Local Students Showcase Their Art At Jericho Public Library
The Fourth Annual Metropolitan Association of Fine Art Juried Student Art Show
JENNIFER CORR
Inside the Jericho Public Library, patrons will have the opportunity to be delighted by paintings, drawings and mixed media created by local middle and high school students.
The artwork ranges in theme, from culture to the environment and politics. Many who get to witness this show are blown away at the talent of local youth. The show is held in partnership between the Metropolitan Association of Fine Arts and Syosset’s Sally Studio Art Center.
There are 48 pieces from various types of media including paintings, drawings, pastels and three-dimensional compositions. And many of these students have excelled in art contests and exhibitions nationwide. For example, six of the students are Golden Key winners in the prestigious Scholastic Celebrating Art National contest. In addition, some of the students have won ‘Silver Keys’ or Honorable Mention. Two of the students were recently awarded First Place and Third Place in the Congressional Art Contest for the district and will have their works displayed in the Capitol in Washington DC.
The Syosset Jericho Tribune visited the Jericho Public Library on May 9 to take a look at the art work and meet with Sally Feng and Jindi Zeng. Feng is the director of Sally Studio Art Center and the president of the Metropolitan Fine Art Association, a nonprofit arts service organization dedicated to promoting cross-cultural understanding and exposure to the arts for young artists.
According to the Sally Studio Art Center website, Feng graduated from the Tianjin Institute of Fine Arts in China, and went on to study at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York. Feng is an oil portraitist, sumi-e artist (Japanese ink paint) and art teacher. Her work has been exhibited locally and nationally.
In order to teach art to students, Feng said, you have to become friends with them, because each student is different.
“I’m passionate about teaching,” Feng said. “Teaching is so much fun. It’s so much fun to see other artists grow. They
are young children and they really grow to become artists, as you can see in the show... They can express ideas. I just fall in love with teaching.”
Feng said while she is the president of the Metropolitan Fine Art Association, Zeng, a founder and a parent of an art student, does a lot of the leg work. Many of the board members of the Metropolitan Association of Fine Arts are supportive parents, Feng added.
“I’m very old friends with Sally,” Zeng said. “My older daughter started learning drawing when Sally only had about six students...
We have a lot of students joining and learning, and it’s getting bigger and bigger. Sally said she had an idea to help more people, so the first thing we could do is start a nonprofit organization and then we held an art show... The main
idea is to include more students and help some students in need.”
In the past, the Metropolitan Association of Fine Arts held its first show with art from high school students, selling the art and donating $3000 to Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen.
The Jericho Public Library has been hosting this show since 2018, but it has been two years since the last show due to the pandemic shutdown.
This year the artwork will not be sold. Getting into this art show is an achievement in itself, but some of the entries will be rewarded by Ron Becker, the judge of the show.
“I encourage all art lovers to visit the Jericho Library Art Exhibit currently on display,” Becker said. “Judging this exhibit was an inspiring pleasure and quite challenging. The caliber of work by high school students and younger is surprising. There is
so much quality work, it was hard to select a limited number of pieces for awards. Upon entering the room, I wasn’t sure I was at the right exhibit because the work is of such high quality. Between the variety of subject matter, mediums used and use of color, the work will draw you in to appreciate technique, detail, drama, message and beauty. Congratulations to the artists and bravo to the teachers who bring out the best in their students.”
Student Amy Chen, who illustrated a young woman underwater among sea creatures in a piece titled <communication>, won Best in Show. Chen worked on that piece in a summer class at Sally Studio Art Center, where the theme was centered around the ocean.
“When we gave the students the theme, students have their own idea on how they’ll put it together to express themselves in art,” Feng said. “When we gave them the theme, students started to do a little research and they find some images. This is a big process. It’s not like you will immediately find the idea... We need to guide them in how to find the way to express what they really want to say.”
Feng added that while parents and fans of artwork are in awe of the work that’s on display, younger students are feeling inspired. And younger students are certainly not being left out. The artwork by students ages 8 to 12 is being featured in a gallery from the Metropolitan Association of Fine Art online. The work is delightful. To view the digital gallery, visit www.metfinearts.org/events.
When it comes to the host of the show, the Jericho Public Library, Feng called it home.
“Jericho Public Library is always very supportive,” Feng said. “I really appreciate it and this opportunity to display our student’s work to the public.”
And the community, in general, is a great place to live, especially for students. Feng’s been a member of the community for more than 20 years.
“In this neighborhood, they have a lot of people from different cultures and different backgrounds,” Feng said. “This is a wonderful place... Our school has a lot of students who are Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Indian and American. They have all different cultures and we’re all together. It’s so amazing. We learn different things.. Even the language, sometimes, they learn from each other. I think we are trying to create a community through art to unite everyone together.”
A Memorial Day Tribute To Syosset-
BY TOM MONTALBANO editors@antonnews.comThis is the second part of a series honoring 21 young men from the Syosset-Woodbury community who lost their lives in three wars that defined the past hundred years.
World War II (1939-1945):
Scores of Syosset-Woodbury men and women contributed to the war effort, whether as foot soldiers, sailors, pilots, nurses, or homeland defense volunteers. Tragically, 14 young Syosset-Woodbury men lost their lives.
The following will discuss seven of these men. The additional seven will be focused on in the May 24 issue.
FFC Clement Zgliszewski, US Naval Reserve Zgliszewskiserved in the Naval Reserve as a Fireman First Class, maintaining equipment in the engine room of the USS Juneau, a light cruiser that operated primarily in the Pacific Theater. On Nov. 13, 1942, the Juneau, while engaged in the latenight Battle of Guadalcanal off the Solomon Islands, suffered a hit by Japanese air fire and, in retreating, took a fatal blast from a Japanese-fired torpedo. The explosion tore the SS Juneau in half and sank it in less than
20 seconds, sending hundreds of sailors to their immediate deaths or into the cold, shark-infested ocean. Six-hundred-eightyseven men, including 21-year-old Clemmy, perished. Zgliszewski is memorialized at the Manila American Cemetery in the Philippines.
PVT William A. Gilks, US Army Spinal meningitis, a deadly infection of the fluid and membrane around the brain and spinal cord, posed a significant threat to soldiers in the Second World War. For at least one local serviceman, the disease proved fatal.
Gilks received a draft notice. Deferred until after his high school graduation, 19-year-old Gilks reported for duty at Mitchel Field on Dec. 8, 1942 and was immediately transferred to a base in upstate New York for training. Less than a week later, he received a call stating that his mother had suffered a serious stroke and wanted to see him. Gilks immediately secured a leave of absence. Somewhere along the way, Gilks began to feel ill, and by the time he reached Woodbury, his condition had significantly deteriorated. A doctor’s examination revealed that Gilks had contracted spinal meningitis, most likely from the military
base. Four days later, Gilks succumbed to the disease. He is buried at the Long Island National Cemetery in Farmingdale.
Graham W. Baylis, US Merchant Marines Baylis enjoyed a good life growing up in Woodbury. At 22, he decided to offer his seafaring skills and experience to the United States Coast Guard but was discharged a few months into his service because of poor vision. Determined to serve his country in some capacity, Graham immediately registered with the US Merchant Marines, a branch of the Armed Services that, in WWII, delivered personnel and military supplies to
Woodbury’s Fallen Servicemen
war zones around the world. On Feb. 3, 1943, shortly after marrying his college sweetheart, Baylis found himself in the engine room of the SS Dorchester, which was headed toward Greenland with 904 troops and civilians on board. Suddenly, five torpedoes launched by a German U-boat tore a huge hole in the Dorchester’s side, shutting down its engines and sending the crew scrambling toward lifeboats. Baylis, who was in the engine room at the time of the attack, likely died in the initial explosion, which ultimately sank the ship and sent 673 passengers to their deaths. He is buried at the Huntington Rural Cemetery.
LT George Tiffany, Jr., US Navy
Tiffany Jr. grew up in St. Louis, MO and moved to Syosset in 1933, when he was in his mid-twenties. An Ivy League student and a relative of the prominent Tiffany family of Oyster Bay Cove, Tiffany Jr. heard Uncle Sam’s call during the war and was ultimately assigned to the gunboat St. Augustine, which served to safely escort military vessels out of New York Harbor. While leading a convoy bound for Guantanamo Bay late in the evening on Jan. 6, 1944, the St. Augustine collided with a merchant tanker, split in half, and sank within five minutes, just south of Cape May, New Jersey. The rough, wintry seas claimed 115 of the gunboat’s 145 passengers, including 37-yearold Tiffany Jr., who is buried at Forest Hills
Cemetery in Suffolk, Massachusetts.
PVT Ceslaw Zdunek, US Army
Zdunek left Syosset on Feb. 9, 1943 to report for duty with the 141st Infantry Regiment/36th Infantry Division, a unit that would soon see a good deal of action on the Italian front. While details of Zdunek’s death are spotty, he is presumed to have been killed in action on Jan. 22, 1944 during an amphibious assault on the western coast of Italy in what became known as the Battle of Anzio. Twenty-one years old at the time of his death, Zdunek is buried in the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery in Lazio, Italy.
Twenty-two-year-old Pepe, Jr. had just enjoyed a chance reunion with his brother, Danny, also a service member, on New Year’s Eve of 1944 when he was assigned to fly a B-24H mission for the 737th Bomber Squadron, 454th Bomber Group off the coast of Sardinia, Italy on Feb. 4, 1944. At some point during the mission, Pepe, Jr.’s bomber was either shot down or experienced a mechanical failure over the Mediterranean Sea, and he went missing in action. Patsy’s body was never recovered, but he is memorialized at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery in Lazio, Italy.
Twenty-year-old Robert Hendrickson served as a Gunner with the 480th Bomb Squadron, 336th Bomber Group from Lake Charles Army Airfield. On the night of March 1, 1944, he and six other airmen were conducting a training mission in their B-26C Marauder twin-engine bomber over the Gulf of Mexico when the aircraft crashed seven miles south of Grand Chenier, Louisiana. All seven airmen, including Hendrickson, died. He is buried at Holy Rood Cemetery in Westbury.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
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THURSDAY, MAY 18
Teens: All About College Visits with C2 Education Students are invited to the Jericho Public Library theater, 1 Merry Lane in Jericho, from 6 to 7 p.m. for a workshop. The workshop will focus on when to visit college, what questions to ask while visiting and what to look out for to ensure your student will find the right college. For more information and to register, visit jericholibrary. org.
FRIDAY, MAY 19
Movie: Funny Lady
e Syosset Public Library will be showing Funny Lady in its theater from 1:30 to 4 p.m. Barbra Streisand returns as Fanny Brice, portraying the musical comedy star’s tempestuous life with her second husband (James Caan), showman Billy Rose, in the 1930s. is movie is rated PG and runs for 150 minutes.
SATURDAY, MAY 20
In-Person Paper Shredding at the JPL: End the Clutter End the clutter with paper shredding at
the Jericho Public Library, 1 Merry Lane. No registration is required for this event. Empty your drawers, clean your desk, organize your files. Shred all your excess paper safely and securely at this shredding event. All documents will be shredded in a professional mobile shredding truck while you watch, and all paper is recycled. No need to remove staples or paper clips. No plastic, magazines or newspapers. Partici pants can bring a max of four standard size boxes. This is for household documents only, no businesses.
SUNDAY, MAY 21
Jericho Cares 5K Run/Walk
Elitefeats and Jericho Cares will be hosting a 5K Run and Walk at Bethpage Polo at the Park, Bethpage State Park Playground, Bethpage. Jericho Cares, founded by Jericho residents, has a mission in assisting families in need. They provide clothes, celebrate birthdays and holidays, and help with food insecurities and other basic supplies. They are a network of local residents helping families one at a time. The kids fun run will begin at 8:30 a.m. and
the 5K will start at 9 a.m. Non perishable donations would be greatly appreciated. Register at jerichocares.org.
Family Harmonica Concert
Jiayi He is a much acclaimed world class harmonica virtuoso and the winner of many prestigious awards in America, Europe and the Far East. He will be at the Syosset Public Library theater from 1 to 2:30 p.m. You will hear music from classical to modern. He is accomplished in all types of harmonicas. Register at syossetlibrary. org.
TUESDAY, MAY 23
Afternoon Book Discussion
Join Lisa Hollander, a reader’s services librarian at the Syosset Public Library, at 2 p.m. for an in-person discussion of the New York Times bestselling novel French Braid by Anne Tyler. Copies of the book will be available at the circulation desk one month before the program. No registration is necessary. e event will take place at the Syosset Public Library,
225 S Oyster Bay Road.
25th Anniversary Gala
The Syosset Woodbury Chamber of Commerce will be hosting a gala to celebrate 25 years of serving the community as well as past presidents that made it happen at The Mansion at Oyster Bay, 1 South Woods Road in Woodbury, at 5:30 p.m. Join the chamber for a night of dinner and dancing. To get tickets, visit syossetchamber.com.
MONDAY, MAY 29
Memorial Day Parade
e Gus Scutari VFW post 6394 will host the Memorial Day parade in Syosset stepping o at 10 a.m. e parade will be followed by a ceremony at the Memorial Park (Gus Scutari Way) located at the corner of Jackson Ave and Underhill Blvd.
TUESDAY, MAY 30
Morning Mystery Book Discussion
Join Donna Burger, Readers’ Services Librarian at the Syosset Public Library, for a Morning Mystery Book Discussion of The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman. The event will take place at 11 a.m. at the Syosset Public Library, 225 S Oyster Bay Road. Copies of the book will be available at the Circulation Desk. No registration is necessary.
North Shore Wildlife Sanctuary
Founded 1929
Thursday, May 25th 4 p.m. - 9 p.m. Mill River Rod and Gun Club
5 West Harbor Drive, Bayville, NY 11709
Tickets are $100 per person and may be purchased at HTTPS://NSWWILDLIFESANCTUARY.ORG/TICKETS.ASPX by scanning the QR code below, or at the door, and will include:
Open Bar, Hot and Cold Dishes • Door Prizes, Raf es and Silent Auction
All
*** FREE GIFT for all Pre-Registered Attendees***
THE EVENT WILL BE HELD RAIN OR SHINE ALL AGES WELCOME – SORRY - NO PETS
Directions From Locust Valley: Bayville Road to Bayville Avenue. Follow Bayville Avenue to Ludlum Avenue. Turn right onto Ludlum Avenue, then left at the blinking light before the drawbridge onto West Harbor Drive. The Club is approximately 3-tenths of a mile on the right – just after the West Harbor Beach ball elds.
P.O. Box 214 Mill Neck, New York 11765 www.nswildlifesanctuary.org
The North Shore Wildlife Sanctuary, Inc. is a 501(c )3) corporation.
Directions From Oyster Bay: West Shore Road over the drawbridge. Make a left at the blinking light onto West Harbor Drive. The Club is approximately 3-tenths of a mile on the right – just after the West Harbor Beach ball elds.
Helping The Unhoused: Mental Health First Aid
Knowing what to do in a crisis could save a life
AMANDA OLSEN
aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
With the constant bombardment of news each day brings, it can be hard not to live in a state of hyper-sensitivity. According to the Mayo Clinic, surveys have shown a major increase in the number of U.S. adults who report symptoms of stress, anxiety, depression and insomnia compared to before the pandemic. Stress is a normal psychological and physical reaction to the demands of life. Everyone reacts differently to difficult situations, and it’s normal to feel stress and worry during a crisis. But multiple challenges can push people beyond their ability to cope.
For some people, their mental health issues disrupt their lives enough to leave them unemployed or even unhoused. When someone is in crisis, it’s important to know how to help them. Having this information, and understanding when and how to implement it, can deescalate a potentially dangerous situation and prevent serious harm.
There are a number of resources available, both for those experiencing the crisis and the people who love and want to help them. The Long Island Crisis Center serves as a central hub for many of them in Nassau and Suffolk counties, directing people to the service that may be most helpful. “We’re predominantly a crisis hotline. People can call if they are suicidal, looking for housing, dealing with rape, sexual assault, domestic violence and substance abuse. And people can call our hotline either for themselves or if they’re concerned about someone that they love,” said Christine Cione, Clinical Director at LICC, when describing the center’s focus.
The Crisis Center does not just hand out resources and leave people to fend for themselves. With the caller’s permission, they will follow up to make sure that they are getting the help they need. Cione describes this as a ‘warm hand off:’ “We follow up with callers, so if someone is at risk for suicide, or let’s say domestic violence, and they give us permission, we can follow up with them in a few days via phone and check in and see how they’re doing, if they’ve been linked up with services. And we’ll do that until we feel that they are established with a provider or some kind of therapist. we tried to do a lot of warm hand offs in that way.”
One of the most helpful interventions is the mobile crisis unit. Manned by plainclothes
psychiatric social workers who arrive in a regular, unmarked vehicle, the mobile unit is able to assess the individual where they are, in a non-threatening way, and make a determination for how to proceed based on that assessment. There is a unit for both Nassau and Suffolk, as well as a larger unit that serves all of New York City. If the person really is in psychiatric distress, the unit will call 911 to have EMS transport the person to a hospital to be further evaluated. If they determine that is not necessary, they will provide resources to get the person into housing.
If the person in distress is not known to the individual, the best way to help can be less certain. Many people’s first instinct is to call the police. While most likely well-intentioned, this is not always the best course of action. It isn’t possible to know what kind of interactions the person has had with police in the past. Dealing with uniformed officers may make the situation worse, and cause harm that could have been prevented. Cione recommends the mobile crisis unit in this situation as well. “The police are trained to enforce the law. Now, more and more, they are being trained around the issues surrounding mental health, but even if the police officers aren’t doing anything, a person can look at a person in uniform and be triggered or be re traumatized. You don’t necessarily know what the reaction will be, and it could become dangerous. (With the mobile crisis unit) they’re regular social workers in plainclothes who are specifically trained how to de-escalate mental health and crisis situations.” She said.
Above all, empathy and compassion are needed when dealing with today’s heightened tension. People experiencing mental health crises or homelessness are human, and deserve to be treated with dignity. Cione puts it this way: “I think people in our society are hyper-alert. Ever since the pandemic, people are living in a very anxious state. We need to pause for a second and really try to assess what is going on before reacting. I think we need more understanding of what homeless (or unhoused) individuals are going through. Homeless people are not that different from us, except maybe they fell on hard times or did not get the access to mental health care they needed when they needed it.”
There is training available from the National Council for Mental Wellbeing through the Mental Health Association in New York State that treats mental health situations as part of a first aid training regimen. These courses are offered both in person and online and provide a certificate upon completion.
NASSAU COMMUNITYCOUNTY BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RESOURCE LIST
Updated
HELPLINES, HOTLINES, CRISIS SERVICES, AND EMERGENCY Call 211: 211 Assists
https://www.211.org/get-help/mental-health
Mental Health Association of Nassau County: (516) 489-2322 16 Main Street Hempstead, NY 11550 Crisis Respite Residential Service for Children
Nassau County Behavioral Health Helpline: (516) 227-8255 (TALK) Provides short-term crisis intervention counseling and support for residents struggling with mental illness and/or substance use disorders.
NYS Mental Health Hotline – Project Hope: (844) 863-9314 Project Hope provides New Yorkers with free and confidential help as part of the FEMA response to COVID-19.
CN Guidance and Counseling Services: (631) 521-8524 950 South Oyster Bay Roa d Hicksville, NY 11801 Crisis Respite Residential Service for Adults
Mobile Crisis Unit for Children and Adults: (516) 227-8255 (TALK) 60 Charles Lindbergh Avenue Uniondale, NY 11553 24/7 behavioral health helpline with a team of licensed profe ssional social workers and nurses specially trained to help individuals and their families with mental health problems.
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: (800) 273-8255 24/7 hotline for anyone in suicidal crisis or emotional https://omh.ny.gov/omhweb/bootstrap/crisis.htmldistress.
Pediatric Behavioral Health Urgent Care
In collaboration with the Northwell Health Equity Task Force
Mental Health Resources
The Long Island Crisis Center Hotline is (516)679-1111. it is available 24/7 for crisis calls, information and referral, as well as outreach for suicidal individuals on Long Island.
Concern for Independent Living-(631)758-0474
Assists mentally ill and veterans in Nassau and Suffolk counties.
Association for Mental Health and Wellness-(631)471-7242
Catholic Charities Mental Health Residential Services (516)733-7000
Federation of Organizations-www. fedoforg.org
FREE (Family Residences and Essential Enterprise) (516)870-1600
Options for Community Livingwww.optionscl.org
Pax Christi Hospitality Center (631)928-9108
For men over the age of 16
Family Service League(631)427-3700
Services for the Underserved in NYC
• 212-633-6900
• 877-583-5336 (Veterans)
Emergency Housing---Emergency Housing-DSS--Nassau County
• 516-227-8519 or 227-8395
(8am-4pm)
• 516-573-8626 after hours (4pm-8am)
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Long Island Visual Arts Non-Profits Host Mental Health Event
The Art League of Long Island is excited to participate in “Art Soothes the Mindful Soul” and announces a free event during Mental Health Awareness Month. This art and meditation event will be held on May 25 from 6 to 7:30 pm in our Jeanne Tengelsen Gallery. The event is open to all members of the community and no prior experience is necessary. It is an opportunity for individuals to come together and learn about the importance of mental health and the benefits of meditation and art therapy. We hope to offer a unique experience that will be both educational and therapeutic for all participants.
Elizabeth Castelli, a meditation instructor and life coach, will lead the group through a guided meditation session that will begin with a relaxation/ body scan. She will help participants tap into their Inner Heart Wisdom, the place of Creative Power, and imagine what they are being called to create. Posing inquiry to our heart center to envision what is lying latent within.
Rachel Woelfel, a Masters candidate in Art Therapy at Pratt Institute, will then lead the participants in expressing their emotions through color and mixed media art materials. This workshop is in the spirit of the Art League’s motto, “Be the Artist You Want to Be.”
Elizabeth Castelli is an ACC (ICF), Certified Professional Coach (CPC) and Energy Leadership Index Master Practitioner (ELI-MP) through the
Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching (iPEC), an ICF (International Coaching Federation) accredited program. She upholds the ICF professional and ethical standards of practice in her coaching. Elizabeth is also a Registered Nurse and traditional Reiki Master.
Rachel Woelfel is a Graduate Student at Pratt Institute’s Art Therapy and Creativity Development program. Born in Huntington, New York, Rachel received her Bachelor’s degree in Studio Art and Art History from Stony Brook University, with minor studies in Media Arts and Gender Studies.
The event will be held in the Art League of Long Island’s Jeanne Tengelsen Gallery, located at 107 East Deer Park Road, in Dix Hills, NY. Established in 1955, the Art League is a not-for-profit visual arts center whose mission is to provide a forum and showcase for artists of all ages and ability levels, whether through art education in the studios or exhibition opportunities in the gallery and art fairs. Artwork on display in the gallery may be available for purchase. The Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery is open free of charge. For more information visit www.artleagueli.org or call (631) 462-5400. Pre-registration is required due to limited space, and interested participants can register online at the Art League’s website: www.artleagueli.org.
—Submitted by Art League of Long Island
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
HOMELESSNESS IN THE USA: THE INVISIBLE SOUL
I ride the westbound Long Island Rail Road train, bounding toward Penn Station on a beautiful crisp autumn morning surrounded by men and women nattily dressed in their business attire.
These men and women glance at their cell phones, unfold and re-fold their newspapers, open their leather briefcases, and sip their cups of coffee in perfect orchestration to the squealing of the train wheels on the metal tracks. The blurry images of towns whizzing by gives way to darkness, a tell-tale sign to all aboard that the train is descending into the tunnel. Soon, our destination is at hand. The announcement informing all that the intended destination has been reached comes as no surprise. Many travelers are already standing in the aisle, overcoats on, briefcases and bags in hand, ready to commence the final leg of their journeys to their respective workplaces. I file out slowly and join the end of this pack of travelers as they move seemingly in unison up the steps to the concourse.
The morning rush moves in a perfect choreography as people traverse the corridors, some running for tracks while others moving apace trying to get to the
escalators and the street beyond.
Peppering this throng of daily commuters are tourists trying to not get run over or tripped up by this single-minded group eager to begin another workday.
In their determination to get to where they need to be this particular morning, it appears that none of these commuters sees him. Although, maybe a more accurate assessment is nobody wants to see him. It is far easier and more convenient for people to avert their eyes.
I see him…a human being clearly down on his luck. He wears his misfortune like a badge of the adversity he’s clearly experienced in his young life. It is evident in his dirty face, matted hair peeking from under his hat, and his grimy, smelly clothes. He proffers a used Starbucks cup with his soiled hand and caked nails for donations. Some coins rattle from inside. I take a moment to observe. The morning masses move swiftly by him as if he is invisible.
I feel obligated to honor his cup and his plight. As I make my contribution, a well-dressed commuter offers an unsolicited and galling observation suggesting that if people, like me, donate to the homeless it will
dissuade them from supporting themselves. While the motivation from the impertinent commuter is unclear, his words are mostly definitely not helpful. As the commuter moves on, I lock eyes with the young recipient of my donation. I wonder to myself, Why are you here, in this circumstance? Everybody has a story and I ponder what his could be… Homelessness is not an NYC problem. It transcends county lines, sexual orientation, political parties, religion, etc. It is an issue that may not impact you intimately. But, it could, especially now that the covid-19 pandemic has had such devastating impact on people worldwide. People who were secure financially and emotionally pre-pandemic may not be by the time covid-19 is quelled. That does not bode well for vulnerable people. Homelessness may have even further-reaching implications than it does at the moment.
Reports from the University of Pennsylvania and Loyola University New Orleans find that nearly one in five homeless youths from North America are victims of human trafficking. Undoubtedly, the issue of homelessness is compounded by mental instability. Numerous
COLUMNS
studies have reported that approximately one-third of homeless people have serious mental illness. Additionally, in 2017, the National Coalition for the Homeless has found that 38 percent of homeless people are alcohol dependent, and 26 percent are dependent on other harmful chemicals.
Statistics such as those are disquieting. The dichotomy of being the financial capital of the world yet sometimes having to climb over multitudes of homeless living on cardboard boxes on NYC streets is almost too much to comprehend. It should be a finding that stirs the hearts of men and women and emboldens them to action.
My fervent hope is that New York City will look at this issue of homelessness and the underlying conditions that potentiate it. In studying it, I believe answers will present themselves. The answers should be inclusive of all the human conditions that contribute to the lack of a home for so many. Better funding and education would certainly be a good start.
The goal should be visibility for the seemingly invisible soul that I saw on my fateful morning trip in NYC.
by Vincent Carey, East MeadowTime For Some Washington Housecleaning
It seems that ethics are a hot topic in Washington these days. The focus has been on the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court. It seems that at least two justices have been getting personal benefits and failing to disclose them on their annual filings. While we are on the subject of ethics, it is worth mentioning that the House and the Senate also needs an ethics lecture.
The controversy about the Supreme Court started when it was revealed that Justice Clarence Thomas had taken numerous luxury trips around the world paid for by a billionaire, who may or may not have business in front of the court. Whether he does or does not have cases that affect his benefactor, there is no doubt that Justice Thomas has failed to disclose any information about the trips and other lavish perks
INSIDE POLITICS
that he and his wife have been enjoying.
The Clarence Thomas situation got even worse when it turned out that the billionaire purchased the house that had been occupied by
the Justice’s mother. In addition, since the purchase, the house has been renovated with the addition of carport and other new features. The purchaser money bags stated that he wanted to turn the house into a museum, but museums don’t need carports.
The issue in this case is that all of the other judges in the federal courts are obligated to file a conflict disclosure report, but the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court states that they don’t have to file similar forms. Because of the sensitivity of this whole matter, a Senate Committee held a public hearing on the ethics mess and took testimony from a number of legal scholars who stated that the Supreme Court should follow the same rules as the other federal judges.
In time, the Supreme Court will be forced to come up with a new
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disclosure process and the sacred nine members will have new rules to follow. Which brings us to the issue of members of Congress trading in stocks connected to issues before them. For the past five plus years, legislation has been introduced that would ban members from trading in stocks based on inside information. That happened during the pandemic when some members were buying stock in vaccine companies such as Moderna and Pfizer.
Every time the media asks any Congress member about the need for a ban on such transactions they all say they favor such a ban and blame it on the leadership for not bringing the bills to the floor. I recall the old expression “what is good for the goose is good for the gander.” Both the Court and the Congress should do the right thing and clean up their act.
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COLUMNS Ongoing Problems With MTA Congestion Pricing Implementation
The previous New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Pat Foye always blamed President Trump along with his management team at the United States Department of Transportation and Federal Highway Administration, for delays in implementation of Congestion Pricing. Current MTA Chairman Janno Lieber, by comparison, doesn’t offer the same criticism to President Biden, US DOT Secretary Pete Buttigieg or the Federal Highway Administration for the same lack of progress after 28 months under their watch. The same silence in holding the Biden administration accountable by Governor Kathy Hochul and Senator Charles Schumer also applies. Neither Hochul or Schumer have offered any criticism of delays under the current Washington administration.
The MTA Traffic Mobility Review Board (TMRB) will never convene until FHWA issues a NEPA finding. This is necessary for future implementation of Congestion Pricing to proceed. As a result, the MTA Traffic Mobility Review Board has yet to hold its first meeting to discuss final details of tolling options and who will pay. Nobody knows if this process will be conducted in the light of day or behind closed doors shielded from the public, media and transportation advocates. Buttigieg recently admitted that FHWA has no schedule for completion of NEPA.
Congestion Pricing continues to be politically sensitive. In 2024, members of the NYC Council, State Assembly and State Senate will have to run for reelection. Many will not want to alienate constituents who might be impacted by Congestion Pricing. It will take up to one year after FHWA issues the NEPA finding before the MTA Traffic Mobility Review Board can complete their review and the MTA install equipment necessary for implementation. Only then will tolling start and revenues begin to flow to the MTA.
Elected officials will lobby for discounts or exemptions for police officers, fire fighters, teachers, low income, NYC outer borough residency, seniors, physically disabled. small commercial delivery businesses, users of electric vehicles, residents living below 60th Street in Manhattan or other special niches. These discounts or exemptions will be adopted to placate their constituents when running for reelection in 2024. More discounts translates to less revenues.
If approved, New Jersey residents will be paying a portion of revenues generated by Congestion Price Tolling. The MTA estimates it will generate $1 billion annually. These revenues will be used to leverage another $2 billion annually via bonding. This is supposed to raise $15 billion that which will help pay for the MTA $51 billion 2020 - 2025 Five Year Capital Plan. Both NJ Transit and the Port Authority of NY & NJ have similar multi year Capital Plans. Many NJ residents and elected officials oppose Congestion Pricing. Some have threatened law suits or
PENNER STATION
introduction of federal legislation to block implementation. The MTA may have to placate them by offering NJ a share of revenues generated by new tolls they will be paying.
Some of these dollars could go toward the NJ 25% share for the $18 billion (two new Hudson River plus rehab of two existing tunnels) or 25% share of the $39 billion full scope Gateway project. There is also the $10 billion new Port Authority 42nd Street midtown Manhattan Bus Terminal along with NJ’s share of $2 billion toward Governors Hochul & New Jersey’s Phil Murphy’s $8 billion Penn Station redevelopment project, There are other NJ Transit and Port Authority Trans Hudson (PATH) capital programs or other transportation improvements that would benefit NJ residents.
Thousands of New Yorkers are reverse commuters traveling from Penn Station, Herald Square 34th Street PATH Station and the Port Authority 42nd Street bus terminal to jobs, schools, sports stadiums, entertainment, Newark Airport and other NJ destinations. They benefit by NJ Transit, Port Authority and PATH capital investments.
Nobody can predict if anywhere near $1 billion in annual toll revenues will actually appear. You can’t capture five years of toll revenues estimated to be $1 billion per year when you implement the program four and 1/2 years late or after 90% of the five year capital program has come and gone. The odds continue to grow that Congestion Pricing may not be implemented until 2025. This would result in the MTA having to postpone billions in capital projects until the next 2025 - 2029 Five Year Capital Plan.
How will Hochul assist the MTA in making up for billions in previously anticipated congestion price tolling that may not appear until June 2024 or later?. Who knows if $1 billion in annual toll revenues will actually appear. There is still a long road ahead before Congestion Pricing becomes a reality.
(Larry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously served as a former Director for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Office of Operations and Program Management.)
Santos Arraigned On Federal Charges
Freshman congressman claims he didn’t see it coming
In the month and change since Santos Watch went on break, it would appear that the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (EDNY), not unlike the titular man himself, has been keeping pretty busy.
The EDNY recently made international news on behalf of the U.S. Department of Justice by filing federal charges against freshman congressman Representative George Santos (NY-03), bringing a new level of intensity to an ongoing Santos saga.
On May 9, CNN first broke the news that Santos was expected to be indicted on federal charges relating to financial aspects of his campaign and fundraising.
On May 10, the EDNY unsealed its 13-count indictment against Rep. Santos, who turned himself in to the federal courthouse in Central Islip. Once there, he was arrested and arraigned on 13 federal criminal charges, including seven counts of wire fraud, three counts of money laundering, one count of theft of public funds, and two counts of making materially false statements to the House of Representatives.
Santos pleaded not guilty to the charges, and was released on $500,000 bond that was arranged by three unnamed parties.
U.S. Attorney Breon Peace stated that the indictment “seeks to hold Santos accountable for various alleged fraudulent schemes and brazen misrepresentations.”
Fellow members of the House of Representatives from New York quickly weighed in in the hours following news of the Santos indictment.
“The criminal prosecution of Rep. George
Rep. George Santos’ Twitter profile banner features an image of Santos outside Manhattan Criminal Court on April 4, 2023, the day former President Trump was arraigned there. (Screenshot via Twitter)
Santos is long overdue. He is a pathological liar and lawbreaker who lied to the voters of New York State and defrauded his way into the U.S. Congress,” Rep. Ritchie Torres (NY-15) commented in a statement. “Santos is a deep rot of corruption at the core of Congress.”
Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (NY-04) said in a statement, “I am confident the justice system will fully reveal Congressman Santos’ long history of deceit, and I once again call on this serial fraudster to resign from office.”
For his part, Santos seemingly didn’t know about the impending charges, or at least said he didn’t. Writing on Twitter, a favorite platform of Santos, Associated Press reporter Farnoush Amiri said that when she contacted Santos about the indictment being unsealed the next day, he responded, “That’s news to me,” and, “You’re the first to call me about this.”
He later tweeted, “WITCH HUNT!”
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Capturing Long Island’s Open Mic Scene
The Scene Magazine To Launch At Industry Huntington May 31
JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonmediagroup.comLong Island’s music, poetry and art scene is alive and well, and some would even say thriving.
On alternating Mondays in Port Jefferson, musicians and poets, and those who appreciate
the arts, gather inside a crowded kava and kratom bar called Roots to share and listen. It’s a very special place because people of all ages and backgrounds put down their phones and any distractions and truly listen to the messages each person is trying to convey.
It was at that open mic, called Vision Airy Arts, where co-founder M.T. Pariti announced the launch of a new magazine called The Scene to a group of fellow artists. While he was speaking in front of everyone, he also spoke his original poetry from memory. The Scene art director, Steven Clifford, also reads poetry at that open mic.
The Scene will bring to its readers a compilation of poetry and art from artists all across Nassau, Suffolk, Queens and Brooklyn. Readers will also get to enjoy interviews with open mic MCs and learn what open mics are happening near them.
“Poetry is very much alive,” The Scene’s website stated. “However, it flows unexamined en masse through the veins of different ‘scenes.’ We want to be a network of arteries connecting the isolated parts. The Scene eases communication to check the vitals. Our fingertips will touch the collective pulse of poetry.”
There will be a launch party for The Scene at the lounge, Industry, located at 344 New York Ave. in Huntington, in partnership with The Muse Exchange, a network that hosts open mics, on May 31 at 8 p.m.
Long Island Weekly spoke to Pariti about his background in poetry and open mics, the general Long Island art and poetry scene and what this new magazine will bring to Long Islanders.
Long Island Weekly: What got you into poetry?
Pariti: I feel like poetry, writing and art are, to some extent, compulsions. They are things that people
feel the need to get out. I have that compulsion to express myself in that way. And, it’s something I’ve been involved with since my teen years, practicing a form of mindfulness through writing. [I] step away from my thoughts and process them and I happen to think oftentimes in rhythm and beat, so I just wound up finding poetry.
Long Island Weekly: When did you start attending open mics?
Pariti: I actually started attending open mics about seven to eight years ago. I just started getting on the scene. I was going to an open mic called The Muse... I know how alive and vibrant the [Long Island open mic] scene was, but how separated, isolated and insulated it had become... I stepped away for several years. COVID happened. Everything got shut down. And a year ago, I got back on the scene and that’s when I realized there was this need for something like this magazine to kind of highlight and help connect all these vibrant scenes that are scattered all over Long Island.
Long Island Weekly: How would you describe the Long Island art, music and poetry scene?
Pariti: I’d say it’s a living, breathing organism and it has different body parts that unfortunately, by their isolation, they can kind of start to decay. There are different scenes. There’s the older, library scene which is looking for a young infusion of blood. There’s the younger scene that you’ll find in Port Jeff. That’s a very college-aged scene happening. There’s also racial divides among
WHERE LONG ISLAND WINS!
the scenes. There’s The Bop open mic in Lindenhurst which is a really awesome open mic, but you don’t see the people at The Bop going to The Muse. You don’t see the library scene going to Poetry with a Purpose. And the whole idea here is to give everyone the opportunity to mingle. We’re all doing the same thing. A lot of the time, we’re all saying the same thing. And if we would just be privy to that, I think there’d be a lot more connection.
Long Island Weekly: When did the process of creating this magazine start?
Pariti: It started pretty recently. We just put out our eighth newsletter, so it’s been going on for nine weeks. And everything has really skyrocketed as far as progress. It’s myself and my partner Steven Clifford. He’s the art director and my partner in the project. Him and I were conversing one night over Twitter spaces and we were talking one night about how I was introducing him to the scene, because he was new to it, and I was telling him about all these open mics that he could check out. I was telling him about this idea I had to start an open mic or to start a quarterly print for people who are on the scene. We started talking about how our skill sets work well together and we decided, you know what, this should be something bigger than that. We fleshed out the DNA of the project, and it came to be.
To learn more about The Scene, submit art or poetry to it and to subscribe to the email newsletter, visit www.thescene.life.
HOMES
Recently Sold
This home at 90 Netz Pl. in Albertson is full of new construction and master craftsmanship. It sold on May 4 for $1,400,000. It is filled with designer details, a definite dream home. It has five bedrooms and three bathrooms. There are hardwood floors throughout and coffered ceilings. The home has custom woodwork throughout also. The eat-in-kitchen is gourmet and has quartz countertops, a tile backsplash, a pot filler, Bosch appliances and a gas fireplace. The primary suite has a soaking bathtub and his & hers customized closets. The bedrooms are generously sized. The backyard includes a beautiful paver patio. The basement has a nine-foot ceiling and walk-out access.
This home at 101 Hilldale Rd. in Albertson sold on April 26 for $1,249,000. It is of superior quality, with a gutted renovation completed last year. This brand new home has hardy board siding, Marvin windows, hardwood floors, Bertazzoni appliances, and high-end finishes throughout. The open-concept living area includes a gas fireplace surrounded by marble. The primary bedroom has an ensuite bathroom with a huge walk-in marble shower and two large walk-in custom closets. Both guest bedrooms have custom closet systems. The basement has an additional 552 square feet that could be refinished for additional living space. Gorgeous landscaping with an installed sprinkler system surrounds this corner property.
HOME & DESIGN
4 Things Every Renter Needs To Consider
As a renter, you’re constantly faced with the same dilemma: keep renting for another year or purchase a home? Your answer depends on your current situation and future plans, but there are a number of benefits to homeownership every renter needs to consider.
Here are a few things you should think about before you settle on renting for another year.
1. Rents are rising quickly
Rent increasing each year isn’t new. Looking back at Census data confirms rental prices have gone up consistently for decades:
If you’re a renter, you’re faced with payments that continue to climb each year.
Rents are still on the rise. It’s important to keep this in mind when the time comes for you to sign a new lease, as your monthly rental payment may increase substantially when you do.
2. Renters miss out on equity gains
One of the most significant advantages of buying a home is the wealth you build through equity. This year alone, homeowners gained a substantial amount of equity, which, in turn, grew their net worth. As a renter, you miss out on this wealth-building tool that can be used to fund your retirement, buy a bigger home, downsize, or even achieve personal goals like paying for an education or starting a new business.
3. Homeowners can customize to their heart’s content
This is a big decision-making point if you want to be able to paint, renovate, and make home upgrades. In many cases, your property owner determines these selections and prefers you don’t alter them as a renter. As a homeowner, you have the freedom to decorate and personalize your home to truly make it your own.
4. Owning a home may provide greater mobility than you think
You may choose to rent because you feel it provides greater flexibility if you need to move for any reason. While it’s true that selling a home may take more time than finding a new rental, it’s important to note how quickly houses are selling in today’s market. According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the average home is only on the market for 17 days. That means you may have more flexibility than you think if you need to relocate as a homeowner.
Bottom Line
Deciding if it’s the right time for you to buy is a personal decision, and the timing is different for everyone. However, if you’d like to learn more about the benefits of homeownership, let’s connect so you can make a confident, informed decision and have a trusted advisor along the way.
—One Key MLS
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.
2023 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Special Olympics Spring Games Come To Farmingdale
LAUREN FELDMAN
lfeldman@antonmediagroup.com
Recently, the 51st Special Olympics Spring Games were hosted by Farmingdale’s Howitt Middle School. The day began with a hearty Farmingdale welcome, including performances by the band as well as the national anthem sung by the high school jazz chorus (under the direction of Mr. Edward Kozlowski), and a rendition of “God Bless America” by the Daler a Cappella team (directed by Ms. Jessica Mischke).
Over 500 athletes from all over came to the event to compete in a variety of competitions, including track and field, baseball, softball, weightlifting, baton toss, frisbee toss, and various swim races. School superintendent Paul Defendini also gave a speech welcoming the athletes. “We are here to celebrate the athletes of Special Olympics New York,” he declared, as the Flame of Hope lit the torch to begin the day. “We will celebrate the diversity of our competitors and acknowledge their athletic achievements. The athletes have been intensely training for this day!”
Following each event, they were taken directly to the podiums to be awarded medals and cheered on by friends and family.
My Mission Is To Imagine, Create and Celebrate Your home.
Taking The Plunge At The Long Island Aquarium
LAUREN FELDMAN
10 feet long, 350 pounds, with hundreds of teeth...and there it was, mere inches from me.
Recently, I had the pleasure to dive with the Long Island Aquarium as a part of one of their immersive experiences. This adventure featured myself (a diving novice), Jim (my cheerful, knowledgeable instructor), a metal cage, and—of course—some sharks.
The Long Island Aquarium has been a Riverhead staple since 2000, becoming the first large-scale Aquarium to open in New York State in more than 35 years. Today, millions of people have visited the Long Island Aquarium, making it one of Long Island’s most popular year-round attractions. The aquarium is home to more than one million gallons of water, which means...lots and lots of fish. Their biggest indoor tank, at more than 120 thousand gallons, hosts the biggest of these fish; the sharks. Dubbed, the “Lost City of Atlantis Shark Exhibit”, this tank hosts a variety of shark breeds, including sand tiger sharks and nurse sharks, as well as other saltwater creatures. It was in this tank that I would take the plunge and come face-to-face with its inhabitants.
A question I am sure you have—as I did myself before the dive—is it scary? You might think to yourself, “No way am I getting in a tank with sharks.” And while that fear is certainly understandable, I can now say for sure that it is unfounded.
Prior to the dive, Jim briefed me on everything from general safety to putting on my wetsuit. The aquarium does not require shark-curious folks to be diving certified, which is not standard policy across aquatic centers. This means that more of us have the chance to get in the cage and come face-to-face with these amazing creatures. The aquarium provided everything necessary for the dive, including a wetsuit, scuba gear, and an underwater mask that allows normal breathing and underwater communications. I totally felt a part of the team and understood everything about the dive process.
Once I was suited up, Jim and I experienced the process of gradually warming me up to the dive—literally. The water is a “toasty” 65 degrees. Thankfully, the wetsuit kept me warm, as we slowly submerged into
provided with weights around my waist, which both helped me keep my balance and from floating around too much.
After I submerged, I confess my fears abandoned me, replaced by what I can only describe as child-like wonder. The tank features an array of sharks and fish that cannot be found together anywhere on Earth. Far from the fear I thought I’d feel, I was purely captured by such an amazing 360-degree view; one which so few people get to experience.
As I looked around the cage, the sharks swam gently by, coming close but never jostling the cage. They are curious and calm species, and I am sure I was far more fascinated by them than they were by me. During my 20-minute dive, aquarium member Jean led an educational program about sharks and a tour of their habitat. I was able to wave at aquarium visitors, and members of my family who came to watch. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that the sand tiger sharks and I were exactly the same age, as well as many other facts about marine life I did not know. It was certainly the most unusual classroom I had ever been in. I could hardly believe it when my 20 minutes were up. Time seemed to stand still inside that cage, I was lost in my fascination, something which has not happened since I was small. The shark dive seems like an adrenaline-hunt, something to do because it is scary. I can assure you, it is so much more than that. This dive was the closest I have come to being a marine explorer. Not only did I feel safe, I felt adventurous, eager to follow the sharks to and fro as they circled the tank. It was delightful to watch schools of fish flutter this way and that. If you have ever had an inkling to step outside of your comfort zone and into the majestic unknown, the Long Island Aquarium’s Shark Dive is a great place to start.
More information about this immersive experience is available at www.longislandaquarium.com as well as the additional exhibits offered, including the popular penguin and sea-lion experiences.
Bethpage Federal Credit Union, New York State’s largest credit union, and the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, announce the final performer line-up for the much-anticipated Bethpage Air Show at Jones Beach, taking place on Saturday, May 27, and Sunday, May 28, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds return to Long Island for their ninth headliner performance. Military performers joining the Thunderbirds include the United States Army Golden Knights Parachute Team, the United States Marines F-35B Demonstration Team, the United States Navy F-18 Growler Legacy Team and the United States Coast Guard Air Station Cape Cod.
Civilian performers include the world-famous Skytypers and their flight squadron of five vintage WWII aircraft; Mike Goulian, North America’s most decorated aerobatic pilot; Folds of Honor Biplane with Ed Hamill; the American Air Power Museum Warbirds; Long Island’s own David Windmiller; Warbird Thunder Airshows; the Civil Air Patrol; and the Farmingdale State College Flying Rams, who will fly several of their 22 college-owned aircraft.
“We have a full lineup of exciting performers this year, and of course we are very happy to welcome the Thunderbirds back to Long Island,” said George Gorman, regional director of New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation—Long
The Bethpage Air Show Returns
Island Region. “During their last visit in 2021, our weekend performances were rained out, but the Thunderbirds remained for our unprecedented Memorial Day show. We will be forever grateful to them for this decision.”
“We are weeks away to Long Island’s unofficial summer kick-off event and we couldn’t be more excited!” said Linda Armyn, chief strategy & marketing officer of Bethpage Federal Credit Union. “Thank you again to all of our sponsors who help make this beloved event possible.”
the 2023 show is the Bethpage Air Show Mobile App. Text ‘Airshow’ to 516-842-4400 to download the app for performer and sponsor information, a site map, helpful FAQs to help prepare you for the show, and more to come. Available now on the App Store and Google Play.
one of the largest, most respected and most popular air shows in the country. More than 366,000 people attended the Bethpage Air Show at Jones Beach the last time the squadron headlined a full weekend show in 2019.
The Bethpage Air Show is free to the public, but the standard $10 vehicle use fee will be collected each day upon entry to the State Park. For 2023 NYS Empire Pass Card holders, there is no vehicle use fee charge.
Available for $80, the 2023 Season Empire
The Dee Dee Brix Team
effective until Dec. 31, 2023 to enjoy the forests, the seashores and the lakefronts of New York State’s parks through all of New York’s beautiful seasons.
For up-to-date information about this year’s show, visit www.bethpageairshow.com or www.facebook.com/BethpageAirShow or contact the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, Regional Office, Recreation Department at 631-321-3510.
—Bethpage Air Show
Elegance on Elderfields
MANHASSET, NY – Elegant & Stately Center Hall, 5-bedroom, 5.5-bath, Colonial located on one of Manhasset's most sought-after streets in the Village of Flower Hill. The private 1+ acre manicured property offers an in-ground pool, plenty of entertaining space with open yard for games and fun. The leaded glass vestibule welcomes guests to the spacious entry foyer, grand principal rooms include formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, chef's eat-in kitchen opens to den with fireplace, office, den and heated screened porch. Plus a full bath, powder room and mudroom. An elegant winding staircase leads to the 2nd floor where you will find a luxurious primary suite including spa bath, fireplace and sitting room/nursery, plus 4 more bedrooms, 4 full baths and laundry on the second floor. MLS# 3472452. $5,900,000.
Patricia Gahan MoroneyReal Estate Salesperson
Gold Circle of Excellence
Manhasset Office
364 Plandome Road 516.627.4440, c.516.313.8966
patriciamoroney@danielgale.com
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Real
Cathleen Dodge Estate SalespersonSterling Circle of Accomplishment Manhasset Office
364 Plandome Road 516.627.4440, c.516.672.4388
cathleendodge@danielgale.com
cathleendodge.danielgale.com
Things To Do Around Long Island
MAY 17
“Art and Art History” Senior Thesis Exhibition is exhibition showcases the work of 2023 BFA Seniors in the Art and Art History department through July 31 in the Adele and Herbert J. Klapper Art Gallery at the Ruth S. Harley University Center on the Adelphi University campus. Visit www.aupac.adelphi.edu for details. e Center is at 1 South Ave., Garden City.
“When We All Stand” Exhibition
The exhibition, “When We All Stand” at Hofstra University through July 28, focuses on the collective power of the arts to address complex issues in society and demonstrates the ability of art and artists to chart a path for social change. Artists often lead the charge and expose truths that may otherwise be ignored. e artists in this exhibition take a stand and call out injustices through their art and activism on issues such as immigration, gender, reproductive rights, mass incarceration, voting rights, racial bias, gun violence, and promises unful lled. ey take action by creating national campaigns for justice, organizing public art protests, connecting with their local community, or joining forces with national organizations. Some make demands on government, politicians, policies, or institutions while others make demands on society and individuals to join them in the ght for justice; still others focus on cultural development as a process that cultivates democracy and unity. ey all combine the making of art with public service that has a grassroots approach in the hope of mobilizing their communities and the nation to ignite movement, create awareness, and inspire others to stand with them. Artists included in the exhibition are Emma Amos, Molly Crabapple and the Equal Justice Initiative, For Freedoms, Miguel Luciano, Michele Pred, Hank Willis omas, and Sophia Victor. e Emily Lowe Gallery at Hofstra University is located on the south campus. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free. Visit www.hofstra.edu for details.
“Eye & Mind: The Shin Collection”
It is astounding to think that a private collection of masterworks as wide-ranging and important as these could be assembled by a 32-year-old connoisseur, but Hong Gyu Shin is an internationally recognized gure in the global art world. He shares his treasures with us, including works by Whistler, Lautrec, Boucher, Daumier, Delacroix, Balthus, de
Kooning, Matta, Pollock, Gorky and many other important names from art history provocatively juxtaposed with the painting and sculpture of our own time from both Asia and the West. On view now through July 9 at Nassau County Museum of Art, located at 1 Museum Drive in Roslyn Harbor. Visit www.nassaumuseum. org or call 516-609-9696 for details.
MAY 24
Fleet Week New York
Fleet Week New York (FWNY) will again return to New York City this year from May 24 through May 30 with three U.S. Navy ships, two U.S. Coast guard vessels and, four U.S. Naval Academy (USNA) Yard Patrol boats (YPs). ree ships from NATO allies will join the week-long celebration. Ships from Canada, Italy and United Kingdom will join the Parade of Ships on Wednesday May 24. Ship tours will be conducted throughout the week in Manhattan and Staten Island from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ship tours will be closed on Sunday, May 28, on Pier 88 in Manhattan due to cruise ship movement. Ship tours on Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, Pier 86, will be conducted daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. USNA YPs are scheduled to depart Saturday, May 27. Visit www. eetweeknewyork.com for details including ship and pier locations.
JUNE 4
Hempstead Lake Bird Walk
Join South Shore Audubon Society (SSAS) on Sunday, June 4, at 9 a.m. for a guided bird walk. Bird walks led by a member of SSAS are conducted nearly most Sunday mornings at various locations around the south shore of Long Island. Walks are open to the public and are free of charge. We especially encourage youngsters to attend. Register by texting that you would like to join the bird walk to Joe at 516-467-9498. Include your name and a contact number to text should there be a need to cancel. Visit www.ssaudubon.org for more details, future bird walks and other events.
JUNE 10
Belmont Stakes
e 155th running of the Belmont Stakes is on Saturday, June 10, at Belmont Park located at 2150 Hempstead Tpke. in Elmont. Festival day entertainment this year includes performances by Diplo, Street Beat Brass and Black Tie Brass. e park is also celebrating the 50th anniversary of Secretariat. Visit www. belmontstakes.com for details.
African American Museum
110 N Franklin St., Hempstead. Visit www. theaamuseum.org or call 516-572-0730.
American Airpower Museum
230 New Hwy, Farmingdale. Visit www. americanairpowermuseum.com or call 631-293-6398.
The Center for Science
Teaching & Learning
1450 Tanglewood Rd., Rockville Centre.
Other points of interest and venues with seasonal events, access and activites:
Visit www.cstl.org or call 516-764-0045.
Clark Botanic Garden
193 I.U. Willets Rd. in Albertson. Visit www.clarkbotanic.org or call 516-484-2208.
The Cradle of Aviation Museum
Charles Lindbergh Blvd. in Garden City. Visit www.cradleofaviation.org for details.
Hicks Nurseries
100 Jericho Tpke. in Westbury. Visit www. hicksnurseries.com or call 516-334-0066.
The Long Island Children’s Museum
11 Davis Ave., Garden City. Visit www.licm. org or call 516-224-5800.
Museum of American Armor
1303 Round Swamp Rd. in Old Bethpage. Visit www.museumofamericanarmor.com or call 516-454-8265.
Old Bethpage Village Restoration
1303 Round Swamp Rd., Old Bethpage. Call 516-572-8400 or visit www.obvrnassau.com.
Old Westbury Gardens
71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. Call 516-333-0048 or visit www.oldwestburygardens.org.
Planting Fields Arboretum
1395 Planting Fields Rd., Oyster Bay. Call 516-922-9200 or visit www.planting elds.org.
Queens County Farm
73-50 Little Neck Pkwy. in Floral Park. Visit www.queensfarm.org or call 718-347-3276.
Rock Hall Museum
199 Broadway in Lawrence. Visit www. friendsofrockhall.org or call 516-239-1157.
Sands Point Preserve
127 Middle Neck Road, Sands Point. Call
516-571-7901, visit www.thesandspointpreserve.com.
The Walt Whitman Birthplace
State Historic Site
246 Old Walt Whitman Rd., Huntington Station, Visit www.waltwhitman.org.
The Whaling Museum & Education Center
301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor. Call 631367-3418 or visit www.cshwhalingmuseum.org. Also check out event calendars for a wide variety of events like sports, family fun, car shows, craft fairs, arts, fireworks and other seasonal entertainment:
Town of Hempstead—www.hempsteadny.gov
Town of Oyster Bay—www.oysterbaytown.com
Town of North Hempstead—www.northhempsteadny.gov
Nassau County—www.nassaucountyny.gov
—Compiled by Christy Hinko
LEGAL NOTICES
KEYSPAN GAS EAST CORPORATION d/b/a NATIONAL GRID
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by KeySpan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“Company”) that it has led with the New York State Public Service Commission (“PSC”) tari revisions to its Schedule for Gas Service, PSC No.1 – GAS, that are proposed to become e ective June 3, 2023.
The Company seeks to increase delivery revenues by approximately $228 million to modernize and improve the safety, reliability, and performance of our infrastructure, enhance the customer experience, reduce system emissions, and fund energy a ordability and e ciency programs. The Company’s ling is subject to approval by the PSC and the rates approved may be di erent from those proposed. The Company expects that the PSC will suspend the proposed rates for the maximum period permitted under the Public Service Law, which would mean an e ective date of revised rates of April 1, 2024.
S.C. No. 1A, 5-1A – Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. No. 1AR, 5-1AR – Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. No. 16, 5-16 – Year-Round Space
S.C. No. 1B, 5-1B – Residential Heating Service S.C.
1BR, 5-1BR – Residential Heating Service
S.C. 17 – Baseload Distributed
5-2A – Non-Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. 17 – Baseload Distributed Generation – Rate 2 –Equal to or greater than 1 MW but less than 5 MW
5-2B – Non-Residential Heating Service
S.C. 17 – Baseload Distributed Generation – Rate 3 –Equal to or greater than 5 MW but less than 50 MW
S.C. 18/19–Non-Firm Demand Response Sales Service – Tier 1
S.C. 18/19–Non-Firm Demand Response Sales Service – Tier 2
For more information, visit ngrid.com/li-rate ling or the PSC’s website (dps.ny.gov).
KEYSPAN GAS EAST CORPORATION d/b/a
Call For Artists: Westbury Arts Celebrates Recent Grads
Graduation is fast approaching and many graduating seniors in recent years have opted to stand out in their commencements by decorating their graduation caps. If you’re a recent graduate from high school or college (graduated in the last 3-4 years) and you were creative (and bold) enough to decorate your graduation cap and proudly walk with it down the aisle to receive your diploma, we want you to submit it for our upcoming art exhibit titled “Westbury Arts Celebrates Our Recent Grads”. We want the world to see your creation and celebrate your achievement, and it’s free to enter. If you prefer to submit a digital photo of your decorated graduation cap instead, please do. Any recent graduates of area high schools as well as college graduates are eligible. Deadline and drop off dates of your submission: Thursday, June 29, from 12 to 4 p.m., Friday, June 30, from 2 to 6 p.m., and Saturday, July 1, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Or mail your entries to Westbury Arts, 255 Schenck Ave, Westbury, NY 11590. If mailing your entry please include your contact information, school you graduated from and year. If submitting a digital photograph, please email it to Submissions@WestburyArts.org.
–Submitted by Westbury Arts
Make the most of summer with the New York Baseball Academy.
Led by Hofstra Baseball head coach and 14-year MLB veteran Frank Catalanotto and his NCAA Division I staff, the New York Baseball Academy at Hofstra provides players with an opportunity to develop their skills through daily workshops, offensive and defensive technique instruction, and game play. With one through six weeks of instruction available, players can customize their camp experience around their schedules.
Learn more about the New York Baseball Academy at hofstra.edu/nyba
Dept. Of Labor Recovers Wages, Damages For Workers Denied Overtime
Professional Building Maintenance Corp. issued separate checks to disguise violations
The U.S. Department of Labor has recovered more than $333,000 in back wages and liquidated damages for 51 employees of a Long Island maintenance company that issued separate checks to workers to mask the company’s failure to pay overtime wages when required by law.
Investigators with the department’s Wage and Hour Division determined that employees worked as many as 80 hours per week or more but, typically, Professional Building Maintenance Corp. and owner Brady Patruno paid them straight-time hourly rates instead of paying overtime for hours over 40 in a workweek.
Specifically, the company and Patruno paid employees working overtime hours in a pay period by issuing more than one check, one from the company’s payroll account for the first 40 or fewer hours of work and a second check from another account for overtime hours. However, the employer, did not pay the required overtime rate for hours over 40 in a workweek. The company issued checks for overtime hours at straight-time hourly
rates either from a second company bank account and/or from straw corporations that Professional Building Maintenance Corp. passed off as subcontractors.
The department’s Regional Office of the Solicitor obtained an administrative search warrant and assisted the division in obtaining third-party bank subpoenas to get the payroll records and canceled checks that revealed the employers’ scheme.
The investigation recovered $166,702 in back wages and an equal amount in liquidated damages and led the department to assess $15,432 in civil money penalties because of the willful nature of the violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
“Employers who wrongly believe they can disregard the law and deprive workers of their hard-earned wages will face significant consequences when their illegal actions are discovered,” said Wage and Hour Division District Director David An in Westbury, New York. “Workers and employers with questions about their rights and responsibilities under federal law should feel free to contact the Wage
and Hour Division.”
The FLSA requires that most employees in the U.S. be paid at least the federal minimum wage for all hours worked and overtime pay at not less than time and
one-half the required rate of pay for all hours over 40 in a workweek.
Learn more about the Wage and Hour Division, including a search tool to use if you think you may be owed back wages collected by the division. Employers and workers can call the division confidentially with questions regardless of where they are from. The department can speak with callers confidentially in more than 200 languages through the agency’s toll-free helpline at 866-4US-WAGE (487-9243). Download the agency’s new Timesheet App for iOS and Android devices — also available in Spanish — to ensure hours and pay are accurate.
—Submitted by US Dept. Of Labor
Yield (APY) disclosed is effective as of May 13, 2023, and may be changed by the Bank at any time, including after account opening. This special Smart Move Money Market offer is limitedto consumers who do not have a deposit account either personally or as joint owner at Ridgewood. One Smart Move Money Market account per customer and must be opened online. A $10,000 minimum deposit is required to open the Smart Move Money Market account. Interest is earned based on the balance in the account at the end of each day in accordance with these tiers: $0 - $9,999: no nterest; $10,000 – $74,999: 4.34% interest rate and 4.50% APY; $75,000 – $124,999: 4.34% interest rate and 4.50% APY; $125,000 – $250,000: 4.34% nterest rate and 4.50% APY; over $250,000: .25% interest rate and .25% APY. The $15 monthly maintenance fee is waived if a balance of $5,000 s maintained at the end of the statement cycle. There is a monthly fee of $5 for paper statements. Overdraft coverage is not offered on the Smart Move Money Market account. Fees may reduce earnings. Offer may be withdrawn at any time without prior notice. Rates, terms and tiers are subject to change without notice. | 3. Up to insurable limits. | © 2023 Ridgewood Savings Bank | Member FDIC
God, The Devil---And Norman Mailer
Gilmore’s death row execution, Mailer had delivered his big book.
jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
(This is part 2, for part 1 please visit LongIslandWeekly.com)
Th roughout the 1970s, Norman Mailer kept the literary world guessing.
He published one nonfiction tome after another. Still the man wanted to be accepted as a novelist. For years, he promised a great novel about ancient Egypt, one which “Dostoyevsky and Marx; Joyce and Freud; Stendhal, Tolstoy, Proust, and Spengler; Faulkner, and even old moldering Hemingway, might come to read.’’
It worked. The man had a talent for publicity. Ancient Evenings was published in 1983 to high national and international advance sales figures. It was another best seller, but not a critical success. Saul Bellow, Mailer’s great rival, dismissed it as “Marquis de Sade for mummies.” Reviews were generally negative.
In truth, with 1979’s The Executioner’s Song, a non-fiction account of Gary
A fixture on the talk show circuit, Mailer began spending more time in Provincetown, MASS, working on thick novels rather than covering topical events. The man’s image was also badly tarnished by his support for Jack Abbott, a longtime convict whose writings impressed Mailer. Abbott was eventually released from prison, only to commit homicide again. Mailer played no role in Abbott’s release, and he had second thoughts about the prisoner, still the torrent of criticism was overwhelming.
The later Mailer included a thriller, Tough Guys Don’t Dance (1985), which was later made into a movie, biographies of Pablo Picasso, Lee Harvey Oswald’s life in Russia, a big CIA novel, Harlot’s Ghost, and the beginnings of a series of novels on Adolf Hitler, only one of which, The Castle In The Garden (2007) was completed before the novelists passing.
I’ll pick out two more books from later Mailer: The Gospel According To The Son and God: An Uncommon Conversation
The former novel, published in 1997 had its genesis when Mailer, on a book tour, discovered the ubiquitous Gideon’s Bible
in his hotel room. The man started the New Testament and declared that he could “do better.” (Mailer’s humor was a saving grace.)
And so, a new novel. The Gospel revealed a different side of Norman Mailer: More searching and far less angry and urgent from earlier volumes. The novel came and went. The New Republic published a cover story depicting the novelist on a cross of his own, adding that “he is finished.” Some time later, Mailer ran into Martin Peretz, the magazine’s publisher, at a Provincetown restaurant. The unsuspecting Peretz was greeted by the senior citizen Mailer with a right cross to the face.
The Gospel is a first-person narrative where an apprehensive young Jesus grows into his ministry. It closes with Jesus finding strength from the struggles of the poor. Their hope reinvigorates Jesus. All of this can be discerned from a reading of the Bible and Mailer, vanity aside, does stay true to the Biblical text.
This interpretation dovetails with Mailer’s final book, a monologue conducted with his friend and archivist, J. Michael Lennon. In On God, Mailer announces that he felt “no attachment, whatsoever, to
organized religion,” viewing God as “the greatest artist” with human beings as His greatest creation.
Mailer does praise Jesus’ ministry: “The beauty of Christ---what Christ was saying to all of us---is that the poor have as much reason to exist as the wealthy.”
Then there is God---and the eternal struggle with the Devil. Mailer never underestimates the Devil. The struggle with the latter is central to Mailer’s work. In this respect, the unsatisfactory endings of An American Dream (1965) and Tough Guys Don’t Dance come into better focus. Sometime, the Devil does win.
And not just over fictional characters, but all of humanity. The man once considered a conversion to Catholicism. However, Mailer rejected an omnipresent God. The Devil might just not be winning; he could deliver a decisive final victory over his enemy. God could lose altogether. This, the priest agreed, would not make Mailer a candidate for the Roman church.
In The Gospel, Mailer had Jesus make references to a remnant. Nothing is ever lost entirely. My re-reading of On God did not reveal that belief. A believer keeps faith in a remnant. Mailer might have been served better by reading the columnist
Joe Sobran: Part of this world is going to hell, part of it, however, is going to heaven, or at least as much as heaven allows in this world.
Mailer was an American author. He grew up in a nation that considered itself Christian and that---Depression or no Depression---remained innocent over its past and confident for the future. Mailer certainly would have agreed with Bellow in Mr. Sammler’s Planet (1970), where the latter has Artur Sammler as being “annoyed with Anglo-Saxon America for not keeping better order.” And only consider this dialogue in Esquire with Patrick J. Buchanan during Mailer’s 1996 profile of the presidential candidate.
MAILER: Becoming a Democrat opens up something extraordinary…One of the ironies besetting the Democratic Party now is that this country is a Christian country----not a Judeo-Christian country, but a Christian country first and foremost.
BUCHANAN (laughing): That puts you in trouble, Norman!
MAILER (laughing): Being Jewish, I probably can afford to say it’s a Christian country. One small advantage to being Jewish! But here’s my point: The average Democratic congressman who dares to invoke the name of Jesus Christ is doomed!
It was a meeting between two authentic giants: Two prolific authors who were under siege their entire careers, but still managed to maintain a sense of humor. America as a Christian nation? Mailer’s opposition to both the Vietnam and Iraq Wars was based on a belief that the United States was violating Christian morality by not just waging war against nations that could never harm America, but also in the way those wars were prosecuted.
Mailer remained a Jew. Still, America as anything less than a Christian country, made, I believe, no sense to him.
WORD FIND
HOROSCOPES By
HOROSCOPES By
HOROSCOPES By Holiday Mathis
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have pleted the puzzle, there will be 25 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Holiday Mathis Holiday MathisARIES (March 21-April 19). More than one occasion of the week will demand your attendance. You may not feel up to the challenge at rst, but the rewards of being there (or the consequences of not being there) will have far-reaching e ects. It doesn’t matter if you drag yourself to it or rise to it -- as long as you show up, you win.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re an excellent steward of bounty, which is why you keep attracting more of it. You’ll accept all gifts with a gracious smile, knowing it’s the feeling between people that matters the most. Don’t worry too much about what happens next. You can’t hold onto everything. What you don’t keep, you’ll distribute well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). ough it’s said there are “no dumb questions,” there are de nitely questions that get you closer or further away from learning what you’re interested in. Some queries lead to happiness and awakening, while others bring on anxiety. Improvements happen this week because you ask so well.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). You don’t wait for the right time to project magnetism and heart. Any old time is good enough for you, especially when you feel as happy as you do this week. A breakthrough in your personal life will make you feel you can nally move forward. Someone falls in love with your smile, then you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You want to give freely, but you can only give as freely as you feel. e opportunities for fun probably won’t drop into your world this week, and that’s actually a good thing because it’s a chance to create your fun just the way you like it. Whatever you do to ll yourself with joy will contribute to the generosity of spirit you spill into the world.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). A focus on smooth routines and improvements in your realm could be interrupted by an ask. Stand back and assess the situation from as many angles as you can to determine if you can help, and if so, what level of involvement would be most bene cial to all. Justice will win in the end, though it’s not always up to you to deliver it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). When you’re trying out a new endeavor, it can be hard to know what sort of goals are reasonable. Don’t be too eager to set your aim. Enjoy the stage of playful curiosity this week. It’s enough to get a feel for what an activity is like and how it matches up with your skills.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). ere’s a time and place for making comparisons. e time is hardly ever. e place is on a spreadsheet, not a social media platform. Let this week be all about you, your interests and your personal growth. ere’s too much to enjoy about who you are to waste one second thinking about who you aren’t.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). While you do feel more secure when you know your nances are in order, money is neither your only source of stability nor is it your most important one. It’s your relationships and other accomplishments that give you a real sense of your ability to connect and make things happen in your world.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Because there are people around you who could be committed to your growth and well-being, it makes no sense to spend all your energy on those who can only take and never give. Sel essness is an important aspect of good character, but it is not sustainable to have this as your mode too much of the time.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). To look into another person’s eyes and try very hard to understand what that person feels and needs is no small act. Your brand of attention is something special and rare. You teach just by being you. As you pick up the subtle dynamics of a situation, you’ll help others around you to do the same.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’re a con dent tastemaker. You don’t pander to what people want; you give them strong options instead. You know that having more choices doesn’t make people happier and in fact can lead to confusion, decision fatigue and buyer’s remorse. e optimal number of options to o er is three.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
is year is a power-up for your mind. In the months to come, you’ll re ne your strategies for nding the most useful and enjoyable ways to experience life. Loved ones bond in projects; lines of communication and positive feeling open up. A purchase will give a di erent structure to your days as you’re bus y shepherding a deal or maintaining property and possessions. An amazing discovery has to do with family origin and shared futures.
COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND
South of Sydney
Solution: 25 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 25 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
South of Sydney
Solution:
Bait
FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019
CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236
Solution: Marvel at Grand Pacific Drive
Creators Syndicate
CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER FOR RELEASE WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 2023
737 3rd Street Hermosa
CONTRACT BRIDGE
A critical choice
king.
Date: 5/17/23
By Steve BeckerIt’s obvious that the king is the winning play if you can see all 52 cards, but what is the right play if you see only 26 cards? If declarer has, say, the A-5 of spades, the proper play is the ten, which limits South to just one spade trick. But if South has only the J-5, the proper play is the king.
Making the right decision in the present case is not simply a matter of guesswork. As usual, there are clues to guide you to the solution. To begin with, you should apply the Rule of Eleven. You deduct the card West led, the six, from 11, which tells you that there are five cards higher than the six in the North, East and South hands.
The backbone of good card play is the ability to diagnose how the unseen cards are divided. This does not mean that to succeed, a player must ascertain the location of every critical missing card. Sometimes, it might be sufficient to know only where one card is located.
For example, assume you hold the East cards in this deal. West leads the six of spades against three notrump, and dummy follows low. This presents you with the problem of whether to play the ten or the
Since one of the five higher cards is in dummy and you can see three of them in your own hand, you know that South has only one card higher than the six. It is easy to deduce that it cannot be the ace, because in that case South would surely have played the queen from dummy to give himself a chance to win two tricks in the suit instead of one.
So you put up the king and return a spade, hoping partner started with five to the ace, and you wind up setting the contract one trick.
Weekly Sudoku Puzzle
Enter digits from 1 to 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square.
Answer to last issue’s Sudoku Puzzle
Answer to last issue’s Crossword Puzzle
ANNOUNCEMENTS EMPLOYMENT
Oh most beautiful ower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of Heaven, blessed mother of the son of God. Immaculate virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me and show me here you are zmy mother. Oh Holy Mary, mother of God, queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me into my necessity. (Make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (three times). Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hand (three times). Say this Prayer three consecutive days. Then you must publish it and it will be granted to you.
AUTO / MOTORCYCLE
Drive Out Breast Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response
Tax Deduction - Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755
Wheels For Wishes benefiting MakeA-Wish® Northeast New York. Your Car Donations Matter NOW More Than Ever! Free Vehicle Pick Up ANYWHERE. We Accept Most Vehicles Running or Not. 100%
Tax Deductible. Minimal To No Human Contact. Call: (877) 798-9474. Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. www. wheelsforwishes.org.
Experience working with children, teens, preferred.
COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM!
Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now!
Grants and Scholarships available for certain programs for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! 844-947-0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET). Computer with internet is required.
Local Mineola business is looking for a PART TIME FACILITIES PERSON
Must be organized, dependable and able to handle some heavy items when needed. Tuesday and Wednesday are necessary days and we can be exible with remaining hours. Clean driving record and the ability to pass a background check is a must. Please send resume to: ipicone@antonmediagroup.com ne@antonmediagroup.com
FINANCE
TRAIN ONLINE TO DO MEDICAL BILLING!
Become a Medical Office Professional online at CTI! Get Trained, Certified & ready to work in months! Call 855-543-6440. (M-F 8am6pm ET). Computer with internet is required.
Up to $20.70 NYC, $20.00 L.I., $16.20 Upstate NY! If you need care from your relative, friend/ neighbor and you have Medicaid, they may be eligible to start taking care of you as personal assistant under NYS Medicaid CDPA Program. No Certificates needed. 347-713-3553
ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 888-869-5361
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HEALTH / WELLNESS
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BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 866-393-3636
DIRECTV. New 2-Year Price Guarantee. The most live MLB games this season, 200+ channels and over 45,000 on-demand titles. $84.99/mo for 24 months with CHOICE Package. Some restrictions apply. Call DIRECTV 1-888-534-6918
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High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Promo Expires 1/31/24. 1-866-595-6967
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CRIME & SAFETY
Jericho Vehicle Accident Report
The Nassau County Police Department Public Information Office reports the details of an auto accident that occurred on Monday, May 8, 2023 at 6:17 a.m. in Jericho.
According to police, officers responded to an auto accident on the Long Island Expressway. A tractor trailer while traveling westbound near exit 41N lost control and collided with a passenger vehicle. The collision caused a fuel spill requiring the Nassau County’s Emergency Service Unit along with the Jericho Fire Department and the Department of Transportation to respond and contain the spill.
The driver of the passenger vehicle suffered from minor injuries and was transported to a nearby hospital for treatment and evaluation.
The Nassau County Police Department Homicide Squad reported a fatal vehicular accident that occurred on Wednesday, May 3 at 10:21 P.M. on North Broadway in Jericho.
According to detectives, a 2019 Dodge Ram operated by a male, 34, was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes and collided with a 2019 Alfa Romeo 4-door sedan occupied by four male juveniles. As a result of the collision, two male juveniles, both 14, suffered fatal injuries and were pronounced at scene. They were both from Roslyn, and their names were Drew Hassenbein and Ethan Falkowitz. The two additional males, ages 16 and 17, were taken to a local hospital and admitted for internal injuries but are currently listed in stable condition.
After the initial collision, the Alfa Romeo then additionally struck a 2023 Volvo, occupied by a 49-year-old female and her 16-year-old male passenger. They were treated at scene for minor injuries and released. The driver of the 2019 Dodge Ram, defendant Amandeep Singh, 34, of Roslyn, was arrested and transported to a local hospital for minor injuries.
Defendant Amandeep Singh is being charged with aggravated vehicular homicide, vehicular manslaughter in the first degree, manslaughter in the second degree, leaving the scene of an auto accident with a fatality, driving while intoxicated and two counts of assault in the second degree. He was arraigned on Thursday, May 4 at the First District Court, 99 Main Street, Hempstead.
That day was among the most remarkable for the Roslyn community, as hundreds of local residents traveled to Hempstead to attend the arraignment. The outpouring of support was courageous and poignant. Roslyn Mayor John Durkin termed the loss of Falkowitz and Hassenbein as “the saddest day we’ve ever had in Roslyn.”
On Friday, May 5, the Roslyn School District issued a brief statement on the tragedy.
“The tragic passing of two of our Roslyn Middle School students is a tremendous loss for their families, friends, and our school community. The district extends our deepest condolences and asks that everyone respect the families’ right to grieve privately during this very difficult time.
District psychologists, guidance counselors, and social workers are available at each of our schools to provide any needed support for students, staff and families. We wish a speedy and complete recovery to our two Roslyn High School students in the hospital. Our hearts are broken.”
—Information provided by the Nassau County Police Department. Additional reporting by Joe Scotchie and Jennifer Corr.
Raynham Hall Museum congratulates
our honorees
ANTON MEDIA GROUP
THE NORTH SHORE LEADER
RICHNER COMMUNICATIONS/OYSTER BAY HERALD GUARDIAN
and thanks the following artists for their kind participation and spectacular creations for this year’s Love Re-Awakened Ball
JAMIE ARTY, MONARCHBUTTERFLY COM
MARTINE ARNOUX, BALLOONS COUTURE NY
DEAN YODER & JONATHAN GRIMM, DEAN YODER INTERIORS DENISE CHETRAM
MARY ABBENE, THE PRINTERY
NICOLE TRONCONE, N. T. DESIGNS WITH ELITE TENT & PARTY RENTAL KASSIE MILLER, LOCUST VALLEY GARDEN CLUB
RANDY STATHAM, SCARSELLA’S FLOWERS
RICHARD-LAEL LILLARD, THE GENTLEMAN PSYCHIC RICHARD SCHUSTER
SUSAN BLOOM, SUSAN BLOOM INTERIORS
TRÉ & DAVID LAVOÚX-GANCI WITH MUSCARI FLOWERS & PAUL’S NURSERY
JOSEPHINE IANNECE, GLAMOROUS EVENT PLANNERS & PRODUCTIONS
TOM SAMET & NATHAN WOLD, HAMPTONS HOUSE DESIGN WITH PETER FLAMMIA, THE LITTLE FLOWER HOUSE
SYOSSET
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE FOR FORMA-
TION of a limited liability company (LLC) . The name of the limited liability company is JEVIN REAL EST A TE LLC. The date of filing of the articles of organization with the Department of State was March 14, 2023. The County in New York in which the office of the company is located is Nassau. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the company upon whom process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the company served upon him or her to The LLC, 11 Woodstock Court, Muttontown, New York 11771. The business purpose of the company is to engage in any and all business activities pennitted under the laws of the State of New York.
7918506.1
5-17-10-3; 4-26-19-122023-6T-#240308-SYO/JER
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of Small Wonders Pediatric Dentistry, PLLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on March 31, 2023. Office location: Nassau County. SSNY
designated as agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to: 33 Windsor Rd, Great Neck, NY 11021.
Purpose: any lawful purpose
5-24-17-10-3: 4-26-19-2023
6T-#240446-SYO/JER
LEGAL NOTICE
REFEREE’S NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE
SUPREME COURTCOUNTY OF NASSAU
JPMORGAN CHASE
BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff - against - DONG ZHU
AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF RONG JIN, et al Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on December 5, 2019. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501
“Rain or Shine” on the 24th day of May, 2023 at 3:30 PM. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Incorporated Village of Muttontown at Brookville, in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York.
Premises known as 22 Brookville Road, Muttontown, NY 11791.
(Section: 16 Block: A Lot: 978)
Approximate amount of lien $1,726,495.21 plus interest and costs.
Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale.
Index No. 013722/2013. Malachy P. Lyons, Esq., Referee. McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC
Attorney(s) for Plaintiff
420 Lexington Avenue, Suite 840 New York, NY 10170 Tel. 347/286-7409
Dated: March 22, 2023
During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale
5-17-10-3; 4-26-2023-4T#240548-SYO/JER
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of GOLD COAST MASSAGE LLC.
Arts of Org filed with Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/5/22. Office location: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC to: 119 Cayuga Place, Jericho, NY 11753. Purpose: any lawful act.
6-7; 5-31-24-17-10-3-20236T-#240686-SYO/JER
LEGAL NOTICE
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NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST ANTHONY LODATI, CLAIRE LODATI, ET AL., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered August 6, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on June 14, 2023 at 2:30PM, premises known as 1 NORTHWOOD COURT, WOODBURY, NY 11797. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Woodbury, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 14, Block 22, Lot 8. Approximate amount of judgment $339,763.10 plus
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Jericho Now: Jericho School District updates SMART boards (See page 4) Neighbors In The News: Race Hub learning facility welcomed in Syosset (See page 6) Calendar: View upcoming events (See page 8)
An Anton Media Group Publica Vol.88,No.33April12,2022 www.SyossetJerichoTribune.com FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details!
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cel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “Rain or Shine”. Edward Andreas Vincent, Esq, Referee THROUGH JULY 9 ONLY! We’re not just your local newspaper, we’re a member of your community
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Syosset Hospital Is 1 Of 8 Northwell Hospitals To Earn A Top ‘A’ Grade In Leapfrog Safety Report
Eight Northwell Health hospitals, including six on Long Island, earned a top ‘A’ rating for its patient safety, according to a report released by the Leapfrog Group for Spring 2023.
The national distinction recognizes a health system’s commitment to patient safety and achievements in promoting best outcomes.
Leapfrog’s Hospital’s 2023 Spring Grade report showed the following Northwell hospitals earned a top ‘A’ rating:
•Huntington Hospital
•Long Island Jewish Forest Hills
•Mather Hospital, Port Jefferson
•North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset
•Northern Westchester Hospital, Mt. Kisco
•Peconic Bay Medical Center, Riverhead
•South Shore University Hospital, Bay Shore
•Syosset Hospital
The Leapfrog Group, a national nonprofit organization, assigns an A, B, C, D or F grade to nearly 3,000 acute-care hospitals nationwide, which is based on 30 evidence-based patient safety performance measures. The organization issues the report twice annually.
“The spring Leapfrog report shows that Northwell hospitals across the region are continuing to provide the best quality and safest care to our patients at both our community and tertiary care hospitals,” said Peter Silver, MD, senior vice president, associate chief medical officer and chief quality officer at Northwell Health. “The survey reflects our deep commitment to patient safety across the care continuum, whether it
be maternity care, surgical outcomes, care in our intensive care units or care for children.
Our scores reflect not only our dedication to providing the best possible patient care, but how we strive to do better every day.”
Dr. Silver said the Leapfrog survey reviews key patient safety measures including hospital-acquired infections, medication safety, hand washing, maternity care and surgical safety. Certain patient experience scores also are factored in the analysis, which are based on patient satisfaction surveys administered by Press Ganey Associates.
“We are extremely proud of the accom-
100 Years Old
In May 2023, Angelina (Menoncello) “Gina” Spina turned 100 years old. She and her husband (Louis, deceased) moved from Jackson Heights, NY to Syosset on Dec. 31 1954 to her current home. She is a resident of Syosset for 68 years. Gina had four children Richard, Phyllis (deceased) Louis and Paul. She has two grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Gina arrived in the United States after World War II as a “war bride.” She was married in her childhood home of Cannes, France before coming to the USA in 1946.
Gina was born in 1923 in a small town in Northern Italy on the outskirts of Treviso, Italy. At 6-months-old, her parents at the advice of the local priest told them they should flee the country because her paternal grandfather was recently targeted and killed by the fascist government and was planning on
killing her father. So, in the middle of the night they fled to Cannes, France where Gina was raised.
Over the years Gina was principally a stay-at-home mother raising their four children. Later she worked in several bakery shops in Syosset and eventually worked for JC Penney’s in Plainview and Hicksville until she retired at the age of 75. She often reflects back on the many years living on “the block” and all the families and kids on the street over the years.
She drove until the age of 92 and always laments about “losing her license.”
At the age of 100 she cooks some meals on her own and is able to get around without aid and walks up and down the stairs, and stops at the top and often says, “sheew, I’m getting old.”
Happy 100th Birthday!
—Submitted by Louis Spina
plishments of all our hospitals and our 83,000 team members who go above and beyond every day to improve care for our patients who entrust us with their care,” said Dr. Silver. “Northwell has a culture for
continuous improvement and you feel that when you walk into our buildings.”
For more information about Leapfrog Group, see: www.HospitalSafetyGrade.org. —Submitted by Northwell Health
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To schedule an appointment, or request additional information, call 516-364-4200 or visit www.GreenbergCosmeticSurgery.com
“Halle’s Heart,” a Jump Rope for Heart event at Cantiague Elementary School, was a culmination of the Kids Heart Challenge via the American Heart Association and in honor of Cantiague student Halle Huang who passed away last year. Cantiague raised $28,000 for the American Heart Association. Thanks to all that participated in this great event.
—Submitted by the Jericho Union Free School District
Cantiague Jumps Rope For Heart
Syosset Sophomore Named One of Long Island’s Best Young Artists
Syosset sophomore Larissa Mallen has been named one of Long Island’s Best Young Artists. Her work titled, “Rebirth: A Disconnection,” created in the medium marker and colored pencil, will be on display in Huntington’s Heckscher Museum.
“Larissa is creative and passionate about her artwork,” said Syosset art teacher Demi Protonenis. “She takes great pride in her craft and is always looking for the best compositional outcomes.”
Each year, students in grades 9 through
12 are invited to create and submit a work of art inspired by other pieces in the Heckscher Museum as part of the Long Island’s Best Young Artists competition. Hundreds of works of art are submitted from schools across Nassau and Suffolk counties and only 80 are chosen for display in the exhibition. The Heckscher Museum is the only juried exhibition on Long Island that offers high school students the opportunity to show their work in a museum.
Congratulations Larissa on this amazing accomplishment!
—Submitted by the Syosset Central School District
Our Lady of Mercy Academy Celebrates 95 Years
Founded by the Sisters of Mercy in 1928, Our Lady of Mercy Academy (OLMA) celebrated its 95th Anniversary on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at the Mansion at Oyster Bay. As a Catholic, all-girls, college preparatory high school, the faculty and staff have inspired the hearts, minds and spirits of over 8,500 young women to lead, serve and succeed in their colleges, careers, communities and lives.
The proceeds from this event funded scholarships and financial aid.
OLMA President Margaret Myhan, stated “Our 95th-anniversary milestone serves as a reminder of our beginning and, more importantly, the promise of our future rooted in faith and built upon the strength, wisdom, and commitment to providing an educational foundation for our young women based on values and integrity. We acknowledge with gratitude our ‘Spirit of Mercy’ Honorees: The
Dreams R US Foundation, The Georgia Hiden Charitable Foundation, Dr. Eileen Snyder Magri, PH.D (Farmingdale, NY)., Richard L. O’Hara (Roslyn, NY), and Sister Dorothy Sagona, RSM, who received the Lifetime Achievement Award.”
Young women come from all over Long Island and Queens to attend this prestigious high school. Ninety-one percent of the class of 2022 earned $24.8 million in scholarships.
Some of the colleges and universities they attended include: Boston College, College of the Holy Cross, Cornell University, New York University, Notre Dame University, Parsons School of Design, and Villanova.
Our Lady of Mercy Academy is located on 96 acres in Syosset, NY. Visit us at www.olma.org or contact the Advancement Office at 516-921-1047 (ext. 117).
—Submitted by Our Lady of Mercy Academy
TWO
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REGISTER OR DONATE HERE: TSCLIGOLF.ORG
In Loving Memory Of Our Daughter
Sabrina Navaretta
April 3, 2004 - April 28, 2023
Our Family wishes to extend its deepest gratitude to the Syosset-Jericho and surrounding communities for their kindness and support through this difficult time.
Sabrina had an infectious smile and a love for life! She was an Honors student at the University of Delaware studying management in the Lerner College when she was involved in a fatal car accident at the University on April 28th. She had received the AP Scholar with Distinction, was in the Italian Honor Society and the National Honor Society at Syosset High School class of 2022. She enjoyed family, the love of the Ocean, her volunteer work as an autism advocate, serving the community, dog rescue groups and her athletic teams. As she lived her short life, always thinking of others, her last wish was to be an organ donor. Her family has set up the Sabrina Navaretta Scholarship Fund where a substantial scholarship will be awarded to a graduating Senior who closely resembles those qualities that Sabrina exhibited.