion to keep our community safe. I’ve introduced legislation to give $500 million in grants to our police, to make sure our law enforcement officials have the tools and resources they need to keep our community safe.
Finally, I’ll continue to advocate for the state to pick up a greater responsibility for issues like school funding and road repaving to lower property taxes for Long Islanders. I have a proven track record of delivering on the issues that matter most to our community and look forward to continuing to deliver for Long Island families.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 9 235468 R We’re not just your local newspaper, we’re a member of your community Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Roslyn Estates, Flower Hill, East Hills, Greenvale, Albertson 132 East Second Street, Mineola, NY 11501 • 516-747-8282 AntonMediaGroup.com • Advertising@AntonMediaGroup.com Fresh content delivered to your mailbox each week! Local Politics • School News • Community Calendar • Local Sports Entertainment • Puzzles & Games • Events & Happenings • Classi eds Order online: antonnews.com/subscription or CALL 516-403-5120 TODAY! Don’t Miss a Single Issue! FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details! Also Serving Roslyn Harbor, Roslyn Heights, Roslyn Estates, Flower Hill, East Hills, Greenvale and Albertson An Anton Media Group Publication Vol.145,No.35April612,2022 www.Roslyn-News.com $1.00 The Roslyn News (USPS 471-100) INSIDE Springtime! Check out the best golf locations on Long Island. Springtime BEST ISLAND INSIDE: Legislative Night at Glenwood Landing School (See page 3) Roslyn High School Mock Trial Winners (See page 4) Calendar of Events (See page 8) Richard Haas on Russo-Ukraine War (See page 10) Call me for exceptional results with specialized approach. Honesty. Integrity. Experience. Michael Berman www.automaticre.com 516.658.1605 No Great Changes In Proposed Budget Property taxes within state limit (Page 3) (Photo Source Google Earth) Use PROMO CODE 1YXT2022 to add a FREE YEAR! Only $2600 for one year & Bigforchanges the SAT Sail away with me Hofstra re-openingcamp Children A Bright Future Serving . . . GUIDEWINTER ANTON GROUPSPECIAL 2022 DINING Valentine takeoutoptions Crockpot comfort food Local bakers conquercoffee cake market christenings,communions,graduations,rehearsaldinners, functionsanniversaries,engagementparties, rooms SpecialOccasionDinnerPackages NowAcceptingReservationsValentine’sDay MEDICINE PROFILES IN CHILDREN’S ANTON GROUP E115 Hyde 11042 516.627.5113 www.longislandeyesurgeons.com DENTALHEALTH christenings,anniversaries,engagementparties, NowAcceptingPLUS!45 + SPECIALTHEMED SUPPLEMENTS TOO! (Nassau County Delivery Only) OCTOBER 26 – NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP4 ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 9
York State Senate District 7 covers Albertson, Baxter Estates, Bellerose, Bellerose Terrace, Carle Place, East Hills, East Williston, Elmont, Floral Park, Flower Hill, Franklin Square, Garden City, Garden City Park, Glenwood
Incumbent Anna Kaplan (D) (submitted by the Anna Kaplan campaign)
Challenger Jack Martins (R) (submitted by the Jack Martins campaign)
George Santos (R–Queens) (Contributed Photo)
Robert Zimmerman (D–Great Neck) (Contributed Photo)
ELECTION COVERAGE Your Local
Running Game Keeps North Shore Undefeated
JOSEPH SCOTCHIE
jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
Two undefeated teams met on Saturday, Oct. 14 and the North Shore Vikings held their unbeaten status with a 14-7 win over West Hempstead.
The Vikings, playing on the road, struck early with a first quarter 25-yard touchdown run by Nicholas La Rosa. West Hempstead came back to tie the score on a 55-yard touchdown pass from Corey Pierre to Jurrell Hall.
North Shore answered back, sticking to his patented running game. And the Vikings did so in a big way. Peter Liotta, La Rosa’s partner in the explosive Viking backfield, broke free for a 60-yard run to give North Shore a 14-7 lead that it would never relinquish.
For the game, Liotta totaled 102 yards on 11 carries. La Rosa chipped in with 79 yards on 12 carries. Both Daniel Sotiryadis and Ryan Freund starred for the ferocious North Shore defense. Sotiryadis had two
sacks and Freund’s tackling forced a fumble, a key play that helped to preserve the Viking victory.
As North Shore heads into the homestretch of another great season, let’s look at the performances by key players who are keeping the Vikings undefeated.
On Sept. 10, North Shore got off to a strong start with a 41-6 shellacking of Locust Valley. In that game, La Rosa rushed for 137 yards on nine carries, while Liotta had 121 yards on eight tries. Ryan Freund scored two touchdowns, one on a 33-yard pass from Liotta and the other on a five-yard run. Liotta scored two touchdowns and La Rosa had a 22-yard scoring jaunt on his own.
On it has gone. A more hard-fought win came on Sept. 17 in a 16-0 home win over Malverne. Here, the defense played a decisive role. With the game scoreless in the first quarter, Garret Gates recovered a fumble on a jarring tackle by Patrick Godfrey. That set up a 50-yard touchdown by gallop by Nicholas La Rosa. In the second quarter, La Rosa had his own
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
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SATURDAY, OCT. 29
Class of 1972 Reunion
Roslyn High School Class of 1972 is having its Fiftieth Anniversary reunion on Saturday, Oct. 29, at the Hilton Garden Inn, 3 Harbor Park Dr., Port Washington, from 7 to 11 p.m. Cost is $135, including open bar and buffet dinner. For details call Bill Kempner at 516-587-4158 (WCKempner@ gmail.com) or Neal Gardner at 754-204-4520 (nealg2323@aol. com). Don’t miss this once-in-alifetime event.
Marx’s Murder Mystery Corner
At 1 p.m., the Bryant Library will present another murder mystery corner book talk. Professor Marx is back with the third book in The Thursday Murder Club Series, The Bullet that Missed! On Thursdays, four residents of a retirement community gather together to attempt to solve murder cases. Join ther discussion group for a lively chat about the clues, the characters, the red herrings, and more in Richard Osman’s latest book in
the series, The Bullet That Missed. of the book will be available for check out at the Circulation Desk. Limited space available. Registration required. The library is at 2 Paper Mill Rd. For directions go to www.bryant library.org or call the library, at 516-621-2240.
THURSDAY, NOV. 3
Morrison To Speak At Knothole Meeting
The Christopher Morley Knothole Association is back. On Thursday, Nov. 3 at 6:30 p.m. at the Bryant Library, Long Island Rail Road authority David Morrison will give an illustrated talk about the railroad’s many interesting facets – including its connections with the author Christopher Morley, the longtime Roslyn resident and prolific author who regularly commuted from his home in Roslyn
defensive gem, causing a Malverne fumble that resulted later in a six-yard touchdown by Peter Liotta. La Rosa is an old-fashioned player who plays on both sides of the ball.
Displaying their dominance of the tough Nassau IV conference, the Vikings topped the always formidable Seaford squad in a 21-12 away win on Sept. 23.
Nick Livoti was the star of this win. The tailback scored two touchdowns and ran for 80 yards. Liotta had his customary big game, rushing for 134 yards and making a key interception on defense.
Defensive star Garret Gates starred on offense as well, running 30 yards for his own touchdown as the Vikings held back a second half comeback by Seaford.
Another impressive away win came on Sept. 30 when North Shore shut out Island Trees, 28-0. Once again, Liotta and La Rosa played their usual leading roles. La Rosa
one touchdown, while Liotta scored two touchdowns. The halfback ran for 89 yards. He also tossed a successful two-point conversion to James Tober to give the Vikings a solid 14-0 first quarter.
The Oct. 8 41-20 win over Clarke High School was unique in that North Shore actually trailed early in the game.
Trailing 6-0, John Haff got North Shore on the board, returning a kickoff 93 yards for a score. After surrendering another score, Peter Liotta scored the first of his three touchdowns, scampering 34 yards to give the Vikings a 13-12 lead. Liotta followed that up with a 31-yard touchdown run. In the fourth quarter, Liotta capped off his big day with a 48-yard run. In all, Liotta rushed for 189 yards on 13 carries.
Few of our readers remember the legendary “Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside” running back tandem of Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis that anchored the legendary Army teams of the late 1940s. The reporter doesn’t remember, but he read about them constantly. With Liotta and La Rosa, North Shore has their own deadly backfield and it is backed up by a strong offensive line and a stingy defense. For North Shore football, the best is yet to be.
the development of Long Island. The meeting is free and open to the public, there will be a book prize raffle, and refreshments will be served. Parents and young adults are especially welcomed. The meeting will be held in the Helen Glannon Room. The library is at 2 Paper Mill Rd. For directions go to www.
or call the library, at
NOV. 6
What’s So Funny About Art? Surrealists and their Jokes
At 3 p.m.., the Nassau County Museum of Art will present a lecture by Charles A. Riley II on surrealist artists and their jokes. The event is free for members, and $20 for non-members. Please register in advance.
From Salvador Dali’s ridiculous moustache to Marcel Duchamp’s irreverent treatment of the Mona Lisa and Magritte’s bowler hat, you can tell the Surrealists were a bunch of smart-asses with a wicked sense of humor. The first time our director did stand-up, he was the only one who thought it was funny but we hope you will give him another chance and join us again. How many Surrealists does it take to change a light bulb? The museum is at One Museum Drive, Roslyn Harbor. Call 516-484-9338.
ONGOING EVENT: Other Worlds Than This: The Supernatural in Art
From now until Nov. 6 Art has access to worlds beyond the one we know. The supernatural has captivated artists from
ancient spiritual myths and rites to the most popular fantasies of today. The onging exhibit at the Nassau County Museum of Art summons a celestial realm of demons, ghosts and extra-sensory phenomena as conjured by such Surrealists as Breton and Magritte, photographers who specialize in the occult, Old Masters including Goya, Contemporary talents including Michaël Borremans, Allison Janae Hamilton, Robert Gober, and many others. Take a trip into the next dimension with some of the greatest artists in history as your guides. The museum is at One Museum Drive, Roslyn Harbor. Call 516-484-9338.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP10
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David Morrison. (Submitted photo)
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 11 INC.FUNERAL DIRECTORS SINCE 1892 We know how to care, when you need us we’ll be there. Serving Jewish Families for Over 125 Years. PRE-PLAN Give Thanks and Embrace every day because every day counts. BOCA RATON, FLORIDA 1.800.992.9262 ROCKVILLE CENTRE, L.I. 516.764.9400 Steven Kanowitz, Director www.guttermansinc.com WOODBURY, L.I. 516.921.5757 235477 M
ROSLYN
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of AGCC REAL ESTATE LLC
Articles of organization filed with the Secretary of State of N.Y. (SSNY) on 9/12/22. Office location: Nassau County.
SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 7 Horse Hill Rd, Glen Head, NY, 11545.
Purpose: Any lawful activity.
11-2; 10-26-19-12-5; 9-282022-6T-#235116-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company.
Name: Edgemere DJCJ LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on September 22, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2; 10-26-19-12-5-20226T-#235143-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company.
Name: Edgemere AA LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 25, 2021. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to Edgemere AA LLC, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235133-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere AA Mezz LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on March 10, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235134-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company.
Name: Edgemere AL LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 25, 2021. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to Edgemere AL LLC, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235135-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere AL Mezz LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on March 10, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235136-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere BA LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 25, 2021. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to Edgemere BA LLC, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235137-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere BA Mezz LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on March 10, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235138-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere DM Mezz LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organi-
LEGAL NOTICES
zation filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on March 10, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235139-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company.
Name: Edgemere SB LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 25, 2021. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to Edgemere SB LLC, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235140-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Edgemere SB Mezz LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on March 10, 2022. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn, NY 11576. Purpose/ character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235141-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: New Haven Rockaway LLC (“LLC”). Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of the State of New York (“SSNY”) on December 15, 2021. NY office location: Nassau County. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served.
The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to The Limited Liability Company, 1044 Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Lawrence, NY 11559. Purpose/character of LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity.
11-9-2-; 10-26-19-12-52022-6T-#235142-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT
NASSAU COUNTY
NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff against
FUK CHOR HENRY MUI, 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 September 25, 2018, 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 November 15, 2022 at 2:00 PM. Premises known as 15 Oxford Street, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577. Sec 0007 Block 00077-00 Lot 00402. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Roslyn, Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $317,451.85 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 016783/2009.
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.”
Mark McKew, Esq., Referee AYSN351 11-2; 10-26-19-12-20224T-#235280-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF ELECTION OF THE TRUSTEES OF THE SHELTER ROCK PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a petition nominating a candidate for the office of Trustee of the SHELTER ROCK PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT shall be filed with the Clerk of the Library no later than November 26, 2022, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. in the office of the Library, 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson, New York.
The following vacancy is to be filled:
1. For the full term for the office of Trustee commencing January 1, 2023 and ending on December 31, 2027: TOBY SHEBIRO (last incumbent).
A nominating petition shall be subscribed to by at least 25 qualified voters of the Library District, and shall state the residence of each signer and the vacancy for which the candidate is nominated, including at least the length of term and name of the last
incumbent.
For the convenience of the community, the Library District has available blank forms of nominating petitions. However, these forms need not be used and any form which complies with the law and this Notice shall be acceptable.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that an election for the office of Trustee of the SHELTER ROCK PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT shall be held at the office of the Library, 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson, New York, on Tuesday, December 6, 2022 between the hours of 2:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that in accordance with Education Law No. 2018b, application for absentee ballots for the Election may be applied for at the office of the Director of the Shelter Rock Public Library. Such application must be received 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. A list of all persons to whom absentee voter ballots have been issued shall be available during regular office hours commencing November 26, 2022 and until the day of election. Such list will be posted at the polling place during the election. No absentee voter ballot shall be canvassed unless it is received not later than 5:00 p.m. on the day of the Election.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES SHELTER ROCK PUBLIC LIBRARY DISTRICT 11-30-23; 10-26-19-20224T-#235416-ROS
AVISO DE ELECCIONES DE FIDEICOMISARIOS DE LA BIBLIOTECA PUBLICA DE SHELTER ROCK DEL DISTRITO POR LA PRESENTE SE DA AVISO sobre una Solicitud de Nominación de un candidato para la Oficina de Fideicomisario de la Biblioteca Pública Shelter Rock del Distrito que será presentada ante la Secretaría de la Biblioteca a más tardar el 26 de Noviembre, 2022, entre las 9:00am y 5:00pm en su local ubicado en 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson, New York.
La vacante a cubrir es la siguiente:
1. Oficina de Fideicomisario, término completo que comenzará el 1ero de Enero, 2023 y concluirá el 31 de Diciembre, 2027. TONY SHEBIRO (último titular)
Cada petición de nominación deberá ser firmada por al menos 25 votantes calificados del Distrito de la Biblioteca, mostrando su lugar de residencia y la vacante por la cual el candidato está siendo dominado, incluyendo la duración del período y el nombre del último titular.
Para conveniencia de la comunidad, el Distrito de la
Librería tiene disponibles Peticiones de Nominación en blanco. Sin embargo, cualquier otro formato que cumpla con lo requerido por la ley y por el presente aviso serán aceptados.
ADEMAS SE DA AVISO que la Elección para la Oficina de Fideicomisario de la Libreria Pública de Shelter Rock se llevará a cabo en el local de la Biblioteca ubicado en 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson, NY, el dia Martes , 6 de Diciembre, 2022, entre la 2:00PM y 9:00PM.
ADEMAS SE DA AVISO que de acuerdo con la Ley de Educación No. 2018b, se puede solicitar una aplicacion para Balotas ausentes en la la Oficina del Director de la Biblioteca Shelter Rock. Dicha solicitud deberá recibirse por los menos siete (7) dias antes de las Elecciones, si se le va a enviar por correo al votante, ó el dia anterior a las Elecciones, si la Boleta se le entrega al votante en persona.
Una lista de todas las personas a quien se les ha emitido una Boleta de Ausente estará disponible durante las horas de oficina a partir del 26 e Noviembre, 2022 y hasta el dia de las Elecciones. Dicha Lista deberá ser exhibida en el lugar de votación durante las Elecciones. No se tomará en cuenta ninguna Boleta de Ausente que llegue después de las 5:00PM del mismo día de las Elecciones.
POR ORDEN DE LA JUNTA DIRECTIVA DISTRITO DE LA B IBLIOTECA PUBLICA DE SHELTER ROCK. 11-30-23; 10-26-19-20224T-#235418-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO WACHOVIA BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, IN TRUST FOR THE J. P. MORGAN ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2005-S1, HOLDERS OF MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, Plaintiff, vs. ROZA ARYEH, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on August 16, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on November 28, 2022 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 13 Woods Lane, Roslyn, NY 11576.
All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Herricks, Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 9, Block 624 and Lot 14. Approximate amount of judgment is $1,029,534.80 plus interest and costs. Premises will be
sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 301/2015. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale.
If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale.
Scott Braziller, Esq., Referee
Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC, 10 Bank Street, Suite 700, White Plains, New York 10606, Attorneys for Plaintiff
11-16-9-2; 10-26-2022-4T#235431-ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
Roslyn Union Free School
District Financial Statement
Notice is hereby given that the fiscal affairs of Roslyn Union Free School District for the period beginning on July 1, 2021 and ending on June 30, 2022, have been examined by PKF O’Connor Davies, and that the report of the external audit and the management letter prepared in conjunction with the external audit by PKF O’Connor Davies, has been filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons. Pursuant to §35 of the General Municipal Law, the governing board of Roslyn USFD may, in its discretion, prepare a written response to the report of external audit and management letter by PKF O’Connor Davies, and file any such response in the office of the District Clerk as a public record for inspection by all interested persons not later than December 31, 2022.
Nancy Carney Jones District Clerk
10-26-2022-1T-#235480ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
GLENWOOD WATER DISTRICT
Please take notice that the 2022 Public Meetings of the GLENWOOD WATER DISTRICT will be held on the First Wednesday of each month at 10:00AM and the Third Wednesday of each month at 10:00AM at the District Office, 6 Third Street, Glenwood Landing, NY 11547.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
Rod Ford, Secretary 10-26-2022-1T-#235493ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Town of North HempsteadBoard of Zoning Appeals
Pursuant to the provisions of the Code of the Town of North Hempstead, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Zoning Appeals of said Town will
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP12
Continued on page 13
LEGAL NOTICESLEGAL NOTICESLEGAL NOTICESLEGAL NOTICES LEGAL NOTICES
meet at Town Hall, 220 Plandome Road, Manhas set, New York, on Wednes day, November 9, 2022 to consider any matters that may properly be heard by said Board, and will hold a public hearing on said date to consider applications and appeals.
The following cases will be called at said public hearing starting at 10:00am.
APPEAL #21238 Chris topher Barone; 95 Hilldale Rd., Albertson, Section 9, Block 119, Lot 4; Zoned Residence-B
Variances from 70100.2.A(4) and 70-40.C to legalize a fence that is too tall and to construct a portico and addition which are too close to the street.
COVID-19 protocols will be strictly enforced while in side Town Hall.
Persons interested in view ing the file for this appeal may request to do so any time before the scheduled hearing by contacting the BZA department via e-mail at BZAdept@northhempsteadny.gov.
Additionally, the public may view the live stream of this meeting at https:// northhempsteadny.gov/ townboardlive.
Should you wish to partici pate in an appeal hearing, we encourage you register in ad vance by email to bzadept@ northhempsteadny.gov by Friday, November 4, 2022.
Please include your full name, address, email address, and appeal number you wish to be heard on. Comments are lim ited to 3 minutes per speaker. Written comments are accept ed by email up to 60 minutes prior to the hearing. Timely comment submissions will be made part of the record.
DAVID MAMMINA, R.A., Chairman; Board of Zoning Appeals 10-26-2022-1T-#235542ROS
LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
VILLAGE OF EAST HILLS 2022 ROADWAY AND DRAINAGE IMPROVEMENTS PROGRAM
Sealed Bids for 2022 Roadway and Drainage Im provements Program will be received by the Village Clerk’s office, located at 209 Harbor Hill Road, East Hills, New York until 11:00 a.m. (Local Time), on Wednesday, November 9, 2022, and then at said office publicly opened and read aloud.
The Contract Documents, consisting of Advertisement for Bids, Instructions to Bid ders, Bidder’s Checklist, Bid, Bid Bond, Statement of Surety’s Intent, Agree ment, General Conditions, Supplementary Conditions, Payment Bond, Performance Bond, Maintenance Bond, Drawings, Specifications and Addenda may be examined at the following locations: D&B Engineers and
Architects, D.P.C. 330 Crossways Park Drive Woodbury, NY 11797-2015
Complete digital sets of Bidding Documents, draw ings and specifications, will be available on Wednesday, October 26, 2022 and may be obtained online as a down load at the following web site: dbea.biddyhq.com under ‘public projects’. Neither Owner nor Engineer will be responsible for full or partial sets of the Contract Docu ments, including Addenda if any, obtained from sources other than the issuing office. All bidders must obtain a set of the Contract Documents and All Addenda.
Complete sets of Bidding Documents, Drawings and Specifications, may be ob tained from REVplans, 28 Church Street, Warwick, New York 10990, Tel: 1 877272-0216, as a download upon payment of a $100.00 non-refundable bid fee. Any bidder requiring hard copies of the documents shall make arrangements directly with REV and pay for all repro duction, packaging and ship ping costs.
Each Bid must be accom panied by a certified or bank cashier’s check made payable to OWNER, or a Bid Bond issued by a surety licensed to conduct business in the state where the Project is located and having a Best Rating of A- or better from A.M. Best Company and named in the current list of “Companies Holding Certificates of Au thority as Sureties on Feder al Bonds and as Acceptable Reinsuring Companies” as published in Circular 570 (amended) by the Financial Management Service, Surety Bond Branch, U.S. Depart ment of the Treasury, in an amount not less than five per cent of the amount of the Bid submitted. The list may be ordered from the Government Printing Office Bookstore, 26 Federal Plaza, Room 110, New York, NY 10278, (212) 264-3825.
Each Bidder must complete and submit with their bid the “Iranian Investment Activi ties Certification” provided in the Bid Form in compliance with General Municipal Law 103-g, Iranian Energy Sector Divestment.
Each Bidder must complete and submit with their Bid the “Certification of Compliance with New York State Labor Law Section Two Hundred One-G” provided in the Bid Form regarding the imple mentation of a written policy addressing sexual harassment prevention in the workplace.
The Bidder to whom the OWNER proposes to award the Contract will be required to furnish performance and payment bonds and the nec essary insurance certificates as prescribed in the General Conditions and the Supple mentary Conditions upon the execution of the Agreement within ten (10) days of the Notice of Award.
Bidders are required to execute a non-collusive bid ding certification required by
Section 103-d of the General Municipal Law of the State of New York.
The attention of Bidders is particularly called to the requirements as to the con ditions of employment to be observed and the minimum wage rates to be paid under the contracts.
Bidders are also required to comply with the anti-discrim ination provisions of Sections 290-301 of the Executive Law of the State of New York.
The OWNER reserves the right to reject any or all of the Bids received, to readvertise for Bids, to abandon the proj ect, to waive any or all infor malities in any Bid received and to accept any proposal which the OWNER decides to be for the best interest of the OWNER.
Note: All questions must be submitted, in writing, to Edward Kozik no later than 4:00 p.m. on Friday, No vember 4, 2022. Questions must be sent via email to ekozik@db-eng.com.
Date:___________________
By: Order of the Board of Trustees Village of East Hills Donna Gooch, Village Clerk-Treasurer 10-26-2022-1T-#235543ROS
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING VILLAGE OF FLOWER HILL BOARD OF TRUSTEES
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE, that the Incorporated Village of Flower Hill will hold a Regular Meeting and the fol lowing new public hearings on Monday, November 7, 2022 at 7:30 p.m. at Village Hall, 1 Bonnie Heights Road, Manhasset, NY:
1. Proposed LL O 2022 Reduce Village Speed Limit to 25 MPH
2. Proposed LL P 2022 “Amend Ch. 38 “Records” “Article II” to replace MU-1 with LGS-1
3. Proposed LL 2022 “Amend 219-5, No Tree Re moval on Saturdays
4. Application of Michael Rant for Arthur Isakov, 10 Peachtree Lane, Roslyn, NY 11576 also known as Section 6, Block 5318, Lot 18 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map. Applicant seeks a Special Use Permit from the Board of Trustees under Sec tion 195-11of the Code of the Village of Flower Hill which requires that all objects locat ed in the Village Right of Way are to be approved or denied by the Board of Trustees af ter a Special Use Hearing.
Applicant seeks to legalize a retaining wall extending into the Village Right of Way. This meeting is open to the public. Persons who may suf fer from a disability which would prevent them from participating in said hear ing should notify Ronnie Shatzkamer, Village Clerk, at (516) 627-5000 in sufficient time to permit such arrange ments to be made to enable such persons to participate in said hearing.
By Order of the Board of Trustees Ronnie Shatzkamer, Village Administrator Flower Hill, New York Dated: November 2, 2022 10-26-2022-1T-#235576ROS
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV EN that the BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS of the INCORPORATED VIL LAGE OF EAST HILLS has scheduled a meeting and public hearings for November 15, 2022 at 5:30 PM at the Village Hall, 209 Harbor Hill Road, East Hills, NY 11576 to consider the following: HOOMAN AND SHILA NEMAN requests ONE VARIANCE for the property known as 65 TARA DRIVE designated as Section 19 Block 38 Lot 11 on the Nas sau County Land and Tax Map and in the R1 District of the Village. Pursuant to Village of East Hills Code §213-1, accessory equipment must be located in the side or rear yard. The generator was installed as per the approved location for building permit 21-108 (issued 4/8/2021) in the front yard, but that loca tion was approved in error. Therefore a variance is re quested for the front yard generator location.
MELISSA AND CRAIG GIORDANO request SEV EN VARIANECS for the property at 15 MELBY LANE, designated as Sec tion 19 Block 24 Lot 21 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map and in the R1 Dis trict of the Village. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-30, Lot Coverage, all buildings, including accessory struc tures and equipment, may not occupy more than 25 percent of the total lot (6,206 sf for this property). The proposed total lot coverage is 6,357 sf. Therefore, a variance is requested for 151 sf of lot coverage. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-36, Rear Yard Lot Coverage, all build ings and structures, including accessory structures may not occupy more than 20 percent of the rear yard (2,765 sf for this property). The modifi cations/alterations proposed indicate a rear yard lot cover age of 3,172 sf. Therefore, a variance is requested for 407 sf of rear yard lot coverage. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-143(A)(4), a walkway of at least 4 feet in width shall be built on all sides of the pool. No such walkway is proposed on the South side of the pool, therefore a vari ance is requested. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-14 (A), Fence Height, in all residen tial districts, fences of any kind shall not exceed a height of 4 feet from ground level. A 6 foot tall wood fence in front of the pool and acces sory equipment is proposed on the West side of the house. Therefore, variances are re quested for the proposed 6 foot fencing. Pursuant to East Hills Code 271-143(A)(1) and (3), pool enclosure fences
must be 5 feet in height, of the chain link type, and be erect ed completely enclosing the pool at least 5 feet from the edge of the pool and at least 15 feet from any property line. A 4 foot chain link fence along the property line, and a 6 foot wooden fence are pro posed. Therefore, variances are requested for the proposed 6 foot fencing, of the wood en type and located along the property line. Pursuant to East Hills Code 271-143(A) (1), pool enclosure fences must have only one self-clos ing self-latching gate to enter the pool area. Two (2) gates are proposed. Therefore, a variance is requested for the second proposed gate.
(CONTINUED FROM JUNE 14, 2022 MEET ING) OLGA FRIEDMAN requests a SPECIAL EX ECEPTION AND SEVEN VARIANCES for the proper ty known as 75 FIR DRIVE designated as Section 7 Block 249 Lot 41 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map and in the R1 District of the Village. By revised denial letter dated August 29, 2022, Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-139(A), swimming pools require a special excep tion from the Zoning Board of Appeals. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-14 (A), the maximum allowable fence height is 4 feet. Pursuant to East Hills Code 271-143(A) (1) and (3), pool enclosure fences must be five feet high, of the chain link type, and be erected completely enclosing the pool at least five feet from the edge of the pool and at least 15 feet from any prop erty line, and must have only one gate. Therefore, varianc es are requested for the pro posed 6 foot fence (rear) and four foot fence (sides), of the vinyl type, located along the property line. East Hills Code §271-143(A)(10)(i) requires that pool equipment be lo cated in the rear or side yard immediately adjacent to the house or at least 75 feet away from all other houses. There fore, a variance is requested for the pool equipment loca tion. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-23(A), Accessory buildings and uses, Accessory buildings or structures shall not occupy more than 20 per cent of the rear yard (1,428.1 sf). The proposed rear yard lot coverage is 2,156.5 sf. Therefore, a variance is re
quested for 728.4 sf of rear yard lot coverage. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-30, Lot coverage, all buildings, including accessory buildings and structures, shall not cover more than 25 percent of the area of the plot, or 5,174.03 sf for this property. The pro posed total lot coverage is 6,131.5 sf. Therefore, a vari ance is requested for 957.47 sf of total lot coverage. Pursu ant to East Hills Code §271143(A)(4), a walkway of at least 4’ in width shall be built on all sides of the pool. The proposed walkway is 3feet in width. Therefore, a vari ance is requested for 1 foot of walkway around the pool.
(CONTINUED FROM MARCH 9, 2021 MEET ING) ROBERT KUPPER SMITH requests a SPECIAL EXCEPTION AND FIVE VARIANCES for the proper ty known as 76 DEEPWOOD ROAD designated as Section 7 Block K-1 Lot 106 on the Nassau County land and Tax Map and in the R2 District of the Village. By denial letter dated May 16, 2022, pursu ant to East Hills Code §271139(A): Swimming pools require a special exception from the Zoning Board of Ap peals. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-14 (A), the max imum allowable fence height is 4 feet. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-143(A)(1) and (3), pool enclosure fences must of the chain link type, and be erected completely enclosing the pool at least five feet from the edge of the pool and at least 15 feet from any property line and further require that there be only one gate. Therefore, variances are requested for the proposed 5 foot fence, located along the property line. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-47(A), Accessory buildings and uses, Accessory buildings or struc tures shall not occupy more than 15 percent of the rear yard (893.1 sf for this yard). The proposed rear yard lot coverage is 1,672.5 sf. There fore, a variance is requested for 779.4 sf of rear yard lot coverage. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-143(A)(10) (i), pool equipment must be located in the rear or side yard immediately adjacent to the house or at least 75 feet away from all other houses. The proposed pool equipment is in the rear yard but is less than 75 feet from other hous
es. Therefore, a variance is requested. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-30, Lot cov erage, all buildings, including accessory buildings, struc tures and equipment shall not cover more than 25% of the area of the plot or 3,690.5 sf for this property. The pro posed total lot coverage is 4,503.5 sf. Therefore, a vari ance is requested for 813 sf of total lot coverage.
RON KARO requests a SPE CIAL EXCEPTION AND FIVE VARIANCES for the property known as 81 Wood hollow Road, designated as Section 7 Block 202 Lot 4 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map and in the R District of the Village. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-139(A), swimming pools require a special exception from the Zoning Board of Appeals.
Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-14 (A), the maximum allowable fence height is 4 feet. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-143(A)(1) and (3), pool enclosure fences must be five feet in height, of the chain link type, and be erected completely enclosing the pool at least five feet from the edge of the pool and at least 15 feet from any prop erty line. Therefore, variances are requested for the proposed 5 foot fencing located par tially along the property line and for the estate-type fence.
Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-14(A), no fences are permitted in the front yard. The proposed pool fence is located partially in the front yard. Therefore a variance is requested for the front yard fence. Pursuant to East Hills Code §271-23(A), Accessory buildings and uses, accessory buildings or structures shall not occupy more than 20% of the rear yard, or 3,168.4 sf for this property. This proposal indicates a total rear yard cov erage of 4,108.75 sf. There fore, a variance is requested for 940.35 sf of rear yard lot coverage.
Maps and plans regarding the above applications are avail able for inspection on the Village’s website at www.vil lageofeasthills.org/meetings.
Dated: October 26, 2022 10-26-2022-1T-#235579ROS
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 13
BY THE ORDER OF THE BOARD OF APPEALS INCORPORATED
VILLAGE OF EAST HILLS Michael Kosinski, Chairman
Continued from page 12 To Submit Legal Notices for LLPs, LLCs, Summonses, Orders to Show Cause, Citations, Name Changes, Bankruptcy Notices, Trustees Sales, Auction Sales, Foundation Notices Visit our website at antonmediagroup.com or call Legal Advertising at
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The Dolphin Bookshop Is Closing Its Doors
Port Washington bookstore is closing after 76 years in business
On Monday, Oct. 10, The Dolphin Bookshop announced they will be closing down after 76 years in business in Port Washington. The bookshop, located at 299 Main St., has been a town mainstay for decades, and many are sad to see it go.
The shop has an assortment of books, from travel guides to young adult fantasy novels to history books. Besides books, The Dolphin Bookshop carries children’s toys, various candles and soaps, jewelry and many other gift items.
“On Saturday mornings, people would come in to buy childrens gifts for birthday parties, but that has been reduced since the pandemic began,” said shop owner Judith Mitzner.
A year ago, the bookstore consolidat ed from the three spaces of the building they occupy to one corner space. The consolidation of the bookstore pro vided Mitzner with a blank canvas to rearrange and decorate the shop.
“The consolidation was surprisingly challenging,” said Mitzner. “We had to get rid of stuff, so we had a huge sale where items were 75 percent off for about two weeks. Although we down sized the space, we had an opportunity to change up the look of the store.”
Before the pandemic hit, The Dolphin Bookshop held events such as poetry readings, author signings, book club meetings and kids programs. Recently, the bookshop resumed its events, hosting local authors such as Ellen Pall, Shiva Kumar and Sabrina Grossman. The store also has been holding story time and crafts for kids every Sunday.
While the consolidation and enter taining events brought new life to the bookstore after the COVID-19 pandem ic, unfortunately, it wasn’t enough to keep the store afloat.
“We have been struggling for the last 15 to 20 years, and it’s gotten harder and harder,” said Mitzner. “It just doesn’t make sense to stay.”
When asked what contributed to the store’s closing, Mitzner said it’s partly due to “the usual reasons, people are shopping elsewhere.”
The Dolphin Bookshop posted the news of its closing on its Facebook page. Many Port residents have com mented, expressing their sorrow for the loss of the independent bookstore. Below are selected comments from the post.
Facebook user Christine Sanchez: “This makes me incredibly sad.
Dolphin was always a valued part of our town and community. As my son learned to read, we always came to you for age-appropriate recommendations. When he became an avid young reader, we knew you could guide us to keep him coming back for more. Sad to see you go but please know how much you were loved and appreciated!”
Facebook user Rachel Abbey: “This is such sad news. Port has always been proud of our independent bookstore, and the character of our town will be diminished by your departure.”
Facebook user Eileen Grizer Feinman: “The Dolphin was a bright light and loved in Port Washington for so many years. You will be missed.”
A few commenters brought up a sim ilar situation concerning Hungtington’s Book Revue closing down in August 2021. After 44 years in business, Book Revue was unable to cover expenses because of COVID-19 forcing them to close shop for months and postpone its usual events.
Shortly after Book Revue’s closing, they began raising funds and hosting book pop-ups in Huntington parks and local stores willing to host them. Some Port residents have brought up the ef forts of Book Revue and are hoping The Dolphin Bookshop will do the same.
Unfortunately, it takes lots of hard work and dedication to host and publicize pop-ups. After months of struggling to keep The Dolphin open, continuing those efforts in pop-ups doesn’t seem reasonable.
“We’ve been here for a long, long time, and I know many people loved having us here, but they didn’t really love it enough to shop here,” said Mitzner. “It would be a huge effort for a similar outcome.”
The Dolphin Bookshop will be closing its doors at the end of October. Till then, everything the shop carries is 40 percent off when paying with cash or a credit card.
“We’re going to be out by the end of the month for sure,” said Mitzner. “But if there is no reason to stay at a certain point and everything has gone, we will close up.”
Before the end of October, visit The Dolphin Bookshop for the last time and get an exciting fantasy novel, historical biography, or gift item for a loved one at a discounted price.
OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP14
The Dolphin Bookshop storefront, located on the corner of Main Street and Shore Road. (Photo by Julie Prisco)
Books, gifts and more. (Photos by Julie Prisco)
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 15NORTH ZONE 229153 M Manhasset O ce 154 Plandome Road 516.627.2800 Port Washington O ce 475 Port Washington Boulevard 516.883.5200 Roslyn O ce 1528 Old Northern Boulevard 516.621.3555 elliman.com Elliman Knows What Moves 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401. © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. Douglaston | 37-05 East Drive | $1,499,500 | 5 BR, 5 BA | Web# 3419363 Amy Liu: M 917.224.1866 Douglaston | 246-23 51st Avenue | $1,348,888 | 5 BR, 3.5 BA | Web# 3433344 Tong Tong Cheung: M 917.340.0731 Glen Cove | 100 Garvies Point Road | $1,250,000 | 2 BR, 2.5 BA | Web# 3401987 Amy Liu: M 917.224.1866 Port Washington | 42 Wake eld Ave | $879,000 | 3 BR, 2 BA | Web# 3435975 Nicole Eskanazy: M 516.317.4004 | Stuart Bayer: M 516.375.1005 Port Washington | 28 Locust Avenue | $1,799,500 | 6 BR, 4.55 BA | Web# 3406142 Maggie Keats: M 516.449.7598 Manhasset | 94 Papermill Road | $1,999,000 | 4 BR, 3 BA | Web# 3410667 Maggie Keats: M 516.449.7598 Mu ontown | $2,150,000 | 6BR, 5.5BA | Web# 3436499 Sharon Tract: M 516.503.2072 | Andréa Sorrentino: M 516.639.2596 Port Washington | 170 Cow Neck Road | $1,199,000 | 4 BR, 2.5 BA | Web# 3428313 Maggie Keats: M 516.449.7598 | Jill Berman: M 516.375.9101
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OCTOBER 26 - NOVEMBER 1, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401, © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF
BEDROOMS
AND
THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY
YOUR OWN ATTORNEY,
ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT.
EQUAL
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.
elliman.com 232277 R