Also serving Great Neck Estates, Great Neck Plaza, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock and Thomaston Est. 1908 An Anton Media Group Publication Vol.73,No.3February22–28,2023 www.GreatNeckRecord.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. Great Neck Record (USPS 791-440) FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details! LIRR Update: Grand Central Madison access coming to the Port branch (See page 6) Calendar: Donate blood at the library on Feb. 28 (See page 8) School News: Student musician wins songwriting competition (See page 11) Community: North Shore Film Festival begins in March (See page 12) INSIDE Our Luxury Publication blvd. ANTON GROUP PUBLICATION 28, Gold Coast Real Estate & Luxury Living blvd. LIFE OF PI COMES TO BROADWAY Family jewels: Suzy Levian champions the family name Pulling into the station: Recounting the rail line history Opportunity Nicholas Colombos Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Luxury Division Council Member nick.colombos@compass.com 917.453.9333 The Founding Agents of Compass Long Island Angela Dooley Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Luxury Division Council Member angela.dooley@compass.com 516.315.7781 Experience isn’t expensive, it’s priceless...
Stepping Stones Lighthouse (Photo from Anton Media Group Archives) Stepping Stones Lighthouse receives town funding for dock completion (See page 3) Get Results. Sign Up Today! Be S.M.A.R.T. for your kids. (Save Money & Reduce Taxes) Maidenbaum Property Tax Reduction Group, LLC – 483 Chestnut Street, Cedarhurst, NY 11516 Apply online at mptrg.com/marquee or call 516.715.1233 Hablamos Español DEADLINE MARCH 1ST 238864 M 238275 M 516-494-3738
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Next Steps For Stepping Stones Lighthouse
Funding for Stepping Stones Lighthouse is in North Hempstead’s Capital Plan
JULIE PRISCO
jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
At the Jan. 24 Town of North Hempstead board meeting, town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board unanimously approved the town’s 2023-2027 five-year Capital Plan, which includes improvements to infrastructure, park upgrades, and road repaving. Improvements to the Stepping Stone Lighthouse in Great Neck is included in the Capital Plan, among various other projects. The $126,887,733 plan will be funded with a combination of borrowing, grants, and existing cash.
“This five-year capital plan puts a particular emphasis on bringing forward momentum to a number of long-stalled projects throughout the town,” Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena said. “I believe that the Town should be seeking to not just maintain, but significantly improve our parks and our infrastructure. Thank you to the Town Board for working collaboratively throughout this process, the result of which is a capital plan that will improve Town infrastructure for generations to come.”
The Stepping Stones Lighthouse has been in poor condition and has needed repairs for many years. As an important landmark and part of Great Neck’s history, the restoration of this lighthouse is a concern for many involved parties and residents.
The Stepping Stones Lighthouse was built in 1876 to help ships navigate the Long Island Sound waters and rocky reefs and guard the approach to New York City’s East River. The US Government enacted the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act of 2000, which gives away dozens of lighthouses every year to groups willing to preserve them and turn them into public attractions like museums. The lighthouse was offered at no cost to eligible entities, including federal, state, and local agencies, non-profit corporations, and educational organizations. In 2008, the lighthouse was transferred to the Town of North Hempstead.
Since the Town of North Hempstead gained stewardship of the lighthouse 14 years ago, not much has been done to restore or maintain it. In 2014, North Hempstead partnered with the Great Neck Historical Society and the Great Neck Parks District to raise funds and awareness for the
and unload construction material to repair the lighthouse. This company put pilings in the ground to start a dock and got partially into this project, and the town supervising it said they needed to do a better job and stopped them from completing it.
“The footings and the foundation of a dock is all that’s there,” said Katz.
Bob Muller, President of the United States Lighthouse Society, Long Island Chapter, outlined the next steps to get started with the preservation. “The first steps are very clear and really easy: they need to finish that dock. And that’s, again, all up to the town. And we also need to stabilize that lighthouse to get it watertight.”
The funds in the Capital Plan for the Stepping Stone Lighthouse is for phase one of the project, which includes the installation of a new docking facility consisting of a fixed pier and floating dock at the southeast reach of the lighthouse.
According to the Capital Plan, “Grant funding for this project comes from the following organizations: National Parks Service, National Maritime Heritage Grant, administered through the NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, State Historic Preservation Office, Dormitory Authority of the State of New York, State and Municipal Facilities Programs, Dormitory Authority of the State of New York and the State and Municipal Facilities Programs (Great Neck Park District).”
At the Jan. 24 Town of North Hempstead board meeting, Katz expressed his gratitude for the Capital Plan’s inclusion of Phase One for Stepping Stones Lighthouse. “With the acceptance of the lighthouse comes a responsibility of preserving it as a symbol of our past and a beacon for our future. I’d like to thank the town board for including funding in its Capital Plan for the completion of the dock and pier at the lighthouse so that it can be restored and maintained.”
North Hempstead Councilwoman Veronica Lurvey has been listening to the residents of Great Neck and advocating for the lighthouse. “The Lighthouse has historical significance on so many levels. I look forward to working with the Great Neck Historical Society and the rest of the board as well in figuring out how to best fund this task that the town has taken on when it took on the ownership of the lighthouse.”
lighthouse. Since Steppingstone Park is the closest land to the lighthouse, the Park District offered staff and facilities to take people back and forth to the lighthouse.
“In the 14 years [that the town has had stewardship over the lighthouse], the building has been deteriorating,” said Marc Katz,
Vice President of the Great Neck Historical Society. “The outside is fairly firm, but the inside is not; plaster is falling, and it’s not holding up well in the weather.”
Katz shared that about a year ago, North Hempstead took bids to build a dock at the lighthouse so that boats could dock there
While residents of Great Neck are excited to see progress being made in restoring the historical lighthouse off the coast of Kings Point, others feel this project shouldn’t be funded by the town.
Since the lighthouse is closest to Stepping Stones Park, that is the most probable point of access to visit and see the lighthouse.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 3 TOP STORY
Upclose image of lighthouse conditions.
CONTINUES ON NEXT PAGE
Original cornerstone of the light house. (Photos from steppingstoneslight.com)
North Shore’s Response To Governor Hochul’s Housing Crisis Strategy
JULIE PRISCO
jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
In early January, Governor Kathy Hochul delivered her first State of the State Address, in which she announced her statewide strategy to address the housing crisis in New York. The proposal calls for 800,000 new homes to be built over the next decade and requires local participation to achieve housing growth in every community.
The New York Housing Compact is a multipronged strategy that includes removing obstacles to approvals and incentivizing construction. One part of the plan that sticks out to many New York residents, especially those on the North Shore, is the plan’s requirement that local governments with MTA train stations must locally rezone for higher-density residential development.
According to New York State’s website, Governor Hochul’s plan “will require that localities with rail stations run by the MTA undertake a local rezoning or higher density
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE
Stepping Stones Park is part of the Great Neck Parks District and their parks are only open to Great Neck residents.
“Nobody in my district is allowed to go into Stepping Stones Park, including me and people in Garden City Park, Williston Park, and New Hyde Park. This is not helpful for anybody in my district,” said North Hempstead Councilman Dennis Walsh (District 3).
Councilman Walsh along with a Mineola resident expressed that they feel the lighthouse restoration seems like a private project, not a public one. Since North Hempstead residents don’t have access to Stepping Stone Park, North Hempstead funds shouldn’t be used in the project.
Robert Lincoln, a Great Neck resident on the Board of Directors for the Great Neck Historical Society, attended the board meeting to speak on behalf of the restoration project.
“I understand the objection thinking you’re not allowed to go into Stepping Stones Park. Stepping Stones Park is a park in the Great Neck Park District, which the local taxpayers pay to visit. However, they are also a player in this partnership, and already they have opened the park to the Historical Society to run fundraising boat rides,” said Lincoln. “One of the things that we’re looking to do at the Park District is to make that accessible on a scheduled basis for people to go out and visit the lighthouse down the road a long way.”
multifamily development within half a mile of the station unless they already meet the density level. By expanding housing potential in these transit-oriented communities, more families will be able to enjoy improved access to jobs and thriving sustainable communities. ”
For Long Island’s North Shore where suburbia and proximity to the city are cherished, this housing plan makes residents and local officials worry. Places like Port Washington, Great Neck, Manhasset and Roslyn pride themselves on having access to one of the largest LIRR branches on the island while maintaining their suburban neighborhoods.
Local officials have begun to speak out against Governor Hochul’s housing plan to save the North Shore’s suburban neighborhoods from becoming overpopulated.
Seven Long Island State Senators released statements regarding their disapproval of the housing plan. In the statement, the senators call for changes to be made so local government can have a voice in their community’s growth.
Senator Jack Martins (District 7) said: “The Governor’s proposal is nothing less than an existential threat to our way of
“But it will be made available, so there is no privacy. This is not a Great Neck Park District or Great Neck private project. It’s open to everybody,” said Lincoln.
At the Feb. 7 town board meeting, the concern over the project and North Hempstead funding were brought up again.
“So money has been spent to keep it from completely falling apart because we are the stewards of [the lighthouse] right now,” said Councilwoman Lurvey. “And the capital plan now authorizes this phase to be finished.”
While Councilman Walsh and a concerned resident expressed their disapproval of town funds being used on a seemingly private project, Councilwoman Lurvey assured them this money is just being used to finish the incompleted dock. After Phase One, there is no solid plan for the rest of the lighthouse restoration.
“I think there needs to be a visioning process after this part of the project is over. There’s nothing in the capital plan after this phase,” said Councilwoman Lurvey.
At this meeting, a resolution was on the agenda authorizing the assignment of an agreement for engineering services in connection with the Stepping Stones Lighthouse. Taking into consideration the concern of the resident and other councilmembers, Councilwoman Lurvey decided to table the resolution for the town to come back to in a later meeting.
life that cannot be overstated or ignored. Although we acknowledge that there is a housing crisis in New York, the Governor needs to understand that she cannot mandate, legislate or regulate her way through this. Nor can she expect our communities to sit idly by while bureaucrats in Albany demolish the pillars of our suburban quality of life. I urge the Governor to turn away from this foolish and clumsy proposal, to work with our communities and local leaders to incentivize not just growth but smart growth. There is a place for State involvement in this process, but this is not it. I know firsthand the power and innovation that local governments can bring to this issue without State interference. While Mayor of Mineola, we worked with the community to develop a master plan that allowed for transit-oriented, residential development around Mineola’s LIRR station. The result is over 1,000 units of housing built in Mineola over the past 10 years. It was done by building consensus for construction in the right area, in the right way, at the right time. Collaboration and shared best practices will work where this proposal will not.”
In addition, the Town of North Hempstead
board recently sent a letter to Governor Hochul asking her to reconsider certain aspects of her proposal, “most notably the three percent new home growth over three years and transit-oriented local rezoning mandates.”
Those familiar with the Town of North Hempstead board know that for the past year, there has been a large divide between the democratic majority and the republican minority on the board, leading to public disagreements. Partisanship has been pushed aside when it comes to Governor Hochul’s housing plan as all seven members of the board, including the Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, have signed the letter. Below is an excerpt from the Town of North Hempstead letter.
“Local governments must maintain a certain level of autonomy when it comes to appropriately preserving the suburban aesthetic of their communities. We are hopeful you will make appropriate modifications that allow for that. Our residents deserve to have a seat at the table, as they always have, and we are concerned that this new initiative, as currently constituted, may hinder our ability to work proactively and collaboratively with them.”
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 4
The Stepping Stones Lighthouse (Photo from Bob Muller)
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 5 Independent Living | Assisted Living | Memory Care
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Full Long Island Rail Road Service To Grand Central Madison To Begin Monday, February 27
Full Long Island Rail Road Service To Grand Central Madison To Begin Monday, February 27
MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber recently announced full Long Island Rail Road service to Grand Central Madison will take effect on Monday, Feb. 27, adding 271 LIRR trains per day, increasing LIRR systemwide service to 936 trains per day, of which 296 will be to or from Grand Central Madison. Service levels will increase 41 percent over today’s schedules of 665 daily trains and create reverse-peak service on the Port Jefferson and Ronkonkoma Branches for the first time. Train schedules are available via the TrainTime app and at mta.info, where users can find pdf timetables or create point-to-point itineraries.
MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber recently announced full Long Island Rail Road service to Grand Central Madison will take effect on Monday, Feb. 27, adding 271 LIRR trains per day, increasing LIRR systemwide service to 936 trains per day, of which 296 will be to or from Grand Central Madison. Service levels will increase 41 percent over today’s schedules of 665 daily trains and create reverse-peak service on the Port Jefferson and Ronkonkoma Branches for the first time. Train schedules are available via the TrainTime app and at mta.info, where users can find pdf timetables or create point-to-point itineraries.
“Faster, more convenient travel that brings Long Island closer to the heart of the City – the new schedules are going to be a major shot in the arm for the local economy and the effort to get people back to offices, theaters, and shopping,” Chair Lieber said. “We’re excited for riders to get acquainted with the new schedules. You can check out the new trip options, plan trips and buy tickets in the TrainTime app. The new timetables will also be posted to the MTA website.”
“Faster, more convenient travel that brings Long Island closer to the heart of the City – the new schedules are going to be a major shot in the arm for the local economy and the effort to get people back to offices, theaters, and shopping,” Chair Lieber said. “We’re excited for riders to get acquainted with the new schedules. You can check out the new trip options, plan trips and buy tickets in the TrainTime app. The new timetables will also be posted to the MTA website.”
“This is the biggest service increase
“This is the biggest service increase
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in LIRR history,” said Catherine Rinaldi, Interim President of the Long Island Rail Road and President of Metro-North Railroad. “Long Islanders will benefit from a combination of Grand Central Madison service, the new LIRR Main Line third track and a second NYC terminal that links to the east side. The LIRR has created a new schedule with robust reverse commute service that links the entire region to Long Island’s homes, jobs, entertainment and education.”
in LIRR history,” said Catherine Rinaldi, Interim President of the Long Island Rail Road and President of Metro-North Railroad. “Long Islanders will benefit from a combination of Grand Central Madison service, the new LIRR Main Line third track and a second NYC terminal that links to the east side. The LIRR has created a new schedule with robust reverse commute service that links the entire region to Long Island’s homes, jobs, entertainment and education.”
Customers can see their new trip options, plan trips, and buy LIRR tickets in the TrainTime app. New timetables are posted to new.mta.info. For help with trip planning or questions about the new schedules, customers should use the “Chat with us” option in the TrainTime app.
Customers can see their new trip options, plan trips, and buy LIRR tickets in the TrainTime app. New timetables are posted to new.mta.info. For help with trip planning or questions about the new schedules, customers should use the “Chat with us” option in the TrainTime app.
All eleven branches of the LIRR will offer service to Grand Central Madison and Penn Station, in some cases via transfers, and the schedules provide rush-hour through-service to Brooklyn from Freeport, Hempstead and West Hempstead.
All eleven branches of the LIRR will offer service to Grand Central Madison and Penn Station, in some cases via transfers, and the schedules provide rush-hour through-service to Brooklyn from Freeport, Hempstead and West Hempstead.
The opening of Grand Central Madison allows the LIRR to add 13 trains a day to
The opening of Grand Central Madison allows the LIRR to add 13 trains a day to
Port Washington Branch timetables, bringing service on the branch up to 103 trains daily, a 14 percent service increase.
Port Washington Branch timetables, bringing service on the branch up to 103 trains daily, a 14 percent service increase.
During the weekday AM and PM peak, alternate trains will serve Penn Station and Grand Central. Some peak trains will make all stops to Bayside, then continue to Great Neck with stops at Douglaston and Little Neck. Other trains will make their first stop at Bayside or Great Neck, and then make all stops to Port Washington. The new schedules offer more express trains for Bayside, Douglaston, and Little Neck stations.
During the weekday AM and PM peak, alternate trains will serve Penn Station and Grand Central. Some peak trains will make all stops to Bayside, then continue to Great Neck with stops at Douglaston and Little Neck. Other trains will make their first stop at Bayside or Great Neck, and then make all stops to Port Washington. The new schedules offer more express trains for Bayside, Douglaston, and Little Neck stations.
For reverse-peak commuters traveling as far as Great Neck, the new timetables eliminate an 85-minute gap in morning eastbound service and 72-minute gap in evening westbound service.
For reverse-peak commuters traveling as far as Great Neck, the new timetables eliminate an 85-minute gap in morning eastbound service and 72-minute gap in evening westbound service.
Off-Peak and weekend travelers will be able to access trains every half hour between Manhattan and Port Washington, with hourly service to Penn Station and Grand Central. Murray Hill, Broadway, Auburndale, and Plandome service is doubled, as all trains will make all stops.
—Submitted by the New York State MTA
Off-Peak and weekend travelers will be able to access trains every half hour between Manhattan and Port Washington, with hourly service to Penn Station and Grand Central. Murray Hill, Broadway, Auburndale, and Plandome service is doubled, as all trains will make all stops. —Submitted by the New York State MTA
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 6 We’re not just your local newspaper, we’re a member of your community Great Neck Estates, Great Neck Plaza, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock, Thomaston 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 Great Neck Estates, Great Neck Plaza, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock and Thomaston Est. 1908 Vol.72,No.10April6122022$1.00 Great Neck Record (USPS 791-440) FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details! North Hempstead: The St. Francis Hospital outreach bus is providing free health screenings for the community (See page 6) School News: The Great Neck North Middle School Lady Blazers go undefeated this season (See page 10) PERSONALIZED EFFECTIVE OUTPATIENT PHYSICAL AND OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY 1999 Marcus Ave, Lake Success www.agewellpt.com 516.488.8808 TRANSPORTATION 18 Hole GOLF Community, Tennis, Gym, Stores MORE! FULL TIME GENERATORS! Prices Range From $200,000 to $2 Million. DISCOVER RESORT LIVING AT NORTH SHORE TOWERS! Call ANNETTE KROLL for TOUR! Associate Broker 718-631-8867 Enjoy the Ultimate Luxurious Lifestyle! Magic Of Great Neck Realty 215 Middle Neck Rd, Great Neck INSIDE Springtime! golf locations on Long Island. Springtime! ON LONG Birding Reviews Mayor Re-Elected The Great Neck Plaza Mayor has been re-elected and looks forward to continuing village improvements (See page 3) Mayor Ted Rosen campaigning for election in 2020. (Photo from the United Residents Party Facebook) 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 For A Bright Future Serving . . . GUIDEWINTERANANTONMEDIAGROUPSPECIALDINING Valentine takeoutoptions Crockpot comfort food Local bakers conquercoffee cake market christenings,communions,graduations,anniversaries,engagement banquet people SpecialOccasion Packages NowAcceptingReservationsValentine’sDay MEDICINE PROFILES IN CHILDREN’S AN MEDIA SPECIAL FEBRUARY 2022 Suite New 516.627.5113 www.longislandeyesurgeons.com christenings,anniversaries,engagement NowAcceptingPLUS! 45 + SPECIALTHEMED SUPPLEMENTS TOO! (Nassau County Delivery Only) FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 14
Grand Central Madison (Photo by Alex Nunez)
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FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 14
Grand Central Madison (Photo by Alex Nunez)
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PERSONALIZED EFFECTIVE OUTPATIENT PHYSICAL AND OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY 1999 Marcus Ave., Lake Success www.agewellpt.com 516.488.8808 Est. 2004 FREE TRANSPORTATION 238388 M Support Independent Physical Therapist-Owned Practice
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Lectures, performances, tours, family activities and much more
Visit 1,000 Museums Free Supporting members ( $150) enjoy admission privileges while they travel and VIP invitations while they’re here. Visit NARMassociation.org to see participating museums
Purchase a Membership Scan code, visit the museum, or go online to NassauMuseum.org
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FRIDAY, FEB 24-SUNDAY, FEB. 26
Great Neck House Movies
Friday at 5 and 7 p.m. Saturday at 2 p.m. Sunday at 6 p.m. (Great Neck House, Great Neck Parks District) Stillwater (2021 | R | 2h 19min | Crime, drama, thriller)
FRIDAY, FEB. 24
Craft for a Cause
8-10 p.m. (Levels Teen Center) Do you need to complete your community service hours in order to graduate? Come use your crafting skills to serve a good cause. No registration needed.
SATURDAY, FEB. 25
Light In Motion Art Reception
2-4 p.m. (Main Library Lower Lobby)
Paintings by Clemente Ettrick. The spirit of the dance and music performances of the Huntington Summer Arts Festival are reflected in painter Ettrick’s interpretations. The concept of abstract realism is defined by intensified light and colors and the synergy between images and backgrounds in these vibrant works.
SUNDAY, FEB. 26
Farmers’ Market
10 a.m.- 2 p.m. (Great Neck House) The Great Neck Indoor Winter Market is a collaborative project of Deep Roots Farmers Market and the Great Neck Park District. The market will continue to bring the Great Neck community fresh and local foods and crafts.
Three Chords and the Truth
2-3:30 p.m. (Parkville Branch Library Community Room) Country’s Greatest Songwriters with Tennessee Walt. Featuring classic songs famously performed by Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Loretta Lynn, Jimmie Rodgers, Ernest Tubb, Hank Williams and more. Registration is required and can be completed online at greatnecklibrary.org or call 516-466-8055.
drink, and bring your ID with your name and photo. Visit donate.nybc.org to make an appointment.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1
Sing Along
10:30 a.m. (Great Neck Social Center) Sing Along with Mindye and Phoebe. While music is proven to help with memory, actively participating in music has been shown to have many health benefits for seniors. Songs are age appropriate and seniors can request songs. This class is no cost to Nassau County residents. Please call 516-487-0025 to reserve your spot.
Womenspace
1 p.m.-3 p.m. (Great Neck Social Center)
These seasoned ladies have gathered for a number of years, tuned in to what active folks think about. When this group hears about something on the local, state, national or global scene they select an expert from their various contacts to come talk about it. For new ideas and friends, see how stimulating and entertaining these active ladies are. Call 516-487-0025 for more information
TUESDAY, FEB. 28
Community Blood Drive
1:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. (Main Library Community Room) Appointments are preferred, however walk-ins will be welcomed if space permits. Please remember to eat,
THURSDAY, MARCH 2
AARP Tax Help
10 a.m.- 2 p.m. (Parkville Branch Library Programming Room) Do you need help preparing your basic tax forms? AARP will be
offering their tax assistance for the 2022 tax year on Thursdays. This program is available from February 9 through April 13. Please call the Parkville Branch Circulation Department at x273 or x256 to sign up for a time slot.
Project Independence
10:30 a.m. (Zoom) A Town of North Hempstead event for seniors. Social discussion group via Zoom. Enjoy talking with others and meeting your neighbors. Open to North Hempstead residents age 60 and older. If interested call 311 or 516-869-6311 to register and receive a Zoom link.
FRIDAY, MARCH 3
Project Independence and You Radio Show
10 a.m.- 12 p.m. Tune into the Project Independence and You Radio Show at 88.1 FM and WCWP.org. A Town of North Hempstead event for seniors. Dr. Evan Schwarzwald (Cardiologist, Northwell Health) to discuss February is American Heart Month and Talk of the Town with Kristina Lew. Call 311 for more information.
SUNDAY, MARCH 5
Live Performance at Great Neck House
3 p.m. (Great Neck House) See Godfrey Townsend. Godfrey Townsend, the legendary guitarist for the Yardbirds, is back by popular demand. He returns to perform the hits of The Beatles, Eric Clapton and more.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 8
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An Open Opportunity: African American Whalers Found Freedom At Sea
AMANDA OLSEN
aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
While it’s hard to imagine now, hunting whales has been practiced for millennia. Native Americans on Long Island utilized stranded whales to feed whole communities. The Basque region of Spain was the first to establish a commercial whaling practice, and they dominated the industry for more than five centuries. Commercial whaling in North America began almost as soon as the continent was colonized. Sag Harbor was the principle whaling port, and actually grew to be one of the most productive in the world before fire devastated the town.
Products derived from whales included corsets, combs, oil for lamps and machines, wax for candles, cosmetics, and even margarine. High demand meant that the industry was always in need of capable people to man the ships. This included people from all races, often in high numbers.
Estimates put the number of people of color employed on whaling crews between one quarter and one third. It was the first integrated industry and one that allowed people to advance based on their abilities. In fact, it was common for people escaping slavery to use the sea as their means of reaching a free state. Nomi Dayan, executive director of the Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum, sheds some light on how African-American whalers found agency and freedom doing this dangerous work.
“Whaling employed the most diversified workforce, among other occupations at the time. So the question is, why would whalers of color endure hard work and awful living conditions, sometimes poor pay and serious danger with every whale hunt? They chose to work at sea because their options on land were limited, and for some this was a way to autonomy.”
The first black Americans to be treated as citizens were sailors during the 19th century. Because the US feared that the British would capture their sailors, they gave them something called a seaman’s protection certificate. It was an early version of a passport. American sailors carried this document as proof of citizenship. So for black mariners, there was nothing else like this at the time. And so this was very important for African Americans before they were officially defined as citizens. People used these documents as proof that they were sailors in order to escape slavery.
Many of the whaling captains and ship owners were Quaker. Tolerance is one of the
core tenants of the Quaker belief, making them open to hiring people of all races, including African Americans. The other side of this practice is their need for plentiful, cheap labor. “So it was a marriage of this ideal and this need African Americans also who were escaping slavery, but quickly disappear on the waterfront… especially for people in maritime trades, in a few days you could disappear.” Dayan said.
In whaling there was opportunity for people facing work discrimination on land and people escaping slavery. On the other hand, Black whalers faced racial barriers to advancement. People of the same rank were paid the same, regardless of their race. They also slept in the same quarters and ate the same food. This meant that all greenhands, whatever their ethnicity, were housed together, performed the same duties, and
ate the same quality of food. That being said, agents did tend to lump black whalers into service-based positions. According to Dayan, “agents often would make a decision based on how someone looked into what kind of job they would be cast for. So the majority of black seamen worked as green hands, a low rank on the ship, or just a general seaman. Some were cooks and stewards, which paid a little bit better but didn’t necessarily build a career. Some whalers of color did become mates. It was very rare for an African American whaler to become Captain.”
There are examples of Captains of color, such as William T. Shorey on the West coast in the waning days of whaling. He was often called the Black Ahab, after the character in Moby Dick. Probably the most famous local whaler is Pyrrhus Concer of Southampton. He was born about 1814. His mother was enslaved and he was sold as a slave at the age of five for $25. In his late teens he became
a whaler and willing to greatly improve his economic situation. He also inherited some land, which he was able to maintain for the rest of his life. Some of the artifacts from his home are on display in the museum.
Because of the inherent nature of life on a ship, it was essential for whalers to get along. People lived in close quarters aboard ship. Each person had a duty to perform, and all of those jobs had to fit together in order for things to run smoothly. “For the most part, it was in everyone’s interest to work together in a collegial, friendly manner, because the more whales you caught in the shortest amount of time, the sooner you were going to go home and the faster you were going to get paid. The majority of whaling voyages went without conflict; people kept personal tensions and prejudices check.”
There are some records of tense interactions, but these seem to be resolved fairly quickly. In one instance, a crewmember used a racial slur aboard ship and was flogged for it.
Another wrote in his diary that he was surprised to see a ‘colored man’ giving orders. These individuals had some personal conflicts, but after surviving a severe storm, they came out with more respect for each other. Dayan confirmed that “the majority of whale ships sailed with everyone wanting to work together and get the job done. Everyone’s profit depended on it, but there are examples of how your race did influence how shipmates interacted.”
Studying the racial identities of whalers can be difficult, primarily because ship’s records did not make note of an individual’s race. Even the census records of this time kept track of those demographics, so it is sometimes possible to trace a whaler’s background that way. Dayan pointed out that many whaling ships simply recorded the person’s date of birth and appearance. “you’d have your place of birth, some noted your skin color and your hair type. So that’s often a first clue researchers look for: dark. (Their) hair could be curly or dark. Often we do find it’s not completely reliable because it was up to the person’s personal discretion. Often one whaler would be listed as dark on one voyage, tan on another. So it’s a clue but you can’t trust it.”
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 2A FULL RUN
From Sea to Shining Sea: Whalers of the African Diaspora Special Exhibition will run at Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum through 2024. The Museum is located at 301 Main Street, Cold Spring Harbor.
Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum’s Special Exhibit: “From Sea to Shining Sea: Whalers of the African Diaspora.”
Photo from the museum collection. Photographed by Dr.Robert Cushman Murphy, 1912-1913 aboard the Daisy. This photo shows Third Mate, Mr. Almeida, using a boarding knife to cut a hole in whale blubber.
Phyrrhus Concer
was
(Photos by Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum)
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 3A FULL RUN Scan Code April Fools Day! Saturday, April 1, 2023 www.tscli.org 24/7 Hotline (516) 542-0404 Presented by Don't be a fool. Abuse is no joke. RESTORING HOPE FOR VICTIMS OF ABUSE SPONSOR THE TSCLI 5K! Marketing Benefits Available! Contact htract@tscli.org or call (516) 465-4774 for more information
Alzheimer’s Association Presents “In-Person Learning Together: Dementia In The Black Community”
The Long Island Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association will be holding an in-person event called “In-Person Learning Together: Dementia in the Black Community” on Thursday, Feb. 23 from 6:30-7:45 p.m at the EOC of Suffolk’s Central Islip. Registration is required in order to attend and light dinner will be provided. This will be an overview of dementia research, Alzheimer’s Association TrialMatch, and how to navigate conversations with your doctor when you or a loved one are concerned about cognitive decline, Alzheimer’s disease, or another form of dementia.
Guest speakers include Dr. Zorina Costello, director of community engagement for The Center of Spirituality and Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Health System; and Doris Phildor, health systems director of the Alzheimer’s Association New York City Chapter.
“We are excited to hold this in-depth conversation with the Long Island Community,” said Doris Phildor. “Throughout your journey, it is important
to understand how to have these difficult conversations with your doctors and loved ones.”
To Register: Call 800.272.3900 or email
longisland-programs@alz.org. This is an in-person program. Free to attend. Space is limited. To learn more about the Long Island Chapter of the Alzheimer’s
Association, visit https://www.alz.org/ longisland or call the 24/7 Helpline at 800.272.3900.
—Submitted by the Alzheimer’s Association
Concierge Pediatrics Hosts Elected Officials At Ribbon Cutting And Grand Opening
Concierge Pediatrics is the first medical practice of its kind to open in the North Shore area in Roslyn, NY, and will soon open a second in Woodbury, NY.
Dr. Jassey and Dr. Sharon are equally excited to treat pediatric patients and families well by offering the appropriate amount of time needed for visits for a positive healthcare experience. They will develop a unique doctor/patient relationship throughout the entire family journey, from a patients’ infancy to young adulthood.
Dr. Jonathan Jassey, a Board-Certified private pediatrician, graduated from the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine and completed his residency
in pediatrics at Winthrop University Hospital. Dr. Sharon is a Board-Certified pediatrician received her medical degree and pediatric medical training from Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, NY.
Among the perks are: same-day appointments, longer exam times, EKG screenings for kids 6+, home delivery of medications, and round-the-clock telephone and email access to doctors.
Parents are provided with the latest technology in the palm of their hands to provide their child’s pediatrician with precise and accurate information remotely.
As a member, patients are given a
complimentary bio tech device called the Nonagon (N9+). The N9+ is a handheld unit which is FDA cleared to conduct 9 physical examinations remotely using 4 medical-grade sensors and the patient’s smartphone camera to record temperature; photograph the skin/eye, etc; check Oxygen level and pulse; record lung and abdominal sounds; listen to your heart; photograph and video the inner ear or throat. The practice is perfect for remote needs, off hours, weekends and travel. Parents have the ability to work directly with Dr. Sharon and Dr. Jassey to keep their kids healthy on the go.
—Submitted by Concierge Pediatrics
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 4A FULL RUN
Apply online atmptrg.com/anton or call 516.715.1208 Maidenbaum Property Tax Reduction Group, LLC 483 Chestnut Street, Cedarhurst, NY 11516 Get Results. Sign Up Today! Experience & Expertise! DEADLINE MARCH 1 ST 235905 R
Long Island Elite Selects Paws Of War As 2023 Charity Partner
Long Island Elite, a 501(c)(3) not-forprofit organization dedicated to fostering the growth and development of local Long Island business professionals and emerging regional leaders, has announced they have selected Nesconset-based Paws of War as its 2023 charity partner.
Paws of War is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization whose mission is to train and place service animals and companion dogs to support and provide independence to U.S. military veterans that suffer from the emotional and physical effects of war. The non-profit also provides animal rescue for U.S. troops who have befriended an animal while serving overseas.
The funds raised by Long Island Elite in 2023 will give Paws of War additional resources to further its mission of “helping both ends of the leash” by providing services to veterans, first responders and their service or companion animals. These activities will support the mental well-being of individuals in Paws of War programs, giving back to the heroes who have sacrificed so much for this country. Having service or companion animals has proven to be an effective way to enhance mental well-being and reduce veteran suicides. LIE volunteers and funds
raised will also assist in rescuing dogs and cats and pairing them with local heroes in the community.
“This partnership between Long Island Elite and Paws of War will enhance the lives of veterans and lead to numerous dogs
A MULTI-BILLION DOLLAR INVESTMENT FOR LONG ISLAND
Sands, the world leader in developing integrated resorts, is proposing a multi-billion-dollar investment at the current site of the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. This groundbreaking, world-class hospitality and entertainment project will be transformational for the Long Island economy, creating thousands of quality union jobs and generating millions of dollars in tax revenue.
A HISTORIC OPPORTUNITY FOR LONG ISLAND BUSINESSES
Sands is committed to developing long-term partnerships with local businesses. For Long Island-based manufacturers, distributors, wholesale suppliers and other companies servicing the hospitality and entertainment industries, the Sands project will be an unprecedented opportunity to grow your business and be part of what will surely become an iconic centerpiece of the Long Island landscape.
finding their forever homes. We will also raise awareness in our community about Paws of War’s important mission. Our members will see first-hand the challenges that veterans and first responders face, especially those experiencing the effects of PTSD and
the positive impact dogs and cats will provide. As a U.S. Marine veteran, I personally understand the challenges and hardships that our veterans and first responders face every day,” said Frank Morizio, Jr, Long Island Elite President.
During the partnership year, members of Long Island Elite will volunteer their time at Paws of War’s events where they will learn more about the organization, including the cost of training service animals, the challenges and issues related to abandoned and mistreated animals, animal adoption and rescue and the importance of veterans and first responders gathering to share their stories, comraderie and mutual support.
“Many veterans and first responders are struggling with PTSD and other mental health challenges. The support and funds that LIE will provide to us will go toward improving the lives of these heroes and at the same time, find homes for so many dogs that need them,” said Robert Misseri, co-founder of Paws of War.
For information on how to support the Long Island Elite and Paws of War, visit www.longislandelite.com, www.pawsofwar. org, or email info@longislandelite.com.
—Submitted by Long Island Elite
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 5A FULL RUN
Members of Long Island Elite announce Paws of War as their 2023 charity partner of the year. (Pictured from left to right: Marc Shapiro, Strategies For Wealth; Marc Sonnenberg, Citrin Cooperman; Tim Matejka, Gurwin Healthcare Foundation; Ronald Williams, U.S. Army Veteran and his service dog Milo; Kelli Porti, U.S. Army Veteran and Community Outreach Laison for Paws of War; Ray Meyer, Paws of War Volunteer; Derek Cartwright, U.S. Army Veteran and his service dog Zeus; Elissa Weick, Non-Profit Consultant; Joseph Calamia II, Sales Tax Defense LLC; Michael Mosscrop, Long Island Elite Board Member and Charity Director; Aimee C. Keegan, ACLD) (Photo by Long Island Elite)
LEARN HOW YOUR COMPANY CAN BECOME PART OF THIS GROUNDBREAKING PROJECT. VISIT SANDSNEWYORK.COM
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WATCH
SANTOS WATCH
Money Is A Drag
For Santos, like Trump, sums of all sizes raised (oft-ignored) alarms
JANET BURNS
jburns@antonmediagroup.com
In many ways, public criticism of U.S. Representative George Santos is reminiscent of that faced by Donald Trump before he was elected president, however one may feel about either politician.
In Trump’s run-up to the 2016 presidential election, news reports piled up about various, substantial financial oddities in his business dealings, just as Santos has faced claims of varying financial missteps-to-misdeeds. Setting aside such humdrum behaviors as not paying taxes, using an organization’s resources for seemingly private purposes, or failing to pay one’s debts because one is unable, both men have been linked to instances of monetary lawlessness that seem to be simultaneously memorable and, perhaps, quickly forgotten.
For example, as Linda Qiu explained for PolitiFact in early 2016: “Sometime between 1979 and 1980, Trump hired a contractor to demolish an old building in midtown Manhattan to make way for Trump Tower. The contractor signed on
workers from a local union and, to meet Trump’s tight deadline, also brought on 200 [non-union] undocumented laborers from Poland dubbed the “Polish Brigade” ... [who] were off-the-books, working 12-hour shifts seven days a week for $4 to $5 an hour, with no overtime. Some workers were never paid what they were owed.”
Reporting on Santos has brought up allegations of financial misbehaviors that seem to have a similarly uncouth, even outlandish quality to them (said with all due respect to alleged or substantiated victims).
This month, for example, Jacqueline Sweet reported for Politico that Santos seems to have duped Amish Country dog-breeders
in Pennsylvania out of more than $15,000 in 2017. According to Politico, Santos cancelled a number of checks to the sellers, claiming that the checkbook in question had been stolen; he later had a lawyer expunge the charges filed against him in Pennsylvania, and the same lawyer told Politico that she no longer believes Santos’ story. As Sweet reported, “Just days after $15,125 in checks were made out for ‘puppies,’ according to the memo lines, Santos held an adoption event at a Staten Island pet store with his animal rescue charity Friends of Pets United, according to the store’s Instagram account and a person who attended the event.”
The men’s behaviors in their personal lives have also garnered a similar amount of attention in comparison to their financial ones, in many circles — fundamentally different though (most of) these publicized behaviors have been.
Months after audio was leaked of Trump bragging that he could grab any woman’s lower genetalia with impugnity, on the day of his inauguration, half a million people marched in protest of his treatment of women, among others, in the nation’s capital alone.
For Santos, meanwhile, despite growing evidence of a wide range
COLUMNS
It’s an easy Sunday afternoon, I’m deep into my daydreaming, and I can smell the aroma of baked cookies calling for me. I walk into the kitchen and there she is, pulling fresh cookies out of the oven. Not a daydream! Just a nice memory from my childhood visiting my Aunt Mary. Boy, did she make good homemade oatmeal raisin cookies!
What does sugar do for us? Are our sugar cravings there to provide familiar, comforting feelings from childhood or do they set off a cascade of chemical reactions that trigger our dependency? It could be both! Let’s look at this further.
Everyone wants an easy fix when it comes to their health goals and as we all know, easy fixes are hard to come by. What if I told you there was one simple focus you could start with to
ALL ARROWS POINT BACK TO NUTRITION
Nutritionist
Maria Dello
improve your mood, get in shape, and reverse the clock?
Cut down on sugar! Do away with the sweet nothings that do nothing for your health!
Let’s face it – we are programmed to love sugar, and the
of financial and ethical issues of concern, public focus seems to have mainly fixated on his having dressed (perfectly legally and, in a literal sense, innocently) in drag during festivities in Brazil when he was around 20; according to Google Trends, the term “drag” occupies two of the top five spots for both related topics and related trends to “George Santos” to date.
Other Recent Highlights:
• In a 6-1 vote, the North Hempstead Town Board has voted to approve a resolution put forth by Councilwoman Veronica Lurvey that demands that the Long Island contingent of the U.S. House of Representatives, comprising Congressmen Nicholas LaLota, Andrew Garbarino, and Anthony D’Esposito, take steps to expel Congressman Santos.
• After reports that Santos stole $3,000 from Richard Osthoff, a formerly homeless veteran who was fundraising to save his service dog, Legislator Joshua Lafazan started a GoFundMe to benefit Paws of War, a Long Island based organization that helps train and place service dogs for veterans. Overall, donations to this fundraising push have now topped $27,000.
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
The Roslyn News
Editor and Publisher
Angela Susan Anton
President
Frank A. Virga
Vice President of Operations/CFO
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Editors
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Robin Carter
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Linda Baccoli
For circulation inquiries, email: subscribe@antonmediagroup.com
food industry doesn’t help by adding high fructose corn syrup to everything. From our mood to weight gain to much more serious ailments, it is the root cause of disease.
Here are some signs that you are consuming too much sugar:
• Feeling sluggish, moody, and stressed
• Experiencing breakouts and sagging skin
• Gaining weight
• Constant sugar cravings
• Tooth decay (cavities) and gum disease
• Getting sick easily
• Warnings from your doctor about diabetes and heart disease Sugar sets off chemical reactions in our body that trigger ALL these symptoms. By cutting down on your sugar consumption, you can take charge of your health.
Here are some helpful tips:
1. Increase your protein and fiber intake to put sugar cravings at bay.
2. Avoid soda and sugary drinks.
3. After you finish dinner, brush your teeth and avoid the witching hour of sugary snacks.
4. Exercise.
5. Drink more water since cravings are sometimes thirst in disguise.
6. Just don’t buy your usual sugary snacks – when they’re not in the house, it’s going to be much harder to give in.
7. When all else fails and your cravings are strong, eat alternative foods like fruit with a handful of nuts or cheese, a berry parfait, or a protein bar.
You will be surprised at the difference it makes when you cut down on sugar!
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FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 6A FULL RUN
SANTOS
Rep. George Santos’ Twitter profile image.
ALL ARROWS POINT BACK TO NUTRITION Nutritionist
Maria Dello Sweet Nothings
COLUMNS Governor Hochul’s Misguided Housing Plan
Governor Kathy Hochul has proposed a housing plan, which, if adopted, will have drastic consequences for our county and communities. The Hochul plan seeks to create 800,000 new housing units across the state in the next 10 years, with a special focus on Long Island. For Long Island, the target is for 38,218 new units from 2023-2025.
Governor Hochul’s proposal would require local municipalities to rezone properties within one half-mile of a transit station. The new zoning must allow a minimum of 50 units per acre. The half-mile radius would be measured from the station itself or station parking lots. The proposal would prohibit restrictions on height as well as reasonable requirements relating to property line setbacks, lot coverage and minimum parking spaces. In my legislative district, that would include communities that fall within these parameters involving the Great Neck and Manhasset train stations and have a ripple effect that would directly impact nearby residents in communities such as Great Neck Village, Kensington,
LEGISLATIVE REPORT
Thomaston, Great Neck Estates, Great Neck Plaza, Manhasset and others throughout Nassau County.
The state would also establish percentage increases for housing for each town that local leaders unanimously say are unrealistic in the three-year time period. If a town or village fails to meet its target, the state will impose a process whereby developers could appeal the denial of a local municipality to a “state housing approval board,” which could overrule the local determination.
In other words, decisions with respect to housing proposals would no longer be made by local elected officials but would be made by bureaucrats appointed by the state. Furthermore, the proposed housing plan would forbid review of development projects under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA), thereby eliminating the evaluation of important factors such as traffic, air quality and any other significant adverse environmental impacts.
For generations, residents have left the city and come to the suburbs for the quality of life, open space, decreased housing density,
good schools and safe streets. The quality of life in our communities has remained consistent for decades, primarily because residents demanded policies that protected against overdevelopment.
Long Island relies upon a fragile sole source aquifer for our drinking water. Increasing housing density will endanger that water supply, overcrowd our schools and increase strains on our critical infrastructure from sewage treatment to the supply of gas and electric to fire and police services. There will be more cars on the road and more congestion.
In fact, Long Island has been
gradually transforming with more transit-oriented development in communities like Mineola, Patchogue, Farmingdale and others. Rather than accept this gradual progress, the state will force a radical transformation. The “one size fits all” approach ignores the fact that each community is different and what makes sense in one community makes no sense in another.
I have joined with other elected officials throughout our region to oppose this ill-conceived plan and will fight against it every step of the way.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 7A FULL RUN
Pilip represents the county’s 10th Legislative District.
Mazi Melesa Pilip
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The Cornerstone, a 72-unit luxury residential building under construction on Railroad Avenue in Westbury. (Photo source Google)
ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE
Moody Blue John Lodge’s Fave Pianists
which made some noise on the UK charts and recruited Edge to contribute some pre-recorded bits for the forthcoming Days of Future Passed Tour.
dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com
John Lodge may best be known as the long-time bassist for the now defunct-Moody Blues, but for the Birmingham, England native, his music fuse was lit hearing early rock and roll piano players.
“I became a bass player because I used to listen to juke boxes and the left-hand side was where you’d hear the piano—it was a driving force on the lefthand side of the piano—that’s what drove me,” he recalled.
Currently on the road commemorating the release of the Moody’s seminal 1967 sophomore outing Days of Future Passed, Lodge is keen to keep his former group’s legacy alive although the band was declared defunct following the retirement of late founding member Graeme Edge in 2018.
“That’s really important for me to say that the Moody Blues is part of my life,” he said. “It is my life. I’m still a Moody Blue now.”
The pandemic did much to disrupt the routines of touring musicians and Lodge was no exception. Having released 2019’s B Yond, his most recent solo outing, the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer saw the tour grind to a halt in March 2020 when the world went into lockdown. A consummate optimist, Lodge was undeterred, going so far as to learn Garageband software, recorded the single “In These Crazy Times,”
“I had this idea of celebrating the anniversary [of Days] so I went to see Graeme and he really liked if I would record him reciting the poetry [on the album],” Lodge recalled.
“I told him I wanted to film him as well, so he could be an integral part of Days of Future Passed because, ‘Breathe deep, the gathering gloom’ is historic and gigantic. He said he would love to because he wanted to keep the Moody Blues music alive as well, just like I do. I told him he’d always have a place on stage with me. I recorded and filmed him and he’ll be featured on stage as well. As you know, Graeme passed away, so he never got to see it. But his family will and it will be great.”
With his 10,000 Light Years band in tow, Lodge promises a two-part show with the early set consisting of Moody Blues classics and the second half of the evening being a presentation of Days of Future Passed in its entirety. Not unlike his idol, Motown bass-playing great Jamie Jamerson, Lodge will be front and center playing the same Fender Precision bass he purchased at his local music shop on a Saturday afternoon when he was only 16. In the meantime, he was happy to share some of those piano-playing greats who inspired him around that same time.
Little Richard
(December 5, 1932 to May 9, 2020)
“What really resonated with me from Little Richard were the riffs coming off the piano and the band he played with, which I believe was put together by Dave Bartholomew, who did the same for Fats Domino.”
Fats
Domino
(February 26, 1928 to October 24, 2017)
“Fats had a way of playing that English people didn’t understand. It was really self-grown. Pianists from the South were born with it and I don’t know how you learn that. I had to learn it from listening to records.”
Johnnie Johnson
(July 8, 1924 to April 13, 2005)
“I almost forgot to include Johnnie. Chuck Berry said he learned all his riffs from his pianist.”
Jerry Lee Lewis
(September 25, 1935 to October 28, 2022)
“What made him so unique was the outrageousness of him that was great and a way of playing that was just phenomenal. He just kept rocking. Whatever he was doing, that left hand kept going. It was exciting to watch somebody like that playing the piano. You have to realize that we didn’t have anybody in England that could do that. When he came over to England it was like setting the flame alive for rock and roll piano for me.”
WHERE LONG ISLAND WINS!
John Lodge and the 10,0000 Light Year Band will be appearing on February 28 at The Patchogue Theatre for the Performing Arts
71 E. Main St., Patchogue. For more information, visit www. patchogueheatre.com or call 631-2071313. Lodge will also be appearing on March 1 at Sony Hall, 235 W. 46th St., NYC. For more information, visit www.sonyhall.com or call 212-997-5123. Visit www. longislandweekly.com to read a full feature on John Lodge.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 8A FULL RUN LONG ISLAND WEEKLY
LIW IW
John Lodge
Fats Domino (CC BY-SA 2.0)
(Sourced photo)
DAVE GIL de RUBIO
Johnnie Johnson. (Contributed photo)
Must be 18 to enter gaming floor, play video gaming machines, or wager on horse racing. Must be 21 or over to book a hotel stay, must be 18 or over to stay in the hotel. Please play responsibly. If gambling is a problem for you or someone you care about, please call the 24-hour toll-free helpline at 1-877-8HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369).
Jerry Lee Lewis (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Casino Hotel
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AN ANTON MEDIA GROUP LUXURY PUBLICATION • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 Gold Coast Real Estate & Luxury Living blvd. LIFEOFPI COMES TO BROADWAY Family jewels: Suzy Levian champions the family name Pulling into the station: Recounting the rail line history 237592 M The Colombos-Dooley Team is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Compass. Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. 1468 Northern Blvd, Manhasset NY, 11030. 516.517.4751 Nicholas Colombos Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Luxury Division | Council Member nick.colombos@compass.com M: 917.453.9333 The Founding Agents of Compass Long Island Angela Dooley Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Luxury Division | Council Member angela.dooley@compass.com M: 516.315.7781 Experience isn’t expensive, it’s priceless...
Douglas Elliman is Your Market Leader
Record Prices Characterized The Market
In Nassau North Shore, the average sales price rose annually to the third-highest on record as listing inventory increased yearly from the lowest to the third-lowest on record. In the Long Island luxury market, the median and average sales prices rose
annually and remained sharply above pre-pandemic levels. Listing inventory edged higher year over year but was less than h alf of pre-pandemic levels, causing more than one out of four transactions to sell above the last asking price.
Elliman is one of the largest residential brokerages in the New York metropolitan area with a national presence in key luxury markets. Moreover, Douglas Elliman has a strategic global alliance with London-based
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 2B 237506 M
Average Sales Price Number of Sales (Closed) Days on Market (From Last List Date) $1,290,067 540 71 Q4-2022 Average Sales Price Number of Sales (Closed) Days on Market (From Last List Date) $1,298,587 716 61 Q3-2022 Average Sales Price Number of Sales (Closed) Days on Market (From Last List Date) $1,241,989 758 74 Q4-2021 Average Sales Price Number of Sales (Closed) Days on Market (From Last List Date) $1,276,811 994 66 Q3-2021 Douglas
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“Life Of Pi” To Open On Broadway
Lolita Chakrabarti delivers dazzling stage adaptation of Yann Martel’s bestselling novel
BY BLVD. STAFF
Lolita Chakrabarti’s stage adaption of Life of Pi will premiere at Broadway’s Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre (236 West 45th Street) with three Olivier Award-winning performers making their Broadway debuts. Recreating their critically acclaimed performances for Broadway will be “Best Actor” winner Hiran Abeysekera in the role of “Pi” and “Best Supporting Actor” winners Fred Davis and Scarlet Wilderink join the “Richard Parker” puppeteering team.
The Broadway production of the five-time Olivier Award-winning London production of Life of Pi will feature Brian Abraham as Cook/Voice of “Richard Parker,” Rajesh Bose as Father, Avery Glymph as
Father Martin/Russian Sailor/ Rear Admiral Jackson, Mahira Kakkar as Nurse/Amma/ Orange Juice, Kirstin Louie as Lulu Chen, Salma Qarnain as Mrs. Biology Kumar/Zaida Khan, Sathya Sridharan as Mamaji/Pandit-Ji, Daisuke
Tsuji as Mr. Okamoto/Captain, Sonya Venugopal as Rani, with Nikki Calonge, Fred Davis, Rowan Ian Seamus Magee, Jonathan David Martin, Betsy Rosen, Celia Mei Rubin, Scarlet Wilderink and Andrew Wilson as Royal Bengal tiger
“Richard Parker.” Mahnaz Damania, Jon Hoche, Usman Ali Mughal, Uma Paranjpe and David Shih round out the 24-member cast with Adi Dixit as the “Pi” alternate.
Life of Pi begins performances Thursday, March 9, and opens Thursday, March 30. Prior to the Broadway engagement, Life of Pi made its North American Premiere at the American Repertory Theater at Harvard University.
Life of Pi is directed by Max Webster, with set and costume design by Olivier Award winner Tim Hatley, puppetry and movement direction by Olivier Award winner Finn Caldwell, puppet design by
Olivier Award winners Nick Barnes and Finn Caldwell, video design by Olivier Award winner Andrzej
Goulding, lighting design by Olivier Award winner Tim Lutkin, sound design by Carolyn Downing, original music by Andrew T. Mackay, dramaturgy by Jack Bradley, wig design by David Brian Brown, and casting by Stewart/Whitley.
Based on one of the bestloved works of fiction—winner of the Man Booker Prize, selling more than 15 million copies worldwide—Life of Pi is a breath-taking new theatrical adaptation of an epic journey of endurance and hope.
After a cargo ship sinks in
Cobble Court
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the middle of the vast Pacific Ocean, a 16-year-old boy name Pi is stranded on a lifeboat with four other survivors—a hyena, a zebra, an orangutan, and a 450-pound Royal Bengal tiger. Time is against them, nature is harsh, who will survive?
Tickets for Life of Pi on Broadway are available at Telecharge.com (212-239-6200) and at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre box office and range from $49 to $199 (including $2 facility fee). The playing schedule for Life of Pi is as fol-
see LIFE OF PI on page 4B
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GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 3B
Lolita Chakrabarti
Life of Pi is captivating audiences around the globe.
THEATER
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CUT THE STRINGS
A look at some famous puppets
Puppets and puppet shows have existed for centuries across almost all civilizations, with written records dating back to the fifth century B.C. in Greece, China, India, Asia and beyond in the form of hand or glove puppets, marionettes (string puppets), rod puppets and ventriloquist
The names of puppeteers of the ancient world are mostly lost on us today.
Because of radio, TV and stage, we are able to recognize the talents of those who entertain us in modern times like Bob Smith and Frank Paris (Howdy Doody) and Bill Baird (Charlemane the Lion).
Here are several other notable puppets and their puppeteers.
Kukla and Ollie
Puppeteer Burr Tillstrom was the creator of the TV series Kukla, Fran, and Ollie that ran from 1947 to 1957. Kukla and Ollie were puppets (Ollie was a dragon). There were also other puppets, all controlled by Tillstrom, with no script. The show was a huge hit among both children and adults.
Lamb Chop Shari Lewis was a ventriloquist who was so good at what she did that she is remembered more as a puppeteer. The children she performed for often had no idea that she was the one speaking for the puppet Lamb Chop. She and her puppet Lamb Chop appeared on The Captain Kangaroo Show in 1956, and she got her own network series in 1960, The Shari Lewis Show Other puppets on the series included Hush Puppy, Charlie Horse, and Wing Ding, although none were more popular than Lamb Chop.
Daniel Striped Tiger, King Friday XIII, Lady Elaine Fairchilde, Henrietta Pussycat and X The OWL
Before he became the host of the classic children’s TV show Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood, Fred Rogers was an ordained minister and songwriter whose hobby was puppetry. His first TV show had no budget, so he wrote the scripts, built the puppets, and operated and voiced them as well.
The Muppets
All the previous puppeteers had an influence on the man who became the most beloved puppeteer of them all: Jim Henson. Henson’s first TV show, Sam and Friends, introduced the puppet Kermit, who would become Henson’s alter ego and main sidekick for the rest of his life. The Henson empire expanded to include Fraggle Rock, Muppet Babies, The Jim Henson Hour, and a series of feature films cast with Muppets.
Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear, Animal, Grover, Cookie Monster and Bert Henson hired puppeteer Frank Oz in 1963 when his wife retired to raise their children. Oz learned the art of puppetry from his parents, who were both professional puppeteers (and also fought the Nazis with the Dutch Brigades). As a child, he performed with his parents and siblings as part of the Oznowicz Family Marionettes troupe. He later operated the puppet character Yoda in three Star Wars movies.
Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch Caroll Edwin Spinney was an American puppeteer, cartoonist, author, artist and speaker, most famous for playing Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch on Sesame Street from its inception in 1969. World Puppetry Day is celebrated on March 21.
—Compiled by Christy Hinko
Life Of Pi
Actors bring the puppets to life on stage.
lows: Tuesday through Saturday at 8 p.m., with matinees Wednesday and Saturday at 2 p.m., and Sunday at 3 p.m. There will be no 2 p.m. performance on Wednesdays, March 15, and March 22. Beginning Tuesday, April 4, the Life of Pi performance schedule is as follows: Tuesday and Thursday at 7 p.m., Wednesday and Friday at 7:30 p.m., and Saturday at 8 p.m., with matinees Wednes day and Saturday at 2 p.m., and Sunday at 3 p.m.
Life of Pi on Broadway is produced by Simon Friend, Daryl Roth, Hal Luftig, Mark Gordon Pictures, Playing Field, Tulchin Bartner Productions, Gavin Kalin, Hunter Arnold, Hall Smalberg Winkler, 42nd.club, Elizabeth Armstrong, Eilene Davidson, deRoy Shea Waxman, Federman Jenen Productions, Susan Gallin, Independent Presenters Network, John Gore Organization, Kuhn Dodani, Harriet Newman Leve, Anastasia Muravyeva, Mary Lu Roffe, Catherine Schreiber, American Repertory Theatre and Sheffi eld Theatres, with Aaron Lustbader and Hanna Osmolska serving as executive producers.
Life of Pi played Wyndham’s Theatre in London’s West End where it won fi ve Olivier Awards including Best New Play, Best Scenic Design and Best Lighting Design. In an historic fi rst for the Olivier Awards, the seven performers who play Royal Bengal tiger “Richard Parker” were collectively awarded “Best Actor in a Supporting Role.” The London production with its cutting-edge visual effects has garnered great critical acclaim and will launch a United Kingdom and Ireland tour in the summer of 2023. Visit www.lifeofpibway.com for more information.
BRINGING THE SHOW TO LIFE
Puppet director shares what it takes to make dreams a reality on Broadway
BY CHRISTY HINKO
The puppeteer, a person who manipulated an inanimate object, giving the illusion that the puppet is very much alive, is full of creativity and expression. Blvd. had a chance to speak with Finn Caldwell, the puppet designer and movement director for the upcoming screenplay adaptation of Life of Pi on Broadway on March 12.
Puppets come in many shapes, sizes and
forms like as a human or legendary creature. In this case, Caldwell, his co-creator Nick Barnes and a team of a couple dozen people, are charging with bringing the show to life with their interpretation of Richard Parker, the real-to-size Bengal tiger that shares the stage with the human character, Pi.
The Process “Me and Nick, together, we design and build the prototypes,” Caldwell says. “From that prototype, we go into a research and development
phase with performers. In this case, we made a tiger prototype, just to see if tigers work.”
Caldwell and Barnes respond to and adjust their design based on how the actors are able to move and manipulate the test puppet.
“We do a more substantial design that goes into CAD [2D and 3D computer-aided design software],” Caldwell says. “The designs are realized by a team of 10 to 20 designers that Nick manages.”
The Puppets “One of the first parameters that we take into consideration is weight,” Caldwell says. “The tiger puppet is huge and is the size of a tiger, but it obviously cannot weigh what a real tiger weighs.”
He adds, “We came to the decision that we wanted it to look like driftwood, flotsam and jetsam from the sea, reclaimed sea salvaged wood, and that obviously would be incredibly heavy, so we needed to find a material that allowed us to make it look like
it had bulk and muscle and that it had more weight than it actually did.”
Caldwell said that to create Richard Parker, they ended up using Plastazote, a modern kind of foam plastic. The internal structure of the tiger puppet is made from wood and bungee, allowing the tiger skeleton to move in an organic way.
What Inspires You
Caldwell began his career as a performer. His first show was in national tour of War Horse from London. He continued with the show in the West End, New York, Australia, New Zealand and also in Denmark. War Horse wasn’t mine, I was just a performer and the director of puppetry,” Caldwell says. “That is when I started building my own puppets.” Live-scale animals have become his specialty. His first puppet, ambitiously, was a lifesized elephant.
REALIZING THE CREATION
“I read the story and I think ‘what image is coming into my mind as I read this and how does this image further the story. how does this image inform that audience of what’s happening here’,” Caldwell says.
“There is a part in the show where the boy realizes that he has no choice but to make a go of not fighting the tiger but teaching it to stay in one half of the boat. so that is a tough physical sequence.
“We might [instruct] it as ‘tiger gets in the boat. tiger advances toward the boy. boy see PUPPETEERS on page 10B
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 4B
LIFE OF PI from page 3B
The puppets are the main attraction.
form dolls.
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 5B 237549 M Irene (Renee) Rallis Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker O 516.944.2583 | M 516.241.9848 irene.rallis@elliman.com Exceptional Expertise, Extraordinary As the real estate market continues to evolve, it is crucial to have an experienced real estate professional on your side. With my extensive background as a realtor, accountant, and a orney, I will prepare a comprehensive, strategydriven plan for promoting your property. Allow my innovative marketing expertise to tell the unique story of your home and present it in the best light possible. 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401. ©2023 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. *AT DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE Resu s Pinnacle Award Winner Top 4% of Agents Company-Wide #1 Manhasset Agent #3 Long Island Agent by Volume**
VERSE
MAGENTAVERSE
Viva Magenta is Pantone’s Color of the Year 2023
Pantone’s Color of the Year, Viva Magenta 18-1750, vibrates with vim and vigor. It is a shade rooted in nature descending from the red family and expressive of a new signal of strength. Viva Magenta is brave and fearless, and a pulsating color whose exuberance promotes a joyous and optimistic celebration, writing a new narrative.
This year’s Color of the Year is powerful and empowering. It is a new animated red that revels in pure joy, encouraging experimentation and self-expression without restraint, an electrifying, and a boundaryless shade that is manifesting as a stand-out statement.
Viva Magenta welcomes anyone and everyone with the same verve for life and rebellious spirit. It is a color that is audacious, full of wit and inclusive of all.
“In this age of technology, we look to draw inspiration from nature and what is real.
Viva Magenta descends from the red family, and is inspired by the red of cochineal, one of the most precious dyes belonging to the natural dye family as well as one of the strongest and brightest the world has known,” Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of Pantone Color Institute says.
“Rooted in the primordial, Viva Magenta reconnects us to original matter. Invoking the forces of nature, Viva Magenta galvanizes our spirit, helping us to build our inner strength.”
The Meaning Behind Viva Magenta
As we balance our digital and physical lives, we continue to grow our appreciation for the natural world. The Color of the Year 2023 acknowledges our gravitational pull towards natural colors as movements swell around climate change, sustainability, and land protection.
In this year’s Color of the Year selection process, Pantone observed a heightened appreciation and awareness of nature represented by countless lifestyle trends. We’re incorporating more living things into our homes, such as plants, florals, living walls, and restorative outdoor spaces. We’re finding newfound enjoyment in travel, sports, and outdoor recreation after pausing these activities during the pandemic. We’re more careful to protect our bodies as a result of the public health crises—we look to apply and ingest trusted, life-giving ingredients. All of these lifestyle trends speak to the heartiness of natural forces.
Viva Magenta’s organic origins hail from the cochineal beetle. This insect produces carmine dye, one of the most precious, strongest, and brightest of the natural dye family. The red tone of Viva Magenta connects us to original matter, imbibing us with a primordial signal of strength.
The Color of the Year 2023 merges the richness, warmth, and strength of natural matters with the rich, open horizons of the digital world. The result is a shade of red that expands our horizons of authenticity. The metaverse creates new opportunities for us to express ourselves, and the raw fortitude of Viva Magenta inspires us to do so with confidence and bravery.
Color Psychology Reds are power colors that celebrate life. As a bright, crimson red, Viva Magenta balances boldness with a feeling of fun. This dynamic mix exudes rebellion, but not at the expense of softness. It embodies an expression of fierce grace, inspiring us to show up with confidence and humanity. The digital space has accelerated globalization, and as a result, we are more deeply connected to each other than ever before. We can never fully understand what lies beneath the surface of the friends and strangers we meet, but we can always work to deepen our empathy. The Color of the Year 2023 speaks to our desire to take on new challenges and try the unconventional while meeting others with compassion.
What distinguishes this year’s Color of the Year from last year’s—Very Peri, which also married the technical with nature—is Viva Magenta’s ability to answer our collective need for strength.
Viva Magenta offers us the assurance and motivation we
need to weather long-term disruptive events. Three years deep into a pandemic, facing a war, an unstable economy, social unrest, supply chain breakdowns, and mounting climate change, we need to heal. And still, we need to find the motivation to continue. Here, Viva Magenta cloaks us in both power and grace, and sends us out into the world with the verve we’ve yearned for.
Wearing Viva Magenta
Feeling powerful? Wear the Color of the Year as a full-on statement. Need to wake up a quieter outfit? Viva Magenta works
radiantly as an accessory—pair it with pale grays, blues, or pastels. Want to jump on the monochromatic trend? Try it with other pinks and command the room. Because Viva Magenta is a red that strikes a balance between warm and cool, it’s not too harsh for the body. Instead, it brings a fun, celebratory element. In the beauty industry, Pantone sees the Color of the Year worn in hair, especially on tips, a bold look that can transform hair into an accessory. Viva
Magenta also shines on lips, cheeks, and nails. This versatile shade is universally flattering across ages, genders, and skin tones.
Home and Interiors
Daring designers can harness the full power of the Color of the Year as a velvet couch or lacquered wall. Those who desire a more neutral home can use it as a pop of color. As a sculptural Murano glass lighting fixture or striking ikebana floral arrangement punctuating an all-neutral dining room, or a glowing abstract canvas or NFT projection in a white entryway, Viva Magenta packs a lot of drama in a small dose.
Graphic Design Today’s consumers spend large
portions of their days looking at a screen where the visuals tend towards pale and neutral. Designers looking for a color that cuts through this space will find the Color of the Year 2023 a captivating solution. A brand using Viva Magenta expresses that it’s fearless, engaging, and that looks at the world unconventionally to bring about new solutions.
Packaging and Plastics
Brands wanting to appear animated and passionate can use Viva Magenta to elicit a strong consumer reaction. Because reds are advancing colors, they draw the eye and muscle out the colors surrounding them. Whether consumers are scrolling on their phones or browsing the aisles, tapping into the Color of the Year 2023 will ensure you stand out.
—Pantone Color Institute
As an edgy designer, I am excited to embrace Pantone’s 2023 color of the year—Viva Magenta. Vivacious, daring and delicious modestly describes this year’s winner. It’s the world’s way of expressing “I am ready for some fun!”. So, move over never-ending neutrals, and make way for stimulating spaces. Derived from the primary color red, Viva Magenta is comprised of various hues within a series of several palettes. What can we do with this mood-elevating shade? With Viva Magenta, the possibilities are endless. If you are like me and favor a analogous color scheme, you would love to pair this sexy shade with bright pink tones or a deep hue of maroon. You can also go with a monochromatic scheme—using various tints and shades of the main color—Viva Magenta. And, if you are really daring, a complementary color scheme will create drama and excitement in any space. Whatever, whenever, however, Viva Magenta will effortlessly bring happiness to the soul.
—Regina Semeraro, RDIQC Certified, interior designer with Safavieh Home Furnishing in Manhasset
If you have a more neutral home, consider decorating with a pop of color. (Safavieh Home Furnishings)
Promote compassion and cooperation with Viva Magenta, Pantone’s 2023 Color of the Year. The color magenta is a color of joyfulness, satisfaction and gratitude. Magenta has grown in popularity as a color signifying high energy with universal harmony and emotional balance. This hybrid hue contains the passion and power of red, restrained by the quiet energy of violet. Color shy? Take a step outside your comfort zone and apply Viva Magenta to the walls of a fun powder room, a cozy velvet accent chair or some throw pillows. Viva Magenta pairs well with different shades and variations of blues, greens, and browns.
—Kristina Codi, interior designer with Safavieh Home Furnishing in Manhasset
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 6B WELCOME TO THE
Red is a power color.
Because the transform hair
Magenta
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Letter from the Publisher backs off. Boy swings the oar at tiger’ but how do you do this, how do you swing the oar? Is it with terror? And how does the tiger jump at the boy. is that jump full of trepidation? Is it full of rage? Is he trying to have fun with the boy,” Caldwell says.
Welcome to blvd.
Iwas recently reminded of how far we have come at Anton Media Group in the publishing industry when we received an historic advertisement from Christy Orquera, the local history custodian and reference librarian at Great Neck Library. It was a phone book listing for Griscom-Van Alen Publications, Inc. in 1937, the original owners of several of Anton’s current titles and coverage areas. Anton Media Group has survived several threats to the death of print, the pandemic, recessions and other economic obstacles.
We have taken the lit torch of many titles over the century and have continued to bring quality hyperlocal news and publications, like blvd. and Long Island Weekly, to not only the residents of Nassau County, but to the masses across Long Island, throughout the boroughs and across the tristate region.
I am pleased to present our newest edition of blvd. to you.
In the first 2023 edition of blvd., our special sections managing editor, Christy Hinko, speaks exclusively with Finn Caldwell, the puppetry director for Life of Pi, the Broadway adaptation of Yann Martel’s bestselling novel by the same name. Caldwell shares what it takes to make this sensational screenplay come to life. Also, a bit of nostalgia, check out some historic puppetry favorites in showbiz through the decades. Need a pop of color in your life? Check out this year’s 2023 Pantone Color of the Year, the energizing Viva Magenta. Interior designers Kristina and Regina at Safavieh Home Furnishings share their interpretation of this year’s vivid hue.
Notable railroad historian and author David Morrison has recently published a fitting book in honor of North Shore history, of the Arcadia Publishing local history series, Long Island Rail Road—The Port Washington Branch. Travel through time as the railroad makes its way to Long Island, through Great Neck, Manhasset, Port Washington.
Now is a great time to freshen up your racquet sports fashion wardrobe. The owners and stylists at the new Manhasset sports store, 40 Love Lifestyle, share some of their newest arrivals and favorites for the upcoming court season.
Anton Media Group Managing Editor Amanda Olsen sweetens the blvd. pot with a business feature of another North Shore store, HoneyGramz in Great Neck. Check out what all the buzz is about.
South Shore photographer Tricia Messeroux has been gaining notoriety and traction for the past decade with her wildly popular photography series and coffee table books, a nod to historic heroes by way of child models. Her images will transport you back to an awe-inspiring moment in history.
Another one-two punch for championing the success of modern women, Suzy Levian, shares her experience with blvd. as the first woman in a centuries-old jewelry powerhouse family, to launch her own line of diamonds and dazzle. We talk exclusively to her about what it takes to achieve success and live your life through your passion.
Happy reading. Angela Susan Anton
the care and the love for each other and the desire to support each other.”
It takes weeks from the conception, through design and production, to the final stage.
The Best Part
“The whole thing has been pretty incredible; just seeing the impossible things come to life was pretty amazing,” Caldwell says. “You can feel
Caldwell says that he knew this was going to be something special when the show previewed in Boston. The audience was on their feet in sheer delight and amazement.
“It’s about telling stories and it’s about how you live with stories in your life and what stories make you what you are,” Caldwell says. “It’s such a fundamental thing to think about; I want to say truth, but it’s not a truth, it’s more like a question. I am really very
proud to be part of something that is asking such a beautiful question; challenging people to think about the way they live their lives but at the same time delivering such an extraordinarily entertaining show.”
Caldwell is the co-artistic director of Gyre & Gimble, a theater company specializing in puppetry. His co-director/puppet designer credits include The Four Seasons: A Reimagining (Shakespeare’s Globe, Sam Wanamaker Playhouse); The Hartlepool Monkey (UK Tour), and The Elephantom (National Theatre/West End).
True-to-life puppets grace the stage.
comes to life on stage.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 10B
PUPPETEERS from page 4B
Martel’s Life of Pi
Pi battles Richard Parker.
Published by Anton Media Group KARL V. ANTON, JR. Publisher, 1984-2000 Angela Susan Anton Editor and Publisher Frank A. Virga President Iris Picone Vice President of Operations/CFO Shari Egnasko Director of Sales Administration Christy Hinko Managing Editor, Special Sections Robin Carter Director of Production Alex Nuñez Creative Director Cathy Bongiorno Art Director Joy DiDonato Director of Circulation Linda Baccoli Director of Business Administration Contributing Writers Amanda Olsen, Charles Riley Advertising Sales Ally Deane, Sal Massa, Maria Pruyn, Jeryl Sletteland 132 East Second Street, Phone: 516-747-8282 Mineola, NY 11501 Fax: 516-742-5867 advertising inquiries advertising@antonmediagroup.com circulation inquiries subscribe@antonmediagroup.com editorial submissions specialsections@antonmediagroup.com Anton Media Group © 2023 blvd. 237491 M The McCooey Olivieri Team Founding Agents of Long Island Members of the Luxury Division The McCooey Olivieri Team is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Compass. Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. Your trusted real estate advisors from Manhattan to Montauk. complimentary market analysis. For all your real estate needs, our team has you covered. TheMcCooeyOlivieriTeam@Compass.com M: 888.717.2676 | O: 516.408.2231 TheMcCooeyOlivieriTeam.com M NH ET DEN C TY E TH M TON BE CH
three private dining rooms that can accommodate personal and
Renowned steak house debuts third location on Long Island
BY BLVD. STAFF
family celebrations, business meetings and more. The space is elegantly appointed and thoughtfully designed to provide a pleasurable and comfortable dining experience for every guest. With more than 150 restaurants, Ruth’s Chris has been in business for more than 57 years.
“We’ve had the pleasure to serve the Long Island commu-
nity for many years, and are fortunate to make available our one-of-a-kind experience to even more guests in the area,” said William Nicholson, general manager for Ruth’s Chris in Melville. “Ruth’s Chris offers its guests an exclusive dining experience—whether they’re celebrating a special occasion or enjoying an intimate dinner—no matter the size, we look forward to welcoming
guests into our restaurant and showcasing the same topnotch service they’re accustomed to from the brand.”
As part of the pre-opening celebration, Ruth’s Chris hosted a special dinner with community leaders, business owners, and Ruth’s Chris executives, while raising money for the restaurant’s local charity partner and food bank, Island Harvest Food Bank.
“The Melville location will be our third in the area, representing an exciting expansion in the region that further entrenches us throughout Long Island’s fine dining scene,” said Cheryl Henry, president and chief executive officer of
Ruth’s Hospitality Group, Inc.
“We look forward to welcoming new guests, as well as those who are already familiar with and passionate about our brand.”
At Ruth’s Chris, the last bite is just as good as the first. The company’s perfected broiling method and seasoning techniques ensure each cut of USDA Prime beef arrives cooked to perfection and sizzling on a 500-degree plate— just the way Ruth’s Chris founder Ruth Fertel liked it.
Representing the highest-quality beef, these cuts are well marbled and hand-selected for thickness and tenderness. Ruth only served her
guests the finest, and that’s why Ruth’s Chris serves custom-aged USDA Prime beef.
While Ruth’s Chris’ USDA Prime steaks and their signature sizzle may have put the restaurant on the map, guests can also enjoy fresh seafood, scratch-made side dishes and desserts, craft cocktails and choice wines, served with the sort of hospitality that would make its namesake proud. Visit RuthsChris.com/restaurant-locations/melville/or call 631-371-3545 for reservations and more information.
Check out Long Island Weekly (www.longislandweekly.com/ruthschris-melville) to hear more about the dishes.
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 11B 237497 M The Dee Dee Brix Team Delivering premium service at all levels. The Dee Dee Bri Team is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Compass, a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. Dee Dee Brix Principal, The Dee Dee Brix Team Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker M: 516.551.5241 | O: 516.500.8271 deedeebrix@compass.com | deedeebrix.com Making dreams come true for buyers and sellers in the North Shore area for over 28 years. Scan here to learn more about our team GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 11B Ruth’s Chris Steak House OPENS NEW LOCATION
Ruth’s Chris Steak House, famous for its unmatched dining experience and steaks served on 500-degree sizzling plates, announced its newest location in Melville, which opened for business just a few short months ago.
The new Ruth’s Chris restaurant is located at 881 Walt Whitman Rd., bringing an unmatched dining experience to the area in its new 10,684-square-foot restaurant. The new space features a main dining room, a luxurious bar with ample seating and a variety of high tops as well as
The desserts are delectable. (Photos by Christy Hinko) Ruth’s Chris’s steak, cooked to order. Add a lobster tail to your order. 237497 M The Dee Dee
Team Delivering premium service at all levels. The Dee Dee Bri Team is a team of real estate agents affiliated with Compass, a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. Dee Dee Brix Principal, The Dee Dee Brix Team Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker M: 516.551.5241 | O: 516.500.8271 deedeebrix@compass.com | deedeebrix.com Making dreams come true for buyers and sellers in the North Shore area for over 28 years. Scan here to learn more about our team
Brix
Chugging Right Along
Railway historian pens new book about Gold Coast train line
BY CHRISTY HINKO
The Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) is the oldest railroad in the country still operating under its original name. It is the busiest railroad in North America, with 90 million annual riders on 735 trains covering 11 different branches.
Railway historian David D. Morrison recently penned his latest historical recount, Long Island Rail Road: Port Washington Branch, with Arcadia Publishing, renowned for its book series about local history and local interests.
“This history topic is important to Long Island because the Port Washington Branch is the third busiest branch on the LIRR, carrying 14 million riders annually,” Morrison says. “The Port Jefferson Branch carries 19 million and the Babylon Branch 18 million.”
Port Washington Branch trains converge with the main line just east of Woodside Station, in Queens.
“The Port Washington Branch is the only one of the 11 branches that does not go through Jamaica,” Morrison says.
The branch has been electrified since 1913 and is double-track to a point just east of
Great Neck Station.
The highest bridge on the Port Washington Branch is the Manhasset Viaduct, which goes over Manhasset Bay.
“Constructed in 1898, the viaduct allowed trains to run east of Great Neck, over the bay, on into the village of Port Washington,” Morrison says.
The branch has serviced the 1939 New York World’s Fair and the 1964 New York World’s Fair as well as the stadium of the New York Mets baseball team. The Whitestone Branch, which was abandoned in 1932, diverted from the Port Washington Branch at a point a bit east of the current Mets–Willets Point station.
“Part of the Cross Island Parkway is on land that used to be part of the Whitestone Branch,” Morrison notes.
Morrison is a retired branch line manager and railroad historian.
“I’ve written books on the main line out to Ronkonkoma/Greenport, and other branches including Oyster Bay, Port Jefferson, Babylon and Montauk,” Morrison says. “Thus, it was time to do a book on the Port Washington Branch.”
He says this book is especially significant this year because the 125th anniversary of LIRR service to Port Washington occurs on June 23, 2023.
“I developed a love of trains since I was a child when my family had a summer bungalow at Croton Point Park. The bungalow colony was on a high hill overlooking the New York Central Railroad shop facility at Harmon,” Morrison recalls. “As a child, I would sit on the sandbank and watch the steam locomotives being turned on the roundhouse
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 12B
The rail line map, 1929 237486 M
Liza Bendett | Melanie Cogan | Jessi Epstein
Shawn Rogol | Denise Bass | Robyn Brattner
Rocco Caprarella | Barrie Krefetz | Vicki Olman*
Dori Prussian | Lindsey Rosen | Abby Smith
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turntable and the locomotive tenders being filled with coal at the huge coal dock. My interest in LIRR history began when I got a job in the Labor Relations Department in 1973. I’ve been researching and studying LIRR history since then.
Morrison is the author of nine other books in Arcadia’s Images of Rail series, he is a major contributor to the website Trains Are Fun (www. trainsarefun.com).
“There is always something to learn in doing historical research,” Morrison says. Arcadia’s mission is to connect people with their past, with their communities and with one another. Arcadia is the home of unique hyper-local histories of countless hometowns across all fifty states, as well as books on local food, beer and wine; and stories of famous hauntings, all one American city and town at a time. Arcadia has an extraordinary catalog of 17,000 local titles and publishes 500 new books each year. Arcadia counts among its imprints Pelican Publishing, a 100-year-old independent press based in New Orleans, and the critically acclaimed Wildsam Publishing, publisher of highly curated travel literature and guides. Long Island Rail Road: Port Washington Branch by Morrison, with a foreword from Hank Boerner, is available where Arcadia series books are sold and on Amazon ($23.99).
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 13B
(Historical photos courtesy of the Port Washington Public Library and the Cow Neck Peninsula Historical Society)
Author David D. Morrison
The first train rolls into the station.
237500 M Shelley Scotto, SRES Founding Agent of Compass North Shore Licensed Associate RE Broker shelley.scotto@compass.com shelleyscotto.com M: 516.816.7428 | O: 516.517.4751 1468 Northern Blvd, Manhasset, NY 11030 Always dedicated to you! I take the stress out of buying or selling your home. • Your local senior expert • 30+ years experience in LI real estate personal touch from start to finish
Manhasset Viaduct Bridge
Racquet Sport Fashion
CHRISTY HINKO
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 14B
BY
Racquet sports are taking the world by storm and there is a movement to dress smartly while working up a sweat. Tennis, racquetball, badminton or the combination of all three, pickleball, are gaining popularity in the fitness world and so is the market to outfit the women who participate in these sports. In addition to racquet sports, golfers tend to outfit similarly. 40 Love Lifestyle, a new specialty shop in Manhasset, caters to this fitness lifestyle and offers some of this season’s racquet-sport fashion trends to Boulevard readers. 40 Love Lifestyle is located at 439 Plandome Rd., in Manhasset. Visit www.40lovelifestyle.com to learn more.
sporty while being active and living your best life Coordinate your apparel with your equipment. 40 Love Lifestyle has all of the gear to get you set for play. Proper footwear on the court is key. Sporty skirts and skorts help you move on the court. Sports attire should be breathable and comfortable. Make a statement while in play.
Look
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 15B 237566 M 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401 ©2023 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. Maggie Keats Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker O 516.944.2879 | M 516.449.7598 | mkeats@elliman.com | maggiekeats.elliman.com No one sells Long Island’s North Shore like
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 237508 M Let the #1 real estate brokerage guide you home on Long Island.* Manhasset | Huntington Garden City | Locust Valley | Roslyn Syosset | Oceanside | Woodbury Rockville Centre | Sea Cliff Carle Place | Smithtown | Southold compass.com Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by equal housing opportunity laws. 516.517.4751. *Source: 2021 Closed Sales Volume, U.S., RealTrends 500
BY AMANDA OLSEN
Ruth Harrigan’s path to queen bee has been far from conventional. When her daughter was nine years old, she asked for a dog for her birthday. Instead of a furry companion, however, the family opted for chicks. While the chicks were certainly adorable, they had no idea what they were doing, so Harrigan started researching how to care for them.
Local Flavors Sure Can Bee Sweet In Great Neck
Beekeeper opens shop for regional honey, gifts
‘‘And when I was doing research on how to raise chickens, I stumbled upon a petition that said, please help us legalize beekeeping in New York City… I thought, hey, you know, that’s a good cause, so I signed it. The first and only petition I ever signed online.” Harrigan says.
The earliest evidence of human beings making use of honey is a painting of a woman
gathering honey from a wild hive. This painting is found on a cave wall in Spain and is estimated to be between seven thousand and 15,000 years old. Ancient Egyptians routinely used honey and bees, and hives have been found depicted in their hieroglyphics. People throughout the ancient world used honey for medicinal purposes. Hippocrates used honey-based cures for a multitude of ailments, and Persian
physician Al-Razi advised using honey and vinegar as a remedy for skin conditions and gum disease. Honey is still used for dressing wounds and treating coughs and sore throats.
After signing the petition, Harrigan’s curiosity led to a beekeeping course in Manhattan. “I went and took a crash course in beekeeping and I immediately fell in love. When the course ended in March 2010 beekeeping became legal
at the same time, it was great, the timing was perfect. We started with two hives in the neighborhood.”
The hives produced a small amount of honey, but the joy Harrigan got from them more than made up for the effort. All was well, until she was laid off from her Wall Street career in finance after more than 20 years. At the same time, her
see HONEYGRAMZ on page 4C
AN ANTON MEDIA GROUP LUXURY PUBLICATION blvd. Lifestyles FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023
Ruth Harrington of HoneyGramz (Photo by Alex Nuñez)
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 2C 237507 M
Westbury Arts is marking Black History Month with a unique photographic exhibit paying homage to Black leaders.
CHILDREN PAYING HOMAGE TO HISTORIC BLACK LEADERS
BY CHRISTY HINKO
Alt hough Messeroux has produced many such pairings through her business Toddlewood, “Engineers of Equality” grew out of her need to make sense of the murder of George Floyd in 2020.
“2020 happened; the George Floyd situation happened, and Breonna Taylor; my family and I really got involved in peaceful protest,” Messeroux recalls. “I realized that it was time to really educate my youngest [child] about the real world because you always try to protect your children from being scared or being nervous or being different.”
But as a result of Messeroux’s instinct to protect, her daughter, who was nine or 10 at the time, could not understand what was really going on in the world.
adults,” Messeroux says. “I want them to know how to activate; that is the keyword in activism, to take action.”
Casting calls began for Toddlewood.
“I put it out there, thinking it was something that would be different and hoping there would be interest,” Messeroux says. “The response was astronomical. There were thousands and thousands of kids and parents, and when they were chosen, they fl ew to New York from all over; they fl ew in from Texas, Alabama, Georgia, all at their own expense, just to be a part of this.”
Messeroux recalls that the one shoot that she did travel for was to the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Alabama, the site of the Bloody Sunday confl ict in 1965, when police attacked Civil Rights demonstrators as they attempted to march to the state capital in Montgomery. The bridge was declared a National Historic Landmark in 2013.
the history and why she is much Parks; to it, way much more.”
“I had to reassure her that times have changed, but I didn’t want her to take things for granted; I needed her to understand the history and why she is what she is today,” Messeroux says. “The school that she’s in now, much like when I grew up, they don’t really delve into Black History in America. They teach that Black History Month is about Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks; but there is so much more to it, way much more.”
“I wanted to shoot it right on the bridge because it is such a historical site,” Messeroux says. “I wanted to make it as authentic as possible.”
Messeroux holds a degree in TV and fi lm production and is simultaneously in the process of shooting a “hysterical” scripted comedy.
wonderful way.
to use my platform to leaders...to take action
“I felt a sense of responsibility,” Messeroux says. “I decided to use my platform to acknowledge civil rights leaders...to take action and to be a positive
Messeroux says that she wants people to learn about the people who came before them, who afford them to now sit in the front of the bus.
“I always say that I was created to create,” Messeroux says. “Since I was a kid, I knew I had to do something with color and creativity; I couldn’t see myself behind a desk as a career and in high school I defi nitely knew that I wanted to do movies.”
Messeroux landed in an advertising career after college, doing commercials and campaigns.
time back when you are away from your children for so long; I needed to make a life change,” Messeroux says. “I taught myself photography.”
Messeroux says she knew it was time to create something that was truly her own.
The show, at Westbury Arts, 255 Schenck Ave., in Westbury, runs through Feb. 25.
The casting call for Messeroux’s projects opened again at the beginning of February. Toddlewood 2023 is looking for boys and girls age 6 – 11 for many projects such as Messeroux’s Toddlewood Red Carpet photo shoots, movie posters and other ideas.
“Using my artwork, my
“Using my artwork, my God-given skills, I want to be able to educate, inform and empower potentially future decision makers, these kids, as well as
“In advertising, we traveled so much and I was barely home,” Messeroux recalls. Her oldest child was three at the time and she knew she needed to make a career change.
“You cannot get that
“It was time to create something that also included my daughter,” Messeroux says. “She was my muse; she was my fi rst Toddlewood creation. I transformed her to look like Diana Ross.”
Following the media exposure from a feature about her work on the Today Show Messeroux says everything has taken off and has been a bit crazy, assumingly in a
Visit westburyarts.org for gallery hours. Visit toddlewood.com to see more of Messeroux’s work, to learn more about the next casting call and to purchase books and other merchandise.
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 3C
Messeroux and her team love working with child models.
BOOKS Child models y to New York from across the country to work with Messeroux. Photographing this historical moment could only be done properly at the actual bridge.
The show, Engineers of Equality, features historic photos of Black leaders such as Rosa Parks, Nelson Mandela and Harriet Tubman paired with contemporary photos, taken and designed by Long Islander Tricia Messeroux, in which children are attired and posed in emulation of the historical figure.
A tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
husband was going through grad school. “Then my husband said, ‘Well, why don’t you do something with the bees?’ I didn’t know what to do with the bees other than just tending to them and extracting a little bit of honey for ourselves. But I actually started a beauty line, which I still carry.”
Beauty products made from honey and beeswax have been around for thousands of years. Because honey is a humectant, it traps moisture next to the skin. It also contains calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, sodium and zinc, as well as antioxidants. It is also antibacterial.
Once she started seeing success with her beauty line, Harrigan then started selling her own honey.
“I was surprised at how interested people were in local honey that’s made in Douglaston. Every time I extracted it, I would go to local community markets and it would sell out very quickly.”
At this time, she was also teaching yoga to children. After one semester, two of her students gave her a gift. She wanted to do more than just give them a thank you note, so she started thinking about what she had to share with them. She wanted something unique. “I found these little bears and I said, I’m gonna go with my honey and give it to the girls with a cute label that said ‘thank you very much honey.’ That was my very first label. And I gave it to the girls and they absolutely adored them. So then I had all these bears. When someone’s birthday came, I put a label on it. ‘Happy birthday, honey.’ And when Christmas came, ‘Merry Christmas honey.’“ Thus, HoneyGramz was born. The business used to operate out of a small office with no retail space. When the pandemic hit, people were finding the office and knocking on the door to see if they could buy some honey. They were clamoring for a retail space to be able to browse the products in person. Harrigan came up with an ingenious solution. “So instead, we would roll out a little cart like a flight attendant. We’d bring it outside and then my customers would buy or pick it right from the little cart.”
Still, this wasn’t a permanent fix. HoneyGramz needed a home. “So when we were looking for larger space, there’s very few industrial spaces in Great Neck. There’s a lot of smaller retail spaces, but we do everything in house. We actually produce the honey, we bottle the honey, we package and we label we do everything right here on the premises. One day my husband was biking by and there’s a big for rent sign out here. He’s like ‘I think we found our space.’ I called the landlord right away.
We came here and once I saw it, I said I need warehouse space, which is downstairs. And the bonus was a little shop. …It used to be a sign shop, so I said ‘I needed a sign!”
In addition to her own honey and beauty line, Harrigan’s shop sells single source varieties from all over the United States. These honeys all have different flavor profiles depending on what kind of flowers the bees were visiting. Bees are often brought to pollinate farm fields, creating honey from a single source of nectar. For example, if the bees are working a blueberry farm, “all the nectar that’s collected during that pollination period would be from blueberry blossoms. The blueberry honey is actually honey like that’s made from the nectar of those flowers. Not a flavor. I always tell my customers if you actually taste blueberry, like really strong blueberry it’s been added because pure blueberry honey is quite delicate. You have a really little hint of it at the very end. If you take a small taste of each different variety of honey, then you really taste the essence of the difference in the location and the source of the honey, so it’s almost like wine tasting.”
HoneyGramz continues to grow and address the needs of its customers. “This is my ninth year in business. About three years ago, a customer asked us if we had any ginger honey. I’ve never even heard of it. So we did a little research after second and third customer asked for the same thing. That’s an infused line because we only have a pure honey. But this is pure honey with that added flavor to it. But we use all organic ingredients for we call it the superfood line. We use turmeric and all these herbs that’s been known for centuries that are good for your health: turmeric, lemon, elderberry, cinnamon. Since then we’ve added on and now we have 14 different flavors.”
Harrigan took the additional step to have these infusions O/U certified so that more of her customers are able to enjoy them. “Pure honey is kosher; It doesn’t need to be certified. But once we add that extra ingredient (to create the infusion it is no longer kosher). People were dying to taste it but they couldn’t.
So now that we are certified, everyone just came in and…they love the ginger, they love the turmeric, they love the elderberry. So the community really embraced us and we have regular customers here.”
HoneyGramz is located at 345 Great Neck Rd., in Great Neck, just north of Northern Boulevard. The shop is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visit www.HoneyGramz.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 4C
The interior of the store has a bright, welcoming feel. (Photo by
HONEYGRAMZ from page 1C
HoneyGramz)
With avors like matcha and ginger, infused honey is a delicious, spreadable treat.
237594 R
(Photo by Alex Nuñez)
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 5C
Breaking The Diamond Ceiling
14k Gold & White and Blue Diamond Engagement Ring
BY BLVD. STAFF
The jewelry industry is known for its multi-generational ties, where traditions and legacies are passed down to children and grandchildren. For centuries the trade was male dominated, with this past century being one of glass ceilings being broken. Founding the first woman-owned jewelry business in the family, Suzy Levian is on a mission to empower, encouraging women to love themselves. Each of her pieces incorporates a hidden diamond within the band—the Suzy Levian signature secret diamond.
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Family Ties
“Growing up on Long Island gave me the opportunity to meet many people from different backgrounds. This opened my perspective and understanding of the world, and the connections I made helped me excel from my personal life to my business endeavors,” Levian says. “I grew up on Long Island, where I married my husband, and raised my six beautiful children. I opened my business there to be able to run back home or go to school plays for them. I love my work as a designer, but wanted to ensure I was close enough to home to also be there for them.”
Creative powerhouse and business owner, Levian inherited her passion for design from her father. She is the youngest of the five children of A. Levian, the founder of Levian Corp.
“I learned the art of jewelry design from my father, who learned from his father. I was only five years old when I knew I loved what my father did and wanted to follow in his footsteps,” Levian says. “At my father’s company, I would come up with unique color combinations that were used in some of his jewelry.”
After working in the family business with her brothers, Levian felt the need for greater creative expression, forging her own path as the first woman in her family to create a branded line.
Suzy Levian is proud of her family’s long history in the jewelry business.
Levian opened her own business, with the goal of empowering women through beautiful, affordable jewelry designs for all.
“I encourage my kids to follow their dreams, whatever they may be,” Levian says. “Most of them became teachers, and a few did come to work with me to learn the trade and how to utilize our tools to create their own jewelry line.”
MANHASSET Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com
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The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable provides unrivaled ergonomic support to experience significantly higher quality sleep. combines the best that a traditional DUX with the added advantage of adjustability. customize each side of the bed for optimal comfort with our patented Pascal system of cassettes, but now with a simple press of a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping from your partner. your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, a better, healthier way of living. THE
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FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 6C Better, Kinder Care Every Step of the Way Services Home Health Aide Personal Care Aide Live-in Home Care Home Infusion Skilled Nursing Rehabilitation Private Duty Nursing We provide the right type of compassionate home care that keeps our patients safely at home in their community. Providing quality private pay home care Visit our website: www.alwayscompassionate.com 866-212-4585 238443 M 6C From 500-year-old legacy of jewelers, Suzy Levian is first woman in family to start business
THE DUX ® BED FROM SWEDEN THE DUX ® DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE A LITTLE LIFT Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep. The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner. Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living. THE BED YOUR BACK HAS BEEN ACHING FOR In a DUX bed, the spine rests in a natural position. DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com FROM SWEDEN ® DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE LIFT
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Inspiration
“Love is my biggest inspiration,” Levian says. “I am also inspired by my travels around the world and views of nature.”
Beginning with colored pencil sketches, Levian draws her own original concepts, with every design in the collection drawn by Suzy.
“My first passion is a love for inspiring and empowering others, Levian says. “I am an advocate for loving oneself and love others—which is something I creatively express in every piece of jewelry.”
Renowned for her gem intensive compositions, her work is recognized for its boldness and spirited symbolism.
“The Secret Diamond sets my brand apart. The extra diamond, hidden for the wearer’s eyes only, gives a fresh meaning to my jewelry that is not found in any other jewelry brand’s collection. It reminds every woman that there is a secret diamond hidden within themselves. A literal reminder of one’s strength and power hidden in plain sight, everything changed for me as soon as I let my inner secret diamond shine through.”
Her signature collections are renowned for their breathtaking juxtaposition of gemstones and curves. Passionate and energiz-
ing, Levian creates provocative, elegant accessories catering to women invigorating their inner power.
“Everything changed for me as soon as I let my inner secret diamond shine through,” Levian says. “The secret diamond is a reminder to face the world with courage and determination, not accepting the limitations of history. It sparkles for each woman as she makes history.”
Initially debuting with high-end, one-of-a-kind jewelry, Levian has expanded her collections in price ranges affordable to all women. Her success pushes the boundaries beyond jewelry, and she has since launched collections of handbags, scarves, sunglasses, and home décor.
Levian continues to honor the family name by incorporating longstanding style and elements of the Levian brand into her own work.
“My creations relate to the Levian family brand by experience and technique taught by our forefathers,” Levian says. “Some styles may seem similar, as they come from those with the same background of design and we travel together often, seeing the same gorgeous views of nature.”
Charity
A commitment to philanthropy is a cornerstone of the Suzy Levian brand. Donating more than 10 percent of the proceeds from each piece to various charities and organizations, Levian is dedicated to partnering with those who give back. She empowers women to buy for themselves, and for each other, celebrating the milestones of life. Visit www.suzyLevian.com to view the Suzy Levian line of jewelry. —Christy Hinko contributed to this article.
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 7C 237964 M (Proceed to back of the building for Safavieh Outlet entrance & parking) *Sale ends 2/26/23. Cannot be combined with any other offer, not valid on all brands. Offer good on new purchases only. LONG ISLAND’S PREMIER DESTINATION FOR INTERIOR DESIGN HUNDREDS OF STYLES OF FURNITURE & RUGS AVAILABLE IN STOCK • PREMIER WHITE GLOVE DELIVERY FLAGSHIP: GLEN COVE 24 SCHOOL ST 516.365.3800 MANHASSET 1649 NORTHERN BLVD., 516.627.4444 FARMINGDALE 110 BROADHOLLOW RD (RTE 110) 631.777.5678 OUTLET: PORT WASHINGTON 2 CHANNEL DR., 516.945.3868 www.safaviehhome.com • 877.919.1010 AMERICAN LEATHER • BAKER • BERNHARDT • BROWN JORDAN • CALLIGARIS • CANADEL • CARACOLE • CENTURY • DINEC • E.J. VICTOR • HANCOCK & MOORE • HICKORY CHAIR • HOOKER • LEE • LEXINGTON • MARGE CARSON MAITLAND SMITH • RALPH LAUREN • ROWE • SAFAVIEH COUTURE • SHIFMAN MATTRESSES • THAYER COGGIN • THEODORE ALEXANDER • VANGUARD AND BEST OF ALL SAFAVIEH’S WORLD FAMOUS RUGS! PRESIDENTS’ DAY EVENT UP TO 50% OFF LIMITED TIME! SALE ENDS 2/26/23
Nature inspires many of Levian’s pieces. Levian’s creations are made with love. The designs are elegant. Color and beauty are present. There is a secret diamond in each piece.
Natural
237964 M back of the building for Outlet entrance & *Sale ends 2/26/23. be combined with any other offer, not valid on brands. Offer good on new purchases LONG ISLAND’S PREMIER DESTINATION FOR INTERIOR HUNDREDS OF STYLES OF FURNITURE & RUGS AVAILABLE PREMIER WHITE GLOVE GLEN COVE 24 SCHOOL ST MANHASSET NORTHERN 516.627.4444 FARMINGDALE BROADHOLLOW RD (RTE 631.777.5678 OUTLET: WASHINGTON CHANNEL www.safaviehhome.com 877.919.1010 AMERICAN LEATHER BERNHARDT • BROWN JORDAN • CANADEL DINEC • E.J. & MOORE HICKORY • HOOKER • LEE LEXINGTON • MARGE CARSON LAUREN MATTRESSES • THAYER THEODORE ALEXANDER • VANGUARD BEST ALL RUGS! PRESIDENTS’ DAY EVENT UP TO LIMITED SALE ENDS 2/26/23
Sterling
Silver Sapphire & Diamond Accent Pave Cluster Earrings
Blue Sapphire and Diamond Accent Double Row Band
“This time of year is all about camellias at Planting Fields and people drive from afar to see the beauty of their blooms,”
Gina J. Wouters, president and CEO of Planting Fields Foundation says. “The festival is just one way we highlight the space with music, tours, etc.”
William Roberson Coe and his second wife, Mai Coe’s passion for horticulture led them to
THE CAMELLIAS ARE
IN BLOOM
Planting Fields 2023 Camellia Festival is underway
BY BLVD. STAFF
Planting Fields is a magnificent Gold Coast estate from the 1920s, which survives today as a statement about art, architecture, and landscape. On Feb. 18
Planting Fields Foundation kicked off its annual Camellia Festival, taking place in the stunning Camellia House, which was largely the vision of the Olmsted Brothers in 1918 to serve as a show palace for the Coe family’s prized camellia collection.
create many marvelous features in Planting Fields, most notably, the Camellia House. However, when W.R. purchased the original collection over a century ago, he soon realized the Long Island climate was not ideal for these non-hardy plants to survive. To protect his collection, he decided to have a dedicated greenhouse built. Architect Guy Lowell and Andrew Sargent designed the first iteration of the Camellia
House in 1917, The construction of the Camellia House was completed by the specialist greenhouse firm William H. Lutton. In 1918 the Olmsted Brothers firm was hired to design various aspects of the Planting Fields landscape. At this time the Camellia House was expanded to become a show place for the fine camellias.
To date, some of the original Coe plants are still thriving
amongst the dazzling spectacle of the largest camellia collection in the northeast. In late winter, particularly February, the 200plus camellias are in full flower with thousands of blossoms displaying a variety of camellias with vibrant colors of pink, red, white and yellow. Visit anytime through early March. The park is open every day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Dec. 25). Parking fees are
collected daily from May 1 to Labor Day, on weekends and holidays from Labor Day to Nov. 21, and in April on weekends and holidays only. Fee is $8 per car, $75 per bus ($35 for nonprofits).
Coe Hall is open for guided tours March through December, Wednesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Coe Hall is also open for
self-guided tours Saturday and Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. The greenhouses are open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. six days a week— closed on Tuesdays.
Planting Fields would like to thank Heritage Farm & Garden for generously sponsoring the Camellia Festival. Planting Fields Arboretum is located at 1395 Planting Fields Road in Oyster Bay. Visit www.plantingfields.org to learn more.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 8C
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Camellias are in bloom at Planting Fields.
TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF CLASSIC COCKTAILS
BY BLVD. STAFF
Ready-to-serve cocktails from William Grant & Sons, a fifth-generation Scottish family distiller, are the perfect gift to share or enjoy for yourself. Good cocktails are so much more than just a drink—they are an experience. But they are also often tricky to make, require skill, effort and specific ingredients. This is where the master distillers of William Grant & Sons come in.
The master blenders and distillers know their spirit the best; they know what complements the libation and how to produce the perfect serve.
Choose from the delicious Hendrick’s Gin Martini, the bold Glenfiddich Scotch Manhattan, the playful Reyka Rhubarb Cosmopolitan or the irreverent Monkey Shoulder Lazy Old Fashioned.
Hendrick’s Gin Martini
The Hendrick’s Gin Martini is a curiously crafted cocktail made even more unusual with notes of cucumber and rose. The unmistakable art of Hendrick’s Master Distiller Lesley Gracie—in collaboration with five world-class bars—the Hendrick’s Gin Martini is replete with undertones of floral, citrus and herbal curiosity.
“The martini, with its famously fervent followers, is the quintessential gin cocktail,” Ally Martin, Hendrick’s Global Brand Ambassador says. “Because of this, there is no better beverage to showcase Hendrick’s Gin.”
Glenfiddich Scotch Whisky Manhattan
In the Glenfiddich Scotch Manhattan, bright and balanced Single
FROM SWEDEN
THE DUX ® BED FROM SWEDEN
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THE DUX ® BED FROM SWEDEN
THE DUX ® DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE A LITTLE LIFT
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Malt Whisky meets sweet vermouth and sharp Granny Gordon’s bitters, a bespoke bitters recipe that was created by a matriarch of our founder’s family, for a bold yet delicate cocktail.
“The Manhattan is an iconic cocktail; as recognizable the world over as the city that gave it its name,” Struan Grant Ralph, Glenfiddich Global Brand Ambassador says. “Glenfiddich has reached a similarly iconic status around the world and yet like the Manhattan can be created with only three simple ingredients. For this Glenfiddich Manhattan drink I wanted to showcase the simplicity of the serve itself (whisky, vermouth, bitters) and how these combine to create something greater and more delicious than the sum of their parts.”
Reyka Rhubarb Cosmopolitan
Plummet into adventurous Icelandic depths with this playful Rhubarb Cosmo drink. The glacial Reyka vodka harnesses the natural rhubarb whilst mingling with tangy blood orange and zingy fresh lime to create an eruption of Icelandic purity. A classic reimagined by the land of fire & ice.
“Rhubarb is massive in Iceland. Literally and figuratively. Due
to their long dark winters, rhubarb has a much longer growing season than is the norm. This results in humongous rhubarb crops which are used in many different ways by the resourceful Icelanders who have learned to adapt to life on such a harsh but beautiful island,” Fabiano Latham, Reyka UK Brand Ambassador says. “It’s also one of the rare cosmo ingredients to be able to stand up to Icelandic weather and even grow wild and so it was the natural and obvious ingredient for me to highlight. We always like to nod toward our Icelandic origins in our cocktails and Reyka Vodka is the perfect vehicle to carry these flavours through.”
Monkey Shoulder Lazy Old Fashioned
An Old Fashioned recipe should be no-nonsense. So what better malt for the job than one that’s made to mix. Monkey Shoulder’s rich, vibrant and smooth blend with bold, bespoke bitters and golden sugar is combined to give you the legendary Old Fashioned—without the legendary wait.
“The Old Fashioned mix is consistently rated as the most popular cocktail in the world and Monkey Shoulder was originally invented to be the perfect whisky make it with,” Joe Petch, Monkey Shoulder Global Brand Ambassador says. “Traditionally, however, an Old Fashioned takes a long time to make because it requires a lot of stirring, and really, who has time for a that?”
These batched cocktails are best when chilled at least two hours before serving.
Batch & Bottle sells $16.99 per 375ml bottle.
Visit www.batchandbottlecocktails.com to learn more or visit Drizly.com to buy online.
MANHASSET Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com
role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable provides unrivaled ergonomic support to experience significantly higher quality sleep. combines the best that a traditional DUX with the added advantage of adjustability. customize each side of the bed for optimal comfort with our patented Pascal system of cassettes, but now with a simple press of a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping from your partner. your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, a better, healthier way of living. THE BED YOUR
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability.
Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes,
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com
GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 9C
HAS BEEN ACHING FORSM In a DUX bed, the spine rests in a natural position.
BACK
but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner. Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living. THE BED YOUR BACK HAS BEEN ACHING FOR In a DUX bed, the spine rests in a natural position. DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com 238174 M GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING • BLVD • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 9C
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The Big Picture
Museum’s photography exhibition showcases masterworks of history and today
BY CHARLES RILEY
If you love photography, then you cannot afford to miss the blockbuster show at the Nassau County Museum of Art before it closes March 5. With major works on loan from top-tier collectors and galleries, it offers the whole range of the medium, from its very beginnings with painterly images of Manhattan in the 1890s by Edward Steichen and Alfred Stieglitz to the stars of today. Like the Wizard of Oz, the show starts with classic black-and-white early works and then explodes in hugescale color prints. Fans of photography love the show because the medium is accessible: anyone with a camera or smartphone has access to its creative and documentarian possibilities.
But this full-building exhibition features it at its apex, assembling the iconic works of master photographers from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and tracking the technological innovations that pushed the limits of their medium.
Beginning with an homage to canonical greats, including Ansel Adams, Berenice Abbott, and Man Ray, the intimate small-scale prints (most made by the artists) display the technical and compositional savvy that put photography on a par with painting. A stunning gallery of works by Lewis Hine, Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Edward Weston and Robert Capa (one of the eleven surviving shots from D Day, printed in 1944) many coming from the top private collections as well as the Magnum agency, remind us of the “Golden Age”
of photography history unfolded in front of their cameras and the vintage prints are among the most prized in the world. Among the highlights are two versions of Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother, considered the Mona Lisa of photography, and one is annotated by the artist with a short, typed caption she attached to its corner. Along with the
prints of Walker Evans, these are heartbreaking images of America during the Great Depression, examples of photography’s heroic role in shaping the nation’s public policies (Lange’s work pushed major federal reforms).
The exhibition bursts into massive color prints by Thomas Struth, Ahmet Ertug, Thomas Ruff, Candida Hofer, Gregory Crewdson, James Casebere and others who use large scale to draw the viewer into magnificent scientific and architectural spaces. A gallery featuring Bernd and Hilla Becher, the famous teachers of Candida Hofer, Struth and Ruff, offers precise portraits of industrial sites. A spectacular portrait by Lalla Essaydi explores the ways in which women are portrayed in the Muslim world. A heart-stopping installation by Christian Boltanski shares a gallery with a
huge, dream-like panorama by Roslyn resident Yongliang Yang that draws upon the classical Chinese literary source, Peach Blossom Spring. Celebrating the creative life, the exhibition also takes us into the studios of celebrated artists: Constantin Brancusi in a rare self-portrait, Roy Lichtenstein at work while Laurie Lambrecht quietly shoots, riveting portraits by Ernest Haas, Bernard Gotfryd, John Jonas Gruen, Hans Namuth, luminaries including Lee Krasner, Alexander Calder, Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol, Barnett Newman, Robert Rauschenberg, Francis Bacon and others.
Nassau County Museum of Art is located at 1 Museum Dr., in Roslyn. Visit www.nassaumuseum.org for details.
—Charles Riley is the director of the Nassau County Museum of Art in Roslyn.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 10C
Uffizi Firenze III by Candida Höfer
Working on Empire State Building, Signaling the Hookman by Lewis Wickes Hine
Farmer’s Kitchen, Hale County, Alabama by Walker Evans
Untitled, 1966 by Bill Cunningham
Harem #10, 2009 by Lalla Essaydi
MUSEUM
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The Next Move Is Yours
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • BLVD • GOLD COAST REAL ESTATE & LUXURY LIVING 237504 M Custom-Built Majestic Brick Estate Old Westbury | 136 I U Willets Road $7,980,000 | 8 BR, 8.5 BA | Web# 3456193 Joseph Scavo: O 516.629.2212 | M 516.359.2672 Modern Contemporary Manhasset | 4 Folie Court $2,868,000 | 6 BR, 5.5 BA | Web# 3455604 Helene Vlachos: O 516.627.2800 | M 516.641.2532 Custom Contemporary Mill Neck | 136 Roger Canoe Hollow Road $1,500,000 | 3 BR, 3.5 BA | Web# 3426667 Taryn Peel: O 516.759.0400 | M 516.567.8652 Stately and Pristine Old Westbury Estate Old Westbury | 27 Wheatley Road $3,999,000 | 6 BR, 6 BA, 2 HALF BA | Web# 3438976 Miles Korman: O 516.669.3600 | M 516.974.3619 Country Club Living at Its Finest Oyster Bay Cove | 16 Palatine Court $2,779,990 | 5 BR, 4.5 BA | Web# 3420067 Patricia Santella: O 516.759.0400 | M 516.659.8497 East Hills Country Estates East Hills | 130 Elm Drive $1,498,000 | 4 BR, 3 BA | Web# 3451073 Diane Andersen: O 516.883.5200 | M 516.695.2400 Grand Colonial Set on 2 Bucolic Acres Brookville | 14 Glenby Lane $3,988,000 | 6 BR, 7.5 BA | Web# 3437857 Angela Ruggeri: O 516.921.2262 | M 516.419.2770 Patricia Pascullo: O 516.921.2262 | M 516.287.4871 Exquisite Townhome Roslyn | 204 Grist Mill Circle $1,600,000 | 3 BR, 3 BA | Web# 3428743 Jill Berman: O 516.883.5200 | M 516.375.9101 Almost New Construction Plainview | 154 Roxton Road $1,388,000 | 5 BR, 3.5 BA | Web# 3456383 Linda Freedman: O 516.921.2262 | M 917.743.2724
Locust Valley O ce | 71 Forest Avenue | 516.759.0400 Manhasset O ce | 154 Plandome Road | 516.627.2800 Port Washington O ce | 475 Port Washington Boulevard | 516.883.5200 elliman.com 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401. © 2023 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 Roslyn O ce | 1528 Old Northern Boulevard | 516.621.3555 Sea Cli O ce | 263 Sea Cli Avenue | 516.669.3600 Syosset O ce | 277 Jericho Turnpike | 516.921.2262
HOMES
Recently Sold
This charming and sunny two bedroom home at 317 Wellington Road South in Garden City South sold on Dec. 16 for $625,000. It has been nicely updated and features a spacious foyer leading into the living room and dining area. It also has a beautiful, updated eat-in-kitchen with stainless steel appliances and generous pantry space. The home has hardwood floors throughout and one full bathroom. It occupies a 40’x100’ private yard with a paver stone patio. The home is located near shopping, schools and the railroad station.
HOME & DESIGN
Home Composting
There are a number of ways you can get involved in composting from home, from backyard composting, to an indoor vermicomposting bin, subscribing to a local food scraps collection service and participating in a food scraps drop-off program in your local community.
Composting materials such as yard trimmings and food scraps reduces the amount of waste that ends up in landfills or combustion facilities. Preventing organics from landfills reduces the production of methane, a power greenhouse gas. Adding compost to the soil provides valuable nutrients, improves soil structure, adds beneficial soil micro-organisms, suppresses certain plant diseases, reduces the need for fertilizers and pesticides and helps prevent soil erosion and nutrient run-off.
Composting at home is easy; all it takes is a little time, effort and patience. After plants and animals die, they decompose naturally as bacteria and fungi go to work breaking down the remains. Once decayed, the original material is no longer recognizable and takes the form of a rich, dark, soil-like substance. When humans help this process along it is called composting and the product is called compost.
This lovely home located in a cul-de-sac at 4 Kensington Ct. in the Estate Section of Garden City South sold on Dec. 16 for $1,260,000. This home is a center-hall Colonial with an eat-in-kitchen and a formal family room with a fireplace. There are two laundries, one in the basement and one on the first floor. The second floor has a master bedroom with a bathroom and heated floors. There are also three generous-sized bedrooms and heated flooring in the hall bathroom. The basement is finished with tile flooring. There is an egress and a cedar walk-in closet. All bathrooms are newer. The home has new windows, central air conditioning, central vacuum system and a new furnace. This home is near shopping and the train station.
The bacteria and fungi that do most of the work must have four things to thrive, which are captured in this simple rhyme: Making compost takes some care; add greens, browns, water and air.
Greens are your nitrogen
source and include food scraps (such as fruit and vegetable peels, coffee grounds, tea bags and old bread), fresh grass clippings, fresh weeds and manure. Browns are your carbon source and include fallen leaves, dry weeds, shredded paper, wood chips and straw. Browns provide structure for the pile, allowing air to flow more freely.
Compost microorganisms need oxygen! While not necessary, turning (or mixing) the pile twice a month will add more air and speed up breakdown.
Composting works best with the right amount of moisture. If the pile is too wet, add some leaves, shredded newspaper or sawdust. If it’s too dry, add water.
Fruit, vegetables, coffee grounds, indoor plant trimmings, yard trimmings and leaves are all suitable for the compost pile. Do not compost meat, fish, bones, dairy and oil. These things attract animals and do not compost well. Do not compost plants that spread through stems (rhizomes) or roots (ivy). Also, do not compost cat litter and dog feces. These contain disease organisms that remain after composting.
—DEC
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.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 9A FULL
RUN
238445 R compass.com Let the #1 real estate brokerage guide you home on Long Island. * Manhasset | Huntington | Garden City | Locust Valley | Roslyn Syosset | Oceanside | Woodbury | Rockville Centre | Sea Cliff Carle Place | Smithtown | Southold Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by equal housing opportunity laws. . *Source: 2021 Closed Sales Volume, U.S., RealTrends 500.
WE LOVE OUR PETS
Great Neck Native To Show Belgian Breed At Prestigious Westminster
BY CHRISTY HINKO chinko@antonmediagroup.com
His official name is “BISS GCHS CH Takishan Rockin’ The Night Monvieux,” or “Rocky” for short. Rocky is a Belgian Sheepdog, a medium-sized herding dog, bred to show and he will do just that in the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Flushing Meadow Park on May 8.
“We co-owned him with a very good friend who recently passed away,” co-owner and breeder Bruce Freedman said. “It was Cathie’s lifetime dream was to have a dog that went to Westminster and could exceed in both herding and in show. He has all the potential of his uncle, who is a dual champion in both of those categories.”
Rocky finished the year in second place in breed points ranking for his breed in the herding group, but he is now currently in first place in the Belgian Shepherd breed.
“It’s not just that we are showing at Westminster; we were invited to show at Westminster,” Freedman said. “Only five dogs in each breed get invited.”
Cathie Rossman’s daughter, Irene, now co-owns the dog with Freedman and his wife, Lori Goldstrom.
Rocky has been on the road with his handler, Karyn Cowdrey, for more than 30 shows this past year.
“He’s got great movement and great conformation,” Freedman said.
This will be Freedman’s first show at Westminster.
“I knew when I was eight years old that I wanted to show a dog at Westminster,” Freedman said. “Before I was born, my family had dogs that showed at Westminster.”
He began more than 40 years ago training one of his first dogs, an Irish Setter, hand signals.
“He was a high-level obedient, show and field trial dog, which is a rare package,” Freedman said. “When he passed away, I wanted to really get involved in show and obedience.”
His next dog was a German Shepherd, who he recalled reminded him of Paul Marcy’s dog, Blackie, a lifelong friend from Great Neck, as is Freedman.
“I always really loved that dog; he was a big, bold black and tan German Shepherd, who was very obedient and always
listened to Paul’s dad like, ‘Yes sir!’”
Freedman was 25 years old when he got his show shepherd.
“From what I knew of Blackie, my inspiration was that I could not have a dog that was going to be big and powerful and not have him really under command,” Freedman said.
Following the passing of his German Shepherd, Freedman then took on his first Belgian Shepherd. Freedman and Goldstrom are now on their sixth generation of breeding Belgian Tervurens, the most elegant and agile of the three Belgian sheepdog breeds.
“My wife and I met while walking our dogs one day,” Freedman recalled. “We have had Belgian Tervurens now for 28 years.”
Freedman is originally from Great Neck. After high school he began to wander west and eventually ended up in California where he has since made his home.
“I have been on the board of directors and/or the president of the Belgian Tervuren Club of Southern California for 22 years,” Freedman said. “I am very active in the national club, Belgian Sheepdog Club of America (BSCA).”
Words Of Advice
Freedman shared some constructive advice for dog lovers who are interested in getting into dog breeding and showing.
“Don’t go it alone,” Freedman said. “That is first. Find an AKC Breeder of Merit, have them mentor you.” Here are some of his tips and things to consider:
• Determine what breed of dog you want.
• What activities do you really enjoy?
• What are you looking to accomplish?
• Read about breed construction and movement.
• Know your breed.
• Know the standard of the breed.
• Know what your dog was originally bred to do.
• Join a local breed club.
“There are a lot of dogs that, because we are no longer an agrarian society, no longer primarily do what they were originally designed to do, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t still have the instinct to do it,” Freedman said. Visit www.akc.org, find the national club for your breed and ask for referrals.
Westminster Dog Show Coming To Flushing
The Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, America’s second-longest continuously held sporting event, will be held May 8 and 9 at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing Meadows–Corona Park. The 2023 canine celebration also marks the 10th Anniversary of the ever-popular Masters Agility Championship.
“As we march towards our 150th Anniversary in 2026, the Club is excited to bring the dog show to a venue that has always celebrated world-class athletes, and these champion dogs are no exception,” said Westminster Kennel Club President, Darrell W. Crate. “The sprawling complex will give spectators a truly memorable experience as they meet thousands of purpose-bred dogs that each have a rich history and background.”
America’s Dog Show will again attract top-winning dogs from across the country for this iconic event. In addition to the 10th Anniversary of the Masters Agility Championship, the 2023 schedule includes the 8th Annual Masters Obedience Championship, Junior Showmanship, 200+ Breed competitions (for Champions only), seven Group competitions, concluding with Best in Show being crowned in the center of Arthur Ashe Stadium.
Schedule of Events
Saturday, May 6—10th Anniversary of the Masters Agility Championship
Saturday, May 6—8th Annual Masters Obedience Championship (tentative)
Monday, May 8—147th Annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show (Hound, Toy, Non-Sporting and Herding Breeds and Group judging)
Tuesday, May 9—147th Annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show (Sporting, Working, Terrier Breeds, and Group judging followed by Best in Show)
Although Westminster is the pinnacle of competition in the dog world, the event remains a family-friendly experience.
Visit www.westminsterkennelclub.org for more information, tickets and additional events.
—Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 10A FULL RUN
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BY JULIE PRISCO
Sienna Yamins, a ninth grade student at Great Neck North High School, is a talented figure skater in the Great Neck Figure Skating Club. In early February, Sienna earned a Gold medal in Figure Skating at the 2023 Empire State Winter Games at the Lake Placid Olympic Center. Sienna currently trains at the Andrew Stergiopoulos Ice Rink and
SPONSORED BY ORLIN & COHEN
Athlete Of The Month; Sienna Yamins, Figure Skating
is coached by Shannon Lenihan and Kristina Layton.
“It was wonderful to go to Lake Placid this year as 30 members of the Great Neck Skating Club competed and many earned medals,” said Sienna.
Sienna started skating lessons at five years old with the Great Neck Skating School. She then joined the Great Neck Synchronized Skating team which she was a part of for five years. While on the team, they competed in the tri-state area and earned a silver and gold medal at the Empire State Winter Games.
“I just love to skate,” said Sienna. “I really enjoyed the team because I developed so many friendships, and I am still friends with many fellow ice skaters today. We are like a big family.”
“I had been working on [the axel jump] for about two years, and it had gotten really frustrating,” said Sienna. “I put in a lot of hard work, so finally getting it was a big accomplishment.”
As a dedicated figure skater and first year high school student, balancing her sport and school work can be difficult for Sienna. But Sienna’s commitment and love for her sport keeps her motivated to work hard at balancing her weekly schedule.
“I try to practice at least five days a week,” said Sienna. “I have to assess my homework each day and change my ice skating schedule as needed. I also have private lessons three times per week. It’s never easy.”
Sienna is invited to represent New York State at the State games of America 2024 in San Diego, where she will compete against skaters across the nation. Congratulations,
A memorable moment from Sienna’s figure skating career is when she landed her first axel. The axel is one of the oldest and most difficult jumps performed in figure skating.
Orlin & Cohen is proud to support our community’s best high school athletes, just as we support all athletes’ orthopedic needs.
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 Walk-in Sunday Sports Medicine and Recovery Clinics for young athletes.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 11A FULL RUN OF THE MONTH ATHLETE SPORTS
Sienna Yamins at the
Sienna Yamins with her Gold Medal. (Photos contributed by Anne Yamins, Sienna’s mother)
Sienna Yamins, you’re a top student-athlete!
Visit our Sunday Sports Medicine and Recovery Clinics 3480 Veterans Memorial Highway, Bohemia 1101 Stewart Avenue, Suite 100, Garden City 516.536.2800 631.706.2800 orlincohen.com Locations across Nassau and Suffolk OC954_Sienna_Yamins_Athlete_Month_10x5.5.indd 1 2/14/23 1:46 PM 238387 M
WORD FIND
HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis
HOROSCOPES
This 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 the puzzle, there will be 17 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Holiday Mathis
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND HOROSCOPES By
By Holiday Mathis
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll do the thing you feel is right. You’d prefer the transaction was also punctuated with a receipt -- some kind of proof of completion implying that indeed the right choice was made. Such assurances are rare in life, but you can trust your inner knowing and the new consciousness that’s informing your next move.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). e optimist thinks this is the best day ever, and the pessimist fears this is so. You’re the realist who defers judgment and, furthermore, sees commentary as an unnecessary expense of energy. You’re too busy handling life, which you’ll do with grace, strength, agility and humor. Truly you’re a rock to your people.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Imagine you are meeting your host for the rst time in your life and the last time, too. e challenge is to absorb everything you can about a person in a relaxed and casual way. In paying attention to others, a very attractive part of you is highlighted -- the part that is real, engaged, attentive and intelligent.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). In a world where possibilities are endless and things can go so many directions, there must be a reason they went one way and not the other. You’re intent on solving a problem. You’ll start by eliminating distractions, isolating the variables, focusing on the trouble source and experimenting to see what heals best.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). ere are those who will create drama to get their needs met, more than likely because they don’t know another way to do it. To avoid drama you’ll either avoid the person or try to sense and meet their need. ere’s no right answer, only the one that better suits your overall goals and purposes.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ve come to crave knowledge that adds a layer of interest to the ordinary world. e bird, the tree and the house encountered on your drive home are either common sights or endless sources of wonder, depending on how much you know about them. is week brings bright bursts of illumination.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). ese unique, unrepeatable moments. ere will never be a second chance to savor the one you’re in. But is it really possible to meld completely with every sensation and still function in the modern world? You’ve a schedule to keep, and people depend on you. You’ll be present to many levels of reality at once this week.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Why do we dream? Even as humankind explores the outer reaches of space, the complexities of our own minds are still equally mysterious, with multiple theories on even the most common aspects of our lives. You’ll be struck this week by the beautiful complexity of common things.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). ere are many ways to make sure everything ows smoothly without a hitch. One is to rehearse encounters and plan for various contingencies. Another is to release your expectations. If anything that happens is acceptable, nothing could go wrong. You’ll try di erent approaches to nd what ts.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). If being liked depends on giving a good performance, you’ll pull it o , but the cost will be high and the reward will be acceptance of a heightened version of yourself. You’re better o when you show up authentically and tolerate whatever happens. is is a way to make true and wonderful friends.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). e root of the word “sorcery” is “sors,” the Latin word for “fate.” On the other side of the magic wand’s wave, it seems the transformation was always destined to happen. But in the thick of a determined e ort, it seems things could go a lot of ways or not at all. e work is your magic and the magic is your work.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You believe things can be better and you’ll make it so, though the way is not straightforward. You’ve tried many things that just didn’t work, at least not to your standard. It’s made you brave. You have the courage to try something new. Work in private and share the results when you’re ready.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
You are deeply loyal and do not expect those loyalties to pay o , but oh, how they do this year. e accolades you receive are meaningful not because you love the attention but because they allow you to be in a better position to serve others. Entertaining relationships are featured, and you’ll love how the ride surprises you and energizes your choices. You’ll go in for a new look for your home or image -a creation that’s as fun to put together as it is to celebrate when it’s complete. You’ve a knack for investing in the spring, especially in education or in your team.
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Olympic Games
Solution: 17 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 completed the puzzle, there will be 17 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Olympic
Artacho Del
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 TUESDAY, FEB. 21, 2023
CONTRACT BRIDGE
Solution: Records will tumble
By Steve Becker
Diagnostic analysis
another diamond.
Declarer put up dummy’s ace, East contributing the ten, and was now in excellent position to judge West’s distribution. West had started with two spades, at least six hearts, most likely four diamonds to the jack and, therefore, at most one club.
So, after cashing the ten of spades, declarer played another spade. This forced East to discard a heart as South discarded a club. Now the ace-of-clubs play from dummy, on which West produced the eight, convinced South that West had started with 2-6-4-1 distribution.
This deal demonstrates how a declarer can take advantage of the knowledge he has acquired during the bidding and play to bring in a seemingly unmakeable contract.
West led the king of hearts against four spades and shifted to a low diamond at trick two. Declarer won with dummy’s king, cashed the ace of spades, catching West’s jack, and continued with a low spade to the queen. West took the king and led
This assumption was confirmed when declarer next led a diamond to his queen, forcing East to discard still another heart. South then ruffed the queen of hearts with dummy’s last trump as East followed with his last heart.
Everyone was down to three cards at this point. Dummy had the K-10-7 of clubs, East the Q-J-6 and South the 9-5 of clubs and seven of diamonds. The seven-of-clubs lead from dummy then compelled East to win and yield the last two tricks to dummy’s K-10, and the contract was home.
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 12A FULL RUN
The survival principle. ©2023 King Features Syndicate Inc.
East-West vulnerable. NORTH ♠ A 10 8 4 2 ♥ 2 ♦ A K 9 ♣ A K 10 7 WEST EAST ♠ K J ♠ 9 7 5 ♥ A K J 9 6 5 ♥ 10 8 4 3 ♦ J 6 5 2 ♦ 10 8 ♣ 8 ♣ Q J 6 3 SOUTH ♠ Q 6 3 ♥ Q 7 ♦ Q 7 4 3 ♣ 9 5 4 2 The bidding: WestNorthEastSouth 1 ♥ DblePass1 ♠ 2 ♥ 4 ♠ Opening lead — king of hearts.
Tomorrow:
West dealer.
Solar Bans City Curry Dome Dues Gary Glen Gold Green Hand Hurt Ideal Injury Jack McLoughlin Jane Judo Kelly Legs Lewis Lift Lisa London Lose Medal Milan Mitch Nagano Netball Opening Oslo Pain Paris Peers Polo Provis Race Ryan Set Slalom Sport Steve Style Throw Tokyo Tone Vancouver Warm up Wood
Date:
Creators Syndicate 737
Hermosa
© 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
2/22/23
3rd Street
Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com
17 Letters Artacho Del Solar Bans City Curry Dome Dues Gary Glen Gold Green Hand Hurt Ideal Injury Jack McLoughlin Jane Judo Kelly Legs Lewis Lift Lisa London Lose Medal Milan Mitch Nagano Netball Opening Oslo Pain Paris Peers Polo Provis Race Ryan Set Slalom Sport Steve Style Throw Tokyo Tone Vancouver Warm up Wood Solution: Records will tumble Date: 2/22/23 Creators Syndicate 737 3rd Street Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 info@creators.com © 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
Games Solution:
Life Happens, Needs Change
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 • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 13A FULL RUN
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Long Island Housing
Complaint Line at
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or disability in connection with the rental, sale
financing of real estate. Nassau
income
papers does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination, call
Services’ Discrimination
800660-6920. (Long Island Housing Services is
Fair Housing Agency of Nassau and Suffolk Counties.)
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GREAT NECK
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF NASSAU
U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Lehman Mortgage Trust Mortgage Pass Through Certificates
Series 2006-8, Plaintiff
AGAINST
Ramin Gidanian; Nazanin Kohan a/k/a Nazanin Gidanian; et al., Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered October 3, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 8, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 106 Oxford Boulevard, Great Neck, NY 11023. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being near Great Neck, in the Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 2 Block 353 Lot 15. Approximate amount of judgment $824,300.63 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 601724/2018. The auction will be conducted pursuant to the COVID-19 Policies
Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the Tenth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”
Desiree L. Fusco, Esq., Referee LOGS Legal Group LLP f/k/a Shapiro, DiCaro Barak, LLC
Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792
Dated: January 12, 2023
2-22-15-8-1-2023-4T#237765-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
Hakimian Trading LLC filed w/ SSNY on 1/04/23. Office: Nassau Co. SSNY designated as agent for process shall mail to: REPUBLIC REGISTERED AGENT SERVICES INC. 600 BROADWAY STE 200, ALBANY, NY, 12207. Purpose: any lawful. 3-15-8-1; 2-22-15-8-20236T-#238491-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE
SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff - against - MISHEL HAJIBAY PIRANESI, et al
Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on July 25, 2016. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court lo-
cated at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501
“Rain or Shine” on the 15th day of March, 2023 at 2:30
PM. All those four (4) certain plots, pieces or parcels of land, with the building situate, lying and being at Great Neck, in the Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York.
Premises known as 12 Grenwolde Drive, Great Neck (Kings Point), NY 11024.
(Section: 1, Block: 30, Lots: 13, 15, 16 17)
Approximate amount of lien
$4,455,782.64 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.
Index No. 010124/09. George Esernio, Esq., Referee. McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 840 New York, NY 10170 Tel. 347/286-7409
Dated: January 16, 2023
During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale.
3-8-1; 2-22-15-2023-4T#238644-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF NASSAU
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST Mehdi Gabyzadeh a/k/a Mehdi Gabayzadeh; et al., Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered June 21, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 21, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 5 Pheasant Run, Kings Point, NY 11024. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Kings Point, New York, in the Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 1 Block 178 Lot 48. Approximate amount of judgment $2,848,401.13 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 003161/2007. The auction will be conducted pursuant
LEGAL NOTICES
to the COVID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the Tenth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”
Malachy Lyons, Jr., Esq., Referee LOGS Legal Group LLP f/k/a Shapiro, DiCaro Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff
175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792
Dated: January 25, 2023
3-8-1; 2-22-15-2023-4T#238616-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND
SOCIETY, FSB, D/B/A CHRISTIANA TRUST, NOT INDIVIDUALLY BUT AS TRUSTEE FOR PRETIUM MORTGAGE ACQUISITION TRUST, Plaintiff, vs. HOOMAN ENAYATIAN, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to an Order Reforming Mortgage, Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on July 19, 2018, 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 March 21, 2023 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 2 Breuer Avenue, Great Neck, NY 11023. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Incorporated Village of Great Neck, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 1, Block and Lots 105 and 106. Approximate amount of judgment is $483,344.21 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #14541/2013. Cash will not be accepted. 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.
Richard Langone, Esq., Referee Knuckles, Komosinski Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff 3-8-1; 2-22-15-2023-4T#238658-GN
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT NASSAU COUNTY CAPITAL ONE, N.A., Plaintiff against ANGEL SABI, et al
Defendant(s) Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Stern Eisenberg, P.C., Woodbridge Corporation Plaza,
485B
Route 1 South, Suite 330, Iselin, NJ 08830.
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered June 27, 2017, 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 March 28, 2023 at 2:30 PM. Premises known as 10 Crickett Lane a/k/a 10 Cricket Lane, Great Neck a/k/a Kings Point, NY 11024. Sec 1 Block 175 Lot 47. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being at Incorporated Village of Kings Point, Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $662,166.85 plus interest, fees, and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 006337/2016.
During the COVID-19 health emergency, Bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of the sale including but not limited to wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Should a bidder fail to comply, the Referee may refuse to accept any bid, cancel the closing and hold the bidder in default. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale. 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.”
William J. Birney, Esq., Referee NY-62200011-16
3-15-8-1; 2-22-2023-4T#238870-GN
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE
SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF NASSAU
Citibank, N.A. as Successor Trustee to U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee, for MASTR Alternative Loan Trust 2006-1, Plaintiff AGAINST Shahin Rahimian; et al., Defendant(s)
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered September 6, 2017 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on March 28, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 6 Franklin Road, Great Neck, NY 11024. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Village of Great Neck, Town of North Hempstead, County
of Nassau, State of New York, Section: 1 Block: 81 Lot: 189. Approximate amount of judgment $840,930.14 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 014951/2012. The auction will be conducted pursuant to the COVID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the Tenth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine.”
Anthony Russo, Esq., Referee LOGS Legal Group LLP f/k/a Shapiro, DiCaro Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792
Dated: February 9, 2023
3-15-8-1; 2-22-2023-4T#238869-GN
able accommodation, please call 516-482-2727 and give your name and email address (please do not leave a message), in order for us to send zoom coordinates. A DRAFT of the FY 2023 Annual Plan is available at the Housing Authority Main Office at same and on the Housing Authority website at VOGNHA.org.
3-1; 2-22-2023-2T-#238946GN
LEGAL NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Village of Great Neck Plaza will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, March 1, 2023 at 7:00 PM at the Village Hall, Two Gussack Plaza, Great Neck, New York to consider a Conditional Use Permit for Mikhail Plishtiyev to operate a Pharmacy to be known as M A Pharmacy and Med supplies Corp., located at 3 Bond Street 3A., Great Neck.
Hall for inspection during regular business hours of 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.
Andrea Dennett, Chairperson Joyce Cheung, Co-Chairperson
Architectural Review Board
Dated: February 16, 2023
2-22-2023-1T-#239118-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
GREAT NECK UNION
FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT
BID 2022-23-9
Electrical Work for Fire Alarm Systems
DATE OF OPENING:
Friday, March 3, 11:00 a.m.
To all Bidders:
The Great Neck Union Free School District, hereinafter referred to as “the School District” invites bids from qualified vendors for electrical work for fire alarm systems. Bids must be clearly labeled BID 2022-23-9
LEGAL NOTICE
The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority Board of Commissioners is pleased to announce a public hearing in conformance with Section 511 of the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act (QHWRA) of 1998. The public hearing will be held Monday, March 27 th 2023 at 4:00pm at The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority located at 700 Middle Neck Road, Great Neck, NY 11023. The subject of the hearing will be the Public Housing FY 2023 Annual Plan and FY (2020-2024) Five-Year Plan. The Five Year Plan describes the mission of the agency and the agency’s longrange goals and objectives for achieving its mission over a five-year period, and their approach to managing programs and providing services for the upcoming year. The Annual Plan serves as the annual application for grants to support improvements to public housing buildings (Capital Fund Program) and provide a summary of the activities the PHA plans to pursue in the FY 2023 fiscal year. Residents of public housing and members of the public are welcome. Persons wishing to speak will be limited to five (5) minutes each and a sign-up sheet for speakers will be available at the start of the public hearing. The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority does not discriminate because of disability, color, sex, religion, national origin, family status or race. Provisions will be made for persons with disabilities to ensure their full participation in the public hearing if they so choose. Request for any Reasonable Accommodation must be made in advance by 12:00 p.m. on Friday, March 24, 2023. If you are unable to attend, or request a reason-
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that all persons interested in this matter will be given an opportunity to be heard at the public meeting. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF GREAT NECK PLAZA
Ted Rosen, Mayor Patricia O’Byme, Clerk-Treasurer 2-22-2023-1T-#238987-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Trustees of the Village of Great Neck Plaza will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, March1, 2023 at 7 P.M. at the Village Hall, Gussack Plaza, Great Neck, NY to consider approval of the Vigilant Engine Hook Ladder Co. Inc. Fire and Ambulance contract for the year beginning January 1, 2023 and ending December 31, 2023.
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that all people interested with regard to the above will be given an opportunity to be heard at said public hearing.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
VILLAGE OF GREAT NECK PLAZA
Ted M. Rosen, Mayor Patricia O’Byrne, Clerk-Treasurer 2-22-2023-1T-#239059-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
Public Notice
Architectural Review Board
PLEASE BE ADVISED that the Architectural Review Board of the Village of Kensington will hold a public hearing on WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 2023 at p.m. at the Village Hall located at 2 Nassau Drive, Great Neck, NY on the following application:
70 BEVERLY RD., Casamassa also known as Section 2, Block 228, Lot 2 (Rebuild and enlarge rear dinette and enlarge and resurface existing driveway).
All persons will be heard at the time and place above stated. Copies of the application are available at the Village
Electrical Work for Fire Alarm Systems.
Bids will be received by the School District, until Friday, March 3, at 11:00 a.m. Bids may be submitted Monday through Friday, excluding school holidays, between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., at the security desk in the lobby of the Phipps Administration Building, 345 Lakeville Rd, Great Neck, NY 11020.
Bids submitted after the stated time and date will not be considered and will be returned to the individual or firm unopened.
Bids will be opened and read aloud at Friday, March 3, at 11:00 a.m. at the Phipps Administration Building, 345 Lakeville Road, Great Neck, NY 11020. There will be no discussion at the time of bid opening. The names of the bidders shall be available following the bid opening.
The School District reserves the right to make an award as a whole, in part, or reject any or all bids that it considers not to be in its best interest.
Interested vendors may obtain a bid packet from the Purchasing Office of the Great Neck Union Free School District. Call (516) 441-4070 or email jmartin@greatneck. k12.ny.us to request the packet by mail or email.
Please read the bid packet carefully before submitting your bid. Incomplete bids may not be considered.
2-22-2023-1T-#239157-GN
LEGAL NOTICE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Trustees of the Inc. Village of Russell Gardens will hold a Public Meeting on the 2nd day of March 2023 at 8:00 P.M. in the evening at Village Hall, located at 6 Tain Drive, Great Neck, New York.
Dated: 2/22/2023
By Order of the Board of Trustees Inc. Village of Russell Gardens
David M. Miller, Mayor Danielle Pennise, Village Clerk Treasurer 2-22-2023-1T-#239176-GN
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 9
Temple Beth-El Of Great Neck Welcomes Scholar-In-Residence
Temple Beth-El of Great Neck welcomes Rabbi Seth M. Limmer, DHL, for a special Scholar-In-Residence Shabbat Weekend. Rabbi Limmer, the son of TBE congregants Shelley and Steve Limmer, comes ‘home‘ to give a guest sermon at Erev Shabbat service on Friday, March 17, and teach Torah Study on Saturday, March 18. These events are open to the entire community.
On Friday, March 17 at 7 p.m. Rabbi Limmer will speak on the topic Jewish Life Trapped in Translation: the perennial problem of American Jewish life is that it is lived in English. Bible, theology, salvation: we are taught that these words are core contents of religion. But none of these words—religion included!—have any true correspondence in Hebrew, the original language of Jewish thought. To be a modern American Jew is to be trapped in translation: to remove the conceits and concepts of English is the primary task of anyone seeking to uncover Judaism, to discover the profundities of Jewish identity.
On Saturday, March 18 at 9:15 a.m., Rabbi Limmer will discuss The Tabernacle and Translation: This week’s double-portion VaYakhel-Pekudei is loaded with words. But whether discussing how our ancestors acquired “dolphin skins” or understanding
exactly what a “tabernacle” is, we come up against problems of translation. This Torah Study will be a deep dive into these tricky terms to see what they reveal about Jewish thought.
Additionally, Rabbi Limmer will be doing leadership development work with our Board of Trustees.
Rabbi Seth M. Limmer, DHL, is the founder of Open Judaism, committed to
promoting interfaith work for justice and peace. During his rabbinate he has served as chair of the Justice, Peace & Civil Liberties of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, as vice-chair of the URJ’s Commission on Social Action, as dean of faculty for Eisner and Crane Lake Camps, as adjunct professor at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and Vice President of Leadership of the CCAR. On behalf of his
lead role in organizing the Reform Movement’s participation in the NAACP’s 2015 America’s Journey for Justice, Rabbi Limmer accepted the Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath Bearer of Light Award, the highest honor of the URJ. Author of many articles, 2016 saw the publication of his first full-length book, Medieval Midrash: The House for Inspired Innovation. Rabbi Limmer also served as co-editor of Moral Resistance and Spiritual Authority, published by CCAR Press in 2018. Author of many articles and essays, his recent “Trapped in Translation” published in Tablet Magazine was highlighted in the magazine’s special “End of the Year” issue as the featured article on contemporary religious thought. In 2021, Rabbi Limmer was appointed to serve on the Illinois State Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes, and was a founding member of the Faith Leader Social Justice Advisory Committee to the Mayor of Chicago. Rabbi Limmer has served as Senior Rabbi of Chicago Sinai Congregation and Congregation B’nai Yisrael of Armonk, NY.
Temple Beth-El of Great Neck, the peninsula’s very first synagogue, was founded in 1928. To learn more, visit www.tbegreatneck.org, call 516-487-0900 or email info@ tbegreatneck.org.
—Submitted by Temple Beth-El of Great Neck
The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority Board of Commissioners is pleased to announce a public hearing in conformance with Section 511 of the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act (QHWRA) of 1998. The public hearing will be held Monday, March 27th 2023 at 4:00pm at The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority located at 700 Middle Neck Road, Great Neck, NY 11023. The subject of the hearing will be the Public Housing FY 2023 Annual Plan and FY (2020-2024) FiveYear Plan. The Five Year Plan describes the mission of the agency and the agency’s long-range goals and objectives for achieving its mission over a ve-year period, and their approach to managing programs and providing services for the upcoming year. The Annual Plan serves as the annual application for grants to support improvements to public housing buildings (Capital Fund Program) and provide a summary of the activities the PHA plans to pursue in the FY 2023 scal year. Residents of public housing and members of the public are welcome. Persons wishing to speak will be limited to ve (5) minutes each and a sign-up sheet for speakers will be available at the start of the public hearing. The Village of Great Neck Housing Authority does not discriminate because of disability, color, sex, religion, national origin, family status or race. Provisions will be made for persons with disabilities to ensure their full participation in the public hearing if they so choose. Request for any Reasonable Accommodation must be made in advance by 12:00 p.m. on Friday, March 24, 2023. If you are unable to attend, or request a reasonable accommodation, please call 516-482-2727 and give your name and email address (please do not leave a message), in order for us to send zoom coordinates. A DRAFT of the FY 2023 Annual Plan is available at the Housing Authority Main O ce at same and on the Housing Authority website at VOGNHA.org
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 10
Rabbi Seth M. Limmer (Contributed photo)
238967 M
Don'tbeafool.Abuseisnojoke. RESTORINGHOPEFORVICTIMSOFABUSE ScanQRcodeorvisit https://bit.ly/tscli5k toregisterordonate. Contact(516)465-4774oremail htract@tscli.orgformoreinformation. ScanCode Presentedby SponsorsWanted! AprilFoolsDay! Saturday,April1,2023 In-PersonorVirtual! Kid'sFunRun! Raffles&Prizes! AndMore!
SOUTH HIGH MUSICIAN WINS SONGWRITING COMPETITION
South High School senior Melody Song is one of twelve winners in the 2023 National Association for Music Education (NAfME) Eastern Division Composition/Songwriting Competition. Melody’s composition for guitar and vocals, “Past, Present, Future,” will be performed at the Rochester Convention Center on April 14 as part of the NAfME Eastern Division Music Conference.
“Melody is a talented student of violin and voice,” praises Michael Schwartz, performing arts department chair/instrumental
music teacher at South High. Melody has performed in the South High chamber string and symphony orchestras, and she currently sings in the South High mixed choir under the direction of Dr. Janine Robinson, vocal music teacher. Melody will be singing the featured role of Marcellina in South High’s opera production of Le Nozze di Figaro in March.
—Submitted by the Great Neck Public School District
SCHOOL NEWS
FIVE ENSEMBLES TO PERFORM IN REGIONAL CHAMBER MUSIC COMPETITION
Five chamber music ensembles from the Great Neck Public Schools have been selected to perform in the sixth annual Long Island Regional Young Musicians Concert, sponsored by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Participants from GNPS include two chamber ensembles from North High and three chamber ensembles from South High.
The professionally produced Regional Young Musicians Concert, scheduled for Thursday, March 16 at 11 a.m. in the Ruel E. Tucker auditorium in South High School, will feature the top high school chamber ensembles from across Nassau and Suffolk counties. This is the second consecutive year that South High has been selected to host the regional concert.
Ensembles from North High are: Matthew Kwong (cello), Hwi-On Lee (violin), and Mizuki Natsu (piano) performing Piano Trio No. 3 in C minor, Op. 1, No. 3 by Ludwig van Beethoven; and Kajal Ramphul (soprano), Abigail Israel (alto), Jack Brenner (tenor), Maverick Williams (bass) and Mizuki Natsu (piano) performing Four Quartets, Op. 92, by Johannes Brahms. The North High chamber music program is coordinated by Dr. Pamela Levy, fine and performing arts department chair/vocal music teacher, and Dr. Esther Noh, instrumental music teacher.
MARCH REGISTRATION FOR ENGLISH & GED-PREP CLASSES
If you are an adult and want to learn English or improve your English language skills, or if you want to earn a high school equivalency diploma, the Great Neck Public Schools Adult Learning Center offers a variety of classes during the day and evening designed to meet your needs.
A range of English language classes are offered, from beginning literacy to advanced ENL (English as a New Language). In preparation for the GED examination, classes are available to improve math, reading, science, social studies, and writing skills.
Registration for Trimester III classes will take place on Wednesday, March 1, and Thursday, March 2, from 9 a.m.–noon, or from 6:30–9:30 p.m. Preference will be given
The North High Winter Concert I and the South Middle Winter Concert I are airing on Great Neck Public Schools Television (GNPS/TV). GNPS/TV programs are available on demand, 24/7, on the school district website, www.greatneck.k12.ny.us/tv.
Programs can also be viewed in the incorporated villages of Great Neck on Optimum Channel 75 and on Verizon Fios Channel 32. Airing times in program descriptions below are for Optimum and Verizon viewing.
to Great Neck residents and returning Adult Learning Center students.
The non-refundable processing fee for classes is $50 for those who live or work in Great Neck (proof of residency or employment is required), and $100 for nonresidents. The Adult Learning Center now offers the convenience of beginning the registration process online through FamilyID (www.familyid.com).
The Adult Learning Center is located at 105 Clover Dr. in Great Neck. For more information, please contact the Adult Learning Center at 516-441-4950, or visit www.greatneck.k12.ny.us/alc.
—Submitted by the Great Neck Public School District
Ensembles from South High are: Hugh Choi (flute), Sarah Sun (alto saxophone), and Selena Lu (piano) performing Épitaphe de Jean Harlow, Op. 164, by Charles Koechlin; Dylan Kim (violin I), Drew Kim (violin II), Laura Zhang (viola), Victoria Lin (cello I), and Erin Wong (cello II) performing String Quintet, Op. 39, by Aleksandr Glazunov; and Dayoung Yu (violin I), Sidney Wong (violin II), Sebastian Lennox (viola), and Jillian Chang (cello) performing String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 27, by Edvard Grieg. The South High chamber music program is coordinated by Michael Schwartz, performing arts department chair/instrumental music teacher, and Dr. Janine Robinson, vocal music teacher.
The Young Musicians Program is a competition for advanced high school musicians offered by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Chamber music ensembles are invited to submit applications with audio or video recordings through their school music department to be considered for participation. Ensembles from the Long Island Regional Concert are eligible for an invitation to the Young Musicians Concert at Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center.
—Submited by the Great Neck Public School District
DEADLINE TO REGISTER FOR NON-PUBLIC SCHOOL TRANSPORTATION IS APRIL 1
The Great Neck Public Schools offers free transportation for children attending non-public schools who meet walking distance-from-school requirements. The deadline to apply for non-public school transportation for the 2023–24 school year is April 1, as determined by New York State Education Law.
Residents of the Great Neck school district may submit applications for non-public school transportation using the FamilyID system, an easy-to-use and secure registration platform. Links to the online application and instructions are available on the district website at www.greatneck.k12. ny.us/transportation.
To be eligible for free transportation, the
GNPS/TV PROGRAMS
North High Winter Concert I
The North High School Fine and Performing Arts Department presented its Winter Concert over two evenings in December. Tune in to GNPS/TV to view the first concert from Dec. 7, featuring performances by vocal soloists and the Concert Choir under the direction of Fine and Performing Arts Department Chair/vocal music teacher Dr. Pamela Levy, and the Chamber Ensemble under the direction
of instrumental music teacher Dr. Esther Noh. North High School Winter Concert I airs at 9 a.m., and 2:30 and 8 p.m.
South Middle Winter Concert I
The South Middle School Music Department presented Winter Concert I on Dec. 12, featuring grades seven through eight musicians in the Senior Orchestra, Senior Chorus, and the Senior Band. Student ensembles performed classical selections,
walking distance from a pupil’s home to a non-public school must exceed 0.5 mile for students in grades K–5; 0.75 mile for students in grades 6–8; and 1 mile for students in grades 9–12. Transportation is limited to a maximum distance of 15 miles. Other rules may apply for children with disabilities; please consult with the Office of Special Education and Pupil Personnel Services at (516) 441-4970.
For more information, please call the Great Neck Public Schools Transportation Office at (516) 441-4060 on school days between the hours of 9 a.m.–4 p.m.
—Submitted by the Great Neck Public School District
popular works, and traditional holiday classics. Instrumental students are taught by Music Department Chair Alan Schwartz, Mark Boschen, and Andrew DeNise; choral students are taught by Korey Coppola. South Middle School Winter Concert 1 airs at 11:30 a.m., and 5 and 10:30 p.m.
—Submitted by the Great Neck Public School District
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 11
Melody Song (Contributed photo)
Gold Coast International Film Festival’s Spotlight On Jewish Film
Gold Coast International Film Festival is proud to present the best new Jewish and Israeli films as part of its 2023 Spotlight on Jewish Films. The GCIFF lineup showcases 5 critically acclaimed features comprised of a diverse collection of outstanding international narrative and documentary works, with special guest speaker question and answers following select screenings. All events will take place at the Manhasset Cinemas, 430 Plandome Rd. in Manhasset.
Schachten-A Retribution (March 14 at 7:00pm; in German with English subtitles)
Schachten-A Retribution, which premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, is a thrilling historical drama that explores the lives of Austrian Jews in the years after World War II and the legacies of anti-Semitism and racism that follow them. When the legal system fails to secure punishment for the Nazi concentration camp commandant who tortured and murdered much of Victor’s family, the young businessman resolves to take the law into his own hands.
Israel Swings for Gold (March 16 at 7:00pm)
Israel Swings for Gold follows the 2021 Israeli baseball team as they compete in the Olympics for the first time. With no media allowed in Tokyo’s Olympic Village, the players record their own experiences for the world to see. With a team of mostly newly minted Israelis, including one star pitcher
from New Hyde Park, Long Island, they chronicle unexpected battles against anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism as they strive to show the world what they can accomplish.
Hummus Full Trailer (March 21 at 7:00pm; in Hebrew with English subtitles)
Hummus Full Trailer is a satirical crimefilled comedy of errors that involves three trailers that have been smuggled into Israel. A mistake in the harbor brings together Arabs, Orthodox Jews and a gay couple that must join forces to solve the mishap.
Exodus 91 (March 23 at 7:00pm; in Hebrew, Amharic, and English with English subtitles)
Exodus 91 follows Israeli diplomat, Asher Naim, on a seemingly insurmountable mission to bring 15,000 Ethiopian Jews to Israel through Operation Solomon. In this vital,
LEGAL NOTICES
PURPOSE: THE FILING OF NEW TARIFF AMMENDMENTS TO P.S.C. NO. 1 GAS TO COMPLY WITH THE COMMISSION’S ORDERS DATED JANUARY 19, 2023, IN P.S.C. CASES 4-M-0565 AND 20-M-0266.
TEXT: Notice is hereby given that Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid has led new tari amendments with the Public Service Commission to comply with the Commission’s Order is dated January 19, 2023, to become e ective February 1, 2023.
Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“KEDLI”) led tari revisions in response to a New York State Public Service Commission (“PSC”) Order Authorizing Phase 2 Arrears Reduction Program. Phase 2 of the Arrears Reduction Program provides automatic relief through direct bill credits to residential non-Energy A ordability Program (“EAP”) and small-commercial customers who have eligible arrears and who did not receive relief under the Phase 1 program, by issuing a one-time bill credit to reduce or eliminate accrued arrears through May 1, 2022. The PSC Order also establishes the Arrears Management Program (“AMP”) Phase 2 Surcharge to recover costs of these bill credits e ective February 1, 2023.
Notice is hereby given that starting on February 1, 2023, the AMP Phase 2 Surcharge will commence on customer bills and will be included in the Delivery Revenue Adjustment line. The AMP surcharge is located on the KEDLI website. For Residential customers:
https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Home/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/ ?regionkey=nylongisland&customertype=home and Business customers https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Business/Bills-Meters-and-Rates /?regionkey=nylongisland&customertype=business
Copies of the proposed revisions are available for public inspection and can be obtained on the Company’s website at https://www.nationalgridus.com
gripping film, a historical moment is brought to vivid life through a hybrid of documentary and dramatic narrative. Gold Coast’s screening of Exodus 91 includes a post-screening Q&A with Nassau County Legislator Mazi Pilip, herself an Ethiopian Jew who was rescued as a child through Operation Solomon.
America (March 28 at 7:00pm; in Hebrew with English subtitles)
America, a colorful, affecting Israeli melodrama, follows an Israeli swimming tutor living in Chicago who returns to Israel after 10 years away to bury his father. An encounter with a beloved childhood friend and his newly engaged girlfriend will set a series of events in motion that will affect everyone’s lives forever.
For more information on each film and to purchase tickets visit www.goldcoastarts.org.
The 2023 Spotlight on Jewish Film is made possible by the generous support of The Bristal Assisted Living, Sumi & Michael Glickman and Micki & Dohn S. Schildkraut.
About Gold Coast Arts
Gold Coast Arts is a 501(c)(3) multi-arts organization dedicated to promoting the arts through education, exhibition, performance, and outreach. For a quarter-century, it has brought the arts to tens of thousands of people throughout the Long Island region. Among the Center’s offerings are its School for the Arts, which holds year-round classes in visual and performing arts for students of all ages and abilities; a free public art gallery; a concert and lecture series; film screenings and discussions; the annual Gold Coast International Film Festival; and initiatives that focus on senior citizens and underserved communities. These initiatives include artist residencies, after-school programs, school assemblies, teacher-training workshops, and parent-child workshops. The Gold Coast Arts Center’s programs are made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. The Gold Coast Arts Center is an affiliate of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts “Partners in Education” program and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. For more information, visit www.goldcoastarts.org.
—Submitted by Gold Coast Arts
Manhasset Great Neck Camera Club
The Manhasset Great Neck Camera Club will hold a meeting on Monday, Feb. 27, 2022 at 6:30 p.m. at the Manhasset Public Library, located at 30 Onderdonk Ave., Manhasset, NY 11030. This meeting will feature a “Program Evening” where master photographer Dr. Ivan Rothman, will provide an instructive, slide illustrated lecture entitled: Wildlife Photography: New Perspectives. Ivan has over 40 years experience as a photographer. A “Meet and Greet” takes place between 6-6:30 p.m. Our meetings are open to all.
We are a welcoming group of photographers in an active club and can assist all classes and skill levels of digital photographers, from iPhone, Point & Shoot, Beginners, and Advanced. Visit our web site MGNCC.ORG which has links to the “Color Wheel”, our club newsletter, and a wealth of photography information. For further information, please email mgncc@optonline.net
—Submitted by the Manhasset Great Neck Camera Club
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 12
(Photo courtesy of Gold Coast Arts)
(Getty Images)
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Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid
10th Annual Lunar New Year Celebration
Earlier this monnth, the Great Neck Chinese Association hosted its 10th annual Lunar New Year Celebration. The Great Neck Chinese Association co-presidents are Steve Chen and Dorothy Feng. The Great Neck Chinese Association event was put together by talented per-
formers, dedicated volunteers and skilled professionals. Traditional songs and dances were perfomed at the celebration.
—Information gathered from the Great Neck Chinese Association
Governor Hochul Announces $100 Million To Repave Roads Impacted By Extreme Weather
Governor Kathy Hochul today announced $100 million in State funding has been released to support the renewal of State roadways impacted by extreme weather. The funding supports repaving projects at 64 locations, totaling almost 520 lane miles of pavement, and complements the record level of investment in infrastructure across New York State.
“We are making historic investments in transportation infrastructure to create safer roads and smooth, hassle-free commutes for all travelers,” Governor Hochul said. “New York is home to extreme weather year-round, and this $100 million in funding will be vital to helping ensure that our road conditions are safe for our hardest-hit communities.”
Through sustained investment in transportation infrastructure, New York State is enhancing quality of life for all New Yorkers, making State highways safer and more efficient while encouraging local commerce and tourism. The current Department of Transportation five-year capital plan provides historic funding for road and bridge repair and modernization, and this critical infrastructure funding will help restore hundreds of lane miles of highway impacted by extreme weather.
New York State Department of Transportation Commissioner Marie Therese Dominguez said, “Weather in New York is getting more intense more often, necessitating the need for vital and timely maintenance of our infrastructure. Governor Hochul understands the critical need to keep our infrastructure in a state of good repair, and this funding will renew vital travel corridors across the state while restoring hundreds of miles of roads to help them better withstand Mother Nature’s challenges.”
In the Long Island Region, $9 million to resurface Northern State Parkway from Meadowbrook State Parkway to Wantagh State Parkway in the Town of North Hempstead and the Village of Westbury, Nassau County.
Other repaving projects across the State will take place in the Capital Region, North Country Region, Mohawk Valley Region, Central New York Region, Finger Lakes Region, Western New York Region, Southern Tier Region and Mid-Hudson Region.
To read a detailed list of paving locations, visit governor.ny.gov
—Information provided by the Office of Governor Kathy Hochul
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Elected officials with the Great Neck Association co-presidents and volunteers. (Photo from Town of North Hempstead Jennifer DeSena’s Facebook)
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2023 Lunar New Year celebration performers. (Photo from the Great Neck Chinese Association)
Town Announces 2023 Home Sustainability Workshops And Rain Barrel & Composter Sales
“The Home Sustainability Workshops introduce residents to a variety of ways to make their home yard more environmentally friendly,” Supervisor DeSena said. “I believe the Town plays an important role as an environmental steward for the next generation and I strongly believe that programs like this one will help ensure a healthy environment now and in the future.”
“These workshops are so important toward creating a greener future for all. They provide residents with the knowledge they need to make choices about their daily habits that can help reduce their carbon footprint,” said Councilmember Lurvey. “By learning about sustainability or adding a rain barrel and composter to your home the Town is empowering residents to take small yet impactful actions towards preserving our planet.”
orth Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board are pleased to announce that the Town will once again be offering Home Sustainability Workshops as well as the sales of rain barrels and compost bins to Town residents this March.The workshops will educate residents on ways they can maintain their landscapes for both human and environmental health. This year’s workshops will be held virtually through Zoom. They are free for all, including non-residents, but registration is required. The following workshops being offered are:
Sustainable Yard Care:
Wednesday, March 1 at 6:30 p.m.
Find out how you can make your yard more sustainable by composting, using a rain barrel, saving water, creating wildlife habitat, using alternatives to pesticides, applying fertilizer properly and more! Your yard can look great and be healthy for the environment!
Native Plant Gardening:
Wednesday, March 15 at 6:30 p.m.
Native plant gardens help to conserve water, reduce fertilizers and pesticides, and provide food and habitat for wildlife, like pollinators. The president of the Long Island Native Plant Initiative explains how to create native plant gardens in the home landscape.
Creating Rain Gardens:
Wednesday, March 29 at 6:30 p.m.
Discover how to install these gardens that reduce stormwater pollution and flooding, recharge
and purify our drinking water, and provide food and habitat for wildlife.
Rain Barrel and Composter Sales
Composting and using a rain barrel are two great ways to help the environment from your own backyard. Compost provides valuable plant nutrients, reduces waste, and lessens or eliminates the need for synthetic fertilizers. Rain barrels collect rainwater that can be used for outdoor irrigation and help to conserve water use, allow users to save money, and reduce stormwater pollution.
The Town will have composters and rain barrels available for purchase at a discounted fee of $50 each (1 each per household). These items are only available to Town of North Hempstead residents at a first come, first served basis (ID is required). Please note there is a limited number of each item. Sales will be held at Clark Botanic Garden in Albertson.
For more information, dates of rain barrel and composter sales and to register for a workshop visit northhempsteadny.gov/sustainability or call 311.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
Town Board Adopts Local Laws To Help Small Businesses
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board unanimously approved two local laws to assist small local businesses at a recent meeting held on Feb. 7.
Local Law Allowing Extended Temporary Outdoor Permits Including Sidewalk Sales & Seating
The legislation amended Chapter 48 entitled “Sidewalks” and Chapter 70 entitled “Zoning” of the Town Code. One resolution extended the suspension of the Town Code provisions limiting the number of sidewalk sale permits that may be issued for any given
location during a 12-month period and temporarily waive the fees for a sidewalk sale permit. Additionally, it was also approved to extend the timeframe to continue allowing temporary outdoor seating and other temporary outdoor uses. Both measures have been extended through Dec. 31, 2023 at which time it will be reevaluated.
“The implementation of these amendments to our local laws serve as a way to support our local business owners. Not only does it allow for businesses to expand their reach beyond the confines of their brick and mortar stores, but creates a new and inviting
experience for residents and visitors alike,” said Councilmember Dalimonte.
Local Law Allowing Extended Use Of Tents For Businesses
The other legislation temporarily suspends Section 2-9 N (7) of the Town Code with respect to tent permits. This temporary suspension allows businesses to apply for a tent permit and install a tent for up to six months, the maximum length allowed by state law.
“We at the Town want to enhance our partnership with our local business communities in whatever ways we can,” said Coun-
cilmember Zuckerman. “Giving businesses more space through the use of tents means they have the ability to serve more patrons. We want our residents shopping local as frequently as they can, and we hope that this initiative proves beneficial for business owners.”
Businesses participating in these initiatives, as well as those using outdoor heaters and temporary tents, must do so in compliance with the New York State Fire Code, the Nassau County Fire Ordinance, and the applicable permit provisions of the Town Code.
These efforts were initially part of the Town’s “Lift Up Local”
—Submitted by the Town of
North Hempstead
Expediting Review For Solar Installation And Electric Vehicle Charging Stations
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, Councilmember Veronica Lurvey, and the Town Board approved a local law to help promote the use and installation of electric charging
stations at the Feb. 7 Town Board meeting. The legislation amends Chapter 2 of the Town Code by authorizing the expedited review for solar installations, electric vehicle charging stations, and
related equipment.
North Hempstead
empowers its residents to go green and embrace clean energy solutions. We are proud to be at the forefront of this important change.” The expedited permit application
FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 14
will be reviewed by the Building Department within 14
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“This new law is a crucial step forward in our journey toward a more sustainable and resilient future,” said Councilmember Lurvey. “It is imperative that of North Hempstead
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initiative, which was designed by Supervisor Judi Bosworth’s internal Business Recovery Response Workgroup. The group’s goal is to find ways to help businesses that have been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Workgroup, which includes members of the Town Board, has helped establish dining in local parks, expanded outdoor dining programs, created a “parklet” dining program, and facilitated street closures to help attract customers.
Learn about native plant gardening on March 15.
The Town has composters and rain barrels available for purchase. (Contributed photos)
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FEBRUARY 22 - 28, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP 236509 M 110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY, 11746. 631.549.7401 © 2023 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.