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Welcome Back
After long layoff, Junior League reopens (Page 3)
INSIDE: Durkin Response To ‘Stress’ Rating (Page 4)
Joe Lettera: A Giant Of The Hardwood (Page 6)
Calendar of Events (Page 8)
Roslyn Sports Update (Page 10)
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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.
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TOP STORY
The gift shop is back
Renovated and Redesigned Thrift Shop Is Back A
fter being closed for nearly eight months, the Junior League of Long Island’s Thrift Shop, a longtime community pillar which had suffered significant damage resulting from Hurricane Ida, opened its doors on April 29 with a ribbon cutting ceremony hosted by the Greater Roslyn Chamber of Commerce. The storm had caused damage valued at $250,000 and a loss of over 75 percent of inventory. At the ribbon cutting, many friends and community members were in attendance. From the Greater Roslyn Chamber of Commerce, those present included: Rich Branciforte, president; Barbara Kaplan, vice president, Marketing and Public Relations and Chamber Board Members Wayne Wink, Phil Hershkowitz, Melissa Spitalnick, Garnet Ardila, Jim Zanfardino, and Graciela Hall, who is also the Thrift Shop chair. Chamber members Kate Lumetta, Mimi Howard, Elisa Bonavita, Sydney Gordon, and Jeryl Sletteland were also there. Politicians in attendance were Jennifer DeSena, Town of North Hempstead Supervisor; Peter Zuckerman, Town of North Hempstead Councilman and Betsy Golan from Senator Anna Kaplan’s office. The Thrift Shop has been operating at 1395 Old
Northern Blvd. in Roslyn since 1962, and has stood the test of time in the ever-changing landscape of surrounding neighborhood businesses. It also houses the headquarters of the Junior League of Long Island. The building dates to 1856 and was originally the Benjamin Hicks Lumber Office and then later the Conklin, Tubby and Conklin Lumber office, followed by a laundromat and a dance school until 1959, when the “founding
mothers” of the North Shore Service League bought the property in conjunction with the Phillips Foundation. In 1961, the building was restored by architect Edward Weeks resulting in the structure of today. In 1962, the North Shore Service League officially became a part of the Association of Junior Leagues International. Through the help and support of the Restoration Committee, made up of Junior League members, the repairs and upgrades to the over 150-year-old building were completed last week. Christopher Cooper, an interior designer working with the membership, helped redesign and reimagine the floor layout and gave the shop a new look keeping in mind its historical background. “It is because of the Junior League of Long Island Thrift Shop, that our volunteers are equipped with the resources needed to complete various projects, workshops and give support to under-served communities throughout Long Island and also enable us to develop and train our volunteers throughout the years,” said League President Carol St. Jacques in a statement thanking the community for their help during the tough times. —Submitted by Graciela Hall and Barbara Kaplan, Roslyn Chamber of Commerce
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MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
Durkin Responds To ‘Fiscal Stress’ Claim JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
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ast week, The Roslyn News reported that the New York State Comptroller’s office had placed the Village of Roslyn as being “susceptible to fiscal stress” for its near future. Making the susceptible list is a long way from being in “significant fiscal stress.” Still, it was a surprise since the village, year in and year out, balances its books while keeping the property tax increase well within the state-mandated two percent cap. As the village’s longtime mayor, John Durkin has presided over each of these balanced budgets. The mayor, not surprisingly, was quick to respond. His statement sought to assure residents that any negative ratings will be temporary in nature. “The Village Board has been monitoring this matter and the Board anticipates that the New York State Comptroller’s designation of ‘susceptible fiscal stress’ will no longer be applied for the fiscal year which ends on May 31, 2022,” the statement began. “The Village of Roslyn was greatly impacted by COVID which significantly impacted our revenue side of the balance sheet in several areas, including building permits, parking meter fees and Justice Court fines. However, the second half of the 2021/2022 saw our reemergence from the pandemic with expected revenues to exceed expenditures by more than $500,000 even though the Village of Roslyn has never increased real estate taxes that exceed the New York State tax cap.” The announcement came after State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s office conducted its latest round of fiscal scores, which local governments with fiscal years ending between Feb. 28 and
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July 31, 2021. Roslyn’s overall score was 50.8. The susceptible range includes those village and cities within the 45 to 55 percent category. Up to 73 villages and cities have failed to file their financial information. A. John Durkin DiNapoli’s office did not exactly identify what being susceptible to fiscal stress means. It did say that the system, which has been in place since 2012,
assesses levels of fiscal stress in local governments using financial indicators including year-end fund balance, cash position, shortterm cash-flow borrowing and patterns of operating deficits. In total, the list generates overall fiscal stress scores, which ultimately drive final classifications. The system also analyzes separate environmental indicators to help provide insight into the health of local economies and other challenges that might affect a local government’s or school district’s finances. This information includes population trends, poverty, and unemployment to assist in budget planning, which DiNapoli said is especially helpful during periods of revenue and expenditure fluctuations.
This year’s testing revealed improvements for some of the villages in question. None of the state’s cities, towns and businesses fall under the category of “significant fiscal stress.” Only one village, Amsterdam in Montgomery County, was ranked in “moderate fiscal stress,” an improvement from last year when it was in the significant fiscal stress category. DiNapoli’s office said the villages of Addison (Steuben County) and South Dayton (Cattaraugus County) were also in “moderate fiscal stress.” Both villages were ranked in “susceptible to fiscal stress” last year but jumped in score this year with Addison going from 53.8 to 61.7 and South Dayton going from 47.5 to 55.4.
Police Injured In Car Chase The Major Case Bureau reports the arrest of three male juveniles that occurred on Sunday, April 24, at 12:15 p.m. in Lake Success for Grand Larceny. According to the Burglary Pattern Team, a Sixth Squad detective observed a 2020 blue Mercedes Benz in Roslyn that was previously reported stolen and attempted to conduct a Vehicle and Traffic Law stop; in
which the driver, a 16-year-old male juvenile, refused to comply. Police said that multiple police vehicles were struck by the defendant before he was finally stopped on the Long Island Expressway and placed under arrest. A 17-year-old male juvenile in the front passenger seat and a 16-year-old male juvenile in the rear passenger seat were also placed under arrest, police
added. All defendants were transported to a nearby hospital for assessment and treatment, police said. Three police officers and two detectives were also transported for treatment. Police said that one officer suffered a concussion and pain to the left wrist, right hip, back, and neck pain, while a second officer suffered neck and left shoulder pain and finally, a
third officer injured his left wrist. One detective suffered a concussion and another detective suffered cervical pain. A police investigation resulted in a loaded pistol being recovered from inside the vehicle. All three defendants are charged with Grand Larceny second degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon second degree and Criminal Possession of a Weapon third degree. The
driver is additionally charged with five counts of Assault second degree and Unlawful Fleeing of a Police Officer in a Motor Vehicle third degree. All defendants were arraigned at First District Court, Adolescent Offender Part, 99 Main St., Hempstead on Monday, April 25. —Submitted by the Nassau County Police Department
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022
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MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
Joe Lettera: Roslyn’s Master Of The Hardwood JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
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players with talent, high intelligence and who were resourceful. Their success as adults was predictable. They have achieved as doctors, lawyers, and businessmen, as authors, as a movie director and in coaching. ‘Good citizen’ is a label for all of them. I realized early that Roslyn was unique and I stayed for 32 years. It was my privilege to coach such boys. “Every coach knows the indispensable role of a wife who supports your passion for basketball. My wife is Janice and we calculate that she attended over 500 games and shared the highs and lows of every season. The players knew Janice and referred to her as Mrs.
his year marks the 145th anniversary of the Village of Roslyn. As you have noticed, The Roslyn News, throughout the course of this still-young year, has been running features of famous people and places in our town. Recently, we ran a feature on Michael Crichton, the Roslyn native who received world-wide fame as an author, screenwriter, and originator of such successful television series as ER. In that article, Crichton was quoted on the good fortune of growing up in a pleasant village. One of his inspirations was longtime Roslyn High School head basketball coach, Joe Lettera. Joe Lettera in action Crichton passed away in 2008. His old coach died on Dec. 6, 2021. This week, it’s Coach Lettera’s turn. division titles and two trips to the “Coach of the Year” While at the height of his fame, Nassau County finals, winning a in 1973. Joe was Crichton remembered where he county championship in 1980. two-time President came from and the impact Lettera Lettera’s many honors include of the Nassau had on him and other young men. being named 1973 Nassau County County Basketball In a 1996 profile, Crichton, Coach of the Year, a two-time Coaches Association while visiting his alma mater, represident of the Nassau County and received two marked that Lettera was a “young Basketball Coaches Association ‘Sportsmanship coach…who grew up in a tough and a two-time Sportsmanship Awards’ from neighborhood. He told us, ‘We’re Award winner from the Long the Long Island Lettera’s Hall of Fame plaque going to build character Island Basketball Officials. Basketball Officials through winning.’ So In 2014, Lettera Association. Coach America. Thank you Janice.” I wanted to come was named to the Lettera won the North Shore Lettera referred to his final back again and New York State Championship two times. Roslyn remarks as “personal and brief.” see where I Basketball was twice a Nassau County “Janice and I have three came from.” Hall of Fame. Basketball Finalist. His teams won children. They are here with their Lettera, for New York 7 Division Championships and families and our grandchildren,” his part, has been had 28 of 30 winning seasons. he noted. “We are proud of their called the basketJoe served for many years on the achievements in Roslyn High Crichton ball capital Section 8 Basketball Tournament School through effort and desire. one of the of America, Committee.” Our first son, Joe, was captain of five best so one can His induction speech was varsity football and played varsity players he imagine what equally memorable. basketball. I was very demanding ever coached, an illustrious “Thank you to Roslyn Public of Joe at every practice session. including the company Lettera Schools for unlimited opportuniBut he prevailed and earned a best center he ever now traveled in. ties. Thank you to fellow adminstarting position on our [1973] had. Coaches in the istrators, teachers, and coaches. championship team. Our daughter, Lettera’s career Hall of Fame Thank you to my secretaries and Addressing the Roslyn Valerie, played four varsity sports at Roslyn High include Nat male and female students who Board of Education and was a scholarship volleyball School remains Holman, Joe maintained contact with me and player at Syracuse University. Paul legendary. Lettera coached the Lapchick, Frank McGuire, Red became friends. was captain of varsity football and Bulldogs from 1958 to 1989. In Holtzman, Lou Carnesecca, Billy “Appreciation to family, players, those three decades, he won 405 Cunningham, and Jim Boeheim. friends, associations and opposing played lacrosse. He was a starting lacrosse goalie at Marist College. games, compiling an impressive The induction ceremony took coaches who sent a personal mesThank you, children, for your love .668 winning percentage. Roslyn place on March 16, 2014 at the sage for the Induction Ceremony and patience with your father.” enjoyed winning seasons in 28 out Glen Falls Civic Center. Lettera’s program. Your words will be a In addition, Lettera shared some of 30 seasons he served as head plaque read as follows: tangible part of this wonderful memories of his time in Roslyn coach. It is fair to say that no other “Joe Lettera directed the Varsity memory for me. with The Roslyn News. high school coach in America had Basketball Program at Roslyn “Most of all, thank you to every “It has been 20 years since I left such a record of excellence in that High School for 30 years and won boy who played on my teams and Roslyn and it is natural to reflect time period. 405 games from 1958 to 1989. were devoted to team play and on the past,” he said. “I believed Roslyn dominated during He was selected by the New York gave full effort at every practice I experienced a golden era in Lettera’s reign. They won seven Daily News as Nassau County and game. I was fortunate to have
Roslyn. The students were intelligent and highly motivated. During my time, there were two superb superintendents, Dr. John Owens, and the erudite Dr. Joshua Segal. The assistant superintendent, Dr. Madeline Richardson, was my administrator mentor and guided me through those leadership years. For most of my coaching career, I had one principal, Bob Canosa. He was a Harvard graduate who combined intelligence with composure and discipline on any issue. I realize I was very fortunate to be there during that time.” Later that year, the Roslyn Board of Education also recognized Lettera’s achievement. Superintendent Dr. Dan Brenner, board members, former students and players of Lettera’s spoke about the former coach who now has his Hall of Fame plaque hanging by the memorial of his close friend and colleague, the late Walter “Renny” Witzig. “Tonight we are celebrating the events that occurred in the last weeks and months,” said Dr. Brenner. “Coach Lettera is a storied basketball coach that led many teams to excellence and was recently put into the NYS Hall of Fame. He will forever be attached to Roslyn High School and forever be a part of the school’s history.” Steve D’Agostino, a former student and player of Lettera’s whose athletic career was cut short by an illness, gave a moving tribute to the former coach. “When I was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in my senior year, you took a bad situation and changed that outcome for me,” said D’Agostino. “I was privileged to have a coach who cared for me as a young man and cared for his team.” D’Agostino said that even though he could no longer play sports, Lettera made him an assistant coach so he could still be part of the team. “Thanks to Coach Lettera, I learned a lot about life and how to treat people from his courageous and passionate leadership.” The legendary college football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant once remarked that when a player graduated from the University of Alabama, he still felt a responsibility towards that player. The same was true of Joe Lettera. For him, there was no such thing as a “former player.” And that included world-famous novelists and everyday workingmen.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.
................... WEDNESDAY MAY 11
Computer Desktop Class From 11 a.m. to noon. Do you need help with setting up Kanopy, Hoopla or Libby, or do you have questions about Microsoft Office, PowerPoint, Google Drive or need help with basic computer questions, and many more? You can make an appointment with the library’s tech staff. The Bryant Library is at 2 Paper Mill Rd. Call 516-621-2240. The Alexander Technique Starts at 1 p.m. Learn how to improve posture, reduce pain, unwind, look and feel better with certified Alexander technique teacher Gary Adelman. Register online today. The Bryant Library is at 2 Paper Mill Rd. Call 516-621-2240.
................... THURSDAY, MAY 12
Burlap Owl Craft From 5 to 5:45 p.m. Grades K - 5. Bring your creativity to this informative program about owls. You will be designing an Owl family using burlap and buttons. Parent or caregiver must accompany the child. Online registration required for Zoom link. After registering, you will be notified when to come and pick up your materials. Call
Children’s Services at 516-621-2240. Fifth Grade Visit 9:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Harbor Hill fifth grade visit. At the Helen Glannon Room. Connect with us and your friends as library patrons gather together virtually for stories, songs, fingerplays and more. Develop important pre-literacy skills including vocabulary, print awareness, narrative skills, and phonological awareness. All are welcome, no registration required. Christopher Morley and Sherlock Holmes Online. 7:30 p.m. Sherlock Holmes is one of the most well-known characters in literature. One hundred and thirty-five years after his first Christopher appearance in A Morley Study in Scarlet, Sherlock Holmes is more popular than ever, celebrated in film, on stage, and by dedicated fans in clubs around the globe. The current worldwide Sherlockian phenomenon traces many of its origins to Roslyn’s own Christopher Morley. Morley founded the first major Holmes society, the Baker Street Irregulars, and wrote extensively about the famous detective. Join the library via Zoom on Thursday, May
Yoga under the stars 12, at 7:30 p.m. as historian Harrison Hunt examines Christopher Morley’s lifelong interest in Sherlock Holmes. Harrison Hunt was the senior curator of history for the Nassau County Department of Parks, for which he supervised numerous museum sites, including Christopher Morley’s writer’s retreat, The Knothole. Harrison is an active Sherlockian and a past president of the Roslyn Landmark Society.
relaxation. Pop Up Prana Yoga’s principle is that yoga is with you wherever you go and hosts its mobile, all-inclusive yoga service in varied environments. Its Friday night Yoga is intended to help guests unwind after a stressful week. If you’re an advanced yogi and seek growth, no worries. You will be given an opportunity to shine and improvise your own variations throughout the session. The park is at 2030 Wellwood Ave., Farmingdale. Call 631-249-6100.
................... FRIDAY, MAY 20
Correction
Yoga Under The Stars From 7:30 to 8:30 p.m., Pinelawn Memorial Park and Arboretum will host Pop Up Prana Yoga, where guests will be lead in an open level, beginner-friendly yoga practice and Hatha Centering Class. Performed at a slower pace, with less intense positions, the class with include extended time for meditation, yogic breath work and
The article, “Roger and Peggy Gerry: Master Preservationists” (The Roslyn News, Feb. 2, 2022), implies that Dr. Gerry voted against the construction of a Stop & Shop supermarket in Roslyn back in 1994. Dr. Gerry did indeed vote in favor of construction.
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2022 Nassau County Games For The Physically Challenged Announced
More than 1,000 athletes to compete at Mitchel Field Athletic Complex
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assau County Executive Bruce A. Blakeman and student athletes from the Henry Viscardi Center recently announced plans for the 2022 Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged, which will be taking place June 2 through June 4 at the Mitchel Field Athletic Complex and Nassau Community College. Competitors will travel throughout New York State to Nassau County to participate in a weekend of fun athletic events alongside friends and family. There is great excitement surrounding the 36th Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged, especially since this is the first year back after two years because of COVID-19. New York State funding was eliminated for the Games several years ago and the office of the Nassau County Executive, with the help of private sector sponsors, has kept the Games alive. County Executive Blakeman stated, “The student athletes who participate in the Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged are truly inspirational to watch.” Blakeman continued, “I encourage all residents to come down to Mitchel Field June 2-4, to see the student athletes in action and join in on the fun. I would also like to extend thanks and gratitude to the generous sponsors that have allowed us to keep the Games alive here in Nassau County.” With the general support of corporations such as Elias Properties, PSEG Long Island, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, The Theresa Foundation, UBS, Bethpage Federal Credit Union, the New York Yankees and the Dee Foundation, athletes will compete in track, field, slalom, archery, swimming, wheelchair basketball and table tennis. Participants, ranging from ages 5 to 21, face disabilities including blindness, visually impaired, deaf, hearing impaired, spinal cord injured, amputees and those who have cerebral palsy, dwarfism and other physical
More than 1,000 athletes will be participating in the 2022 Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged,
Nassau County Executive Bruce A. Blakeman announced plans for the 2022 Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged, which will be taking place June 2 through June 4 at the Mitchel Field Athletic Complex and Nassau Community College. (Photos courtesy of the office of County Executive Bruce Blakeman)
challenges. In its 36th year, the Games will take place in part due to contributions from King Kullen—America’ First Supermarket—who has been a long-time sponsor helping to feed the athletes, while Hofstra University has committed to housing the athletes with only minimal costs for maintenance. Nassau Community College is the venue hosting swimming, wheelchair basketball and table
tennis events as well as the closing ceremonies. The Nassau County Department of Health and Medical Reserve Corps volunteers will once again work to provide on-site medical care and response during the games. In addition, NICE Bus will provide shuttle bus service for participants and has also generously donated $5,000 toward the Opening Ceremonies. The cost of participation is
Wheelchair basketball is one of the events that athletes will be participating in during the 2022 Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged free and the numbers of athletes increase each year, boasting more than 1,000. The dedication brought forth by the parents, families, teachers, coaches and volunteers is critical to the success of the Games. Operating with a small staff, the Games are facilitated by those who return year after year to a program they love. “We are so excited to be back after a two-year pause and thank County Executive Blakeman for
his support of this unique program,” Games for the Physically Challenged Director Susan Maxwell said. “The athletes are ready to return to the thrill of the competition, the excitement of winning a medal and the comradery of the Games.” Visit www.nassaucountypc games.com for more information about the Nassau County Games for the Physically Challenged. —Submitted by the office of County Executive Bruce Blakeman
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DEC Announces $750,000 In Second Round Of ‘Regenerate NY’ Forestry Grants Funding now available for eligible private forest landowners
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ew York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Basil Seggos recently commemorated Arbor Day by announcing $750,000 in funding now available for the second round of the state’s “Regenerate NY” Forestry Cost Share Grant Program. The grant program is designed to assist private landowners in growing the next generation of forests, which are crucial for mitigating climate change, providing wildlife habitat, protecting air and water quality, and supplying an important renewable resource. A third of the total available funds ($250,000) is specifically earmarked for tree planting projects that will establish new forests or supplement the regeneration of existing ones. “Arbor Day is an inspiration for all New Yorkers to celebrate the importance of trees to our health, environment, and economy and to take actions collectively to preserve our forests for future generations,” Seggos said. “While climate change, invasive species and white-tailed deer are threatening the health of our trees and forests, I’m proud of the work our expert foresters are doing to advance programs, like Regenerate NY, that help forest landowners protect and sustainably manage our essential forest resources and the many benefits they provide. DEC encourages more New Yorkers to take advantage of these programs and help advance our forest conservation efforts across the state.” With nearly 75 percent of New York’s 18.7 million acres of forestland being privately owned, the grants help support landowners in growing healthy forests. Regenerate NY is funded by New York State’s Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) and managed by DEC’s Division of Lands and Forests. Private landowners who own between 10 and 1,000 acres of forest land in New York State may apply for grant awards ranging from a minimum of $10,000 to a maximum of $50,000, with a required 25 percent match. Eligible projects include, but are not limited to, planting trees, soil scarification, removing competing vegetation that would interfere with seedling establishment and growth, and installation of deer fence. Applicants must work with a private forester to develop their project. Up to two applications may be submitted per applicant, provided the applications are for separate properties. In the first year of the grant program in 2021, DEC awarded nearly $450,000 for 16 projects covering 503 practice acres. More
The Regenerate NY Forestry Cost Share Grant Program is making $750,000 available to assist private landowners in growing the next generation of forests. (Photo by Mark Daniel Lecciones/ ArborDayGrant_051322_MarkDanielLecciones)
than 12,000 tree seedlings are being planted across New York State thanks to the funding provided by that round of grants. Through these plantings, private landowners are ensuring the next generation of forests and all the benefits they provide by fostering existing forestland regeneration and establishing new forested areas. The sizes of projects varied, with the largest project covering 78 acres and the smallest involving half an acre. Contracts were executed to reforest a total of nearly 100 acres, restore 105 acres of forest stands, manage competing vegetation on 176 acres, and install deer fencing on 127 acres, among other projects. “Forests are one of our best tools in the fight against climate change,” New York
State Forester and Division of Lands and Forests Director Robert Davies said. “Not only do trees absorb and store carbon as they grow, but products made from wood require significantly less energy to make than their carbon dioxide-intense counterparts like aluminum and plastic, and solid wood products continue to store carbon well beyond a tree’s lifetime. New York’s private forests remove enough carbon dioxide from the atmosphere in one year to negate the emissions of two million gasoline-powered automobiles over the same time period, underscoring the importance of investing in the regeneration of forests.” “The New York Forest Owner’s Association applauds the Regenerate NY
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Forestry Cost Share Grant Program,” organization president Stacey Kazacos said. “Funding stewardship and regeneration efforts will help ensure our forests continue to support New York’s rural economy, protect our water and air quality, and sequester carbon for generations to come. We look forward to the long-term improvements this initiative will contribute to our communities throughout the state.” “In order to foster successful regeneration, forest landowners must actively manage and implement costly measures to ensure the next generation of forests, which in turn provide carbon sequestration benefits, as well as habitat and other ecosystem benefits for biodiversity,” John Bartow of the Empire State Forest Products Association said. “Regenerate NY is a critical financial assistance package for New York forest owners to actively manage and steward forests for the future, and we applaud DEC, the State Legislature and Governor Hochul for the continued support for Regenerate NY in the Environmental Protection Fund.” Applications may be submitted through the New York State Grants Gateway and will be accepted until 3 p.m. on Oct. 7, or until funds are depleted, whichever comes first. Grants will be awarded on a rolling basis. Applicants need to establish an account in the Grants Gateway System. Once registered, applicants can search the Grants Gateway for “Regenerate NY.” Arbor Day is a nationally celebrated observance held on the last Friday of April each year. It was originally established in 1872 to encourage farmers and homesteaders to plant trees for shade, fuel and beauty in open areas. Today, it is an opportunity to promote tree planting and care while we celebrate everything trees do for us. From a several hundred-acre rural forest to the street trees of an urban forest, all trees are important for providing invaluable ecosystem services and societal benefits that affect our everyday lives. Visit DEC’s website to learn more about Arbor Day. —Submitted by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
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Recycling Bikes And Sewing Machines Collection Drive Set May 14
t’s time to put those old bicycles and sewing machines to good use. Returned Peace Corps Volunteers of Long Island, in partnership with the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island, is collecting used bicycles and sewing machines on Saturday, May 14 (rain or shine) from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m, at the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island, 38 Old Country Rd. in Garden City (at the western end of Old Country Road). Items collected will be refurbished by the international projects Pedals for Progress and Sewing Peace and sent to Belize in Central America. Anyone with an adult or child’s bicycle in repairable condition or a working portable sewing machine is urged to donate the item. The program does not accept “bikes for parts,” disassembled bikes or tricycles. Since it costs $40 to collect, process, ship, rebuild and distribute each bicycle, a donation toward shipping costs is necessary (suggested minimum $20 per item). All cash and material donations are fully deductible and a receipt will be provided on site. This is the 18th bike/sewing machine collection organized by Returned Peace
Bike and sewing machine collection at the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island in 2020. (Photos courtesy of the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island)
Corps Volunteers of Long. Since beginning this collection, RPCV of LI has collected 1,668 bicycles and 261 sewing machines
Classes Start Second week in September. German Lessons Since 1897
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for more information email: kidslearngerman@aol.com or go to german-american-school.org
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that have been distributed to Rwanda, Tanzania, Togo, Guatemala, Albania and Kosovo amongst others. Pedals for Progress collects bicycles and sewing machines annually and transfers this material wealth to those more needy. To date, more than 163,785 bikes and 5,523 sewing machines have been shipped to developing countries in Latin America, Africa, Eastern Europe and the Caribbean. In these countries the bikes are reconditioned by partner agencies and distributed at low cost to poor working adults and children. These bikes provide reliable transportation for commuting to school, work, transporting product to market and accessing health care and other services. Sewing machine shipments help initiate educational programs and generate income opportunities that may otherwise remain out of reach for many people. Steady employment for adults is vital to the development and success of struggling communities. Alan Schultz, the in-coming director of Pedals for Progress and Sewing Peace, says that the first container of bikes and sewing machines will be sent to their partners in Belize and a second shipment is expected to be sent in June to Tanzania. Bette Bass of Massapequa, who was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Ethiopia from 1955-89, said, “Members of the RPCVs of Long Island see as their mission both to serve in the communities where we live and to support programs in developing countries as well as to support the Peace Corps and its goals.” For more information, contact Bette Bass at 516-606-1400 (email bettembass@ gmail.com or Kathy Williams-Ging at
Rachel in Tanzania is a seamstress and store owner in her local marketplace who received a sewing machine through Sewing Peace. She primarily makes dresses but also sells sewing equipment, thread and fabric. She has been running her business for five years and has been able to provide for herself and her daughter through her small business. 631-549-4873 (email ktsging@optonline. net). —Submitted by the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island
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Nassau County Legislature Announces Electric NICE Bus Initiative New electric fleet will be eco-friendly and cut back on county gas usage
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ith gas prices surging nation-wide, and increased environmental concerns being raised by many, there has been a push to use more public transportation to both save money and ease our carbon footprint. The Nassau County Legislature recently held a press conference at the NICE bus yard on Commercial Avenue in East Garden City to announce the purchase of six new battery electric-powered NICE Buses. “Nassau County has a reputation for being one of the most environmentally responsible counties in the State,” Presiding Officer Richard Nicolello said. “By adding zero-emission buses to our fleet, we will immediately reduce emissions and improve air quality here in Nassau County, while saving hundreds of thousands of dollars in maintenance and fuel.” The six vehicles purchased are New Flyer Xcelsior CHARGE NG 40-foot transit buses, model XE40. They come with 525KWh lithium-ion batteries and have a range of approximately 180 to 200 miles on a single charge. The cost is approximately $1.1 million per vehicle. The county’s funding has been supplemented by funding from New York State and the federal government for greener transportation. It is estimated that each electric bus will save up to $125,000 in maintenance and up to $400,000 in fuel savings over its 12-year lifespan. These six buses will initially service the Nassau County HUB area with service
originating from the Rosa Parks Bus Depot in the Village of Hempstead and serving the greater Hempstead, Nassau Community College, Hofstra University and Roosevelt Field areas. Usage will then expand throughout the county. “Nassau Inter-County Express has selected New Flyer as our new battery-electric bus vendor,” NICE Chief Executive Officer Jack Khzouz said. “We plan on deploying these energy-efficient vehicles for the launch of our new bus rapid transit (BRT) system, which will provide Nassau County with zero emissions travel between Rosa Parks Hempstead Transit Center to the Nassau Hub/NCC locations. They will help NICE improve accessibility and connectivity within Nassau County.” The charging equipment that will be purchased for the buses include ABB HVC Power cabinets and depot charge boxes. The primary charging station site will be the decommissioned water purification plant on the corner of Oak Street and Commercial Avenue in East Garden City. Legislation for the purchase of this new fleet as well as the construction of the charging stations passed through the full legislature. It had previously passed through Committees on March 7. The buses are expected in the Fall of 2022. They will be the first electric public transport buses in use on Long Island. —Submitted by the Nassau County Legislature
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From left in front of demo electric bus: Legislator Steve Rhoads; Legislator John Giuffré; Legislator Tom McKevitt; NICE Chief Executive Officer Jack Khzouz; Presiding Officer Richard Nicolello; Legislator Rose Marie Walker; Legislator John Ferretti; Legislator Laura Schaefer; and Legislator Mazi Melesa Pilip. (Photo courtesy of the Nassau County Legislature) 232139_
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‘New York City In 6’ Transportation Plan Lacks Substance Former New York City Comptroller and Mayoral candidate Scott Stringer and New York City Transit Riders Alliance’s “The NYC in 6” plan calls for investment in transportation to support around-the-clock transit service. Under this plan, trains and buses would arrive at least every six minutes all day, every day. It sounds great on paper. Riders would never have to wait more than six minutes for the next bus or subway train, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The plan also promises to reduce the cost for anyone boarding a Long Island or Metro North Rail Road train at any of the 41 stations within New York City for the same cost of a Metro card or OMNY (One Metro New York) card. Advocates failed to provide any details to explain the capital and operating costs, funding sources or implementation time table for this proposal. Farebox recovery rates vary based upon the trip, route and time of day. Any rush hour New York City Transit local or express bus, subway, Staten Island Railway, Long Island or Metro North Rail Road trip carries more riders than midday, evening, overnight or weekends. The same holds true for the New York City Economic Development Corporation Private Ferry Operator program. Rush hour trips have a better fare box recovery rate and require less subsidy than other times of day and night. There is always a fixed cost per hour for any mode of transportation. This includes equipment (bus, subway car, train or ferry purchase) straight line depreciation of equipment over time and mileage, driver,
PENNER STATION Larry Penner
engineer or ferry boat captain’s salary, conductors, ticket takers, deck hands, fuel or power and maintenance of equipment. The costs for all of the above to any promised six minute service intervals could easily add up to the hundreds of millions, if not a billion or more annually. This is based upon the need to purchase more equipment, replace existing equipment sooner as it is used more frequently, expand maintenance and storage capacity at existing bus depots and rail yards, staffing, maintenance and cost for fueling buses along with powering commuter rail and subway trains while in transit service. If you follow the logic of this proposal, it would also be extended to those boarding New York City Transit and MTA Bus Express buses from two fare zones (known as “transit deserts”) in Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens and Staten Island, as well. Thousands of those riders will want equivalent increased services. Ditto for the 66,000 daily pre-COVID-19 Staten Island Ferry and thousands more New York City Economic
Development Corporations private ferry operators riders. They also will want to see significant increased services even if not every six minutes. Express bus riders pay a premium $6.75 fare. They will want to see the same discounted equivalent $2.75 Metro Card or OMNY fare as LIRR or Metro North city based riders. How do proposal advocates propose to find funding, which could run into the tens of millions, to make up for this lost revenue? Thousands of current Long Island and Metro North New York City resident customers currently pay a premium single, weekly Former New York City Comptroller or monthly price for a ticket. If and Mayoral candidate Scott you also reduce their fares to Stringer (CC BY 2.0) equal the Metro Card or OMNY, the MTA will lose millions in Where is the financial plan revenue. How does the MTA fund outlining the detailed capital, opthis new deficit? erating, maintenance costs and The number 7 New York timetable for implementation City Transit subway rush hour express requires 25 minutes from of “NYC In 6” plan TANSTAFL? There ain’t no such thing as a free Main Street Flushing to Grand lunch or in this case cheap bus, Central Terminal or 30 minutes subway or commuter rail ride. to Hudson Yards. Current LIRR Someone will have to pick up the service from Flushing to Penn tab. It will end up as higher fares, Station requires 17 minutes. tolls, increased future congestion Initiation of LIRR service for East side access to Grand Central pricing and taxes. Terminal will require 20 minutes. Larry Penner is a transportaHow many of the pre COVID-19 tion advocate, historian and writFlushing number 7 subway er, who previously worked for the 66,000 riders offered the same Federal Transit Administration price on the LIRR, would switch Region 2 New York Office. This to save time? People will be standing in the aisles. With a free included the development, review, approval and oversight OMNY or Metro Card transfer from bus to subway, imagine how for billions in capital projects and programs for the MTA, NYC many thousands of new LIRR riders will attempt to board trains Transit, Long Island Rail Road, at Jamaica Station for trips to Metro North Rail Road, MTA Penn Station, Atlantic Terminal, Bus along with 30 other transit Hunters Point, Long Island City agencies in NY & NJ. or Grand Central Terminal.
THE SPIRIT OF OUR TOWN
Fr. Ralph Sommer
that made their presence known over a month ago are still trumpeting springtime splendor and the flowering cherry trees are only beginning to drop their petals onto our cars. Cold is the trade-off for a prolonged festive springtime. For Christians, what is happening in nature fits in with the spiritual movement of this time of year. While most folks know about the 12 days of Christmas, not everyone still knows about the 50 days of Easter. Of course
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Celebrating
38 YEARS
The Long Cold Spring As much as I long for warmer weather, I have been secretly enjoying hidden benefits of the long cold spring we’ve been having. You see, the cold nights and cool days have preserved the beauty of the spring flowering trees and plants for longer than usual. In past years we’d get a week or so of glory and then an especially hot day would cause the blooms to fade or drop and we’d then wait for summer green to fully leaf out. But not this year. Daffodils
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000
we acknowledge the birth of Jesus of Nazareth in December, but being born is something that happens to everyone. But rising from the dead? That’s something to get excited about. A dozen days won’t do to celebrate God’s promise of everlasting life. One of things that happens each year in the Catholic parishes during the Easter season is the celebration of bringing children to receive communion for the first time. If you look out
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IN BUSINESS 1984-2022
Letters to the editor are welcomed by Anton Media Group. We reserve the right to edit in the interest of space and clarity. All letters must include an address and daytime telephone number for verification. All material contributed to Anton Media Group in any form becomes the property of the newspapers to use, modify and distribute as the newspaper staff assigns or sees fit. Letters to the editor can be mailed to: editors@antonmediagroup.com Additional copies of this and other issues are available for purchase by calling 516-403-5120.
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The Popularity Of Fake According to the mighty Google, thief of personal information, the most popular vehicle is the US right now is the Ford F-150 truck. One of the most popular shows is Better Call Saul. When it comes to movies, The Batman’s popularity is off the charts. But what buries them all is the popularity of fake. Fake is the rage. Fake news, fake “breaking news,” fake statistics, fake polls, fake faces. The world of fake is escalating. Not surprisingly, history shows us this phenomenon is nothing new. Fake has been around since the Roman Empire. Nero wasn’t playing a violin while Rome burned. He wasn’t even there. The fake news was put out by his political enemies. This is true blue history. What’s not true is Trump declaring he coined the phrase. Because of the vast number of fake situations, I’ll highlight the most popular implemented by myself and the general public. Fake conversations, or phantom conversations, have been escalating, but once again originated years ago. The history of the phantom phone conversation goes back to the ‘40s, at least in the movies. Take the PI who shadows a suspect, careful not make any abrupt movements that may blow his cover. He stays back a safe distance as he follows the suspect through the crowded big city streets. Suddenly, the suspect
LONG ISLAND STORIES Thomas Kuntzmann
darts into a hotel and sits down in the lobby. The PI nonchalantly walks to the other end of the lobby and ducks into a phone booth. While keeping an eye on his suspect, he starts to mouth the fake dialogue. Out of reverence for old movies, I recently put a modern spin on this ruse and tweaked the dramatics for use as a salesperson repellent. First, I have nothing against salespeople. That is their livelihood, and they need to be, let’s say aggressive, in order to meet quotas. Anyway, my strategy is designed so I can enjoy browsing the merchandise. And then take pictures so I can order the item later online. Now, even though I have keen sense of when a salesperson is ready to pounce, the maneuver does not take much skill. As the salesperson approaches, yank out that cell phone and raise it to your
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE understand the belief that the your window at the neighbors who are headed off for church, you see boys dressed in suits and girls in white dresses. Countless photos are taken in front of the flowering shrubs and parking spots on the block are in short supply as all sorts of relatives arrive for the day. So what is this all about? Each Sunday, when Catholics come to church they have the opportunity to receive communion, a tradition that goes back to the night before Jesus died when he took bread and said, “Take this and eat: this is my body.” When parents bring their very little children to church, the young ones look on as their parents receive communion. Sometimes the kids say out loud what they are thinking: “I want one!” But until they are old enough to
host is really the way Jesus is present in this food, they are not yet able to receive communion. When they are old enough to understand and after two years of participation in a religious formation program, they can join the rest of the community in receiving communion each week. “First” communion is just that—the first time they are fed with communion. This of course is followed by second communion, third communion, etc. as the children now join their parents in receiving communion each week. Years ago it was prescribed what children had to wear for their first communion. It often involved white suits for the boys and white dresses with veils for the girls. These days it is up to each family to decide what special outfit to wear and many
ear. Start the fake call employing everyday dialogue for realism and not to raise any suspicion. “Yeah, hey Dave what’s going on? You what? No kidding, you bowled three perfect games and got signed to do television commercials? That’s wild.” No salesperson will walk up to you and say, “when you get off that call, can I help you?” The fake call is wildly popular because once you learn the routine, it can be used to hide from others seeking to borrow your car, money and valuable time. I teach classes starting next week. The next situation is taken from personal experience and what I’ll call the forced fake. My girlfriend and I went on an incredible vacation to Barcelona a few years back. This past year we a booked a vacation in Tennessee during Christmas when everything is closed. Great idea. She then asked me one evening if I’m excited about the upcoming trip. My mind immediately positioned the Barcelona vacation as a reference for what I consider exciting. Tennessee is a music capital but isn’t exactly over-thetop excitement. But in the name of relationship respectability, I faked it beautifully. “Absolutely. Can’t wait to step into an actual honky-tonk and tour Dolly Parton’s dressing room.” Wish we could leave today.” Unfortunately, sarcasm parents and grandparents recall their own first communion day and want to recreate something of that experience as they dress their children for the day. Why dress up? It’s like any other first experience. For example, parents take care to dress their children for their first day of school in a new school outfit. Yet communion is ultimately not about what a child wears, but how a child grows in faith. The saying, “you are what you eat” holds true here. Parents are concerned about feeding their children a healthy diet each day. Spiritually, Catholics feed on a weekly diet of the Divine. I know for myself, each time I receive communion, I have to seriously consider how I care for others and how loving I am. Ultimately this is why parents receive communion each week and why they are so
suffocated the beauty of the fake. But you get the point. In my opinion, the most overused implementation of fake is fake news. The reason is obvious. It’s easy to lie. Not only that, look at the hundreds of outlets that fake uses to blanket the earth: news reporters faking they are at the front lines of a war, sexy weather ladies faking they know what they’re talking about, and television reality shows faking they are real. Then there is the Saturday night get together at a neighbors’ house for dinner and debate. If you’re looking for the best way to ruin a weekend, this is it. Friends suddenly become enemies by debating world issues based on what they heard on some talk show. Ironically, they would all agree that these days, you really don’t know what is real or fake. Turns out that the debate is a game of Twister. Whether you’re
are on the right or left with your politics, the other guy is always is the courier of the fake news. Sometimes, you can get faked out by clinging to your opinion that was based on fake facts you heard on your trusted news source. Happens to the best of us. The bottom line is that engaging in fake situations may seem unhealthy or underhanded. But as you can see, on most occasions, it avoids a more compelling and complicated scene. Finally, I applaud the lifting of mandates for many obvious reasons, but one in particular. The price for the fake vaccine card had skyrocketed out of my price range. What did you think of this story? Email tfiction@hotmail.com to share it with Tom Kuntzmann. He is an outdoorsman with main interests in hiking and golf. His column focuses on local outdoor events and suburban stories.
Communion is the service of Christian worship at which bread and wine are consecrated and shared. (Photo by John Snyder/CC BY-SA 3.0) thrilled to bring their children to the Eucharistic table. More care. More love. Just what the world needs these days. Just as this year’s springtime has preserved the flowering beauty all around us, may
the ongoing beauty of people praying together each week fill us with joy. Father Ralph Sommer is the pastor of St. Bernard’s Church in Levittown and is an Anton Media Group columnist.
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ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE
LONG ISLAND WEEKLY
Felix Cavaliere’s Fave Masters Of The ‘88s Cavaliere as he relives a bucolic childhood learning classical music before getting bit by f Felix Cavaliere decided to the rock and roll bug. The retire tomorrow, the blueNashville resident is frank eyed soul singing organ player about his struggles to please and founding member of The his parents, who expected him Rascals could do that on the to become a doctor while he back of a boatload of accomharbored dreams of becoming plishments. Membership in a a professional musician, even number of halls of fame (Rock while he went off to Syracuse & Roll, Songwriter, Vocal Group, University, where he counted Grammy and Musicians), three Lou Reed among his classnumber one hits, seven Top mates. Cavaliere shares the 10 hits and 20 Top 40 hits. And pain of losing his mother at the that doesn’t even touch on the age of 13 and the eventual path enormous influence Cavaliere to spiritual enlightenment he had on a generation of musifound when he met his guru. cians that include Billy Joel, It’s a relationship he’s credited Bruce Springsteen and Little with steadying a life that found Steven Van Zandt. But instead, him navigating fatherhood, the 77-year-old Pelham native is divorce, the dissolution of not only on the road with fellow The Rascals and the ‘60s survivor and Monkee Micky passing of his exDolenz, but promoting his new wife and a child. autobiography, Felix Cavaliere: “In the book, Memoir Of a Rascal. It’s a projI mention how ect that took four years to take much a help my and proved to be a rewarding guru was in my experience despite the extended career and life,” he length of time it took to pen. said. “This man put “I have a new appreciation me on a path that for Stephen King because this I never left and I’m was a lot of work,” he said. “I so grateful for that. did this because I’m in my I’m still on that seventh decade and I was only path, still a Rascal for five or six years of my life. What about the other years? I thought people might find that interesting. In the end, I’m happy to have relived the memories of my family, kids, grandkids and guru Swami Paramahansa Yogananda.” The flow of Memoir of a Felix Cavaliere Rascal is one that sounds as (Photo courtesy of Felix Cavaliere) if you’re kicking back with
I
healthy, still able to work and sing because of a lot of the tenets he taught me. It’s pretty simple—you take care of your mind, soul and your body and you’re going to be alright.” With another album under his belt that’s he’s aiming to release later in 2022, Cavaliere is being driven by a clean life, love of family and an insatiable appetite for making music that’s keeping him youthful and on the road. “Having done this book, my biggest takeaway is ‘How lucky am I?,’” he said. “Not only have I had an unbelievable career,’ but an unbelievable life. It’s not perfect. I lost a daughter. I lost a band. I’ve been divorced. I lost a wife. But you know what? I’m very thankful because when you get to the end of the book, I’m still going.” Given how much music continues to feed Cavalieri, he was more than happy to share who some of his favorite keyboard/ organ players are.
with his right hand. The way he played bass—he obviously studied bass because he wasn’t just tapping the roots of the chord. He was playing lines (Public domain) and those lines now are like classical training for the Hammond organ. His sounds were brilliant. They weren’t kid sounds— they were funk sounds.”
Billy Joel
(May 9, 1949 to the present)
Ray Charles (September 23, 1930 to June 10, 2004)
“I was a little white kid growing up in Westchester County listening to classical music the first time I heard him, which was on a little transistor (Public domain) radio tuned to WINS playing ‘What’d I Say.’ It was really influential. You could hear the soul and depth of him through his music. I couldn’t figure out how he tapped into that depth and crying. Later on I realized it came through a lot of grief and pain.”
Jimmy Smith (December 8, 1925 to February 8, 2005)
“You haver to realize that like most organ players, he played the bass with his feet and hands. The melody was played
“He’s got amazing chops. The first time I met him was in the early days when he was this young Long Island prodigy who loved and (Photo by David admired The Rascals. Shankbone/CC Musically, he speaks BY 3.0) for himself. He’s got a gift for emulating other people’s music with class, like Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. The other thing I admire about him is that he’s a fighter. He had a financial problem with a manager where he was financially bleeding. But he picked himself up, didn’t cry about it, didn’t disappear and slide into drugs. I never heard him bitch about it. He’s a survivor who’s back on his feet again who came back and kicked ass.” Felix Cavaliere will be appearing with Micky Dolenz on May 14 at the Patchogue Theatre for the Performing Arts, 71 East Main St., Patchogue. For more information, visit www.patchoguetheatre.com or call 631-207-1313.
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BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO
dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022 11A
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HOME & DESIGN Don’t Spring Into Garden Cleanup Too Soon
HOMES
Recently Sold
BY JUSTIN WHEELER
specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
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This immaculate expanded ranch situated on quiet block in the heart of Hicksville at 128 Burns Ave. sold on April 29 for $625,000. This home has great curb appeal with newer vinyl siding, a brick walkway, bluestone stoop and steps. The living room is extended and has a brick fireplace, skylight and sliding doors to the backyard. The dining room is suitable for a banquet. The floors are hardwood. The kitchen has oak cabinets and a skylight. The first floor has three bedrooms and two bathrooms. The attic has pull-down stairs. The home has central air conditioning and all of the windows have been replaced. The garage fits one and a half cars and has an attached shed. The driveway has new blacktop and brick. The home has solar panels which help for a low electric bill. The backyard is fenced and there is a new brick patio. The property has in-ground sprinklers. The home is near shopping and transporation. This beautiful, totally renovated home at 67 Friendly Rd. in Hicksville sold on April 29 for $735,000. It has a large open floorplan with engineered hardwood floors throughout on both levels. The designer kitchen is fabulous and has white wood cabinetry including a gorgeous seven-foot center island, stainless appliances and quartz countertops. This home boasts four large bedrooms, a study/den with lovely glass doors and two full bathrooms. The home has central air conditioning, forced air heat and a utility room for the boiler and storage. There is a designated closet for a washer and dryer. The backyard is fully fenced with a large patio; lovely landscaping provides privacy. The home has upgraded 200amp electric service, in-ground sprinklers and low taxes.
socks and long underwear—it’s too early.
pring is here. A time Have I paid my taxes? when warmer weather In mid-late April should naturally turns a be the earliest you consider winter-weary homeowner’s cutting back perennials and thoughts towards tackling clearing garden debris. Keep in outdoor chores. The first warm mind that some bees don’t weather of the season emerge until late May, may coax us out so the longer you into the yard, but can tolerate your pollinators in “messy” garden your garden the better. aren’t ready to take a chance on Would I the first warm You may have plant day. Chrysalides seen a bumble bee tomatoes still cling to last already. now? season’s dried standing Any gardener will tell you plant material. While you may it’s not a good idea to plant your begin to see bumble bees and tomatoes outdoors until evening ground-nesting bees emerge as temperatures are in the 50s. flowering trees and shrubs burst into bloom, they still need cover Is it time to mow? during chilly nights and when If it’s time to regularly mow “April brings the sweet spring your lawn, it’s probably a safe showers, on and on for hours bet that most pollinators have and hours.” While carpenter emerged. bees and bumble bees may be It’s tough to turn a blind eye out and about by early April, to the “messy” garden, especialother species such as sweat ly when gardening magazines, bees are still hiding out, waiting catalogs and TV ads provide for the warmer days that arrive temptation daily. Each spring in May. Last year’s leaf litter is we beg gardeners and homestill providing protection for owners to press pause and both plants and invertebrates find other ways to occupy their against late-season frosts. weekends. While you may be eager to get outside and play in Have I put away the the garden—there will be time snow shovel? enough to toil in the soil before If you haven’t tempted fate you know it. yet by relegating the snow —Justin Wheeler writes for shovel to the back of the garage Xerces Society (xerces.org) and if you’re still wearing wool
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.
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. 917.868.8745. *Source: 2021 Closed Sales Volume, U.S., RealTrends 500.
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Nassau County D.A. Counterfeit Jacket Donation Project Winds Down Final 1,000 jackets distributed; 600 jackets donated to humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine
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assau County District Attorney (NCDA) Anne T. Donnelly recently announced the completion of a six-year long effort to donate nearly 100,000 counterfeit jackets—seized during multiple investigations—to more than 160 charities across Long Island and the greater New York area. During three investigations between 2015 and 2017, the NCDA and its law enforcement partners in the Nassau County Police Department, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Homeland Security Investigations, seized nearly 100,000 counterfeit jackets from warehouses in Hicksville, Westbury and Old Bethpage, intended for sale with a street value that— at the time—exceeded $3 million. The NCDA has distributed the jackets to more than 160 nonprofits, charities and volunteer groups for individuals in need. The final 1,000 jackets were recently distributed to charities, including 600 jackets that have been donated to St. Finbar Roman Catholic Church, which will be sent to Ukraine as part of humanitarian relief efforts in the region. “After three seizures netted us nearly 100,000 counterfeit jackets, we were faced with a tough choice: send them to the incinerator to be destroyed like most counterfeit goods, or get creative, and find a way to put these jackets into the hands of people who needed them most,” Donnelly said. “With the help of our extraordinary partners, the jackets were given new life and donated to charities across Long Island and New York. Now, at the end of this journey with one final donation, we are glad to be able to provide some small measure of relief to the people of Ukraine.” “After a lengthy multi-agency investigation was conducted, the most advantageous way for the counterfeit goods to be dispersed was to ensure that the deserving in our communities are taken care of,” Nassau County Police Department (NCDP) Commissioner Patrick J. Ryder said. “Not only will these jackets keep them warm, it will bring smiles to their faces knowing that their law enforcement agencies care. With many of the jackets also being shipped to the Ukraine, it’s a great way for Nassau County to show our support.” “In supporting neuro-diverse inclusion and employment opportunities through this donation, the Nassau County District Attorney’s Office has strengthened the fabric of the entire county,” AHRC (Association for the Help of Retarded Children) Nassau CEO Stanfort J. Perry said. “These machines
District Attorney Anne T. Donnelly (center), Nassau County Police Department Commissioner Patrick J. Ryder (third from right), AHRC Nassau CEO Stanfort J. Perry (third from left) and partners pose with donated counterfeit jackets.
District Attorney Anne T. Donnelly (at the podium) announces the completion of a six-year long effort to donate nearly 100,000 seized counterfeit jackets to upwards of 160 charities across Long Island and the greater New York area, along with an outgoing shipment to the Ukraine. (Photos courtesy of the office of the Nassau County District Attorney)
provide a pathway for men and women with developmental disabilities to become meaningfully employed while supplying needed resources in our local Long Island economy.” Seized counterfeit clothing was once destroyed by law, but in 2015, state forfeiture laws were amended to allow for counterfeit items, like clothing or jackets, to be donated to charity with proper safety testing and the permission of the victim. In 2015, NCDA, NCPD, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Homeland Security Investigations seized more than 50,000 counterfeit jackets in a Hicksville warehouse, with a street value at the time in excess of $2 million. State law requires not-for-profit recipients of donated counterfeit clothing to
inspect or pay for inspection of the clothing to ensure it is safe for consumers. The defendant was ordered, as part of his plea, to pay for the expense of the independent testing and the storage of the jackets earmarked for donation. Two additional seizures, in Westbury and Old Bethpage in 2016 and 2017, respectively, brought the total number of seized counterfeit jackets to 98,000. With the permission of the victim manufacturer, a project was initiated to alter the jackets to remove the fraudulent labels using embroidery machines that were also seized during the investigations. NCDA donated four seized machines to AHRC Nassau and Spectrum Designs, who trained their clients with intellectual and developmental disabilities to operate
Seized embroidery machines at AHRC Nassau used to embroider over the counterfeit labels of more than 13,000 of the donated jackets. the embroidery machines and remove the counterfeit labels, ensuring the jackets were ready for charitable donation, while providing their clients with valuable, transferable, occupational skills. All jackets were safety tested and counterfeit trademarks were removed before donation to charitable organizations. The NCDA thanks the many organizations that have assisted in these efforts, including its law enforcement partners, AHRC Nassau, Spectrum Designs, the recipient charities, veterans’ associations, local business owners and manufacturers and NCDA staff who participated in the project. —Submitted by the Nassau County District Attorney’s office
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022 13A
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Bill to Electrify Home BILL TO:
BILL FROM:
NEW YORK STATE
Washington Ave and State St Albany, NY 12224
New York State Resident 123 Main Street Albany, NY 12207
$1,000
Electric Stove
$2,700
Electric Hot Water Heater
$7,500
Electric Heat Pump & Installation C) System New Heating/Cooling Ventilation (HVA
TOTAL DUE:
$25,000
$36,200
Albany’s Energy Plan Could Cost You Big Time. State lawmakers are finalizing the details for an energy plan that most New Yorkers haven’t heard much about. It includes a ban on gas appliances in your home – including stoves, furnaces and water heaters – which could cost the average New Yorker about $30,000 to replace. Some lawmakers in Albany even want to completely eliminate natural gas use. Today, more than 60% of New Yorkers use gas in their homes, and without it, our utility bills could skyrocket.
Tell Albany: Long Island Can’t Afford Their Energy Plan. For more information, visit: NY4AffordableEnergy.com
PAID FOR BY NEW YORKERS FOR AFFORDABLE ENERGY
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14A MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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That Seventies Novel
Ready for a fun-filled, safe summer?
Review of: Crossroads by Jonathan Franzen
JOSEPH SCOTCHIE
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jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
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he novelist Jonathan Franzen is a bird watcher, so much so that he published a book on his passion, The End of the End of The Earth. While celebrating bird life, he proclaimed that we humans should stop having children. Second thoughts? His latest novel, Crossroads, is about a postwar couple, Russ and Marion Hildebrandt who are right in step with that fecund era, raising now a family of three boys and girls. The novel is a story of liberal Protestantism, early 1970s-style. Russ Hildebrandt, a reverend at a suburban Chicago parish, holds the usual amount of nostalgia for the antiwar, pro-civil rights era of the 1960s. That decade is over. The war in Vietnam is winding down. In the Sixties, the country ran off track. What would the new decade bring? Would the country go back on track or continue to indulge in the liberation ideology of the previous decade? Set in suburbia, the novel takes the predicable journey into John Updike territory. Russ is bored with his “joyless” marriage. He takes up with a female parishioner. His wife, in turn, travels to California, ostensibly to meet relatives but with the real objective to countering Russ’s adultery with an affair with an old flame. Her former lover is now old and flabby and balding. In his life, Russ has only been with one woman. Marion has been with two. He wants to catch up. The couple’s middle-aged angst is predictably boorish. Do we need more novels on this worn-out subject? The drama comes from the couple’s children. Clem, the oldest, feels guilty about his college deferment that allows him to avoid Vietnam. His girlfriend has an older brother in southeast Asia, plus Clem’s father was one of those rare conscientious objectors during World War II. To his girlfriend’s dismay, he wants to enlist. Becky Hildebrandt is the All-American girl, a popular cheerleader all with an admiring folk musician boyfriend in tow. Judson is too young to be part of the family drama, but his older brother, Perry, upsets the entire apple cart. A bright high school student, he also deals in narcotics. On a church trip to an Indian reservation in Arizona, he discovers peyote and dreams of creating his own peyote empire selling the drug to ChicagoLand’s hippie population. Along the way, Perry gets in trouble with the law and then tries to hang himself in a jail cell. That shocker pulls his parents back together. The legal bills to bail
out of the young man also take a bite of the Becky’s college tuition savings. Her life, too, is off track. Crossroads is a solid portrait of early 1970s America. In a time of great restlessness, young people did not necessarily take the high school-to-college route. College dropouts were numerous. Middle class youth hit the road, joining the ranks of the working-class. Which way, America? Well, the country couldn’t make up its mind. The lure of Sixties-style liberation ideology, then and now, proved irresistible. Clem and Becky confront adulthood. The older brother leaves a heartbroken girlfriend. However, the draft board rejects his enlistment idea and so the young man travels south to work with peasants in Peru before finishing college and joining the middle class. Bereft of tuition money, Becky joins her musician boyfriend on a European tour, where she promptly gets pregnant and happily married. Clem achieves adulthood not through the service, but instead through hard labor in the fields. The children are more admirable than their parents. Becky’s private prayer sessions are both intense and believable. Being a Christian gentlelady is her goal in life. The reader roots for her and for Clem to redeem their parents’ behavior. Crossroads is being advertised as the first novel in a planned trilogy. It is also a happy-ending novel, full of hard-fought victories. Russ and Marion escape suburbia for a parish in rural Indiana. Becky’s Christianity is sincere. Clem’s breakup with his girlfriend, Sharon, makes him a less attractive figure. Perry’s health problems apparently will set up plots for coming volumes. Franzen’s project is off to a good start. The major characters confront their dilemmas and seek to overcome them, proving again that all good fiction is a highly moral enterprise.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022 15A
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Guest Organist Peter Richard Conte In Recital
n organ concert featuring Peter Richard Conte will take place on Friday, May 13, at 7:30 p.m. at St. Agnes Cathedral located at 29 Quealy Pl. in Rockville Centre. He is a Nassau County native. Conte’s nearly-unparalleled technical facility, brilliant ear for lush tonal color and innovative programming style have made him one of the most sought-after orchestral organists of this era. In 1989, he was appointed Wanamaker Grand Court Organist at what is now the Macy’s Department Store in downtown Philadelphia, the fourth person to hold that title since the organ first played in 1911. He performs a majority of twice-daily recitals on the largest (29,000+ pipes) fully-functioning musical instrument in the world. Conte is also principal organist of Longwood Gardens in Kennett Square, PA, organist choirmaster of St. Clement’s Church in Philadelphia and a frequent collaborator and soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Philly Pops. Conte is high regarded as a mind-bogglingly masterful performer and arranger of organ transcriptions. He has been regularly featured on National Public Radio and on ABC television’s Good Morning America and World News Tonight. For 13 years he was heard on The Wanamaker Organ Hour radio program
Peter Richard Conte (Photo courtesy of Charles Miller, Philip Truckenbrod Concert Artists)
on the Internet at WRTI.ORG. He has been a featured artist at several American Guild of Organists national and regional conventions and has performed as soloist with numerous orchestras across the U.S. Conte has served as Adjunct Assistant
Professor of Organ at Westminster Choir College in Princeton, NJ, where he taught organ improvisation. He is the 2008 recipient of the Distinguished Alumni Award from the Indiana University School of Music in Bloomington. In 2013, the Philadelphia
Music Alliance honored him with a bronze plaque on the Avenue of the Arts’ Walk of Fame. His numerous recordings appear on the Gothic, JAV, Pro Organo, Dorian, Raven and DTR labels. His most recent solo CD, Virgil Fox Remembered, was released in May 2016 on the Raven Label. All are welcome to attend this concert. It will be followed by a reception at which the Nassau Chapter of the American Guild of Organists will celebrate its 90th anniversary. Suggested donation to the concert is $20 for general admission and $15 for AGO members. The reception is free. —Submitted by the Nassau Chapter of the American Guild of Organists
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Bring/Mention this ad to Adis or Alis and receive a complimentary cordial from our Il Mulino cart
1042 Northern Blvd, Roslyn, NY 11576 • Reservation 516.621.1870 www.ilmulino.com
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16A MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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Eat See Do Check out these great places in New Hyde Park Eat at Original Umberto’s of New Hyde Park
The Original Umberto’s of New Hyde Park Family Restaurant opened in 1965 by Umberto Corteo, his brother Joe, and eventually his brother Carlo. The small pizzeria has grown into a two-story full-service cafe, four-star dining room and a world-class banquet facility, now including an outdoor, tented patio. The family-run business has also opened locations in Bellmore, Lake Grove, Massapequa and Manhasset. At the very least, if you cannot decide from the dozens of appetizingly delicious menu items, try either a Sicilian slice (rated best Sicilian pie in New York) or a Grandma slice (once featured on the Food Network). Located at 633 Jericho Tpke., west of Lakeville Road. Open weekdays and Saturdays from 10:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and on Sundays from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Visit www.umbertosfamily.com or call 516-437-7698 to place an order or to make a reservation.
McDonald’s at the Joseph Denton House
The Joseph Denton House is a historic building in New Hyde Park within the Town of North Hempstead. It was built in 1795 as a farmhouse, then it was converted in the
Bobb Howard’s General Store candy (Christy Hinko)
Bobb Howard’s General Store
McDonald’s of New Hyde Park at Denton House
Umberto’s of New Hyde Park 1860s to a Georgian-style mansion. After WWII, the home was sold before becoming a funeral home and then a series of restaurants. McDonald’s acquired the dilapidated property in 1985, intending to demolish it and build a standard structure. North Hempstead and residents of the New Hyde
Park community successfully sought historic designation after a three-year battle. An agreement was reached with McDonald’s to allow a single-story addition to the back for a drive-thru if the front exterior was restored to its 1926 appearance. After an extensive renovation which included installing a series of windows for the veranda, and restoration of the ornamentation, window shutters and brick chimneys, McDonald’s opened in the historic building in 1991. The inside of the building was gutted in the process, including exposed rafters. A grand staircase leads to a dining area on the second floor. Located at 2045 Jericho Tpke., east from New Hyde Park Road.
This year marks a milestone year for Eileen Caplin Wysel and her husband, Ronnie, owners of Bobb Howard’s General Store in New Hyde Park, its 75th anniversary to be exact. With oldtime candy, some of the favorites that we still love today date back to the early 1900s, like Bit-O-Honey, Dum Dums, Good and Plenty, gumdrops, jelly beans, PEZ, Raisinets, rock candy, Sixlets, Slo Pokes, Tootsie Rolls and Twizzlers. And all of these can still be found at Bobb Howard’s General Store. Located at 581 Lakeville Rd., just north of Jericho Turnpike. The store is open Monday through Saturday from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Visit www.bobbhowardsgeneralstore. com to learn more about old-time candies, the history of the general store or to place a special order. —Compiled by Christy Hinko
Northwell Opens Sandra Atlas Bass Otolaryngology Center New center offers state-of-the-art exam, testing and procedure space thanks to generous donation Northwell Health recently announced the opening of the Sandra Atlas Bass Otolaryngology Center, an 18,000-squarefoot, state-of-the-art, comprehensive care facility featuring top otolaryngologists and head and neck tumor experts, on the campus of Long Island Jewish Medical Center. The Otolaryngology Center, located at 444 Lakeville Rd. in New Hyde Park, was funded through a generous $12.15 million donation from longtime Northwell Health benefactor Sandra Atlas Bass. The center will offer head and neck ambulatory procedures; adult laryngology, rhinology and skull base surgery; facial plastic surgery; general otolaryngology; adult speech language pathology; and audiology testing. “Northwell Health is eternally grateful for the friendship and support of Sandra Atlas Bass,” Northwell president and CEO Michael Dowling said. “It’s been a threedecade-long philanthropic partnership that’s had a truly profound impact on the communities that we serve. Northwell is
able to deliver world-class care because of selfless supporters like Ms. Bass. And we thank her very, very much.” Bass is a leading philanthropist and her commitment to Northwell has changed the lives of thousands of patients through her extraordinary generosity. Her giving for this project supports Northwell’s “Outpacing the Impossible” campaign, which Northwell Health announced in 2018 with the ambitious goal of raising $1 billion to advance care throughout the Metro New York region. “This new center is so important to the health and wellbeing of our communities because it will play a critical role in our ability to communicate and connect with others,” Bass said. “I’m thankful that I can help advance the science of head and
neck conditions and make a difference in people’s lives.” Her latest gift expands and modernizes Northwell’s flagship otolaryngology practice. The new clinical space features 22 exam and four procedure rooms, testing facilities and conference rooms. “This incredible gift from Ms. Bass allows us to care for patients with many forms of communication disabilities,” said Andrea Vambutas, MD, senior vice president and executive director of Northwell’s Head and Neck Services. “Our goal is to provide advanced, state-of-the-art treatment for many complicated otolaryngologic diseases that affect our ability to hear, smell, swallow or talk.” The center is staffed by recognized specialists in head and neck surgery,
laryngology, sinus surgery, sleep medicine, plastic surgery and reconstructive surgery and general otolaryngology. “The Sandra Atlas Bass Otolaryngology Center broadens our ambulatory abilities to treat adult otolaryngology patients with routine and complex disease,” said Allan Abramson, MD, chair emeritus of the Department of Otolaryngology at Long Island Jewish Medical Center. “In addition, this beautiful facility will help enable us to recruit and train outstanding otolaryngology residents and fellows.” Bass also supports a long-running program that provides hearing aids for children and adolescents from underserved communities. Life-changing hearing aids have been shown to improve communication skills, academic performance, and the ability to socialize. Call 888-321-3627 or go to www.north well.edu/otolaryngology for more information or to book an appointment, —Submitted by Northwell Health
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022 17A
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Give A Man A Salmon And He’ll Poach It
here are many different methods to cooking. Each one impacts the flavor and texture of the food. Examples include roasting, grilling, sautéing, boiling, frying, braising, poaching, sous vide, steaming and even microwaving, which I must admit is not a technique I recommend. The degree to which we choose to use these methods also follows habitual ways of cooking. We most frequently roast our turkeys, grill our steaks, sauté our vegetables and boil our eggs. Or we fry our bacon and sometimes poach our fish and steam our vegetables. Sous vide is my newest favorite, and it is only 40 years old and it cooks by temperature alone. Poaching is similar to sous vide, however, poaching imparts flavor through the liquid itself. For many people, Asian takeout is the only experience they have with poaching. In the Far East, this technique is as common as burgers on the grill. In contrast, Western-style eaters choose to fry, grill, roast or braise. But we sell ourselves short not to give other methods a try. Poaching is one of the easiest, quickest and most satisfying cooking methods available. However, poaching is among the most nutritious and healthiest methods ever devised in that it does not use any fat in the cooking process to carry heat to the food and it is as flexible as the flavoring you add to the liquid.
How Long Do We Poach?
Poaching is ideally done on top of your oven on a burner with liquid reaching temperatures between 160 and 180 Fahrenheit. This will take about 8 minutes in the bath at desired temperature confirmed by a food thermometer. If the liquid is bubbling at the top, turn it down until you only see the liquid moving or simmering slightly at the bottom. If your vegetables are smaller than a couple of inches square, poach less time—3 to 4 minutes.
ZOX’s KITCHEN Chef Alan Zox
What Liquid Is Used And How Much Do We Use?
The liquid you poach in will significantly determine the taste of the food. Try water, milk, wine, broth, lemon juice, vinegar or puréed vegetables in a liquid of your choice, an approach made popular by author and Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten. Not very much liquid is needed—2 to 4 inches high—or approximately 2 quarts of liquid in a large pan dependent upon the thickness of items to be poached. We place the items half in and half out of the liquid.
What Holds The Food To Be Poached? As you can see from the above
procedure, no special equipment is needed for poaching other than a medium to large-size sauté pan as long as it will hold the proper amount of liquid and the items to be poached. If a larger pan is needed, use a large hotel pan to hold whatever you are poaching with another pan that sits inside with holes. This second pan must be low enough so that the poaching items are partly in the liquid and partly out. Cover the entire poaching container with a metal top or a piece of aluminum foil. This works perfectly fine and is less expensive than poachers sold at William Sonoma or an online company you can Google. Here’s a simple recipe for poached salmon. This is a dish that is divine with a freshly tossed salad and a lemon, fennel vinaigrette and some brown rice and bulgur wheat on the side.
Fennel Dipping Sauce
Combine ¼ cup extra virgin olive oil with 1 tbsp sweet tamari sauce, 1 tbsp mirin, juice of ½ lemon and 1 teaspoon toasted and crushed fennel seeds. Whisk all together. This sauce can also be used on the salad. Buon Appetito. Chef Alan Zox is the Cape Cod Culinary Incubator executive director. Visit www. zoxkitchen.com or www.facebook.com/zox kitchen for more information about Chef Zox.
Poached Salmon Recipe With Fennel Dipping Sauce Serves 4 to 6
2 lbs salmon cut into 4 to 6 pieces. (Also try any white fish like halibut, flounder or fluke. Squid or shrimp poached for 3 to 4 minutes each are wonderful.) 1 ½ cups pinot grigio 1 ½ cups water 1 large poblano chile pepper, diced 1 large Italian red pepper, diced ½ cup chopped cilantro 1 quartered yellow onion 1 chopped celery stalk 1 large chopped carrot 1 quartered lemon 1. Pour poaching liquid that includes pinot grigio and water into a medium-size skillet with sides. Add one rough chopped poblano chile and one rough chopped Italian pepper, loosely packed cilantro, quartered yellow onion, 1 chopped celery stalk and one large chopped carrot. 2. Place the salmon in simmering liquid using medium heat and poach for 7 to 8 minutes. Remove and carefully place on a sheet tray. Cover with aluminum foil and hold on top of the stove until ready to eat within 10 minutes. If longer, put in oven at 225F still covered until ready to eat, within 10 minutes.
How Do You Know If The Food Is Done?
Place the item to be poached into a poaching bath at least half-covered until the internal temperature of chicken or fish has reached about 160F, which takes about 8 to 10 minutes—confirmed by a food thermometer. Vegetables take less time—3 to 4 minutes—and tend to retain their color. Fish develops a slightly white color or pink with salmon; chicken or other birds will also become slightly pale in color as will pork. Don’t expect your food to be brown or crispy but rather moist and plump. You will also have the knowledge of eating virtually no fat nor dairy.
Poached salmon (Photo by Caff Williams/public domain)
18A MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
FULL RUN
Top Court Tosses Out Latest Congressional Map Pennsylvania resident to draw New York maps
JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
W
ill New York have congressional districts approved before the now-August primary? Will they have it done before the November elections? Does it take a resident of Pittsburgh to draw a legislative map for all of New York State? Or as Casey Stengel once put it, “Can’t anybody here play this game?” Once again, the process of drawing up congressional districts for the decade of the 2020’s has been stalled. Last week, the New York State Court of Appeals struck down maps the Democratic Party-dominated State Assembly and State Senate had approved. The court is comprised of eight members, all appointed by the governor of New York. Voting to reject the latest map were Judges Janet DiFiore, Michael Garcia, Madeline Singas and Anthony Cannataro. Judges Rowan D. Wilson and Shirley Troutman partially agreed with the majority opinion. One judge, Jenny Rivera dissented. “Upon careful review of the plain language of the Constitution and the history pertaining to the adoption of the 2014 reforms, it is evident that the legislature and the Independent Redistricting Commission (IRC) deviated from the constitutionally-mandated procedure,” wrote Chief Judge Janet DiFiore. The majority decision also claimed that the maps were “...drawn with an unconstitutional partisan intent.” The failed process throws the primary season into turmoil. The June primaries for congressional seats and State Senate seats have been canceled. Instead, those primaries will have to wait until Aug. 23. The June 28 primary for the governor’s race and State Assembly races remains intact. As expected, reaction was swift. Nicole Malliotakis, a Republican congresswoman from Staten Island, was pleased by the ruling. “The will of the people prevailed over the corrupt Albany Machine in a tremendous victory for democracy, fair elections and the Constitution!,” she tweeted. The rejected map would have put Malliotakis’ seat in play.
Former Nassau County District Attorney Madeleine Singas Meanwhile, Representative Sean Patrick Maloney, who represents a district in the lower Hudson Valley, now has his seat in some jeopardy. Maloney, however, was defiant. His response: “Two words: Bring it.” The ruling demonstrates the chaos that the restricting process has become. The IRC came into being in 2014 through a voter-approved constitutional amendment. In recent months, the IRC drew up a map that was rejected by state legislators. The IRC refused to draw up a new map and so the State Assembly and State Senate submitted their own maps, one that has been rejected by the state’s highest court. Democrats hold significant majorities on both chambers. Its map, consisting of 26 districts, gave an advantage to the Republicans in only four districts. Political experts predicted that such a map could result in a net gain of three seats for the Democrats, a crucial number since their nationwide majority has a 223-212 margin. It also matters greatly for Long Island. Of the island’s four incumbents, only Andrew Garbarino (R–Massapequa) is running for re-election. The other three— Kathleen Rice (D-Garden City), Thomas R. Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) and Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) have either retired (Rice) or are running for their respective parties’ gubernatorial nomination (Suozzi and Zeldin). Where does the ruling leave New York? Meet one Jonathan Cervas, a Carnegie Mellon University post-doctorate fellow. Carnegie Mellon is located in western
Pennsylvania. However, this resident of Pittsburgh is now charged with drawing a new map for both congressional districts and State Senate districts in New York. As part of the ongoing dysfunction, Patrick McAllister, the acting Chief Justice in Steuben County, appointed Cervas to his new role. McAllister did so after also striking down the most recent map. McAllister set Aug. 23 as the new primary date. According to published reports, Cervas has assisted in drawing up maps in Georgia, Virginia and Utah. Cervas is scheduled to release a draft of the two maps by May 16, with a final map set for May 24. On May 6, a public meeting was held in the little town of Bath. That’s one public meeting.
After the 2020 census, New York lost a single congressional seat, continuing a pattern that has been in motion since 1950. That year marked the zenith of the Empire State. It had 45 congressional seats as New York was by far the most populous state in the union. Today, New York has dropped to fourth in population size and has 26 seats. In 1950, Florida had only six congressional districts, less than, say, Alabama or Mississippi. Today it has 29 seats. Where have all the New Yorkers gone? In 1970, New York had 41 congressional seats. By 1990, that was down to 31. Since 1950, New York has lost 19 congressional seats. It’s not as if anyone has noticed, but that’s a pretty large number.
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022 19A WORD FIND
FULL RUN
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direct always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you hav pleted the puzzle, there will be 21 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle. By Holiday Mathis By Holiday Mathis
Gold coasting Solution: 21 Letters
WORD FIND This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 21 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Gold coasting Solution: 21 Letters
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). It would be easy to assume that everyone around you sees the same thing, but even those closest have a drastically different view. This week, it is most notable in your appreciation of beauty that is not so obvious to others. The influence of unusual loveliness seeps into your work, lending an irresistible quality. CANCER (June 22-July 22). There’s no wrong outlook on life, but there are ways of seeing things that make it easier or harder to get to your goals. The influence of lighthearted people will help you maintain a spirit of optimism. Emotional and intellectual flexibility keeps you moving forward past obstacles and limits.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You may not be able to control when you feel afraid, but you can work on bringing more awareness to the emotion, and you can talk to yourself in a way that helps you get through it or even rise above it. You’ll make progress this week because you decide that no matter how you feel, you’re not going to stop. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Bottom line, winners fail more times. Those who decide to succeed are agreeing to fail. Success is essentially a commitment to the recovery process. This week, you’ll fall, get up, try it a different way and probably fall again. You’ll be willing to keep adjusting until you figure out how to fly. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). If you could peak inside the mind of another, you might be surprised by what they take away from their charming interactions with you. Suffice it to say, you’ll spark imaginations in ways you may never know, though you’re likely to at least have a general sense that something magical is occurring. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). As a rule, you’re kinder than is necessary. Occasionally, it has happened that someone takes advantage of your kindness, and it won’t be the last time. And while you may be temporarily disappointed by this evidence of misplaced energy, you’ll never regret your choice to be a generous person. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Doing what’s right isn’t always obvious. Sometimes it takes research. It would be most efficient if you didn’t have to concern yourself with moral judgments because every option before you was vetted and deemed wholesome. This week, it will be the case, as you participate in groups of kindred thinkers. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The stable aspects of your world depend on steadfast mechanics to produce predictable outcomes at an efficient rate. And while that part operates well, you can’t help but notice other parts of your life in which you ache for change. You’ll be willing to gamble a little stability for a chance at exciting transformation.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
Growth of any kind is fascinating, but exponential growth is particularly amazing to witness. Many will delight in watching you rocket to meet goals that were once barely imaginable to you. Supporters will rally for you, but it’s the opposition that brings out your best. Be grateful for worthy opponents, as they give you purpose and motivation to get stronger. Consider learning a new language, code or culture, as it will round out the foundation of your intellectual and emotional expansion.
Dawn Disco Entertainment Films Barbecue Hats Bays Beach Heatwave Bike Booth Idle Iluka Buses Cabs Island Carrara Keno Catch Laze Cool Cruise Loop Dance
Lotion Lunch Marina DawnMirage Lotion Disco Noosa Lunch Entertainment Marina Ocean Mirage Films Hats Open Noosa Heatwave Pass Ocean Idle Open Picnic Pass Iluka Island Radio Picnic Radio Keno Raft Laze Raft Real Loop Real
Zumer
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Date: 5/11/22
Creators310-337-7003 Syndicate Date: 5/11/22 • info@creators.com CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER 737 3rd Street • Hermosa Beach, CA 9 0254 By Steve Becker FOR RELEASE 310-337-7003 WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 2022 • info@creators.com
CONTRACT BRIDGE
It pays to be pessimistic South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH ♠ 10 8 5 3 ♥A J 7 6 5 ♦K2 ♣6 4 WEST EAST ♠K74 ♠QJ962 ♥Q 9 4 2 ♥ K 10 8 3 ♦7 ♦854 ♣ Q J 10 9 3 ♣7 SOUTH ♠A ♥— ♦ A Q J 10 9 6 3 ♣A K 8 5 2 The bidding: South West North East 2 ♣* Pass 2♥ Pass 3♦ Pass 4♦ Pass 6♦ *strong, artificial Opening lead — queen of clubs. When declarer is confronted with what appears to be a laydown contract, he must first ask himself, “What can defeat me?” The failure to ask this one simple question has been responsible for the demise of many a makable hand. Consider today’s deal where South was in six diamonds and West led the queen of clubs. Declarer won with the ace and promptly played the king, ruffed by East. East returned a trump, and South found himself fighting a los-
ing battle. He won the trump in his hand, ruffed a club with the diamond king and discarded another club on the heart ace. But South had no place to put his remaining small club, and he ended down one. Declarer was very unlucky to run into a 5-1 club division, but if he had taken this possibility into account and sought a means to deal with it, he might have found the way to assure the contract. South can see that the slam is sure to make if the adverse clubs are divided 3-3 or 4-2. He can ruff a club with the diamond king in either case, guaranteeing at least 12 tricks. However, he should also think about the possibility of a 5-1 club split. Should that exist, the contract is in danger. If South tries to cash a second high club prior to ruffing a club in dummy, an opponent might ruff, as in the actual deal. To cater to this possibility, as well as the normal 3-3 and 4-2 breaks, declarer should invoke a safety play. Rather than try to cash his second high club, he should lead a low one instead! West wins the trick but cannot do anything to stop the contract. South has only two small clubs left, one of which can be trumped with dummy’s king while the other can be discarded on the ace of hearts.
Tomorrow: Standard procedure.
COPYRIGHT 2022 CREATORS.COM
Sea World Sunny Surf Tanning Sea World Sunny Trip Surf Tube Tanning Trip Umbrella Tube Unit Umbrella Wind Unit Wind Zumer
Solution: Where theme parks abound
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Understanding the perspective of others takes work. At the very least, you must move to where they are to see it how they see it. It might involve stooping, climbing or shifting into uncomfortable positions. Empathy is always a worthy endeavor, though. It allows you to live more lives inside your current lifetime.
Barbecue Bays Beach Bike Booth Buses Cabs Carrara Catch Cool Cruise Dance
Solution: Where theme parks abound
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Things have been so up in the air for you lately, you would appreciate if at least one area of life felt settled. Alas, all seems designed to keep you on your toes. At least you make the dance look good! And this week, those watching will agree. You’ll even get a round of applause.
© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). A series of natural and spontaneous changes will prompt your gentle response. Why are you so chill now? Perhaps you sense the futility in creating friction or offering resistance. Or maybe you simply feel that after this initial adjustment period, your life will get better. And you’re so right about that.
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND
© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis HOROSCOPES
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You respect the systems people create and the rules they use to manage them. And though you will honor the preferences of others whenever possible, you also see where leeway might be granted. Do not be afraid to ask for what you want. You’ll be making more worlds better than just your own.
©2022 King Features Syndicate Inc.
20
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Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, familial status, age, marital status, sexual orientation or disability in connection with the rental, sale or financing of real estate. Nassau also prohibits source of income discrimination. Anton Community Newspapers does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination, call Long Island Housing Services’ Discrimination Complaint Line at 800660-6920. (Long Island Housing Services is the Fair Housing Agency of Nassau and Suffolk Counties.)
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Owner Andy DiSpirito 45 years of experience. Old Craftsmanship. We build driveways, patios, pools, chimneys, steps, barbeques, waterproofing and drywells.
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022
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Fun Ways To Celebrate Earth Day
or Earth Day 2022, fourth and fifth grade students at Harbor Hill Elementary School took recycling to a whole new level. Under the direction of music teacher Ms. Dorothy Burns, they created real instruments out of recycled materials. Students began by designing a blueprint of the instrument, then gathered all the materials needed to build it. Many instruments were made, including drum sets, guitars, flutes, and more. “I am so impressed with the creativity that my students have shown throughout this entire project,” said Ms. Burns —Submitted by the Roslyn School District Celebrating Earth Day
Students Collaborate On Barcode Project Recently, Roslyn High School students traveled to Stony Brook University (SBU) to participate in Barcode Long Island (BLI)—a collaboration with Stony Brook University, Brookhaven National Laboratory, the American Museum of Natural History, and the DNA Learning Center. Funded by the National Institutes of Health, the project’s mission is for students to gain an intuitive understanding of the crucial interdependence between humans and the natural environment. BLI uses DNA barcoding to explore, document, and track biodiversity on and around Long Island, through distributed experiments by student research teams, led by trained Long Island
educators. Alongside Dr. Maureen Murphy of SBU, students visited a nature preserve and Hidden Pond Park to collect lichens, then prepared samples for storage and DNA extraction. “The students planned a science experiment to investigate the environmental impacts of pollutants on indicators such as lichens,” said science teacher Lisa Daniels. “Using modern technology, they will replicate the DNA and study taxonomic connections.” —Submitted by the Roslyn School District
Students collect lichen
Students examine lichen
National Ranking For EW Music Education The East Williston School District has been selected as one of the Best Communities for Music Education in the nation by the National Association of Music Merchants Foundation in recognition of the district’s outstanding commitment to providing quality music education and inspiring a love of music among students in all grade levels. To qualify for the Best Communities designation, East Williston answered detailed questions about funding, graduation requirements, music class participation,
instruction time, facilities, support for the music program and community music-making programs. Responses were verified with school officials and reviewed by The Music Research Institute at the University of Kansas. This recognition and the success of the district’s music program and student musicians would not have been possible without the work of the district’s talented and dedicated music staff. Congratulations to John D’Onofrio-Watts, Scott Hoefling, Edward Lattari, Alyssa Lubrano, Rachel Macleod, Stan Orlovsky, Peggy
Pokrywka and Eve Troiano and the District K-12 Arts Coordinator Danielle Mammolito.
East Williston School District has been ranked one of the Best Communities for Music Education in the nation by the National Association of Music Merchants Foundation. Photo courtesy of the East Williston School District
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SPORTS
Lady Bulldogs Undefeated In Conference Play
JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
T
he mighty Roslyn High School girls’ lacrosse continues its route through Nassau County competition. This past week, Roslyn won two games, defeating Jericho 15-5 on April 25, before capping the week with a 13-4 triumph over Wheatley. Casey Rhine has been the offensive star for Roslyn. And in the win over Wheatley, she contributed more of the same, scoring four goals and two assists. Gia Patane had
the same identical numbers. The attack was rounded out by Katie Glennon who had two goals and four assists. Also in the scoring column was Jesse Gatto who had a goal and an assist. On defense, Dareen Abukoush scored eight saves. The mighty Roslyn offense was on a greater display in the win over Jericho. Gia Patane paced the offense with four goals, six assists and 10 total points. Five other Lady Bulldogs made it into the scorers column: Casey Rhine and Isabella Schiff each had three goals, Kattie Glennon and Jesse Gatto had two goals each. Dareen Abukoush had nine saves.
The playoffs are upcoming and the Lady Bulldogs are well-positioned for the postseason. The boys’ baseball squad is also racking up some impressive wins. Roslyn is 6-7 overall and 6-6 in conference play. Its trifecta over Glen Cove bodes well for the future of the team. Matt Fliegler, Tyler Giordano, Harris Reinstein all had big games in the 10-7, 10-3, and 8-1 wins over Glen Cove. Fliegler had a total of seven runs batted in. Giordano had six ribbies. Luke Tullman and Jason Liepper also contributed to the offensive surge. Jared Simpson and Matt Fliegler hurled the Bulldogs to their victories.
Legislature Honors Regeneron Finalists THE ROSLYN NEWS STAFF roslyn@antonmediagroup.com
Recently, the Nassau County Legislature honored local Regeneron finalists. Five Nassau County high school seniors, including Hailee Youn of Roslyn High School, were among the 40 finalists chosen in the Regeneron Science Talent Search 2022 competition. The finalists were chosen based on their projects’ scientific rigor and their potential to become world-changing scientists and leaders. The pool of entrants was over 1,800 students, all of whom completed an original research project and extensive application process. “This award not only reflects upon these great students who accomplished this prestigious feat, but also the quality education provided by our schools and teachers,” presiding officer Richard Nicolello said. “These students have demonstrated their leadership and commitment to STEM innovation through their projects which ranged from eye cancer, DNA-protein interactions, voting habits, dietary restrictions effect on life span, and COVID-19-induced stress. Congratulations to all the finalists and runners up.” The finalists include Hailee Youn Roslyn High School
From right: Legislator Bill Gaylor; Presiding Officer Richard Nicolello; Legislator Laura Schaefer; Legislator Steve Rhoads; Barbi Frank, Teacher at John F. Kennedy High School; Shannon Su, Runner up, John F. Kennedy High School; Christopher Luisi, Finalist, John F. Kennedy High School; Desiree Rigaud, Finalist, John F. Kennedy High School; Legislator Rose Marie Walker; Legislator Arnold Drucker; Legislator Debra Mulé. Project Title: ‘Why We Vote: How Positive Descriptive Norms and Holding a Minority Political Viewpoint Increase Citizens’ Intention and Responsibility to Vote” Ethan Chiu Syosset High School Project Title: “Developing a self-formed ectodermal autonomous multi-zone organoid model using human stem cells to examine the effect of doxycycline treatment on uveal melanoma” Rohan Ghotra Syosset High School Project Title: “Uncovering Motif
Interactions from Convolutional Attention Networks for Regulatory Genomics” Desiree Rigaud John F. Kennedy High School Project Title: “COVID-19 Induced Economic Stress: The Effect on Marital Functioning and Methods of Alleviating Financial Stress” Christopher Luisi John F. Kennedy High School Project Title: “How Dietary Restriction Affects the Athleticism, Metabolic Rate, and Lifespan of Drosophila melanogaster”
Meredith Daly Photo courtesy of Herricks Public Schools
Daly Wins Young Musicians Contest Herricks High School sophomore Meredith Daly is one of seven winners being recognized in the 2022 New York Flute Club Young Musicians Contest. In addition to being a dedicated member of the Herricks High School Music Department, Daly is a member of the Long Island Youth Orchestra and the Metropolitan Youth Orchestra of New York. She recently won second place in the 2020 Queensboro Symphony Orchestra International Competition, and has participated in the NYSSSA School for Orchestral Studies, Kinhaven Music School, LIU Post Chamber Music Festival and Oyster Bay Music Festival. The Young Musicians Contest is intended to foster the development of precollegiate flutists by exposing them to a healthy competitive environment and constructive comments from the area’s professional flutists. The seven winners performed in-person at the Flute Fair YMC concert on April 23. Daly played Franz Doppler’s –Fantaisie Pastorale Hongroise.
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022
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MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
To the Jewish Community of New York Presenting the check in grand fashion.
Library Receives State Grant
Compassionate care for Sinai Chapels families is now available at Riverside-Nassau North Chapels.
BY THE ROSLYN NEWS STAFF
Dear Friends,
roslyn@antonmediagroup.com
A
For four generations, Sinai Chapels has served New York’s Jewish community with compassion and care. After over 40 years of personal commitment to Sinai Chapels, I have decided to close the Fresh Meadows chapel to spend more time with my family.
ssemblywoman Gina L. Sillitti (D-Port Washington) recently presented representatives of the Bryant Library with a ceremonial check for $25,000. The grant will be used to purchase bilingual storybooks for the library’s physical and digital collections. “Libraries are important community centers that impart a love of reading and learning on our children, and I’ll always do everything I can to support these beloved
I will continue, however, to assist families as a consultant alongside many of Sinai’s longtime funeral directors who have also joined this accomplished team. RiversideNassau North Chapels specializes in all movements in the Jewish faith, and I personally selected them to serve families that have relied on Sinai Chapels for many years.
institutions,” said Sillitti. “The grant I secured will help the Bryant Library bolster their collection and share the joy of reading with even more young people. I want to thank the library staff for all that they do, as well as the parents and teachers who help foster a love of learning among all our children.” “On behalf of The Bryant Library I want to thank Assemblyperson Gina Sillitti for supporting library services in her district. The monies from the grant she obtained for us will go towards enhancing our collection and services at the library for our patrons,” said Victor Caputo, the library director.
Kaplan Co-Sponsors ‘EV-Ready’ Legislation
On behalf of all of us at Sinai Chapels, thank you for trusting us to serve you. If you have prearrangements with us, please know that your contract is safe and will be honored by Riverside-Nassau North Chapels (55 N Station Plaza, Great Neck), as well as other providers in the Dignity Memorial® network.
BY THE ROSLYN NEWS STAFF roslyn@antonmediagroup.com
If you have questions regarding your prearrangement, please call us at 718-445-0300. For other questions or additional information, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us at 516-487-9769 or visit www.jewishfunerals.com. Sincerely, Michael Resnick President, Sinai Chapels
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The New York State Senate recently approved legislation that would promote the development of new electric vehicles (EV). The bill would charge infrastructure to help ease the transition to electric vehicles for those New Yorkers who want it. The bill passed as part of a package of legislation designed to combat climate change. Senator Anna M. Kaplan (D—North Hills) supported the legislation. “Climate change has the power to devastate life on Long Island, and in order to combat it we must take decisive action and make real investments in the green infrastructure, technology, and jobs of the future. Ensuring that new parking structures are pre-wired for electric vehicle charging is a no-brainer, and it’s what needs to be done to ensure that our infrastructure will be ready to handle the growing number of EVs on the road today and tomorrow. I’m
proud to sponsor legislation to get it done, and I’m proud to support the full package of environmental legislation being passed today,” Kaplan said, The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA), which Kaplan co-sponsored, requires an 85 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. One major impediment to the adoption of EVs by the general public is “range anxiety,” or the fear of running out of power on a drive and not being able to find a charging station. This legislation combats this problem by ensuring greater access to charging stations by drivers by requiring the installation of new EV charging infrastructure. Specifically, S.23A/A.4386, requires any new parking garage or parking lot capable of accommodating 50 or more cars, that receives state capital funding, to be capable of supporting electric charging stations at a minimum of 20 percent of available parking spaces.
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Gilded Dove Found, Restored At Church
ar back in the chamber that houses the organ pipes at Christ Church in Manhasset, there was a lot of dust. Maybe even 20 years’ worth. The space lies behind a little door only opened on occasion, then closed again due to the minimal need for access. But the space was explored more thoroughly in 2021 for electronic connections to a new organ console. An unexpected treasure was revealed: a carved gilded dove with broken legs. Standing about 10 inches tall with a 12-inch wingspread, the last known photos of the once intact dove were taken in 1966, where an image of the wall-mounted bird can be seen above the pulpit. Whether the dove was accidentally broken during minor renovations to the church in 1971, around the time that the Cassavant Organ Console was installed, cannot be determined. But its recent discovery in the organ chamber caused
Pictured from left are the gilded dove from 1830, church Sexton Enrique Valdez during the restoration, and the restored dove. (Contributed Photos) quite a stir, as some congregants remembered it, and the minister reflected upon its significance. “The dove, with its promise of hope and security, is so meaningful, especially as a symbol of the Holy Spirit,” the Reverend
Stephen Tamke, rector of Christ Church stated. “The repair and re-installation of this dove will offer to all those who gather for worship in the church, or those who simply stop in to pray, a visible reminder of our baptism into the community of
Christian faithful.” He added, “We have in our midst a very talented model builder, our sexton, Enrique Valdes, who has worked to repair and restore the dove to its original beauty.” After the final coats of gold paint are dry, a location will be chosen to re-hang this beautiful, symbolic sculpture. Christ Church recently completed an extensive renovation of the interior of the church, plus a new roof and enhancements to security and lighting outside. A replacement organ console is to be delivered this spring, hence the interior preparations. Finding the dove was an added bonus, and with Enrique’s skill, it looks new again. Careful research into the provenance of the dove revealed it was originally a gift from St. George’s Church in New York City in 1830, representing the Holy Spirit. The church community wishes “A Happy 192nd birthday to our restored gilded dove!” —Submitted by Christ Church Manhasset
More Support For Ukraine THE ROSLYN NEWS STAFF roslyn@antonmediagroup.com
Herricks elementary and middle school students have come together to show their support for the Ukraine people by coordinating food, clothing and medical supply drives as well as sending encouraging messages of hope. Two March inspired events organized and led by Herricks students included the Denton Avenue Elementary donation drive to aid the people of Ukraine, and the Kids4Ukraine community efforts in conjunction with the Shelter Rock Library, initiated by Herricks sixth grader Neil Chen. The Denton Avenue Elementary drive promoted their event in school with posters designed by the students. The efforts were organized by the Denton Avenue Student Council along with their adviser Mrs. Roulett and the school’s Human Relations Club, along with their advisor Mrs. Manning. The student families donated food, clothing and medical supplies that filled two truckloads. Students sorted and packed the items that were delivered to St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Church in Riverhead. The second event, a community-wide collection to assist humanitarian relief for Ukraine took place on March 26 at the Shelter Rock Library organized by Kids4Ukraine, started by Herricks middle school student, Neil Chen. The sixth grader had the idea of spreading awareness to school aged children about the situation in Ukraine and promoted his idea through social media and a partnership with the library. Chen’s vision resulted in the collection of hundreds of medical supply items such as
Herricks sixth grader, Neil Chen organized Kids4Ukraine in conjunction with Shelter Rock Library and collected medical supplies to donate to Ukraine efforts. The donations are combined with larger efforts through St. Josaphat’s Monastery in Glen Cove. (Photos Courtesy of Herricks Public Schools)
Denton Avenue Elementary students in Herricks organized a collection of food, clothing, and necessities to support the people of the Ukraine. The donations are combined with larger efforts through St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Church in Riverhead.
first aid kits, ibuprofen, antibacterial ointments, creams, gauzes, gloves, medical tapes, and walkers during the one day, two-and-ahalf-hour collection window at the library. Additionally, several Herricks elementary and middle school students along with their parents volunteered their time sorting, packing, and loading the collected medical supplies to be delivered to St. Josaphat’s Monastery in Glen Cove. Both drives were organized by Herricks students and supported by the Herricks community. St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Church and St. Josaphat’s Monastery were grateful for the outpouring of generosity in support of the people of Ukraine.
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MAY 11 - 17, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
Hospital Expands Community Outreach FRANK RIZZO
I
frizzo@antonmediagroup.com
t may be a regional health center behemoth, with eight specialties nationally ranked in the US News & World Report “Best Hospital” list. But Nassau University Medical Center started life in 1951 as the humble 169-bed Manhasset Hospital, on 12 acres of land donated by the magnate John H. “Jock” Whitney. And as it grew to the current 738-bed iteration, part of the massive Northwell Health system, it never forgot the surrounding area. But recently, it has started enhancing its connections with greater Manhasset. “While North Shore University Hospital has grown to become one of the most highly regarded and specialized medical centers in the Northeast, it’s still a community hospital at heart,” said Jon Sendach, executive director of North Shore University Hospital. “We have team members who were born inside these walls and others who have chosen to live in this community. So while our connection to Manhasset and the Town of North Hempstead is undeniable, we believed that creating a role to serve as a liaison to the community was vital after the global disconnect created by the pandemic. Christine Patti has done the outreach to help strengthen that bond with civic groups and others who want to engage with us—and we’re excited to do more.” The Council of Greater Manhasset Civic Associations (Greater Council) recently hosted Patti, who since November 2021 has been the North Shore Community Relations department’s program manager. Greater Council President Richard Bentley stated, “We’ve had good relations with North Shore for a number of years and we want to make sure to keep it that way. That’s why we’re meeting with them tonight for an update [on] some of the community activities that they’re looking to expand and we’re willing to give as much feedback as we can on the good things that could be done in this community.” Patti noted that it was a new role that was created for her at North Shore. Before, she served in a similar capacity at Northwell Health’s Syosset Hospital “to build out their community program, working with community partners, local nonprofits, Jewish community centers, houses of worship and schools, doing all kinds of different programming and bringing health education to the community.” She added, “I was brought on by the North Shore team in November with the
The hospital will be expanding the list of community partners in the upcoming months. (Presentation Slide) goal of creating programs here and develHigh School “to create a scholarship for a oping a relationship with our community deserving student there. We’ve also been in the Manhasset greater area.” working with Councilwoman [Veronica] Patti said she has put together a Lurvey’s office on a project for the three-part strategic plan involving Whitney Pond Park playground health and wellness initiatives, revitalization. We pledged the community investments and donation to that project so sustainable community we’re really looking forward partnerships. to making that investment It’s still a community “We’ve already started there and giving back to hospital at heart. to get involved with some the community in that of the local chambers,” way.” —North Shore University she said. “We just joined Patti went on to say Hospital Executive Director the Manhasset Chamber that “health and wellness Jon Sendach and the Port Washington commitment is really our Chamber. I’m looking forward bread and butter.” to hopefully establishing regular Earlier, she had been at the meetings with different community leaders Manhasset-Great Neck Equal Opportunity and have you all involved with that.” Commission (EOC) building in Manhasset, As far as the schools, Patti said her holding a program on nutrition. She noted department is in talks with Manhasset that, along with Northwell specialists, she
Novick Named A Top Woman Wealth Advisor BY THE ROSLYN NEWS STAFF roslyn@antonmediagroup.com
Old Westbury resident Susan Novick and Merrill Lynch Wealth Management Financial Advisor was recently named to the 2022 Forbes “America’s Top Women Wealth Advisors Best-inState” list. Novick graduated from Susan Harvard University Magna Novick cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa. She is managing director at the Novick Sternlieb Dewailly Group within Merrill. She specializes in multigenerational
and impact investing, helping clients develop individualized portfolios based on their goals and values. Novick is a founding board member of Advancing Women in Science and Medicine at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research at Northwell Health, formerly served as president of the Harvard Alumni Association, and is a supporter of numerous charities including Healthcorps, The Actor’s Fund, and the Interfaith Nutrition Network.
Christine Patti is leading North Shore University Hospital’s outreach to the community. (Photo by Frank Rizzo) had done several programs at the EOC already. The goal, she affirmed, is to bring health screenings, vaccination pods and food and other distribution drives—but also non-medical programs such as career workshops. “We’re dipping our toes in and just getting started,” Patti observed. “Obviously, there’s a lot of folks to meet and a lot of work to do and we really look forward to hearing the feedback as far as some of the things we can be doing, and hopefully to continue to make partnerships.” Bentley asked if she had reached out to St. Mary’s High School in Manhasset. “Yes,” Patti replied, adding, “In addition, our director, Jon Sendach, has been meeting with a lot of different community leaders. He went over to St Mary’s. He’s been at a lot of schools that were mentioned.” She wanted to make high school students aware of the many employment and career opportunities available within the health care system—and not just medicine. Patti mentioned that the health system did a program at the government center with Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman to mark Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, in which the dome was lighted as a reminder, One slide she screened showed the logos of North Shore’s community partners. They included the Roslyn and Port Washington schools, the Sid Jacobson JCC, Port Washington Community Chest and the Great Neck Chinese Association. Bentley commented that he did not see the Greater Council’s logo. Patti replied, “Next time, we’ll have five or six pages of logos up there.” “Are there any questions, comments?” she wondered. Bentley quipped, “We’ll think of them five minutes after you leave (laughter).” You can reach Patti at cpatti@northwell.edu.
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • MAY 11 - 17, 2022
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